Hash :
a90663f5
        
        Author :
  
        
        Date :
2000-07-08T00:41:13
        
      
vast clean-up of the sources in order to allow flat directory compilation (by defining the FT_FLAT_COMPILE macro at compile time..) moved "freetype2/BUILD" to "freetype2/docs/BUILD"
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264
FreeType 2 compilation how-to
Introduction:
Welcome to this new beta of the FreeType 2 library. You'll find in this
document instructions on how to compile the library on your favorite
platform.
  *** UNIX USERS : Even though the FT2 build system doesn't
  ************** : use the Autoconf/Automake tools, these will
  ************** : be introduced in the Unix-specific parts of
  ************** : the build in our final release..
I. QUICK COMMAND-LINE GUIDE:
----------------------------
  Install GNU Make, then try the following on Unix or any system with gcc:
     make    // this will setup the build
     make    // this will build the library
  On Win32+Visual C++:
     make setup visualc    // setup the build for VisualC++ on Win32
     make                  // build the library
  Then, go to the "demos" directory and type
     make
  To compile the demo programs..
  If this doesn't work, read the following..
II. COMMAND-LINE COMPILATION:
-----------------------------
  Note that if you do not want to compile FreeType 2 from a command line
  shell, please skip to section III below (DETAILED COMPILATION)
  FreeType 2 includes a powerful and flexible build system that allows you
  to easily compile it on a great variety of platforms from the command
  line. To do so, just follow these simple instructions:
  a/ Install GNU Make:
     Because GNU Make is the only Make tool supported to compile FreeType 2,
     you should install it on your machine.
     Because the FT2 build system relies on many important features of GNU
     Make, trying to build the library with any other Make tool will *fail*.
  b/ Invoke "make":
     Go to the root FT2 directory, then simply invoke GNU Make from the
     command line, this will launch the FreeType 2 Host Platform detection
     routines. A summary will be displayed, for example, on Win32:
     ========================================================================
        FreeType build system -- automatic system detection
        The following settings are used:
          platform                     win32
          compiler                     gcc
          configuration directory      ./builds/win32
          configuration rules          ./builds/win32/w32-gcc.mk
        If this does not correspond to your system or settings please remove
        the file 'config.mk' from this directory then read the INSTALL file
        for help.
        Otherwise, simply type 'make' again to build the library.
     =========================================================================
     If the detected settings correspond to your platform and compiler,
     skip to step e/. Note that if your platform is completely alien to
     the build system, the detected platform will be "ansi".
  c/ Configure the build system for a different compiler:
     If the build system correctly detected your platform, but you want to
     use a different compiler than the one specified in the summary (for
     most platforms, gcc is the defaut compiler), simply invoke GNU Make
     like :
         make setup <compiler>
     For example:
            to use Visual C++ on Win32, type:  "make setup visualc"
            to use LCC-Win32 on Win32, type:   "make setup lcc"
     The <compiler> name to use is platform-dependent. The list of available
     compilers for your system is available in the file
     "builds/<system>/detect.mk" (note that we hope to make the list
     displayed at user demand in the final release)..
     If you're satisfying by the new configuration summary, skip to step e/
  d/ Configure the build system for an unknown platform/compiler:
     What the auto-detection/setup phase of the build system does is simply
     copy a file to the current directory under the name "config.mk".
     For example, on OS/2+gcc, it would simply copy "builds/os2/os2-gcc.mk"
     to "./config.mk"
     If for some reason your platform isn't correctly detected, simply copy
     manually the configuration sub-makefile to "./config.mk" and go to
     step e/.
     Note that this file is a sub-Makefile used to specify Make variables
     used to invoke the compiler and linker during the build, you can easily
     create your own version from one of the existing configuration files,
     then copy it to the current directory under the name "./config.mk".
  e/ Build the library:
     The auto-detection/setup phase should have copied a file in the current
     directory, called "./config.mk". This file contains definitions of various
     Make variables used to invoke the compiler and linker during the build.
     To launch the build, simply invoke GNU Make again: the top Makefile will
     detect the configuration file and run the build with it..
  f/ Build the demonstration programs:
     Once the library is compiled, go to "demos", then invoke GNU Make.
     Note that the demonstration programs include a tiny graphics sub-system
     that includes "drivers" to display Windows on Win32, X11 and OS/2. The
     build system should automatically detect which driver to use based on
     the current platform.
     UNIX USERS TAKE NOTE: XXXXXX
     When building the demos, the build system tries to detect your X11 path
     by looking for the patterns "X11R5/bin", "X11R6/bin" or "X11/bin" in
     your current path. If no X11 path is found, the demo programs will not
     be able to display graphics and will fail. Change your current path
     if you encounter this problem.
     Note that the release version will use Autoconf to detect everything
     on Unix, so this will not be necessary !!
II. DETAILED COMPILATION PROCEDURE:
-----------------------------------
  If you don't want to compile FreeType 2 from the command-line (for example
  from a graphical IDE on a Mac or Windows), you'll need to understand how the
  FreeType files are organized.
  FreeType 2 has a very module design, and it is made of several components.
  Each component must be compiled as a stand-alone object file, even when it
  is really made of several C source files. For example, the "base layer"
  component is made of the following C files:
    src/
      base/
        ftcalc.c    - computations
        ftobjs.c    - object management
        ftstream.c  - stream input
        ftlist.c    - simple list management
        ftoutln.c   - simple outline processing
        ftextend.c  - extensions support
  However, you can create a single object file by compiling the file
  "src/base/ftbase.c", whose content is basically:
        #include <base/ftcalc.c>
        #include <base/ftobjs.c>
        #include <base/ftstream.c>
        #include <base/ftlist.c>
        #include <base/ftoutln.c>
        #include <base/ftextend.c>
  Similarly, each component has a single "englobing" C file to compile it
  as a stand-alone object, i.e. :
     src/base/ftbase.c         - the base layer, high-level interface
     src/sfnt/sfnt.c           - the "sfnt" module
     src/psnames/psnames.c     - the Postscript Names module
     src/truetype/truetype.c   - the TrueType font driver
     src/type1/type1.c         - the Type 1 font driver
  To compile one component, do the following:
   - add the top-level "include" directory to your compilation include path
   - add the "src" directory to your compilation include path.
   - compile the component "source" file (see list below), you don't need
     to be in the component's directory..
  For example, the following line can be used to compile the truetype driver
  on Unix:
     cd freetype2/
     cc -c -Iinclude -Isrc  src/truetype/truetype.c
  Alternatively:
     cd freetype2/src/truetype
     cc -c -I../../include -I.. truetype.c
  The complete list of files to compile for a feature-complete build of
  FreeType 2 is:
     src/base/ftsystem.c         - system-specific memory and i/o support
     src/base/ftinit.c           - initialisation layer
     src/base/ftdebug.c          - debugging component (empty in release build)
     src/base/ftbase.c           - the "base layer" component
     src/base/ftglyph.c          - optional convenience functions
     src/raster1/raster1.c       - the monochrome bitmap renderer
     src/smooth/smooth.c         - the anti-aliased bitmap renderer
     src/sfnt/sfnt.c             - the "sfnt" module
     src/psnames/psnames.c       - the "psnames" module
     src/truetype/truetype.c     - the TrueType font driver
     src/type1/type1.c           - the Type 1 font driver (incl. Multiple Masters)
     src/cid/type1cid.c          - the Type 1 CID-keyed font driver
     src/cff/cff.c               - the OpenType/CFF/CEF font driver
     src/winfonts/winfnt.c       - the Windows FNT/FON font driver
  All font drivers are optional. the "sfnt" and "psnames" modules are
  mandatory for certain drivers.
III. Support for flat-directory compilation:
----------------------------------------
  It is now possible to put all FreeType 2 source files into a single
  directory, with the exception of the "include" hierarchy.
  Note that you'll still need to only compile the 'wrapper' sources described
  above. Define the "FT_FLAT_COMPILE" macro when compiling. Here's an
  example:
  
   1/ Copy all files in current directory:
   
     cp freetype2/src/base/*.[hc] .
     cp freetype2/src/raster1/*.[hc] .
     cp freetype2/src/smooth/*.[hc] .
     etc...
   2/ Compile sources:
        
     cc -c -DFT_FLAT_COMPILE -Ifreetype/include ftsystem.c
     cc -c -DFT_FLAT_COMPILE -Ifreetype/include ftinit.c
     cc -c -DFT_FLAT_COMPILE -Ifreetype/include ftdebug.c
     cc -c -DFT_FLAT_COMPILE -Ifreetype/include ftbase.c
     etc...