8 1.2. Platform-specific notes
15 1.3. Adding support for new platforms
17 2.1. Static vs. dynamic linking of liblzma
18 2.2. Optimizing xzdec and lzmadec
19 3. xzgrep and other scripts
23 4.1. "No C99 compiler was found."
24 4.2. "No POSIX conforming shell (sh) was found."
25 4.3. configure works but build fails at crc32_x86.S
26 4.4. Lots of warnings about symbol visibility
32 If you aren't familiar with building packages that use GNU Autotools,
33 see the file INSTALL.generic for generic instructions before reading
36 If you are going to build a package for distribution, see also the
37 file PACKAGERS. It contains information that should help making the
38 binary packages as good as possible, but the information isn't very
39 interesting to those making local builds for private use or for use
40 in special situations like embedded systems.
43 1. Supported platforms
44 ----------------------
46 XZ Utils are developed on GNU/Linux, but they should work on many
47 POSIX-like operating systems like *BSDs and Solaris, and even on
48 a few non-POSIX operating systems.
53 A C99 compiler is required to compile XZ Utils. If you use GCC, you
54 need at least version 3.x.x. GCC version 2.xx.x doesn't support some
55 C99 features used in XZ Utils source code, thus GCC 2 won't compile
58 XZ Utils takes advantage of some GNU C extensions when building
59 with GCC. Because these extensions are used only when building
60 with GCC, it should be possible to use any C99 compiler.
63 1.2. Platform-specific notes
67 MIPSpro 7.4.4m has been reported to produce broken code if using
68 the -O2 optimization flag ("make check" fails). Using -O1 should
71 A problem has been reported when using shared liblzma. Passing
72 --disable-shared to configure works around this. Alternatively,
73 putting "-64" to CFLAGS to build a 64-bit version might help too.
78 The default install of MINIX 3 includes Amsterdam Compiler Kit (ACK),
79 which doesn't support C99. Install GCC to compile XZ Utils.
81 MINIX 3.1.8 (and possibly some other versions too) has bugs in
82 /usr/include/stdint.h, which has to be patched before XZ Utils
83 can be compiled correctly. See
84 <http://gforge.cs.vu.nl/gf/project/minix/tracker/?action=TrackerItemEdit&tracker_item_id=537>.
86 XZ Utils doesn't have code to detect the amount of physical RAM and
87 number of CPU cores on MINIX 3.
89 See section 4.4 in this file about symbol visibility warnings (you
90 may want to pass gl_cv_cc_visibility=no to configure).
95 XZ Utils can be built for OpenVMS, but the build system files
96 are not included in the XZ Utils source package. The required
97 OpenVMS-specific files are maintained by Jouk Jansen and can be
100 http://nchrem.tnw.tudelft.nl/openvms/software2.html#xzutils
105 If you try to use the native C compiler on Tru64 (passing CC=cc to
106 configure), you may need the workaround mention in section 4.1 in
107 this file (pass also ac_cv_prog_cc_c99= to configure).
112 Building XZ Utils on Windows is supported under MinGW + MSYS,
113 MinGW-w64 + MSYS, and Cygwin. There is windows/build.bash to
114 ease packaging XZ Utils with MinGW(-w64) + MSYS into a
115 redistributable .zip or .7z file. See windows/INSTALL-Windows.txt
116 for more information.
118 It might be possible to build liblzma with a non-GNU toolchain too,
119 but that will probably require writing a separate makefile. Building
120 the command line tools with non-GNU toolchains will be harder than
121 building only liblzma.
123 Even if liblzma is built with MinGW, the resulting DLL or static
124 library can be used by other compilers and linkers, including MSVC.
125 Thus, it shouldn't be a problem to use MinGW to build liblzma even
126 if you cannot use MinGW to build the rest of your project. See
127 windows/README-Windows.txt for details.
132 There is an experimental Makefile in the "dos" directory to build
133 XZ Utils on DOS using DJGPP. Support for long file names (LFN) is
134 needed. See dos/README for more information.
136 GNU Autotools based build hasn't been tried on DOS. If you try, I
137 would like to hear if it worked.
140 1.3. Adding support for new platforms
142 If you have written patches to make XZ Utils to work on previously
143 unsupported platform, please send the patches to me! I will consider
144 including them to the official version. It's nice to minimize the
145 need of third-party patching.
147 One exception: Don't request or send patches to change the whole
148 source package to C89. I find C99 substantially nicer to write and
149 maintain. However, the public library headers must be in C89 to
150 avoid frustrating those who maintain programs, which are strictly
157 In most cases, the defaults are what you want. Many of the options
158 below are useful only when building a size-optimized version of
159 liblzma or command line tools.
161 --enable-encoders=LIST
163 Specify a comma-separated LIST of filter encoders to
164 build. See "./configure --help" for exact list of
165 available filter encoders. The default is to build all
168 If LIST is empty or --disable-encoders is used, no filter
169 encoders will be built and also the code shared between
170 encoders will be omitted.
172 Disabling encoders will remove some symbols from the
173 liblzma ABI, so this option should be used only when it
174 is known to not cause problems.
176 --enable-decoders=LIST
178 This is like --enable-encoders but for decoders. The
179 default is to build all supported decoders.
181 --enable-match-finders=LIST
182 liblzma includes two categories of match finders:
183 hash chains and binary trees. Hash chains (hc3 and hc4)
184 are quite fast but they don't provide the best compression
185 ratio. Binary trees (bt2, bt3 and bt4) give excellent
186 compression ratio, but they are slower and need more
187 memory than hash chains.
189 You need to enable at least one match finder to build the
190 LZMA1 or LZMA2 filter encoders. Usually hash chains are
191 used only in the fast mode, while binary trees are used to
192 when the best compression ratio is wanted.
194 The default is to build all the match finders if LZMA1
195 or LZMA2 filter encoders are being built.
198 liblzma support multiple integrity checks. CRC32 is
199 mandatory, and cannot be omitted. See "./configure --help"
200 for exact list of available integrity check types.
202 liblzma and the command line tools can decompress files
203 which use unsupported integrity check type, but naturally
204 the file integrity cannot be verified in that case.
206 Disabling integrity checks may remove some symbols from
207 the liblzma ABI, so this option should be used only when
208 it is known to not cause problems.
214 Don't build and install the command line tool mentioned
217 NOTE: Disabling xz will skip some tests in "make check".
219 NOTE: If xzdec is disabled and lzmadec is left enabled,
220 a dangling man page symlink lzmadec.1 -> xzdec.1 is
224 Don't create symlinks for LZMA Utils compatibility.
225 This includes lzma, unlzma, and lzcat. If scripts are
226 installed, also lzdiff, lzcmp, lzgrep, lzegrep, lzfgrep,
227 lzmore, and lzless will be omitted if this option is used.
230 Don't install the scripts xzdiff, xzgrep, xzmore, xzless,
234 liblzma includes some assembler optimizations. Currently
235 there is only assembler code for CRC32 and CRC64 for
238 All the assembler code in liblzma is position-independent
239 code, which is suitable for use in shared libraries and
240 position-independent executables. So far only i386
241 instructions are used, but the code is optimized for i686
242 class CPUs. If you are compiling liblzma exclusively for
243 pre-i686 systems, you may want to disable the assembler
246 --enable-unaligned-access
247 Allow liblzma to use unaligned memory access for 16-bit
248 and 32-bit loads and stores. This should be enabled only
249 when the hardware supports this, i.e. when unaligned
250 access is fast. Some operating system kernels emulate
251 unaligned access, which is extremely slow. This option
252 shouldn't be used on systems that rely on such emulation.
254 Unaligned access is enabled by default on x86, x86-64,
255 and big endian PowerPC.
258 Reduce the size of liblzma by selecting smaller but
259 semantically equivalent version of some functions, and
260 omit precomputed lookup tables. This option tends to
261 make liblzma slightly slower.
263 Note that while omitting the precomputed tables makes
264 liblzma smaller on disk, the tables are still needed at
265 run time, and need to be computed at startup. This also
266 means that the RAM holding the tables won't be shared
267 between applications linked against shared liblzma.
269 This option doesn't modify CFLAGS to tell the compiler
270 to optimize for size. You need to add -Os or equivalent
271 flag(s) to CFLAGS manually.
273 --enable-assume-ram=SIZE
274 On the most common operating systems, XZ Utils is able to
275 detect the amount of physical memory on the system. This
276 information is used by the options --memlimit-compress,
277 --memlimit-decompress, and --memlimit when setting the
278 limit to a percentage of total RAM.
280 On some systems, there is no code to detect the amount of
281 RAM though. Using --enable-assume-ram one can set how much
282 memory to assume on these systems. SIZE is given as MiB.
283 The default is 128 MiB.
285 Feel free to send patches to add support for detecting
286 the amount of RAM on the operating system you use. See
287 src/common/tuklib_physmem.c for details.
290 Disable threading support. This makes some things
291 thread-unsafe, meaning that if multithreaded application
292 calls liblzma functions from more than one thread,
293 something bad may happen.
295 Use this option if threading support causes you trouble,
296 or if you know that you will use liblzma only from
297 single-threaded applications and want to avoid dependency
301 This enables the assert() macro and possibly some other
302 run-time consistency checks. It makes the code slower, so
303 you normally don't want to have this enabled.
306 If building with GCC, make all compiler warnings an error,
307 that abort the compilation. This may help catching bugs,
308 and should work on most systems. This has no effect on the
312 2.1. Static vs. dynamic linking of liblzma
314 On 32-bit x86, linking against static liblzma can give a minor
315 speed improvement. Static libraries on x86 are usually compiled as
316 position-dependent code (non-PIC) and shared libraries are built as
317 position-independent code (PIC). PIC wastes one register, which can
318 make the code slightly slower compared to a non-PIC version. (Note
319 that this doesn't apply to x86-64.)
321 If you want to link xz against static liblzma, the simplest way
322 is to pass --disable-shared to configure. If you want also shared
323 liblzma, run configure again and run "make install" only for
327 2.2. Optimizing xzdec and lzmadec
329 xzdec and lzmadec are intended to be relatively small instead of
330 optimizing for the best speed. Thus, it is a good idea to build
331 xzdec and lzmadec separately:
333 - To link the tools against static liblzma, pass --disable-shared
336 - To select somewhat size-optimized variant of some things in
337 liblzma, pass --enable-small to configure.
339 - Tell the compiler to optimize for size instead of speed.
340 E.g. with GCC, put -Os into CFLAGS.
342 - xzdec and lzmadec will never use multithreading capabilities of
343 liblzma. You can avoid dependency on libpthread by passing
344 --disable-threads to configure.
346 - There are and will be no translated messages for xzdec and
347 lzmadec, so it is fine to pass also --disable-nls to configure.
349 - Only decoder code is needed, so you can speed up the build
350 slightly by passing --disable-encoders to configure. This
351 shouldn't affect the final size of the executables though,
352 because the linker is able to omit the encoder code anyway.
354 If you have no use for xzdec or lzmadec, you can disable them with
355 --disable-xzdec and --disable-lzmadec.
358 3. xzgrep and other scripts
359 ---------------------------
363 POSIX shell (sh) and bunch of other standard POSIX tools are required
364 to run the scripts. The configure script tries to find a POSIX
365 compliant sh, but if it fails, you can force the shell by passing
366 gl_cv_posix_shell=/path/to/posix-sh as an argument to the configure
369 Some of the scripts require also mktemp. The original mktemp can be
370 found from <http://www.mktemp.org/>. On GNU, most will use the mktemp
371 program from GNU coreutils instead of the original implementation.
372 Both mktemp versions are fine for XZ Utils (and practically for
373 everything else too).
378 The scripts assume that the required tools (standard POSIX utilities,
379 mktemp, and xz) are in PATH; the scripts don't set the PATH themselves.
380 Some people like this while some think this is a bug. Those in the
381 latter group can easily patch the scripts before running the configure
382 script by taking advantage of a placeholder line in the scripts.
384 For example, to make the scripts prefix /usr/bin:/bin to PATH:
386 perl -pi -e 's|^#SET_PATH.*$|PATH=/usr/bin:/bin:\$PATH|' \
393 4.1. "No C99 compiler was found."
395 You need a C99 compiler to build XZ Utils. If the configure script
396 cannot find a C99 compiler and you think you have such a compiler
397 installed, set the compiler command by passing CC=/path/to/c99 as
398 an argument to the configure script.
400 If you get this error even when you think your compiler supports C99,
401 you can override the test by passing ac_cv_prog_cc_c99= as an argument
402 to the configure script. The test for C99 compiler is not perfect (and
403 it is not as easy to make it perfect as it sounds), so sometimes this
404 may be needed. You will get a compile error if your compiler doesn't
408 4.2. "No POSIX conforming shell (sh) was found."
410 xzgrep and other scripts need a shell that (roughly) conforms
411 to POSIX. The configure script tries to find such a shell. If
412 it fails, you can force the shell to be used by passing
413 gl_cv_posix_shell=/path/to/posix-sh as an argument to the configure
417 4.3. configure works but build fails at crc32_x86.S
419 The easy fix is to pass --disable-assembler to the configure script.
421 The configure script determines if assembler code can be used by
422 looking at the configure triplet; there is currently no check if
423 the assembler code can actually actually be built. The x86 assembler
424 code should work on x86 GNU/Linux, *BSDs, Solaris, Darwin, MinGW,
425 Cygwin, and DJGPP. On other x86 systems, there may be problems and
426 the assembler code may need to be disabled with the configure option.
428 If you get this error when building for x86-64, you have specified or
429 the configure script has misguessed your architecture. Pass the
430 correct configure triplet using the --build=CPU-COMPANY-SYSTEM option
431 (see INSTALL.generic).
434 4.4. Lots of warnings about symbol visibility
436 On some systems where symbol visibility isn't supported, GCC may
437 still accept the visibility options and attributes, which will make
438 configure think that visibility is supported. This will result in
439 many compiler warnings. You can avoid the warnings by forcing the
440 visibility support off by passing gl_cv_cc_visibility=no as an
441 argument to the configure script. This has no effect on the
442 resulting binaries, but fewer warnings looks nicer and may allow
443 using --enable-werror.