NDir -- Nice Directory Compile and Installation Guide (version 0.8.4) If you got a binary package of NDir, install it with the respective tool (rpm)! System Requirements: What you need ================================== * A POSIX compliant UNIX system (e.g. Linux). * The GNU version of the make utility -- the Makefiles uses some of its special features. * A C++ compiler supporting Standard C++. * The C library and the C++ standard library. NDir has been successfully compiled with: * EGCS 2.91.66 (GNU C++ standard library 2.9) * Previous versions were compiled with GCC (the GNU C/C++ compiler) version 2.7.2.3 (GNU C++ standard library ver. 2.7). This compiler is not actively supported anymore. Compiling NDir ============== After having unpacked NDir (if neccessary), change to NDir's main directory. If you use the GNU C++ standard library 2.7, edit the (top-level) Makefile and remove comments from the line saying "... GNU_CPPSTDLIB_VER27 ...". (This is neccessary due to renamed methods in the string class.) Also check some other settings at the top of the top-level makefile. If you plan an installation for multiple systems in a common filesystem, read about "multiple machine type option" below. Type make to compile the program. In case you are using GCC 2.7.2.x, the compiler will issue lots of warnings about namespaces. You can safely ignore them (I hope...). Installation ============ If the compilation was successful, decide where you want NDir to be installed. Edit the (top-level) Makefile: Set the variable 'prefix' to the directory where the program should be installed (files will actually be installed in some of its subdirectories). Make sure you have write permission to that directory. As make will write four files named 'ndir', 'lw', 'lw' and 'uninstall-ndir' in the 'bin' subdirectory and the man pages in the man/man1 subdirectory, make sure no existing files will be overwritten that you want to keep!!! make does not warn you! Then, type make install to install NDir An alternative to editing the Makefile would be calling make as follows: make prefix=... install lw and lv are alternative names for ndir, from which lv has the meaning of ndir -l. If you do not want the abbreviations (lw, lv), just remove the symbolic links. Unistallation ============= Beginning with version 0.5.4, NDir comes with an unstallation script. Just execute 'unistall-ndir' from the installation directory. Installation with multiple machine type option ============================================== NDir supports to be installed for more than one platform in a common directory tree. You will not need this feature unless you are using a network of computers of different platform that share a common filesystem. To use this feature, edit the Makefile and set the multi_machine_mode variable to 'y', then set the installation prefix if neccessary (do this only once to get everything installed in a common directory tree). Compilation and installation then goes as follows: Call 'make clean', then compile and install NDir as explained above. Repeat these steps for every platform you want to use. The binary will be installed in the bin/MACHINE subdirectory, where MACHINE is the value obtained by a call to 'uname -m'. Finally, ensure this directory is included in your PATH (the right one on each platform!).