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18 <h1>International Components for Unicode<br />
19 <abbr title="International Components for Unicode">ICU</abbr> 52 ReadMe</h1>
20
21 <!--<p><b>Note:</b> This is a development milestone release of ICU4C 52.
22 This milestone is intended for those wishing to get an early look at ICU 52 new features and API changes.
23 It is not recommended for production use.</p>-->
24 <!--<p><b>Note:</b> This is a release candidate version of ICU4C 52.
25 It is not recommended for production use.</p>-->
26
27 <p>Last updated: 2013-Sep-30<br />
28 Copyright © 1997-2013 International Business Machines Corporation and
29 others. All Rights Reserved.</p>
30 <!-- Remember that there is a copyright at the end too -->
31 <hr />
32
33 <h2 class="TOC">Table of Contents</h2>
34
35 <ul class="TOC">
36 <li><a href="#Introduction">Introduction</a></li>
37
38 <li><a href="#GettingStarted">Getting Started</a></li>
39
40 <li><a href="#News">What Is New In This release?</a></li>
41
42 <li><a href="#Download">How To Download the Source Code</a></li>
43
44 <li><a href="#SourceCode">ICU Source Code Organization</a></li>
45
46 <li>
47 <a href="#HowToBuild">How To Build And Install ICU</a>
48
49 <ul >
50 <li><a href="#RecBuild">Recommended Build Options</a></li>
51
52 <li><a href="#UserConfig">User-Configurable Settings</a></li>
53
54 <li><a href="#HowToBuildWindows">Windows</a></li>
55
56 <li><a href="#HowToBuildCygwin">Cygwin</a></li>
57
58 <li><a href="#HowToBuildUNIX">UNIX</a></li>
59
60 <li><a href="#HowToBuildZOS">z/OS (os/390)</a></li>
61
62 <li><a href="#HowToBuildOS400">IBM i family (IBM i, i5/OS, OS/400)</a></li>
63
64 <li><a href="#HowToCrossCompileICU">How to Cross Compile ICU</a></li>
65 </ul>
66 </li>
67
68
69 <li><a href="#HowToPackage">How To Package ICU</a></li>
70
71 <li>
72 <a href="#ImportantNotes">Important Notes About Using ICU</a>
73
74 <ul >
75 <li><a href="#ImportantNotesMultithreaded">Using ICU in a Multithreaded
76 Environment</a></li>
77
78 <li><a href="#ImportantNotesWindows">Windows Platform</a></li>
79
80 <li><a href="#ImportantNotesUNIX">UNIX Type Platforms</a></li>
81 </ul>
82 </li>
83
84 <li>
85 <a href="#PlatformDependencies">Platform Dependencies</a>
86
87 <ul >
88 <li><a href="#PlatformDependenciesNew">Porting To A New
89 Platform</a></li>
90
91 <li><a href="#PlatformDependenciesImpl">Platform Dependent
92 Implementations</a></li>
93 </ul>
94 </li>
95 </ul>
96 <hr />
97
98 <h2><a name="Introduction" href="#Introduction" id=
99 "Introduction">Introduction</a></h2>
100
101 <p>Today's software market is a global one in which it is desirable to
102 develop and maintain one application (single source/single binary) that
103 supports a wide variety of languages. The International Components for
104 Unicode (ICU) libraries provide robust and full-featured Unicode services on
105 a wide variety of platforms to help this design goal. The ICU libraries
106 provide support for:</p>
107
108 <ul>
109 <li>The latest version of the Unicode standard</li>
110
111 <li>Character set conversions with support for over 220 codepages</li>
112
113 <li>Locale data for more than 300 locales</li>
114
115 <li>Language sensitive text collation (sorting) and searching based on the
116 Unicode Collation Algorithm (=ISO 14651)</li>
117
118 <li>Regular expression matching and Unicode sets</li>
119
120 <li>Transformations for normalization, upper/lowercase, script
121 transliterations (50+ pairs)</li>
122
123 <li>Resource bundles for storing and accessing localized information</li>
124
125 <li>Date/Number/Message formatting and parsing of culture specific
126 input/output formats</li>
127
128 <li>Calendar specific date and time manipulation</li>
129
130 <li>Complex text layout for Arabic, Hebrew, Indic and Thai</li>
131
132 <li>Text boundary analysis for finding characters, word and sentence
133 boundaries</li>
134 </ul>
135
136 <p>ICU has a sister project ICU4J that extends the internationalization
137 capabilities of Java to a level similar to ICU. The ICU C/C++ project is also
138 called ICU4C when a distinction is necessary.</p>
139
140 <h2><a name="GettingStarted" href="#GettingStarted" id=
141 "GettingStarted">Getting started</a></h2>
142
143 <p>This document describes how to build and install ICU on your machine. For
144 other information about ICU please see the following table of links.<br />
145 The ICU homepage also links to related information about writing
146 internationalized software.</p>
147
148 <table class="docTable" summary="These are some useful links regarding ICU and internationalization in general.">
149 <caption>
150 Here are some useful links regarding ICU and internationalization in
151 general.
152 </caption>
153
154 <tr>
155 <td>ICU, ICU4C & ICU4J Homepage</td>
156
157 <td><a href=
158 "http://icu-project.org/">http://icu-project.org/</a></td>
159 </tr>
160
161 <tr>
162 <td>FAQ - Frequently Asked Questions about ICU</td>
163
164 <td><a href=
165 "http://userguide.icu-project.org/icufaq">http://userguide.icu-project.org/icufaq</a></td>
166 </tr>
167
168 <tr>
169 <td>ICU User's Guide</td>
170
171 <td><a href=
172 "http://userguide.icu-project.org/">http://userguide.icu-project.org/</a></td>
173 </tr>
174
175 <tr>
176 <td>How To Use ICU</td>
177
178 <td><a href="http://userguide.icu-project.org/howtouseicu">http://userguide.icu-project.org/howtouseicu</a></td>
179 </tr>
180
181 <tr>
182 <td>Download ICU Releases</td>
183
184 <td><a href=
185 "http://site.icu-project.org/download">http://site.icu-project.org/download</a></td>
186 </tr>
187
188 <tr>
189 <td>ICU4C API Documentation Online</td>
190
191 <td><a href=
192 "http://icu-project.org/apiref/icu4c/">http://icu-project.org/apiref/icu4c/</a></td>
193 </tr>
194
195 <tr>
196 <td>Online ICU Demos</td>
197
198 <td><a href=
199 "http://demo.icu-project.org/icu-bin/icudemos">http://demo.icu-project.org/icu-bin/icudemos</a></td>
200 </tr>
201
202 <tr>
203 <td>Contacts and Bug Reports/Feature Requests</td>
204
205 <td><a href=
206 "http://site.icu-project.org/contacts">http://site.icu-project.org/contacts</a></td>
207 </tr>
208 </table>
209
210 <p><strong>Important:</strong> Please make sure you understand the <a href=
211 "license.html">Copyright and License Information</a>.</p>
212
213 <h2><a name="News" href="#News" id="News">What is new in this
214 release?</a></h2>
215
216 <p>To see which APIs are new or changed in this release, view the <a href="APIChangeReport.html">ICU4C API Change Report</a>. </p>
217
218 <!-- ICU 52 items -->
219 <h3>DecimalFormat - two functions marked as const</h3>
220 <p>
221 <tt>DecimalFormat::isScientificNotation</tt> and <tt>DecimalFormat::isExponentSignAlwaysShown</tt>
222 are now const member functions. DecimalFormat is not recommended for subclassing.
223 </p>
224
225 <h3>CollationElementIterator protected methods became private</h3>
226 <p>The C++ CollationElementIterator (CEI) had two protected constructors
227 (called only by RuleBasedCollator CEI factory methods)
228 and a protected assignment operator.
229 The class documentation says "CollationElementIterator should not be subclassed",
230 and it cannot be subclassed effectively.
231 The protected methods were made private and might be removed altogether.
232 For details see <a href="http://bugs.icu-project.org/trac/ticket/10251">ticket #10251</a>.</p>
233 <!-- end ICU 52 items -->
234
235 <p>The following list concentrates on <em>changes that affect existing
236 applications migrating from previous ICU releases</em>.
237 For more news about this release, see the
238
239 <a href="http://site.icu-project.org/download/52">ICU download page</a>.
240
241<!-- <a href="http://site.icu-project.org/download/milestone">ICU milestone download page</a>.
242 </p>-->
243
244 <h3>C++ BasicTimeZone subclassing-API breaking changes</h3>
245 <p>We have made make some changes to the C++ BasicTimeZone(basictz.h) for ICU 51
246 that will make it easier to use some time zone support features found in BasicTimeZone
247 (basictz.h), but the changes are incompatible for subclasses. If there are subclasses,
248 they will have to be modified as well.</p>
249
250 <p>BasicTimeZone is a subclass of TimeZone and providing some enhanced features, such as
251 getNextTransition and getPreviousTransition. The class is used as the base class of all
252 of ICU's time zone implementation classes. User Classes directly extending TimeZone and
253 consumers of ICU TimeZone implementation classes are not affected by the changes.</p>
254
255 <p>For details see the email "ICU4C C++ BasicTimeZone subclassing-API breaking changes"
256 sent on 2013-Feb-5 to the icu-support
257 <a href="http://site.icu-project.org/contacts">mailing lists</a>,
258 and <a href="http://bugs.icu-project.org/trac/ticket/9648">ICU ticket #9648</a>.</p>
259
260 <h3>Date format pattern "V"</h3>
261 <p>The date format pattern "V" was introduced in ICU 3.8 (inherited from CLDR 1.5) as
262 a variation of pattern "z" to support time zone abbreviation format such as "PST".
263 The pattern "z" prints out a time zone abbreviation only when it is commonly used for a locale.
264 The pattern "V" was slightly different from pattern "z" and the pattern designates
265 a time zone abbreviation even it is not commonly used for a locale. For example, time
266 zone abbreviation "AEST" for Australian Eastern Standard Time might not be well recognized
267 by people in the United States. For the zone, pattern "z" does not use "AEST" (instead, use
268 UTC offset format "GMT+10:00", as the fallback) , while pattern "V" used to print out "AEST".
269 In CLDR 21, the data used for checking commonly used or not was completely removed (CLDR
270 ticket <a href="http://unicode.org/cldr/trac/ticket/4052">#4052</a>), so the difference
271 between pattern "z" and "V" is no longer available since ICU 49 (based on CLDR 21 specification).</p>
272
273 <p>In CLDR 23, the CLDR technical committee decided to reuse the semantically deprecated
274 pattern "V" for a different purpose. With the new specification, the date format pattern
275 "V" is used for short time zone IDs, such as "uslax" for zone America/Los_Angeles. ICU 51
276 implements the new specification. So existing ICU users currently using custom date format
277 patterns with pattern "V" are suggested to change them to pattern "z".</p>
278
279 <p>Note that the existing pattern "VVVV" for a time zone's generic location name is not
280 affected by the new specification and the pattern "VVVV" continues to work as same as
281 previous ICU releases.</p>
282
283 <h2><a name="Download" href="#Download" id="Download">How To Download the
284 Source Code</a></h2>
285
286 <p>There are two ways to download ICU releases:</p>
287
288 <ul>
289 <li><strong>Official Release Snapshot:</strong><br />
290 If you want to use ICU (as opposed to developing it), you should download
291 an official packaged version of the ICU source code. These versions are
292 tested more thoroughly than day-to-day development builds of the system,
293 and they are packaged in zip and tar files for convenient download. These
294 packaged files can be found at <a href=
295 "http://site.icu-project.org/download">http://site.icu-project.org/download</a>.<br />
296 The packaged snapshots are named <strong>icu-nnnn.zip</strong> or
297 <strong>icu-nnnn.tgz</strong>, where nnnn is the version number. The .zip
298 file is used for Windows platforms, while the .tgz file is preferred on
299 most other platforms.<br />
300 Please unzip this file. </li>
301
302 <li><strong>Subversion Source Repository:</strong><br />
303 If you are interested in developing features, patches, or bug fixes for
304 ICU, you should probably be working with the latest version of the ICU
305 source code. You will need to check the code out of our Subversion repository to
306 ensure that you have the most recent version of all of the files. See our
307 <a href="http://site.icu-project.org/repository">source
308 repository</a> for details.</li>
309 </ul>
310
311 <h2><a name="SourceCode" href="#SourceCode" id="SourceCode">ICU Source Code
312 Organization</a></h2>
313
314 <p>In the descriptions below, <strong><i><ICU></i></strong> is the full
315 path name of the ICU directory (the top level directory from the distribution
316 archives) in your file system. You can also view the <a href=
317 "http://userguide.icu-project.org/design">ICU Architectural
318 Design</a> section of the User's Guide to see which libraries you need for
319 your software product. You need at least the data (<code>[lib]icudt</code>)
320 and the common (<code>[lib]icuuc</code>) libraries in order to use ICU.</p>
321
322 <table class="docTable" summary="The following files describe the code drop.">
323 <caption>
324 The following files describe the code drop.
325 </caption>
326
327 <tr>
328 <th scope="col">File</th>
329
330 <th scope="col">Description</th>
331 </tr>
332
333 <tr>
334 <td>readme.html</td>
335
336 <td>Describes the International Components for Unicode (this file)</td>
337 </tr>
338
339 <tr>
340 <td>license.html</td>
341
342 <td>Contains the text of the ICU license</td>
343 </tr>
344 </table>
345
346 <p><br />
347 </p>
348
349 <table class="docTable" summary=
350 "The following directories contain source code and data files.">
351 <caption>
352 The following directories contain source code and data files.
353 </caption>
354
355 <tr>
356 <th scope="col">Directory</th>
357
358 <th scope="col">Description</th>
359 </tr>
360
361 <tr>
362 <td><i><ICU></i>/source/<b>common</b>/</td>
363
364 <td>The core Unicode and support functionality, such as resource bundles,
365 character properties, locales, codepage conversion, normalization,
366 Unicode properties, Locale, and UnicodeString.</td>
367 </tr>
368
369 <tr>
370 <td><i><ICU></i>/source/<b>i18n</b>/</td>
371
372 <td>Modules in i18n are generally the more data-driven, that is to say
373 resource bundle driven, components. These deal with higher-level
374 internationalization issues such as formatting, collation, text break
375 analysis, and transliteration.</td>
376 </tr>
377
378 <tr>
379 <td><i><ICU></i>/source/<b>layout</b>/</td>
380
381 <td>Contains the ICU layout engine (not a rasterizer).</td>
382 </tr>
383
384 <tr>
385 <td><i><ICU></i>/source/<b>io</b>/</td>
386
387 <td>Contains the ICU I/O library.</td>
388 </tr>
389
390 <tr>
391 <td><i><ICU></i>/source/<b>data</b>/</td>
392
393 <td>
394 <p>This directory contains the source data in text format, which is
395 compiled into binary form during the ICU build process. It contains
396 several subdirectories, in which the data files are grouped by
397 function. Note that the build process must be run again after any
398 changes are made to this directory.</p>
399
400 <p>If some of the following directories are missing, it's probably
401 because you got an official download. If you need the data source files
402 for customization, then please download the ICU source code from <a
403 href="http://site.icu-project.org/repository">subversion</a>.</p>
404
405 <ul>
406 <li><b>in/</b> A directory that contains a pre-built data library for
407 ICU. A standard source code package will contain this file without
408 several of the following directories. This is to simplify the build
409 process for the majority of users and to reduce platform porting
410 issues.</li>
411
412 <li><b>brkitr/</b> Data files for character, word, sentence, title
413 casing and line boundary analysis.</li>
414
415 <li><b>locales/</b> These .txt files contain ICU language and
416 culture-specific localization data. Two special bundles are
417 <b>root</b>, which is the fallback data and parent of other bundles,
418 and <b>index</b>, which contains a list of installed bundles. The
419 makefile <b>resfiles.mk</b> contains the list of resource bundle
420 files.</li>
421
422 <li><b>mappings/</b> Here are the code page converter tables. These
423 .ucm files contain mappings to and from Unicode. These are compiled
424 into .cnv files. <b>convrtrs.txt</b> is the alias mapping table from
425 various converter name formats to ICU internal format and vice versa.
426 It produces cnvalias.icu. The makefiles <b>ucmfiles.mk,
427 ucmcore.mk,</b> and <b>ucmebcdic.mk</b> contain the list of
428 converters to be built.</li>
429
430 <li><b>translit/</b> This directory contains transliterator rules as
431 resource bundles, a makefile <b>trnsfiles.mk</b> containing the list
432 of installed system translitaration files, and as well the special
433 bundle <b>translit_index</b> which lists the system transliterator
434 aliases.</li>
435
436 <li><b>unidata/</b> This directory contains the Unicode data files.
437 Please see <a href=
438 "http://www.unicode.org/">http://www.unicode.org/</a> for more
439 information.</li>
440
441 <li><b>misc/</b> The misc directory contains other data files which
442 did not fit into the above categories. Currently it only contains
443 time zone information, and a name preperation file for <a href=
444 "http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3490.txt">IDNA</a>.</li>
445
446 <li><b>out/</b> This directory contains the assembled memory mapped
447 files.</li>
448
449 <li><b>out/build/</b> This directory contains intermediate (compiled)
450 files, such as .cnv, .res, etc.</li>
451 </ul>
452
453 <p>If you are creating a special ICU build, you can set the ICU_DATA
454 environment variable to the out/ or the out/build/ directories, but
455 this is generally discouraged because most people set it incorrectly.
456 You can view the <a href=
457 "http://userguide.icu-project.org/icudata">ICU Data
458 Management</a> section of the ICU User's Guide for details.</p>
459 </td>
460 </tr>
461
462 <tr>
463 <td><i><ICU></i>/source/test/<b>intltest</b>/</td>
464
465 <td>A test suite including all C++ APIs. For information about running
466 the test suite, see the build instructions specific to your platform
467 later in this document.</td>
468 </tr>
469
470 <tr>
471 <td><i><ICU></i>/source/test/<b>cintltst</b>/</td>
472
473 <td>A test suite written in C, including all C APIs. For information
474 about running the test suite, see the build instructions specific to your
475 platform later in this document.</td>
476 </tr>
477
478 <tr>
479 <td><i><ICU></i>/source/test/<b>iotest</b>/</td>
480
481 <td>A test suite written in C and C++ to test the icuio library. For
482 information about running the test suite, see the build instructions
483 specific to your platform later in this document.</td>
484 </tr>
485
486 <tr>
487 <td><i><ICU></i>/source/test/<b>testdata</b>/</td>
488
489 <td>Source text files for data, which are read by the tests. It contains
490 the subdirectories <b>out/build/</b> which is used for intermediate
491 files, and <b>out/</b> which contains <b>testdata.dat.</b></td>
492 </tr>
493
494 <tr>
495 <td><i><ICU></i>/source/<b>tools</b>/</td>
496
497 <td>Tools for generating the data files. Data files are generated by
498 invoking <i><ICU></i>/source/data/build/makedata.bat on Win32 or
499 <i><ICU></i>/source/make on UNIX.</td>
500 </tr>
501
502 <tr>
503 <td><i><ICU></i>/source/<b>samples</b>/</td>
504
505 <td>Various sample programs that use ICU</td>
506 </tr>
507
508 <tr>
509 <td><i><ICU></i>/source/<b>extra</b>/</td>
510
511 <td>Non-supported API additions. Currently, it contains the 'uconv' tool
512 to perform codepage conversion on files.</td>
513 </tr>
514
515 <tr>
516 <td><i><ICU></i>/<b>packaging</b>/</td>
517
518 <td>This directory contain scripts and tools for packaging the final
519 ICU build for various release platforms.</td>
520 </tr>
521
522 <tr>
523 <td><i><ICU></i>/source/<b>config</b>/</td>
524
525 <td>Contains helper makefiles for platform specific build commands. Used
526 by 'configure'.</td>
527 </tr>
528
529 <tr>
530 <td><i><ICU></i>/source/<b>allinone</b>/</td>
531
532 <td>Contains top-level ICU workspace and project files, for instance to
533 build all of ICU under one MSVC project.</td>
534 </tr>
535
536 <tr>
537 <td><i><ICU></i>/<b>include</b>/</td>
538
539 <td>Contains the headers needed for developing software that uses ICU on
540 Windows.</td>
541 </tr>
542
543 <tr>
544 <td><i><ICU></i>/<b>lib</b>/</td>
545
546 <td>Contains the import libraries for linking ICU into your Windows
547 application.</td>
548 </tr>
549
550 <tr>
551 <td><i><ICU></i>/<b>bin</b>/</td>
552
553 <td>Contains the libraries and executables for using ICU on Windows.</td>
554 </tr>
555 </table>
556 <!-- end of ICU structure ==================================== -->
557
558 <h2><a name="HowToBuild" href="#HowToBuild" id="HowToBuild">How To Build And
559 Install ICU</a></h2>
560
561 <h3><a name="RecBuild" href="#RecBuild" id=
562 "RecBuild">Recommended Build Options</a></h3>
563
564 <p>Depending on the platform and the type of installation,
565 we recommend a small number of modifications and build options.</p>
566 <ul>
567 <li><b>Namespace:</b> By default, unicode/uversion.h has
568 "using namespace icu;" which defeats much of the purpose of the namespace.
569 (This is for historical reasons: Originally, ICU4C did not use namespaces,
570 and some compilers did not support them. The default "using" statement
571 preserves source code compatibility.)<br />
572 We recommend you turn this off via <code>-DU_USING_ICU_NAMESPACE=0</code>
573 or by modifying unicode/uversion.h:
574<pre>Index: source/common/unicode/uversion.h
575===================================================================
576--- source/common/unicode/uversion.h (revision 26606)
577+++ source/common/unicode/uversion.h (working copy)
578@@ -180,7 +180,8 @@
579 # define U_NAMESPACE_QUALIFIER U_ICU_NAMESPACE::
580
581 # ifndef U_USING_ICU_NAMESPACE
582-# define U_USING_ICU_NAMESPACE 1
583+ // Set to 0 to force namespace declarations in ICU usage.
584+# define U_USING_ICU_NAMESPACE 0
585 # endif
586 # if U_USING_ICU_NAMESPACE
587 U_NAMESPACE_USE
588</pre>
589 ICU call sites then either qualify ICU types explicitly,
590 for example <code>icu::UnicodeString</code>,
591 or do <code>using icu::UnicodeString;</code> where appropriate.</li>
592 <li><b>Hardcode the default charset to UTF-8:</b> On platforms where
593 the default charset is always UTF-8,
594 like MacOS X and some Linux distributions,
595 we recommend hardcoding ICU's default charset to UTF-8.
596 This means that some implementation code becomes simpler and faster,
597 and statically linked ICU libraries become smaller.
598 (See the <a href="http://icu-project.org/apiref/icu4c/utypes_8h.html#0a33e1edf3cd23d9e9c972b63c9f7943">U_CHARSET_IS_UTF8</a>
599 API documentation for more details.)<br />
600 You can <code>-DU_CHARSET_IS_UTF8=1</code> or
601 modify unicode/utypes.h (in ICU 4.8 and below)
602 or modify unicode/platform.h (in ICU 49 and higher):
603<pre>Index: source/common/unicode/utypes.h
604===================================================================
605--- source/common/unicode/utypes.h (revision 26606)
606+++ source/common/unicode/utypes.h (working copy)
607@@ -160,7 +160,7 @@
608 * @see UCONFIG_NO_CONVERSION
609 */
610 #ifndef U_CHARSET_IS_UTF8
611-# define U_CHARSET_IS_UTF8 0
612+# define U_CHARSET_IS_UTF8 1
613 #endif
614
615 /*===========================================================================*/
616</pre></li>
617 <li><b>UnicodeString constructors:</b> The UnicodeString class has
618 several single-argument constructors that are not marked "explicit"
619 for historical reasons.
620 This can lead to inadvertent construction of a <code>UnicodeString</code>
621 with a single character by using an integer,
622 and it can lead to inadvertent dependency on the conversion framework
623 by using a C string literal.<br />
624 Beginning with ICU 49, you should do the following:
625 <ul>
626 <li>Consider marking the from-<code>UChar</code>
627 and from-<code>UChar32</code> constructors explicit via
628 <code>-DUNISTR_FROM_CHAR_EXPLICIT=explicit</code> or similar.</li>
629 <li>Consider marking the from-<code>const char*</code> and
630 from-<code>const UChar*</code> constructors explicit via
631 <code>-DUNISTR_FROM_STRING_EXPLICIT=explicit</code> or similar.</li>
632 </ul>
633 Note: The ICU test suites cannot be compiled with these settings.
634 </li>
635 <li><b>utf.h, utf8.h, utf16.h, utf_old.h:</b>
636 By default, utypes.h (and thus almost every public ICU header)
637 includes all of these header files.
638 Often, none of them are needed, or only one or two of them.
639 All of utf_old.h is deprecated or obsolete.<br />
640 Beginning with ICU 49,
641 you should define <code>U_NO_DEFAULT_INCLUDE_UTF_HEADERS</code> to 1
642 (via -D or uconfig.h, as above)
643 and include those header files explicitly that you actually need.<br />
644 Note: The ICU test suites cannot be compiled with this setting.</li>
645 <li><b>.dat file:</b> By default, the ICU data is built into
646 a shared library (DLL). This is convenient because it requires no
647 install-time or runtime configuration,
648 but the library is platform-specific and cannot be modified.
649 A .dat package file makes the opposite trade-off:
650 Platform-portable (except for endianness and charset family, which
651 can be changed with the icupkg tool)
652 and modifiable (also with the icupkg tool).
653 If a path is set, then single data files (e.g., .res files)
654 can be copied to that location to provide new locale data
655 or conversion tables etc.<br />
656 The only drawback with a .dat package file is that the application
657 needs to provide ICU with the file system path to the package file
658 (e.g., by calling <code>u_setDataDirectory()</code>)
659 or with a pointer to the data (<code>udata_setCommonData()</code>)
660 before other ICU API calls.
661 This is usually easy if ICU is used from an application where
662 <code>main()</code> takes care of such initialization.
663 It may be hard if ICU is shipped with
664 another shared library (such as the Xerces-C++ XML parser)
665 which does not control <code>main()</code>.<br />
666 See the <a href="http://userguide.icu-project.org/icudata">User Guide ICU Data</a>
667 chapter for more details.<br />
668 If possible, we recommend building the .dat package.
669 Specify <code>--with-data-packaging=archive</code>
670 on the configure command line, as in<br />
671 <code>runConfigureICU Linux --with-data-packaging=archive</code><br />
672 (Read the configure script's output for further instructions.
673 On Windows, the Visual Studio build generates both the .dat package
674 and the data DLL.)<br />
675 Be sure to install and use the tiny stubdata library
676 rather than the large data DLL.</li>
677 <li><b>Static libraries:</b> It may make sense to build the ICU code
678 into static libraries (.a) rather than shared libraries (.so/.dll).
679 Static linking reduces the overall size of the binary by removing
680 code that is never called.<br />
681 Example configure command line:<br />
682 <code>runConfigureICU Linux --enable-static --disable-shared</code></li>
683 <li><b>Out-of-source build:</b> It is usually desirable to keep the ICU
684 source file tree clean and have build output files written to
685 a different location. This is called an "out-of-source build".
686 Simply invoke the configure script from the target location:
687<pre>~/icu$ svn export http://source.icu-project.org/repos/icu/icu/trunk
688~/icu$ mkdir trunk-dev
689~/icu$ cd trunk-dev
690~/icu/trunk-dev$ /trunk/source/runConfigureICU Linux
691~/icu/trunk-dev$ make check</pre></li>
692 </ul>
693 <h4>ICU as a System-Level Library</h4>
694 <p>If ICU is installed as a system-level library, there are further
695 opportunities and restrictions to consider.
696 For details, see the <em>Using ICU as an Operating System Level Library</em>
697 section of the <a href="http://userguide.icu-project.org/design">User Guide ICU Architectural Design</a> chapter.</p>
698 <ul>
699 <li><b>Data path:</b> For a system-level library, it is best to load
700 ICU data from the .dat package file because the file system path
701 to the .dat package file can be hardcoded. ICU will automatically set
702 the path to the final install location using U_ICU_DATA_DEFAULT_DIR.
703 Alternatively, you can set <code>-DICU_DATA_DIR=/path/to/icu/data</code>
704 when building the ICU code. (Used by source/common/putil.c.)<br />
705 Consider also setting <code>-DICU_NO_USER_DATA_OVERRIDE</code>
706 if you do not want the "ICU_DATA" environment variable to be used.
707 (An application can still override the data path via
708 <code>u_setDataDirectory()</code> or
709 <code>udata_setCommonData()</code>.</li>
710 <li><b>Hide draft API:</b> API marked with <code>@draft</code>
711 is new and not yet stable. Applications must not rely on unstable
712 APIs from a system-level library.
713 Define <code>U_HIDE_DRAFT_API</code>, <code>U_HIDE_INTERNAL_API</code>
714 and <code>U_HIDE_SYSTEM_API</code>
715 by modifying unicode/utypes.h before installing it.</li>
716 <li><b>Only C APIs:</b> Applications must not rely on C++ APIs from a
717 system-level library because binary C++ compatibility
718 across library and compiler versions is very hard to achieve.
719 Most ICU C++ APIs are in header files that contain a comment with
720 <code>\brief C++ API</code>.
721 Consider not installing these header files.</li>
722 <li><b>Disable renaming:</b> By default, ICU library entry point names
723 have an ICU version suffix. Turn this off for a system-level installation,
724 to enable upgrading ICU without breaking applications. For example:<br />
725 <code>runConfigureICU Linux --disable-renaming</code><br />
726 The public header files from this configuration must be installed
727 for applications to include and get the correct entry point names.</li>
728 </ul>
729
730 <h3><a name="UserConfig" href="#UserConfig" id="UserConfig">User-Configurable Settings</a></h3>
731 <p>ICU4C can be customized via a number of user-configurable settings.
732 Many of them are controlled by preprocessor macros which are
733 defined in the <code>source/common/unicode/uconfig.h</code> header file.
734 Some turn off parts of ICU, for example conversion or collation,
735 trading off a smaller library for reduced functionality.
736 Other settings are recommended (see previous section)
737 but their default values are set for better source code compatibility.</p>
738
739 <p>In order to change such user-configurable settings, you can
740 either modify the <code>uconfig.h</code> header file by adding
741 a specific <code>#define ...</code> for one or more of the macros
742 before they are first tested,
743 or set the compiler's preprocessor flags (<code>CPPFLAGS</code>) to include
744 an equivalent <code>-D</code> macro definition.</p>
745
746 <h3><a name="HowToBuildWindows" href="#HowToBuildWindows" id=
747 "HowToBuildWindows">How To Build And Install On Windows</a></h3>
748
749 <p>Building International Components for Unicode requires:</p>
750
751 <ul>
752 <li>Microsoft Windows</li>
753
754 <li>Microsoft Visual C++</li>
755
756 <li><a href="#HowToBuildCygwin">Cygwin</a> is required when other versions
757 of Microsoft Visual C++ and other compilers are used to build ICU.</li>
758 </ul>
759
760 <p>The steps are:</p>
761
762 <ol>
763 <li>Unzip the icu-XXXX.zip file into any convenient location. Using command
764 line zip, type "unzip -a icu-XXXX.zip -d drive:\directory", or just use
765 WinZip.</li>
766
767 <li>Be sure that the ICU binary directory, <i><ICU></i>\bin\, is
768 included in the <strong>PATH</strong> environment variable. The tests will
769 not work without the location of the ICU DLL files in the path.</li>
770
771 <li>Open the "<i><ICU></i>\source\allinone\allinone.sln" workspace
772 file in Microsoft Visual Studio. (This solution includes all the
773 International Components for Unicode libraries, necessary ICU building
774 tools, and the test suite projects). Please see the <a href=
775 "#HowToBuildWindowsCommandLine">command line note below</a> if you want to
776 build from the command line instead.</li>
777
778 <li>Set the active platform to "Win32" or "x64" (See <a href="#HowToBuildWindowsPlatform">Windows platform note</a> below)
779 and configuration to "Debug" or "Release" (See <a href="#HowToBuildWindowsConfig">Windows configuration note</a> below).</li>
780
781 <li>Choose the "Build" menu and select "Rebuild Solution". If you want to
782 build the Debug and Release at the same time, see the <a href=
783 "#HowToBuildWindowsBatch">batch configuration note</a> below.</li>
784
785
786 <li>Run the tests. They can be run from the command line or from within Visual Studio.
787
788 <h4>Running the Tests from the Windows Command Line (cmd)</h4>
789 <ul>
790 <li>For x86 (32 bit) and Debug, use: <br />
791
792 <tt><i><ICU></i>\source\allinone\icucheck.bat <i>Platform</i> <i>Configuration</i>
793 </tt> <br />
794 </li>
795 <li>So, for example:
796 <br />
797 <tt><i><ICU></i>\source\allinone\icucheck.bat <b>x86</b> <b>Debug</b>
798 </tt>
799 <br/> or <br />
800 <tt><i><ICU></i>\source\allinone\icucheck.bat <b>x86</b> <b>Release</b>
801 </tt>
802 <br/> or <br />
803 <tt><i><ICU></i>\source\allinone\icucheck.bat <b>x64</b> <b>Release</b>
804 </tt></li>
805 </ul>
806
807 <h4>Running the Tests from within Visual Studio</h4>
808
809 <ol>
810 <li>Run the C++ test suite, "intltest". To do this: set the active startup
811 project to "intltest", and press Ctrl+F5 to run it. Make sure that it
812 passes without any errors.</li>
813
814 <li>Run the C test suite, "cintltst". To do this: set the active startup
815 project to "cintltst", and press Ctrl+F5 to run it. Make sure that it
816 passes without any errors.</li>
817
818 <li>Run the I/O test suite, "iotest". To do this: set the active startup
819 project to "iotest", and press Ctrl+F5 to run it. Make sure that it passes
820 without any errors.</li>
821
822 </ol>
823
824 </li>
825
826 <li>You are now able to develop applications with ICU by using the
827 libraries and tools in <i><ICU></i>\bin\. The headers are in
828 <i><ICU></i>\include\ and the link libraries are in
829 <i><ICU></i>\lib\. To install the ICU runtime on a machine, or ship
830 it with your application, copy the needed components from
831 <i><ICU></i>\bin\ to a location on the system PATH or to your
832 application directory.</li>
833 </ol>
834
835 <p><a name="HowToBuildWindowsCommandLine" id=
836 "HowToBuildWindowsCommandLine"><strong>Using MSDEV At The Command Line
837 Note:</strong></a> You can build ICU from the command line. Assuming that you
838 have properly installed Microsoft Visual C++ to support command line
839 execution, you can run the following command, 'devenv.com
840 <i><ICU></i>\source\allinone\allinone.sln /build "Win32|Release"'. You can also
841 use Cygwin with this compiler to build ICU, and you can refer to the <a href=
842 "#HowToBuildCygwin">How To Build And Install On Windows with Cygwin</a>
843 section for more details.</p>
844
845 <p><a name="HowToBuildWindowsPlatform" id=
846 "HowToBuildWindowsPlatform"><strong>Setting Active Platform
847 Note:</strong></a> Even though you are able to select "x64" as the active platform, if your operating system is
848 not a 64 bit version of Windows, the build will fail. To set the active platform, two different possibilities are:</p>
849
850 <ul>
851 <li>Choose "Build" menu, select "Configuration Manager...", and select
852 "Win32" or "x64" for the Active Platform Solution.</li>
853
854 <li>Another way is to select the desired build configuration from "Solution
855 Platforms" dropdown menu from the standard toolbar. It will say
856 "Win32" or "x64" in the dropdown list.</li>
857 </ul>
858
859 <p><a name="HowToBuildWindowsConfig" id=
860 "HowToBuildWindowsConfig"><strong>Setting Active Configuration
861 Note:</strong></a> To set the active configuration, two different
862 possibilities are:</p>
863
864 <ul>
865 <li>Choose "Build" menu, select "Configuration Manager...", and select
866 "Release" or "Debug" for the Active Configuration Solution.</li>
867
868 <li>Another way is to select the desired build configuration from "Solution
869 Configurations" dropdown menu from the standard toolbar. It will say
870 "Release" or "Debug" in the dropdown list.</li>
871 </ul>
872
873 <p><a name="HowToBuildWindowsBatch" id="HowToBuildWindowsBatch"><strong>Batch
874 Configuration Note:</strong></a> If you want to build the Win32 and x64 platforms and
875 Debug and Release configurations at the same time, choose "Build" menu, and select "Batch
876 Build...". Click the "Select All" button, and then click the "Rebuild"
877 button.</p>
878
879 <h3><a name="HowToBuildCygwin" href="#HowToBuildCygwin" id=
880 "HowToBuildCygwin">How To Build And Install On Windows with Cygwin</a></h3>
881
882 <p>Building International Components for Unicode with this configuration
883 requires:</p>
884
885 <ul>
886 <li>Microsoft Windows</li>
887
888 <li>Microsoft Visual C++ (when gcc isn't used).</li>
889
890 <li>
891 Cygwin with the following installed:
892
893 <ul>
894 <li>bash</li>
895
896 <li>GNU make</li>
897
898 <li>ar</li>
899
900 <li>ranlib</li>
901
902 <li>man (if you plan to look at the man pages)</li>
903 </ul>
904 </li>
905 </ul>
906
907 <p>There are two ways you can build ICU with Cygwin. You can build with gcc
908 or Microsoft Visual C++. If you use gcc, the resulting libraries and tools
909 will depend on the Cygwin environment. If you use Microsoft Visual C++, the
910 resulting libraries and tools do not depend on Cygwin and can be more easily
911 distributed to other Windows computers (the generated man pages and shell
912 scripts still need Cygwin). To build with gcc, please follow the "<a href=
913 "#HowToBuildUNIX">How To Build And Install On UNIX</a>" instructions, while
914 you are inside a Cygwin bash shell. To build with Microsoft Visual C++,
915 please use the following instructions:</p>
916
917 <ol>
918 <li>Start the Windows "Command Prompt" window. This is different from the
919 gcc build, which requires the Cygwin Bash command prompt. The Microsoft
920 Visual C++ compiler will not work with a bash command prompt.</li>
921
922 <li>If the computer isn't set up to use Visual C++ from the command line,
923 you need to run vcvars32.bat.<br />For example:<br />"<tt>C:\Program Files\Microsoft
924 Visual Studio 8\VC\bin\vcvars32.bat</tt>" can be used for 32-bit builds
925 <strong>or</strong> <br />"<tt>C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio
926 8\VC\bin\amd64\vcvarsamd64.bat</tt>" can be used for 64-bit builds on
927 Windows x64.</li>
928
929 <li>Unzip the icu-XXXX.zip file into any convenient location. Using command
930 line zip, type "unzip -a icu-XXXX.zip -d drive:\directory", or just use
931 WinZip.</li>
932
933 <li>Change directory to "icu/source", which is where you unzipped ICU.</li>
934
935 <li>Run "<tt>bash <a href="source/runConfigureICU">/runConfigureICU</a>
936 Cygwin/MSVC</tt>" (See <a href="#HowToWindowsConfigureICU">Windows
937 configuration note</a> and non-functional configure options below).</li>
938
939 <li>Type <tt>"make"</tt> to compile the libraries and all the data files.
940 This make command should be GNU make.</li>
941
942 <li>Optionally, type <tt>"make check"</tt> to run the test suite, which
943 checks for ICU's functionality integrity (See <a href=
944 "#HowToTestWithoutGmake">testing note</a> below).</li>
945
946 <li>Type <tt>"make install"</tt> to install ICU. If you used the --prefix=
947 option on configure or runConfigureICU, ICU will be installed to the
948 directory you specified. (See <a href="#HowToInstallICU">installation
949 note</a> below).</li>
950 </ol>
951
952 <p><a name="HowToWindowsConfigureICU" id=
953 "HowToWindowsConfigureICU"><strong>Configuring ICU on Windows
954 NOTE:</strong></a> </p>
955 <p>
956 Ensure that the order of the PATH is MSVC, Cygwin, and then other PATHs. The configure
957 script needs certain tools in Cygwin (e.g. grep).
958 </p>
959 <p>
960 Also, you may need to run <tt>"dos2unix.exe"</tt> on all of the scripts (e.g. configure)
961 in the top source directory of ICU. To avoid this issue, you can download
962 the ICU source for Unix platforms (icu-xxx.tgz).
963 </p>
964 <p>In addition to the Unix <a href=
965 "#HowToConfigureICU">configuration note</a> the following configure options
966 currently do not work on Windows with Microsoft's compiler. Some options can
967 work by manually editing <tt>icu/source/common/unicode/pwin32.h</tt>, but
968 manually editing the files is not recommended.</p>
969
970 <ul>
971 <li><tt>--disable-renaming</tt></li>
972
973 <li><tt>--enable-tracing</tt></li>
974
975 <li><tt>--enable-rpath</tt></li>
976
977 <li><tt>--enable-static</tt> (Requires that U_STATIC_IMPLEMENTATION be
978 defined in user code that links against ICU's static libraries.)</li>
979
980 <li><tt>--with-data-packaging=files</tt> (The pkgdata tool currently does
981 not work in this mode. Manual packaging is required to use this mode.)</li>
982 </ul>
983
984 <h3><a name="HowToBuildUNIX" href="#HowToBuildUNIX" id="HowToBuildUNIX">How
985 To Build And Install On UNIX</a></h3>
986
987 <p>Building International Components for Unicode on UNIX requires:</p>
988
989 <ul>
990 <li>A C++ compiler installed on the target machine (for example: gcc, CC,
991 xlC_r, aCC, cxx, etc...).</li>
992
993 <li>An ANSI C compiler installed on the target machine (for example:
994 cc).</li>
995
996 <li>A recent version of GNU make (3.80+).</li>
997
998 <li>For a list of z/OS tools please view the <a href="#HowToBuildZOS">z/OS
999 build section</a> of this document for further details.</li>
1000 </ul>
1001
1002 <p>Here are the steps to build ICU:</p>
1003
1004 <ol>
1005 <li>Decompress the icu-<i>X</i>.<i>Y</i>.tgz (or
1006 icu-<i>X</i>.<i>Y</i>.tar.gz) file. For example, <tt>"gunzip -d <
1007 icu-<i>X</i>.<i>Y</i>.tgz | tar xvf -"</tt></li>
1008
1009 <li>Change directory to the "icu/source".</li>
1010
1011 <li>Run <span style='font-family: monospace;'>"chmod +x runConfigureICU configure install-sh"</span> because
1012 these files may have the wrong permissions.</li>
1013
1014 <li>Run the <span style='font-family: monospace;'><a href="source/runConfigureICU">runConfigureICU</a></span>
1015 script for your platform. (See <a href="#HowToConfigureICU">configuration
1016 note</a> below).</li>
1017
1018 <li>Type <span style='font-family: monospace;'>"gmake"</span> (or "make" if GNU make is the default make on
1019 your platform) to compile the libraries and all the data files. The proper
1020 name of the GNU make command is printed at the end of the configuration
1021 run, as in "You must use gmake to compile ICU".
1022 <br/>
1023 Note that the compilation command output may be simplified on your platform. If this is the case, you will see just:
1024 <blockquote><p style='background-color: #ddd; font-family: monospace; font-size: small'>gcc ... stubdata.c</p></blockquote>
1025 rather than
1026 <blockquote><p style='background-color: #ddd; font-family: monospace; font-size: small'>gcc -DU_NO_DEFAULT_INCLUDE_UTF_HEADERS=1 -D_REENTRANT -I../common -DU_ATTRIBUTE_DEPRECATED= -O2 -Wall -std=c99 -pedantic -Wshadow -Wpointer-arith -Wmissing-prototypes -Wwrite-strings -c -DPIC -fPIC -o stubdata.o stubdata.c</p></blockquote>
1027 .<br/>
1028 If you need to see the whole compilation line, use <span style='font-family: monospace;'>"gmake VERBOSE=1"</span>. The full compilation line will print if an error occurs.
1029 </li>
1030
1031 <li>Optionally, type <span style='font-family: monospace;'>"gmake check"</span> to run the test suite, which
1032 checks for ICU's functionality integrity (See <a href=
1033 "#HowToTestWithoutGmake">testing note</a> below).</li>
1034
1035 <li>Type <span style='font-family: monospace;'>"gmake install"</span> to install ICU. If you used the --prefix=
1036 option on configure or runConfigureICU, ICU will be installed to the
1037 directory you specified. (See <a href="#HowToInstallICU">installation
1038 note</a> below).</li>
1039 </ol>
1040
1041 <p><a name="HowToConfigureICU" id="HowToConfigureICU"><strong>Configuring ICU
1042 NOTE:</strong></a> Type <tt>"/runConfigureICU --help"</tt> for help on how
1043 to run it and a list of supported platforms. You may also want to type
1044 <tt>"/configure --help"</tt> to print the available configure options that
1045 you may want to give runConfigureICU. If you are not using the
1046 runConfigureICU script, or your platform is not supported by the script, you
1047 may need to set your CC, CXX, CFLAGS and CXXFLAGS environment variables, and
1048 type <tt>"/configure"</tt>.
1049 HP-UX users, please see this <a href="#ImportantNotesHPUX">note regarding
1050 HP-UX multithreaded build issues</a> with newer compilers. Solaris users,
1051 please see this <a href="#ImportantNotesSolaris">note regarding Solaris
1052 multithreaded build issues</a>.</p>
1053
1054 <p>ICU is built with strict compiler warnings enabled by default. If this
1055 causes excessive numbers of warnings on your platform, use the --disable-strict
1056 option to configure to reduce the warning level.</p>
1057
1058 <p><a name="HowToTestWithoutGmake" id="HowToTestWithoutGmake"><strong>Running
1059 The Tests From The Command Line NOTE:</strong></a> You may have to set
1060 certain variables if you with to run test programs individually, that is
1061 apart from "gmake check". The environment variable <strong>ICU_DATA</strong>
1062 can be set to the full pathname of the data directory to indicate where the
1063 locale data files and conversion mapping tables are when you are not using
1064 the shared library (e.g. by using the .dat archive or the individual data
1065 files). The trailing "/" is required after the directory name (e.g.
1066 "$Root/source/data/out/" will work, but the value "$Root/source/data/out" is
1067 not acceptable). You do not need to set <strong>ICU_DATA</strong> if the
1068 complete shared data library is in your library path.</p>
1069
1070 <p><a name="HowToInstallICU" id="HowToInstallICU"><strong>Installing ICU
1071 NOTE:</strong></a> Some platforms use package management tools to control the
1072 installation and uninstallation of files on the system, as well as the
1073 integrity of the system configuration. You may want to check if ICU can be
1074 packaged for your package management tools by looking into the "packaging"
1075 directory. (Please note that if you are using a snapshot of ICU from Subversion, it
1076 is probable that the packaging scripts or related files are not up to date
1077 with the contents of ICU at this time, so use them with caution).</p>
1078
1079 <h3><a name="HowToBuildZOS" href="#HowToBuildZOS" id="HowToBuildZOS">How To
1080 Build And Install On z/OS (OS/390)</a></h3>
1081
1082 <p>You can install ICU on z/OS or OS/390 (the previous name of z/OS), but IBM
1083 tests only the z/OS installation. You install ICU in a z/OS UNIX system
1084 services file system such as HFS or zFS. On this platform, it is important
1085 that you understand a few details:</p>
1086
1087 <ul>
1088 <li>The makedep and GNU make tools are required for building ICU. If it
1089 is not already installed on your system, it is available at the <a href=
1090 "http://www-03.ibm.com/servers/eserver/zseries/zos/unix/bpxa1toy.html">z/OS UNIX -
1091 Tools and Toys</a> site. The PATH environment variable should be updated to
1092 contain the location of this executable prior to build. Failure to add these
1093 tools to your PATH will cause ICU build failures or cause pkgdata to fail
1094 to run.</li>
1095
1096 <li>Since USS does not support using the mmap() function over NFS, it is
1097 recommended that you build ICU on a local filesystem. Once ICU has been
1098 built, you should not have this problem while using ICU when the data
1099 library has been built as a shared library, which is this is the default
1100 setting.</li>
1101
1102 <li>Encoding considerations: The source code assumes that it is compiled
1103 with codepage ibm-1047 (to be exact, the UNIX System Services variant of
1104 it). The pax command converts all of the source code files from ASCII to
1105 codepage ibm-1047 (USS) EBCDIC. However, some files are binary files and
1106 must not be converted, or must be converted back to their original state.
1107 You can use the <a href="as_is/os390/unpax-icu.sh">unpax-icu.sh</a> script
1108 to do this for you automatically. It will unpackage the tar file and
1109 convert all the necessary files for you automatically.</li>
1110
1111 <li>z/OS supports both native S/390 hexadecimal floating point and (with
1112 OS/390 2.6 and later) IEEE 754 binary floating point. This is a compile
1113 time option. Applications built with IEEE should use ICU DLLs that are
1114 built with IEEE (and vice versa). The environment variable IEEE390=0 will
1115 cause the z/OS version of ICU to be built without IEEE floating point
1116 support and use the native hexadecimal floating point. By default ICU is
1117 built with IEEE 754 support. Native floating point support is sufficient
1118 for codepage conversion, resource bundle and UnicodeString operations, but
1119 the Format APIs require IEEE binary floating point.</li>
1120
1121 <li>z/OS introduced the concept of Extra Performance Linkage (XPLINK) to
1122 bring performance improvement opportunities to call-intensive C and C++
1123 applications such as ICU. XPLINK is enabled on a DLL-by-DLL basis, so if
1124 you are considering using XPLINK in your application that uses ICU, you
1125 should consider building the XPLINK-enabled version of ICU. You need to
1126 set ICU's environment variable <code>OS390_XPLINK=1</code> prior to
1127 invoking the make process to produce binaries that are enabled for
1128 XPLINK. The XPLINK option, which is available for z/OS 1.2 and later,
1129 requires the PTF PQ69418 to build XPLINK enabled binaries.</li>
1130
1131 <li>ICU requires XPLINK for the icuio library. If you want to use the
1132 rest of ICU without XPLINK, then you must use the --disable-icuio
1133 configure option.</li>
1134
1135 <li>The latest versions of z/OS use <a
1136 href="http://www.ibm.com/support/docview.wss?uid=swg2120240">XPLINK
1137 version (C128) of the C++ standard library</a> by default. You may see <a
1138 href="http://www.ibm.com/support/docview.wss?uid=swg21376279">an
1139 error</a> when running with XPLINK disabled. To avoid this error,
1140 set the following environment variable or similar:
1141
1142<pre><samp>export _CXX_PSYSIX="CEE.SCEELIB(C128N)":"CBC.SCLBSID(IOSTREAM,COMPLEX)"</samp></pre>
1143 </li>
1144
1145
1146 <li>The rest of the instructions for building and testing ICU on z/OS with
1147 UNIX System Services are the same as the <a href="#HowToBuildUNIX">How To
1148 Build And Install On UNIX</a> section.</li>
1149 </ul>
1150
1151 <h4>z/OS (Batch/PDS) support outside the UNIX system services
1152 environment</h4>
1153
1154 <p>By default, ICU builds its libraries into the UNIX file system (HFS). In
1155 addition, there is a z/OS specific environment variable (OS390BATCH) to build
1156 some libraries into the z/OS native file system. This is useful, for example,
1157 when your application is externalized via Job Control Language (JCL).</p>
1158
1159 <p>The OS390BATCH environment variable enables non-UNIX support including the
1160 batch environment. When OS390BATCH is set, the libicui18n<i>XX</i>.dll,
1161 libicuuc<i>XX</i>.dll, and libicudt<i>XX</i>e.dll binaries are built into
1162 data sets (the native file system). Turning on OS390BATCH does not turn off
1163 the normal z/OS UNIX build. This means that the z/OS UNIX (HFS) DLLs will
1164 always be created.</p>
1165
1166 <p>Two additional environment variables indicate the names of the z/OS data
1167 sets to use. The LOADMOD environment variable identifies the name of the data
1168 set that contains the dynamic link libraries (DLLs) and the LOADEXP
1169 environment variable identifies the name of the data set that contains the
1170 side decks, which are normally the files with the .x suffix in the UNIX file
1171 system.</p>
1172
1173 <p>A data set is roughly equivalent to a UNIX or Windows file. For most kinds
1174 of data sets the operating system maintains record boundaries. UNIX and
1175 Windows files are byte streams. Two kinds of data sets are PDS and PDSE. Each
1176 data set of these two types contains a directory. It is like a UNIX
1177 directory. Each "file" is called a "member". Each member name is limited to
1178 eight bytes, normally EBCDIC.</p>
1179
1180 <p>Here is an example of some environment variables that you can set prior to
1181 building ICU:</p>
1182<pre>
1183<samp>OS390BATCH=1
1184LOADMOD=<i>USER</i>.ICU.LOAD
1185LOADEXP=<i>USER</i>.ICU.EXP</samp>
1186</pre>
1187
1188 <p>The PDS member names for the DLL file names are as follows:</p>
1189<pre>
1190<samp>IXMI<i>XX</i>IN --> libicui18n<i>XX</i>.dll
1191IXMI<i>XX</i>UC --> libicuuc<i>XX</i>.dll
1192IXMI<i>XX</i>DA --> libicudt<i>XX</i>e.dll</samp>
1193</pre>
1194
1195 <p>You should point the LOADMOD environment variable at a partitioned data
1196 set extended (PDSE) and point the LOADEXP environment variable at a
1197 partitioned data set (PDS). The PDSE can be allocated with the following
1198 attributes:</p>
1199<pre>
1200<samp>Data Set Name . . . : <i>USER</i>.ICU.LOAD
1201Management class. . : <i>**None**</i>
1202Storage class . . . : <i>BASE</i>
1203Volume serial . . . : <i>TSO007</i>
1204Device type . . . . : <i>3390</i>
1205Data class. . . . . : <i>LOAD</i>
1206Organization . . . : PO
1207Record format . . . : U
1208Record length . . . : 0
1209Block size . . . . : <i>32760</i>
12101st extent cylinders: 1
1211Secondary cylinders : 5
1212Data set name type : LIBRARY</samp>
1213</pre>
1214
1215 <p>The PDS can be allocated with the following attributes:</p>
1216<pre>
1217<samp>Data Set Name . . . : <i>USER</i>.ICU.EXP
1218Management class. . : <i>**None**</i>
1219Storage class . . . : <i>BASE</i>
1220Volume serial . . . : <i>TSO007</i>
1221Device type . . . . : <i>3390</i>
1222Data class. . . . . : <i>**None**</i>
1223Organization . . . : PO
1224Record format . . . : FB
1225Record length . . . : 80
1226Block size . . . . : <i>3200</i>
12271st extent cylinders: 3
1228Secondary cylinders : 3
1229Data set name type : PDS</samp>
1230</pre>
1231
1232 <h3><a name="HowToBuildOS400" href="#HowToBuildOS400" id=
1233 "HowToBuildOS400">How To Build And Install On The IBM i Family (IBM i, i5/OS OS/400)</a></h3>
1234
1235 <p>Before you start building ICU, ICU requires the following:</p>
1236
1237 <ul>
1238 <li>QSHELL interpreter installed (install base option 30, operating system)
1239 <!--li>QShell Utilities, PRPQ 5799-XEH (not required for V4R5)</li--></li>
1240
1241 <li>ILE C/C++ Compiler installed on the system</li>
1242
1243 <li>The latest IBM tools for Developers for IBM i —
1244 <a href='http://www.ibm.com/servers/enable/site/porting/tools/'>http://www.ibm.com/servers/enable/site/porting/tools/</a>
1245 <!-- formerly: http://www.ibm.com/servers/enable/site/porting/iseries/overview/gnu_utilities.html -->
1246 </li>
1247 </ul>
1248
1249 <p>The following describes how to setup and build ICU. For background
1250 information, you should look at the <a href="#HowToBuildUNIX">UNIX build
1251 instructions</a>.</p>
1252
1253 <ol>
1254 <li>
1255 Copy the ICU source .tgz to the IBM i environment, as binary.
1256 Also, copy the <a href='as_is/os400/unpax-icu.sh'>unpax-icu.sh</a> script into the same directory, as a text file.
1257 </li>
1258
1259 <li>
1260 Create target library. This library will be the target for the
1261 resulting modules, programs and service programs. You will specify this
1262 library on the OUTPUTDIR environment variable.
1263<pre>
1264<samp>CRTLIB LIB(<i>libraryname</i>)
1265ADDENVVAR ENVVAR(OUTPUTDIR) VALUE('<i>libraryname</i>') REPLACE(*YES) </samp></pre>
1266 </li>
1267
1268 <li>
1269 Set up the following environment variables and job characteristics in your build process
1270<pre>
1271<samp>ADDENVVAR ENVVAR(MAKE) VALUE('gmake') REPLACE(*YES)
1272CHGJOB CCSID(37)</samp></pre></li>
1273
1274 <li>Fire up the QSH (all subsequent commands are run inside the qsh session.)</i>
1275 <pre><samp>qsh</samp></pre>
1276 </li>
1277
1278 <li>Set up the PATH: <pre><samp>export PATH=/QIBM/ProdData/DeveloperTools/qsh/bin:$PATH:/QOpenSys/usr/bin</samp></pre>
1279 </li>
1280
1281 <li>Unpack the ICU source code archive:
1282 <pre><samp>gzip -d icu-<i>X</i>.<i>Y</i>.tgz</samp></pre>
1283 </li>
1284
1285 <li>Run unpax-icu.sh on the tar file generated from the previous step.
1286 <pre><samp>unpax-icu.sh icu.tar</samp></pre></li>
1287
1288 <li>Build the program ICULD which ICU will use for linkage.
1289 <pre><samp>cd icu/as_is/os400
1290qsh bldiculd.sh
1291cd ../../..</pre></samp>
1292 </li>
1293
1294 <li>Change into the 'source' directory, and configure ICU. (See <a href="#HowToConfigureICU">configuration
1295 note</a> for details). Note that --with-data-packaging=archive and setting the --prefix are recommended, building in default (dll) mode is currently not supported.
1296 <pre><samp>cd icu/source
1297/runConfigureICU IBMi --prefix=<i>/path/to/somewhere</i> --with-data-packaging=archive</samp></pre>
1298</li>
1299
1300 <li>Build ICU. <i>(Note: Do not use the -j option)</i> <pre><samp>gmake</samp></pre></li>
1301
1302 <li>Test ICU. <pre><samp>gmake check</samp></pre>
1303 <smaller>(The <tt> QIBM_MULTI_THREADED=Y</tt> flag will be automatically applied to intltest -
1304 you can look at the <a href=
1305 "http://publib.boulder.ibm.com/infocenter/iseries/v5r3/index.jsp?topic=/apis/concept4.htm">
1306 iSeries Information Center</a> for more details regarding the running of multiple threads
1307 on IBM i.)</smaller></li>
1308 </ol>
1309
1310 <!-- cross -->
1311 <h3><a name="HowToCrossCompileICU" href="#HowToCrossCompileICU" id="HowToCrossCompileICU">How To Cross Compile ICU</a></h3>
1312 <p>This section will explain how to build ICU on one platform, but to produce binaries intended to run on another. This is commonly known as a cross compile.</p>
1313 <p>Normally, in the course of a build, ICU needs to run the tools that it builds in order to generate and package data and test-data.In a cross compilation setting, ICU is built on a different system from that which it eventually runs on. An example might be, if you are building for a small/headless system (such as an embedded device), or a system where you can't easily run the ICU command line tools (any non-UNIX-like system).</p>
1314 <p>To reduce confusion, we will here refer to the "A" and the "B" system.System "A" is the actual system we will be running on- the only requirements on it is are it is able to build ICU from the command line targetting itself (with configure or runConfigureICU), and secondly, that it also contain the correct toolchain for compiling and linking for the resultant platform, referred to as the "B" system.</p>
1315 <p>The autoconf docs use the term "build" for A, and "host" for B. More details at: <a href="http://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/manual/html_node/Specifying-Names.html#Specifying-Names">http://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/manual/html_node/Specifying-Names.html</a></p>
1316 <p>Three initially-empty directories will be used in this example:</p>
1317 <table summary="Three directories used in this example" class="docTable">
1318 <tr>
1319 <th align="left">/icu</th><td>a copy of the ICU source</td>
1320 </tr>
1321 <tr>
1322 <th align="left">/buildA</th><td>an empty directory, it will contain ICU built for A<br />(MacOSX in this case)</td>
1323 </tr>
1324 <tr>
1325 <th align="left">/buildB</th><td>an empty directory, it will contain ICU built for B<br />(HaikuOS in this case)</td>
1326 </tr>
1327 </table>
1328
1329 <ol>
1330 <li>Check out or unpack the ICU source code into the /icu directory.You will have the directories /icu/source, etc.</li>
1331 <li>Build ICU in /buildA normally (using runConfigureICU or configure):
1332<pre class="samp">cd /buildA
1333sh /icu/source/runConfigureICU <strong>MacOSX</strong>
1334gnumake
1335</pre>
1336 </li>
1337 <li>Set PATH or other variables as needed, such as CPPFLAGS.</li>
1338 <li>Build ICU in /buildB<br />
1339 <div class="note"><b>Note:</b> "<code>--with-cross-build</code>" takes an absolute path.</div>
1340<pre class="samp">cd /buildB
1341sh /icu/source/configure --host=<strong>i586-pc-haiku</strong> --with-cross-build=<strong>/buildA</strong>
1342gnumake</pre>
1343 </li>
1344 <li>Tests and testdata can be built with "gnumake tests".</li>
1345 </ol>
1346 <!-- end cross -->
1347
1348 <!-- end build environment -->
1349
1350 <h2><a name="HowToPackage" href="#HowToPackage" id="HowToPackage">How To
1351 Package ICU</a></h2>
1352
1353 <p>There are many ways that a person can package ICU with their software
1354 products. Usually only the libraries need to be considered for packaging.</p>
1355
1356 <p>On UNIX, you should use "<tt>gmake install</tt>" to make it easier to
1357 develop and package ICU. The bin, lib and include directories are needed to
1358 develop applications that use ICU. These directories will be created relative
1359 to the "<tt>--prefix=</tt><i>dir</i>" configure option (See the <a href=
1360 "#HowToBuildUNIX">UNIX build instructions</a>). When ICU is built on Windows,
1361 a similar directory structure is built.</p>
1362
1363 <p>When changes have been made to the standard ICU distribution, it is
1364 recommended that at least one of the following guidelines be followed for
1365 special packaging.</p>
1366
1367 <ol>
1368 <li>Add a suffix name to the library names. This can be done with the
1369 --with-library-suffix configure option.</li>
1370
1371 <li>The installation script should install the ICU libraries into the
1372 application's directory.</li>
1373 </ol>
1374
1375 <p>Following these guidelines prevents other applications that use a standard
1376 ICU distribution from conflicting with any libraries that you need. On
1377 operating systems that do not have a standard C++ ABI (name mangling) for
1378 compilers, it is recommended to do this special packaging anyway. More
1379 details on customizing ICU are available in the <a href=
1380 "http://userguide.icu-project.org/">User's Guide</a>. The <a href=
1381 "#SourceCode">ICU Source Code Organization</a> section of this readme.html
1382 gives a more complete description of the libraries.</p>
1383
1384 <table class="docTable" summary=
1385 "ICU has several libraries for you to use.">
1386 <caption>
1387 Here is an example of libraries that are frequently packaged.
1388 </caption>
1389
1390 <tr>
1391 <th scope="col">Library Name</th>
1392
1393 <th scope="col">Windows Filename</th>
1394
1395 <th scope="col">Linux Filename</th>
1396
1397 <th scope="col">Comment</th>
1398 </tr>
1399
1400 <tr>
1401 <td>Data Library</td>
1402
1403 <td>icudt<i>XY</i>l.dll</td>
1404
1405 <td>libicudata.so.<i>XY</i>.<i>Z</i></td>
1406
1407 <td>Data required by the Common and I18n libraries. There are many ways
1408 to package and <a href=
1409 "http://userguide.icu-project.org/icudata">customize this
1410 data</a>, but by default this is all you need.</td>
1411 </tr>
1412
1413 <tr>
1414 <td>Common Library</td>
1415
1416 <td>icuuc<i>XY</i>.dll</td>
1417
1418 <td>libicuuc.so.<i>XY</i>.<i>Z</i></td>
1419
1420 <td>Base library required by all other ICU libraries.</td>
1421 </tr>
1422
1423 <tr>
1424 <td>Internationalization (i18n) Library</td>
1425
1426 <td>icuin<i>XY</i>.dll</td>
1427
1428 <td>libicui18n.so.<i>XY</i>.<i>Z</i></td>
1429
1430 <td>A library that contains many locale based internationalization (i18n)
1431 functions.</td>
1432 </tr>
1433
1434 <tr>
1435 <td>Layout Engine</td>
1436
1437 <td>icule<i>XY</i>.dll</td>
1438
1439 <td>libicule.so.<i>XY</i>.<i>Z</i></td>
1440
1441 <td>An optional engine for doing font layout.</td>
1442 </tr>
1443
1444 <tr>
1445 <td>Layout Extensions Engine</td>
1446
1447 <td>iculx<i>XY</i>.dll</td>
1448
1449 <td>libiculx.so.<i>XY</i>.<i>Z</i></td>
1450
1451 <td>An optional engine for doing font layout that uses parts of ICU.</td>
1452 </tr>
1453
1454 <tr>
1455 <td>ICU I/O (Unicode stdio) Library</td>
1456
1457 <td>icuio<i>XY</i>.dll</td>
1458
1459 <td>libicuio.so.<i>XY</i>.<i>Z</i></td>
1460
1461 <td>An optional library that provides a stdio like API with Unicode
1462 support.</td>
1463 </tr>
1464
1465 <tr>
1466 <td>Tool Utility Library</td>
1467
1468 <td>icutu<i>XY</i>.dll</td>
1469
1470 <td>libicutu.so.<i>XY</i>.<i>Z</i></td>
1471
1472 <td>An internal library that contains internal APIs that are only used by
1473 ICU's tools. If you do not use ICU's tools, you do not need this
1474 library.</td>
1475 </tr>
1476 </table>
1477
1478 <p>Normally only the above ICU libraries need to be considered for packaging.
1479 The versionless symbolic links to these libraries are only needed for easier
1480 development. The <i>X</i>, <i>Y</i> and <i>Z</i> parts of the name are the
1481 version numbers of ICU. For example, ICU 2.0.2 would have the name
1482 libicuuc.so.20.2 for the common library. The exact format of the library
1483 names can vary between platforms due to how each platform can handles library
1484 versioning.</p>
1485
1486 <h2><a name="ImportantNotes" href="#ImportantNotes" id=
1487 "ImportantNotes">Important Notes About Using ICU</a></h2>
1488
1489 <h3><a name="ImportantNotesMultithreaded" href="#ImportantNotesMultithreaded"
1490 id="ImportantNotesMultithreaded">Using ICU in a Multithreaded
1491 Environment</a></h3>
1492
1493 <p>Some versions of ICU require calling the <code>u_init()</code> function
1494 from <code>uclean.h</code> to ensure that ICU is initialized properly. In
1495 those ICU versions, <code>u_init()</code> must be called before ICU is used
1496 from multiple threads. There is no harm in calling <code>u_init()</code> in a
1497 single-threaded application, on a single-CPU machine, or in other cases where
1498 <code>u_init()</code> is not required.</p>
1499
1500 <p>In addition to ensuring thread safety, <code>u_init()</code> also attempts
1501 to load at least one ICU data file. Assuming that all data files are packaged
1502 together (or are in the same folder in files mode), a failure code from
1503 <code>u_init()</code> usually means that the data cannot be found. In this
1504 case, the data may not be installed properly, or the application may have
1505 failed to call <code>udata_setCommonData()</code> or
1506 <code>u_setDataDirectory()</code> which specify to ICU where it can find its
1507 data.</p>
1508
1509 <p>Since <code>u_init()</code> will load only one or two data files, it
1510 cannot guarantee that all of the data that an application needs is available.
1511 It cannot check for all data files because the set of files is customizable,
1512 and some ICU services work without loading any data at all. An application
1513 should always check for error codes when opening ICU service objects (using
1514 <code>ucnv_open()</code>, <code>ucol_open()</code>, C++ constructors,
1515 etc.).</p>
1516
1517 <h4>ICU 3.4 and later</h4>
1518
1519 <p>ICU 3.4 self-initializes properly for multi-threaded use. It achieves this
1520 without performance penalty by hardcoding the core Unicode properties data,
1521 at the cost of some flexibility. (For details see Jitterbug 4497.)</p>
1522
1523 <p><code>u_init()</code> can be used to check for data loading. It tries to
1524 load the converter alias table (<code>cnvalias.icu</code>).</p>
1525
1526 <h4>ICU 2.6..3.2</h4>
1527
1528 <p>These ICU versions require a call to <code>u_init()</code> before
1529 multi-threaded use. The services that are directly affected are those that
1530 don't have a service object and need to be fast: normalization and character
1531 properties.</p>
1532
1533 <p><code>u_init()</code> loads and initializes the data files for
1534 normalization and character properties (<code>unorm.icu</code> and
1535 <code>uprops.icu</code>) and can therefore also be used to check for data
1536 loading.</p>
1537
1538 <h4>ICU 2.4 and earlier</h4>
1539
1540 <p>ICU 2.4 and earlier versions were not prepared for multithreaded use on
1541 multi-CPU platforms where the CPUs implement weak memory coherency. These
1542 CPUs include: Power4, Power5, Alpha, Itanium. <code>u_init()</code> was not
1543 defined yet.</p>
1544
1545 <h4><a name="ImportantNotesHPUX" href="#ImportantNotesHPUX" id=
1546 "ImportantNotesHPUX">Using ICU in a Multithreaded Environment on
1547 HP-UX</a></h4>
1548
1549 <p>When ICU is built with aCC on HP-UX, the <a
1550 href="http://h21007.www2.hp.com/portal/site/dspp/menuitem.863c3e4cbcdc3f3515b49c108973a801?ciid=eb08b3f1eee02110b3f1eee02110275d6e10RCRD">-AA</a>
1551 compiler flag is used. It is required in order to use the latest
1552 <iostream> API in a thread safe manner. This compiler flag affects the
1553 version of the C++ library being used. Your applications will also need to
1554 be compiled with -AA in order to use ICU.</p>
1555
1556 <h4><a name="ImportantNotesSolaris" href="#ImportantNotesSolaris" id=
1557 "ImportantNotesSolaris">Using ICU in a Multithreaded Environment on
1558 Solaris</a></h4>
1559
1560 <h5>Linking on Solaris</h5>
1561
1562 <p>In order to avoid synchronization and threading issues, developers are
1563 <strong>suggested</strong> to strictly follow the compiling and linking
1564 guidelines for multithreaded applications, specified in the following
1565 document from Sun Microsystems. Most notably, pay strict attention to the
1566 following statements from Sun:</p>
1567
1568 <blockquote>
1569 <p>To use libthread, specify -lthread before -lc on the ld command line, or
1570 last on the cc command line.</p>
1571
1572 <p>To use libpthread, specify -lpthread before -lc on the ld command line,
1573 or last on the cc command line.</p>
1574 </blockquote>
1575
1576 <p>Failure to do this may cause spurious lock conflicts, recursive mutex
1577 failure, and deadlock.</p>
1578
1579 <p>Source: "<i>Solaris Multithreaded Programming Guide, Compiling and
1580 Debugging</i>", Sun Microsystems, Inc., Apr 2004<br />
1581 <a href=
1582 "http://docs.sun.com/app/docs/doc/816-5137/6mba5vpke?a=view">http://docs.sun.com/app/docs/doc/816-5137/6mba5vpke?a=view</a></p>
1583
1584 <h3><a name="ImportantNotesWindows" href="#ImportantNotesWindows" id=
1585 "ImportantNotesWindows">Windows Platform</a></h3>
1586
1587 <p>If you are building on the Win32 platform, it is important that you
1588 understand a few of the following build details.</p>
1589
1590 <h4>DLL directories and the PATH setting</h4>
1591
1592 <p>As delivered, the International Components for Unicode build as several
1593 DLLs, which are placed in the "<i><ICU></i>\bin" directory. You must
1594 add this directory to the PATH environment variable in your system, or any
1595 executables you build will not be able to access International Components for
1596 Unicode libraries. Alternatively, you can copy the DLL files into a directory
1597 already in your PATH, but we do not recommend this. You can wind up with
1598 multiple copies of the DLL and wind up using the wrong one.</p>
1599
1600 <h4><a name="ImportantNotesWindowsPath" id=
1601 "ImportantNotesWindowsPath">Changing your PATH</a></h4>
1602
1603 <p><strong>Windows 2000/XP</strong>: Use the System Icon in the Control
1604 Panel. Pick the "Advanced" tab. Select the "Environment Variables..."
1605 button. Select the variable PATH in the lower box, and select the lower
1606 "Edit..." button. In the "Variable Value" box, append the string
1607 ";<i><ICU></i>\bin" to the end of the path string. If there is
1608 nothing there, just type in "<i><ICU></i>\bin". Click the Set button,
1609 then the OK button.</p>
1610
1611 <p>Note: When packaging a Windows application for distribution and
1612 installation on user systems, copies of the ICU DLLs should be included with
1613 the application, and installed for exclusive use by the application. This is
1614 the only way to insure that your application is running with the same version
1615 of ICU, built with exactly the same options, that you developed and tested
1616 with. Refer to Microsoft's guidelines on the usage of DLLs, or search for the
1617 phrase "DLL hell" on <a href=
1618 "http://msdn.microsoft.com/">msdn.microsoft.com</a>.</p>
1619
1620 <h3><a name="ImportantNotesUNIX" href="#ImportantNotesUNIX" id=
1621 "ImportantNotesUNIX">UNIX Type Platform</a></h3>
1622
1623 <p>If you are building on a UNIX platform, and if you are installing ICU in a
1624 non-standard location, you may need to add the location of your ICU libraries
1625 to your <strong>LD_LIBRARY_PATH</strong> or <strong>LIBPATH</strong>
1626 environment variable (or the equivalent runtime library path environment
1627 variable for your system). The ICU libraries may not link or load properly
1628 without doing this.</p>
1629
1630 <p>Note that if you do not want to have to set this variable, you may instead
1631 use the --enable-rpath option at configuration time. This option will
1632 instruct the linker to always look for the libraries where they are
1633 installed. You will need to use the appropriate linker options when linking
1634 your own applications and libraries against ICU, too. Please refer to your
1635 system's linker manual for information about runtime paths. The use of rpath
1636 also means that when building a new version of ICU you should not have an
1637 older version installed in the same place as the new version's installation
1638 directory, as the older libraries will used during the build, instead of the
1639 new ones, likely leading to an incorrectly build ICU. This is the proper
1640 behavior of rpath.</p>
1641
1642 <h2><a name="PlatformDependencies" href="#PlatformDependencies" id=
1643 "PlatformDependencies">Platform Dependencies</a></h2>
1644
1645 <h3><a name="PlatformDependenciesNew" href="#PlatformDependenciesNew" id=
1646 "PlatformDependenciesNew">Porting To A New Platform</a></h3>
1647
1648 <p>If you are using ICU's Makefiles to build ICU on a new platform, there are
1649 a few places where you will need to add or modify some files. If you need
1650 more help, you can always ask the <a href=
1651 "http://site.icu-project.org/contacts">icu-support mailing list</a>. Once
1652 you have finished porting ICU to a new platform, it is recommended that you
1653 contribute your changes back to ICU via the icu-support mailing list. This
1654 will make it easier for everyone to benefit from your work.</p>
1655
1656 <h4>Data For a New Platform</h4>
1657
1658 <p>For some people, it may not be necessary for completely build ICU. Most of
1659 the makefiles and build targets are for tools that are used for building
1660 ICU's data, and an application's data (when an application uses ICU resource
1661 bundles for its data).</p>
1662
1663 <p>Data files can be built on a different platform when both platforms share
1664 the same endianness and the same charset family. This assertion does not
1665 include platform dependent DLLs/shared/static libraries. For details see the
1666 User Guide <a href="http://userguide.icu-project.org/icudata">ICU
1667 Data</a> chapter.</p>
1668
1669 <p>ICU 3.6 removes the requirement that ICU be completely built in the native
1670 operating environment. It adds the icupkg tool which can be run on any
1671 platform to turn binary ICU data files from any one of the three formats into
1672 any one of the other data formats. This allows a application to use ICU data
1673 built anywhere to be used for any other target platform.</p>
1674
1675 <p><strong>WARNING!</strong> Building ICU without running the tests is not
1676 recommended. The tests verify that ICU is safe to use. It is recommended that
1677 you try to completely port and test ICU before using the libraries for your
1678 own application.</p>
1679
1680 <h4>Adapting Makefiles For a New Platform</h4>
1681
1682 <p>Try to follow the build steps from the <a href="#HowToBuildUNIX">UNIX</a>
1683 build instructions. If the configure script fails, then you will need to
1684 modify some files. Here are the usual steps for porting to a new
1685 platform:<br />
1686 </p>
1687
1688 <ol>
1689 <li>Create an mh file in icu/source/config/. You can use mh-linux or a
1690 similar mh file as your base configuration.</li>
1691
1692 <li>Modify icu/source/aclocal.m4 to recognize your platform's mh file.</li>
1693
1694 <li>Modify icu/source/configure.in to properly set your <b>platform</b> C
1695 Macro define.</li>
1696
1697 <li>Run <a href="http://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/">autoconf</a> in
1698 icu/source/ without any options. The autoconf tool is standard on most
1699 Linux systems.</li>
1700
1701 <li>If you have any optimization options that you want to normally use, you
1702 can modify icu/source/runConfigureICU to specify those options for your
1703 platform.</li>
1704
1705 <li>Build and test ICU on your platform. It is very important that you run
1706 the tests. If you don't run the tests, there is no guarentee that you have
1707 properly ported ICU.</li>
1708 </ol>
1709
1710 <h3><a name="PlatformDependenciesImpl" href="#PlatformDependenciesImpl" id=
1711 "PlatformDependenciesImpl">Platform Dependent Implementations</a></h3>
1712
1713 <p>The platform dependencies have been mostly isolated into the following
1714 files in the common library. This information can be useful if you are
1715 porting ICU to a new platform.</p>
1716
1717 <ul>
1718 <li>
1719 <strong>unicode/platform.h.in</strong> (autoconf'ed platforms)<br />
1720 <strong>unicode/p<i>XXXX</i>.h</strong> (others: pwin32.h, ppalmos.h,
1721 ..): Platform-dependent typedefs and defines:<br />
1722 <br />
1723
1724
1725 <ul>
1726 <li>Generic types like UBool, int8_t, int16_t, int32_t, int64_t,
1727 uint64_t etc.</li>
1728
1729 <li>U_EXPORT and U_IMPORT for specifying dynamic library import and
1730 export</li>
1731
1732 <li>String handling support for the char16_t and wchar_t types.</li>
1733 </ul>
1734 <br />
1735 </li>
1736
1737 <li>
1738 <strong>unicode/putil.h, putil.c</strong>: platform-dependent
1739 implementations of various functions that are platform dependent:<br />
1740 <br />
1741
1742
1743 <ul>
1744 <li>uprv_isNaN, uprv_isInfinite, uprv_getNaN and uprv_getInfinity for
1745 handling special floating point values.</li>
1746
1747 <li>uprv_tzset, uprv_timezone, uprv_tzname and time for getting
1748 platform specific time and time zone information.</li>
1749
1750 <li>u_getDataDirectory for getting the default data directory.</li>
1751
1752 <li>uprv_getDefaultLocaleID for getting the default locale
1753 setting.</li>
1754
1755 <li>uprv_getDefaultCodepage for getting the default codepage
1756 encoding.</li>
1757 </ul>
1758 <br />
1759 </li>
1760
1761 <li>
1762 <strong>umutex.h, umutex.c</strong>: Code for doing synchronization in
1763 multithreaded applications. If you wish to use International Components
1764 for Unicode in a multithreaded application, you must provide a
1765 synchronization primitive that the classes can use to protect their
1766 global data against simultaneous modifications. We already supply working
1767 implementations for many platforms that ICU builds on.<br />
1768 <br />
1769 </li>
1770
1771 <li><strong>umapfile.h, umapfile.c</strong>: functions for mapping or
1772 otherwise reading or loading files into memory. All access by ICU to data
1773 from files makes use of these functions.<br />
1774 <br />
1775 </li>
1776
1777 <li>Using platform specific #ifdef macros are highly discouraged outside of
1778 the scope of these files. When the source code gets updated in the future,
1779 these #ifdef's can cause testing problems for your platform.</li>
1780 </ul>
1781 <hr />
1782
1783 <p>Copyright © 1997-2013 International Business Machines Corporation and
1784 others. All Rights Reserved.<br />
1785 IBM Globalization Center of Competency - San José<br />
1786 4400 North First Street<br />
1787 San José, CA 95134<br />
1788 USA</p>
1789 </body>
1790</html>
1791