The following build systems are available for Bzip2:
- Meson: This is our preferred build system for Unix-like systems.
- CMake: Build tool for Unix and Windows.
- nmake: Unsupported; used only for Windows and Microsoft Visual Studio 2013 or later.
Meson works for Unix-like OSes and Windows; nmake is only for Windows.
Important note when compiling for Linux:
The SONAME for libbz2 for version 1.0 was:
libbz2.so.1.0
Some distros patched it to libbz2.so.1 to be supported by libtool. Others did not.We had to make a choice when switching from Makefiles -> CMake + Meson. So, the SONAME for libbz2 for version 1.1 is now:
libbz2.so.1
Distros that need it to be ABI compatible with the old SONAME may either:
Use CMake for the build with the option
-D USE_OLD_SONAME=ON
. This will build an extra copy of the library with the old SONAME.Use
patchelf --set-soname
after the build to change the SONAME and install an extra symlink manually:libbz2.so.1.0 -> libbz2.so.1.0.9
You can check the SONAME with:
objdump -p libbz2.so.1.0.9 | grep SONAME
Meson provides a large number of built-in options to control compilation. A few important ones are listed below:
- -Ddefault_library=[static|shared|both], defaults to shared, if you wish to
statically link libbz2 into the binaries set this to
static
- --backend : defaults to ninja, use
vs
if you want to use msbuild - --unity : This enables a unity build (sometimes called a jumbo build), makes a single build faster but rebuilds slower
- -Dbuildtype=[debug|debugoptmized|release|minsize|plain] : Controls default optimization/debug generation args,
defaults to
debug
, useplain
if you wish to pass your own cflags.
Meson recognizes environment variables like $CFLAGS and $CC, it is recommended that you do not use $CFLAGS, and instead use -Dc_args and -DC_link_args, as Meson will remember these even if you need to reconfigure from scratch (such as when you update Meson), it will not remember $CFLAGS.
Meson will never change compilers once configured, so $CC is perfectly safe.
You will need
- Python 3.5 or newer (for Meson)
- meson (Version 0.48 or newer)
- ninja
- pkg-config
- A C compiler such as GCC or Clang
Some linux distros package managers refer to ninja as ninja-build, fedora and debian/ubuntu both do this. Your OS probably provides meson, although it may be too old, in that case you can use python3's pip to install meson:
sudo pip3 install meson
or, for a user local install:
pip3 install --user meson
Once you have installed the dependencies, the following should work
to use the standard Meson configuration, a builddir
for
compilation, and a /usr
prefix for installation:
meson --prefix /usr builddir/
ninja -C builddir
meson test -C builddir --print-errorlogs
[sudo] ninja -C builddir install
You can use meson configure builddir
to check configuration options.
Currently bzip only has one project specific option, which is to force the
generation of documentation on or off.
Ninja acepts many of the same arguments as make, although it will automatically detect the number of CPU cores available and use an appropriate number of threads.
You will need to either download python 3.5 or newer and install with pip:
py -m pip install meson
or you can download pre-bundled installers of meson directly from meson's github.
Either should work fine for the purposes of building bzip2
You will also need pkg-config. There are many sources of pkg-config, I recommend installing from chocolatey because it's easy. chocolatey can also provide ninja, though ninja is not required on windows if you want to use msbuild.
If you want to use MSVC or a compatible compiler launch the associated environment cmd to run meson from; the environments required to make those compilers work is quite complex otherwise.
Once you have all of that installed you can invoke meson to configure the
build. By default meson will generate a ninja backend, if you would prefer to
use msbuild pass the backend flag --backend=vs
. MSVC (and compatible
compilers like clang-cl and ICL) work with ninja as well.
meson $builddir
ninja -C $builddir
meson test -C builddir --print-errorlogs
or:
meson $builddir --backend=vs
cd $builddir
msbuild bzip2.sln /m
Bzip2 can be compiled with the CMake build system.
You can use these commands to build Bzip2 in a certain build
directory.
mkdir build && cd build
cmake ..
cmake --build . --config Release
mkdir build && cd build
cmake .. -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE="Debug"
cmake --build . --config Debug
mkdir build && cd build
cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX:PATH=`pwd`/install ..
cmake --build . --target install --config Release
mkdir build && cd build
cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX:PATH=`pwd`/install .. -DENABLE_EXAMPLES=ON
cmake --build . --target install --config Release
-V
: Verbose-C
: Required for Windows builds
mkdir build && cd build
cmake ..
cmake --build . --config Release
ctest -C Release -V
Bzip2 can be built with Microsoft Visual Studio 2013 or later. From a Visual Studio Tools Command Prompt run:
nmake -f makefile.msc
The build will produce bzip2.exe
and bzip2recover.exe
files that are dependent
on bz2-1.dll
and the Microsoft C Runtime library. Dynamic import and static
libraries are also built: bz2-1.lib
and bz2-static.lib
.