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solaris/10-Aug-20184 KiB

README.md

1Protocol Buffers - Google's data interchange format
2===================================================
3
4[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/google/protobuf.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/google/protobuf) [![Build status](https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/73ctee6ua4w2ruin?svg=true)](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/protobuf/protobuf)
5
6Copyright 2008 Google Inc.
7
8https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/
9
10C++ Installation - Unix
11-----------------------
12
13To build protobuf from source, the following tools are needed:
14
15  * autoconf
16  * automake
17  * libtool
18  * curl (used to download gmock)
19  * make
20  * g++
21  * unzip
22
23On Ubuntu, you can install them with:
24
25  $ sudo apt-get install autoconf automake libtool curl make g++ unzip
26
27On other platforms, please use the corresponding package managing tool to
28install them before proceeding.
29
30If you get the source from github, you need to generate the configure script
31first:
32
33    $ ./autogen.sh
34
35This will download gmock source (which is used for C++ Protocol Buffer
36unit-tests) to the current directory and run automake, autoconf, etc.
37to generate the configure script and various template makefiles.
38
39You can skip this step if you are using a release package (which already
40contains gmock and the configure script).
41
42To build and install the C++ Protocol Buffer runtime and the Protocol
43Buffer compiler (protoc) execute the following:
44
45    $ ./configure
46    $ make
47    $ make check
48    $ sudo make install
49    $ sudo ldconfig # refresh shared library cache.
50
51If "make check" fails, you can still install, but it is likely that
52some features of this library will not work correctly on your system.
53Proceed at your own risk.
54
55For advanced usage information on configure and make, please refer to the
56autoconf documentation:
57
58  http://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/manual/autoconf.html#Running-configure-Scripts
59
60**Hint on install location**
61
62  By default, the package will be installed to /usr/local.  However,
63  on many platforms, /usr/local/lib is not part of LD_LIBRARY_PATH.
64  You can add it, but it may be easier to just install to /usr
65  instead.  To do this, invoke configure as follows:
66
67    ./configure --prefix=/usr
68
69  If you already built the package with a different prefix, make sure
70  to run "make clean" before building again.
71
72**Compiling dependent packages**
73
74  To compile a package that uses Protocol Buffers, you need to pass
75  various flags to your compiler and linker.  As of version 2.2.0,
76  Protocol Buffers integrates with pkg-config to manage this.  If you
77  have pkg-config installed, then you can invoke it to get a list of
78  flags like so:
79
80    pkg-config --cflags protobuf         # print compiler flags
81    pkg-config --libs protobuf           # print linker flags
82    pkg-config --cflags --libs protobuf  # print both
83
84  For example:
85
86    c++ my_program.cc my_proto.pb.cc `pkg-config --cflags --libs protobuf`
87
88  Note that packages written prior to the 2.2.0 release of Protocol
89  Buffers may not yet integrate with pkg-config to get flags, and may
90  not pass the correct set of flags to correctly link against
91  libprotobuf.  If the package in question uses autoconf, you can
92  often fix the problem by invoking its configure script like:
93
94    configure CXXFLAGS="$(pkg-config --cflags protobuf)" \
95              LIBS="$(pkg-config --libs protobuf)"
96
97  This will force it to use the correct flags.
98
99  If you are writing an autoconf-based package that uses Protocol
100  Buffers, you should probably use the PKG_CHECK_MODULES macro in your
101  configure script like:
102
103    PKG_CHECK_MODULES([protobuf], [protobuf])
104
105  See the pkg-config man page for more info.
106
107  If you only want protobuf-lite, substitute "protobuf-lite" in place
108  of "protobuf" in these examples.
109
110**Note for Mac users**
111
112  For a Mac system, Unix tools are not available by default. You will first need
113  to install Xcode from the Mac AppStore and then run the following command from
114  a terminal:
115
116    $ sudo xcode-select --install
117
118  To install Unix tools, you can install "port" following the instructions at
119  https://www.macports.org . This will reside in /opt/local/bin/port for most
120  Mac installations.
121
122    $ sudo /opt/local/bin/port install autoconf automake libtool
123
124  Then follow the Unix instructions above.
125
126**Note for cross-compiling**
127
128  The makefiles normally invoke the protoc executable that they just
129  built in order to build tests.  When cross-compiling, the protoc
130  executable may not be executable on the host machine.  In this case,
131  you must build a copy of protoc for the host machine first, then use
132  the --with-protoc option to tell configure to use it instead.  For
133  example:
134
135    ./configure --with-protoc=protoc
136
137  This will use the installed protoc (found in your $PATH) instead of
138  trying to execute the one built during the build process.  You can
139  also use an executable that hasn't been installed.  For example, if
140  you built the protobuf package for your host machine in ../host,
141  you might do:
142
143    ./configure --with-protoc=../host/src/protoc
144
145  Either way, you must make sure that the protoc executable you use
146  has the same version as the protobuf source code you are trying to
147  use it with.
148
149**Note for Solaris users**
150
151  Solaris 10 x86 has a bug that will make linking fail, complaining
152  about libstdc++.la being invalid.  We have included a work-around
153  in this package.  To use the work-around, run configure as follows:
154
155    ./configure LDFLAGS=-L$PWD/src/solaris
156
157  See src/solaris/libstdc++.la for more info on this bug.
158
159**Note for HP C++ Tru64 users**
160
161  To compile invoke configure as follows:
162
163    ./configure CXXFLAGS="-O -std ansi -ieee -D__USE_STD_IOSTREAM"
164
165  Also, you will need to use gmake instead of make.
166
167**Note for AIX users**
168
169  Compile using the IBM xlC C++ compiler as follows:
170
171    ./configure CXX=xlC
172
173  Also, you will need to use GNU `make` (`gmake`) instead of AIX `make`.
174
175C++ Installation - Windows
176--------------------------
177
178If you only need the protoc binary, you can download it from the release
179page:
180
181  https://github.com/google/protobuf/releases
182
183In the downloads section, download the zip file protoc-$VERSION-win32.zip.
184It contains the protoc binary as well as public proto files of protobuf
185library.
186
187To build from source using Microsoft Visual C++, see [cmake/README.md](../cmake/README.md).
188
189To build from source using Cygwin or MinGW, follow the Unix installation
190instructions, above.
191
192Binary Compatibility Warning
193----------------------------
194
195Due to the nature of C++, it is unlikely that any two versions of the
196Protocol Buffers C++ runtime libraries will have compatible ABIs.
197That is, if you linked an executable against an older version of
198libprotobuf, it is unlikely to work with a newer version without
199re-compiling.  This problem, when it occurs, will normally be detected
200immediately on startup of your app.  Still, you may want to consider
201using static linkage.  You can configure this package to install
202static libraries only using:
203
204    ./configure --disable-shared
205
206Usage
207-----
208
209The complete documentation for Protocol Buffers is available via the
210web at:
211
212    https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/
213