************************************************************************ * Build and Install HDF5 C/C++ Library with CMake * ************************************************************************ Notes: This short instruction is written for users who want to quickly build HDF5 library and tools from the HDF5 source code package using the CMake tools. More information about using CMake can be found at the KitWare site, www.cmake.org. CMake uses the command line, however the visual CMake tool is recommended for the configuration step. The steps are similiar for all the operating systems supported by CMake. NOTES: 1. CMake use is still experimental. While we have attempted to provide error-free files, please understand that development with CMake has just began. The CMake specific files may change before the next release. 2. CMake has been introduced to support development on Windows, however it should be usuable on any system where CMake is supported. Please send us any comments on how CMake support can be improved on any system. ======================================================================== Preconditions ======================================================================== 1. We suggest you obtain the latest CMake for windows from the Kitware web site. The HDF5 1.8.x product requires CMake version 2.8.2. 2. If you plan to use Zlib or Szip, download the packages and install them in a central location. For example on Windows, create a folder extlibs and install the packages there. Windows users should also read Section V in INSTALL_Windows.txt. ======================================================================== Building HDF5 C/C++ Libraries with CMake ======================================================================== 1. Run CMake The CMake executable is named "cmake-gui.exe" on Windows and should be available in your Start menu. For Linux, UNIX, and Mac users the executable is named "cmake-gui" and can be found where CMake was installed. Specify the source and build directories. It is recommemded that you choose a build directory different then the source directory (for example on Windows, if the source is at c:\MyHDFstuff\hdf5, then use c:\MyHDFstuff\hdf5\build or c:\MyHDFstuff\build\hdf5). OPTIONAL: Users can perform the configuration step without using the visual cmake-gui program. We use the file cacheinit.cmake in the config/cmake folder for our testing. This file enables all the basic options and we turn specific options on or off for testing using the following command line within the build directory: cmake -C /config/cmake/cacheinit.cmake -G "" [-D] Where is * Borland Makefiles * MSYS Makefiles * MinGW Makefiles * NMake Makefiles * Unix Makefiles * Visual Studio 10 * Visual Studio 10 Win64 * Visual Studio 6 * Visual Studio 7 * Visual Studio 7 .NET 2003 * Visual Studio 8 2005 * Visual Studio 8 2005 Win64 * Visual Studio 9 2008 * Visual Studio 9 2008 Win64 is: * SZIP_INCLUDE_DIR:PATH= * SZIP_LIBRARY:FILEPATH= * ZLIB_INCLUDE_DIR:PATH= * ZLIB_LIBRARY:FILEPATH= * :BOOL=[ON | OFF] is: # This is the CMakeCache file. ######################## # EXTERNAL cache entries ######################## SET (BUILD_SHARED_LIBS ON CACHE BOOL "Build Shared Libraries" FORCE) SET (BUILD_TESTING ON CACHE BOOL "Build HDF5 Unit Testing" FORCE) SET (HDF5_BUILD_CPP_LIB ON CACHE BOOL "Build HDF5 C++ Library" FORCE) SET (HDF5_BUILD_EXAMPLES ON CACHE BOOL "Build HDF5 Library Examples" FORCE) SET (HDF5_BUILD_FORTRAN ON CACHE BOOL "Build FORTRAN support" FORCE) SET (HDF5_BUILD_HL_LIB ON CACHE BOOL "Build HIGH Level HDF5 Library" FORCE) SET (HDF5_BUILD_TOOLS ON CACHE BOOL "Build HDF5 Tools" FORCE) SET (HDF5_DISABLE_COMPILER_WARNINGS OFF CACHE BOOL "Disable compiler warnings" FORCE) SET (HDF5_ENABLE_HSIZET ON CACHE BOOL "Enable datasets larger than memory" FORCE) SET (HDF5_ENABLE_PARALLEL OFF CACHE BOOL "Enable parallel build (requires MPI)" FORCE) SET (HDF5_ENABLE_SZIP_ENCODING ON CACHE BOOL "Use SZip Encoding" FORCE) SET (HDF5_ENABLE_SZIP_SUPPORT ON CACHE BOOL "Use SZip Filter" FORCE) SET (HDF5_ENABLE_Z_LIB_SUPPORT ON CACHE BOOL "Enable Zlib Filters" FORCE) SET (HDF5_USE_H5DUMP_PACKED_BITS ON CACHE BOOL "Use the PACKED BITS feature in h5dump" FORCE) SET (HDF5_ENABLE_COVERAGE OFF CACHE BOOL "Enable code coverage for Libraries and Programs" FORCE) 2. Configure the cache settings 2.1 Click the Configure button. If this is the first time you are running cmake-gui in this directory, you will be prompted for the generator you wish to use (for example on Windows, Visual Studio 9 2008). CMake will read in the CMakeLists.txt files from the source directory and display options for the HDF5 project. After the first configure you can adjust the cache settings and/or specify locations of other programs. Any conflicts or new values will be highlighted by the configure process in red. Once you are happy with all the settings and there are no more values in red, click the Generate button to produce the appropriate build files. On Windows, if you are using a Visual Studio generator, the solution and project files will be created in the build folder. On linux, if you are using the Unix Makefiles generator, the Makefiles will be created in the build folder. 2.2 Alternative command line example on Windows in c:\MyHDFstuff\hdf5\build directory: cmake -C ../config/cmake/cacheinit.cmake -G "Visual Studio 9 2008" \ -DHDF5_ENABLE_SZIP_SUPPORT:BOOL=OFF -DHDF5_ENABLE_Z_LIB_SUPPORT:BOOL=OFF .. 3. Build HDF5 On Windows, you can build HDF5 using either the Visual Studio Environment or the command line. The command line is used on linux, Unix, and Mac. To build from the command line, navigate to your build directory and execute the following; cmake --build . --config {Debug | Release} NOTE: "--config {Debug | Release}" may be optional on your platform. We recommend choosing either Debug or Release on Windows. 3.1 If you wish to use the Visual Studio environment, open the solution file in your build directory. Be sure to select either Debug or Release and build the solution. 3.2 The external libraries (zlib, szip, and jpeg) can be configured to allow building the libraries by downloading from a SVN repository. The option is 'HDF5_ALLOW_EXTERNAL_SUPPORT'; by adding the following configuration option: -DHDF5_ALLOW_EXTERNAL_SUPPORT:STRING="SVN" The options to control the SVN URL are by defualt: ZLIB_SVN_URL:STRING="http://svn.hdfgroup.uiuc.edu/zlib/trunk" SZIP_SVN_URL:STRING="http://svn.hdfgroup.uiuc.edu/szip/trunk" 4. Test HDF5. To test the build, navigate to your build directory and execute; ctest . -C {Debug | Release} NOTE: "-C {Debug | Release}" may be optional on your platform. We recommend choosing either Debug or Release to match the build step on Windows. 5. Packaging HDF5 To package the build into a simple installer using the NullSoft installer NSIS on Windows, or into compressed files (.tar.gz, .sh, .zip), use the CPack tool. To pacakage the build, navigate to your build directory and execute; cpack -C {Debug | Release} CPackConfig.cmake NOTE: We have just introduced the packaging capability and it has not been extensively tested. Please send us comments on how it can be improved. 6. The files that support building HDF5 with CMake are all the files in the config/cmake folder, the CMakeLists.txt files in each source folder, and CTestConfig.cmake. CTestConfig.cmake is specific to the internal testing performed by The HDF Group. It should be altered for the users installation and needs. 7. More information about using CMake can be found at the KitWare site, www.cmake.org. ************************************************************************ Need further assistance, send email to help@hdfgroup.org