Difference between revisions of "Building the Viewer with Autobuild"

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   -A {32,64}, --address-size {32,64}
   -A {32,64}, --address-size {32,64}
or you can set the environment variable AUTOBUILD_ADDRSIZE to either 32 or 64
or you can set the environment variable AUTOBUILD_ADDRSIZE to either 32 or 64
===Select Build Variables===
In order to make it easier to build collections of related packages (such as the viewer and all the library packages that it imports) with the same compilation options, the autobuild source_environment command expects a file of variable definitions. This can be set using the environmenat variable AUTOBUILD_VARIABLES_FILE
export AUTOBUILD_VARIABLES_FILE=''<path-to-your-variables-file>''
In the Linden viewer builds, that file is in the repository
https://bitbucket.org/lindenlab/viewer-build-variables
You will need to clone a copy of that repository and set the environment variable to point to the <tt>variables</tt> file in the top level of your working copy.; modify it with caution or you may need to recompile all the packages...


=== Build a desired configuration ===
=== Build a desired configuration ===

Revision as of 14:05, 16 June 2017


Install autobuild

KBwarning.png Warning: If you are building for Windows go here Viewer_2_Microsoft_Windows_Builds and do not follow these instructions.

If you haven't done so already, install autobuild. Full documentation can be found on the Autobuild page.

Set desired address size

As of autobuild 1.1, you must specify the desired pointer size for your builds.

You can use the argument:

 -A {32,64}, --address-size {32,64}

or you can set the environment variable AUTOBUILD_ADDRSIZE to either 32 or 64

Select Build Variables

In order to make it easier to build collections of related packages (such as the viewer and all the library packages that it imports) with the same compilation options, the autobuild source_environment command expects a file of variable definitions. This can be set using the environmenat variable AUTOBUILD_VARIABLES_FILE

export AUTOBUILD_VARIABLES_FILE=<path-to-your-variables-file>

In the Linden viewer builds, that file is in the repository

https://bitbucket.org/lindenlab/viewer-build-variables

You will need to clone a copy of that repository and set the environment variable to point to the variables file in the top level of your working copy.; modify it with caution or you may need to recompile all the packages...

Build a desired configuration

With a properly configured developer machine (see compiling), building the viewer with autobuild is as simple as invoking

 autobuild build -c [CONFIGURATION]

where CONFIGURATION stands for the build configuration you would like to build. The build configurations defined in the viewer's autobuild.xml file follow some simple conventions which we describe below. As a developer you should choose the appropriate build configuration for your needs. After a build has completed, the resulting product will be found in the build directory named build-* where the * is wildcard representing the platform dependent part of the name.

Developers who wish to build a viewer with an IDE don't have to do a full command line build. Using

 autobuild configure -c [CONFIGURATION]

Will install any dependencies (if the build configuration uses them) and construct an appropriate project or solution file (.xcodeproj for mac and .sln for windows) inside the build directory.

Linden build configurations

There are two basic types of build configurations which are used to vary the debuggability of the resulting build versus optimization. These configurations are:

  • RelWithDebInfo — optimized but with debugging information.
  • Release — optimized with no debug information.

RelWithDebInfo is usually easy to debug, but code optimizations may occasionally make tracking program flow in a debugger challenging. Release is used for building a shipping version of the viewer; it may be hard to debug because it does not preserve all debugging information.

Installables

Lindens please see also https://wiki.lindenlab.com/wiki/Autobuild/Installables .

Configurations for non-Linden developers

The unmodified build configurations defined in the previous section are configured for use by Linden developers and may require access to installables which are not publicly available. For open source developers a variation is provided to support development by third parties using special configuration names that end in OS. For example, to build a viewer with release optimization including debug information run

autobuild build -c RelWithDebInfoOS

Note that there might still be issues with FMOD in the *OS builds. One possible fix is to explicitly disable the improper download of FMOD using

autobuild build  -c ReleaseOS -- -DFMOD:BOOL=FALSE

Use no installables

KBwarning.png Warning: Building with system libraries rather than autobuild installables is not officially supported. Thus, it is not tested routinely and might be broken any time.

It is possible to build the viewer only using libraries installed to your system, rather than installing Linden Lab-supplied installables into the source tree checkout. For historic reasons, this is known as a "STANDALONE" build. (See What does 'Standalone' mean? on the Linux specific build instructions page.)

KBcaution.png Important: To build "STANDALONE", you have to install any 3rd party dependencies manually.

There are no separate build configurations for STANDALONE. Instead, you may use the *OS configurations and manually switch the STANDALONE CMake variable to ON. For example, to build a viewer with release optimization including debug information run

autobuild configure -c RelWithDebInfoOS -- -DSTANDALONE=ON
autobuild build -c RelWithDebInfoOS --no-configure

Custom builds

If none of the predefined build configurations matches your needs, you have two options for building with exactly the options you need. If you just need to pass an extra configuration option, you should first run the configure command with the following syntax

 autobuild configure -c [build configuration] -- [Option, [Option...]]

Options which appear after the -- are passed through to the configuration command. Now you may build using

 autobuild build -c [build configuration] --no-configure -- [Option, [Option]]

passing any options that should be forwarded to the build command after the --. Using the --no-configure option prevents the configure step from being run again (potentially reverting any option you passed) during the build step.

Alternatively you may add a new configuration to the autobuild.xml configuration file using

 autobuild edit configure

and

 autobuild edit  build

to interactively create new configure and build configurations. More information on creating these configurations may be found in the Autobuild_How_To page.