The installation procedure consists of the steps: 1) configure the "findlib" library 2) compile "findlib" and the "ocamlfind" frontend of "findlib" 3) install "findlib" and the core library configuration Optionally, you can run ./itest after step 2 to check the configuration. Problems with the configuration are unlikely, however. At the end of this file you find notes about MacOS and Windows. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- STEP 1: DEFAULT CONFIGURATION The findlib module and its ocamlfind frontend come with a "configure" script that should almost always be able to figure out a good configuration. Just type: ./configure First the linker options for the various core libraries are figured out, then reasonable installation paths are checked. If the results are not ok, you can modify them using the following options: -bindir <path> set the location where the ocamlfind command should be installed. Default: same location as "ocamlc" -mandir <path> set the location where the man page should be installed. Default: a heuristics, and "/usr/local/man" as fallback. -sitelib <path> set the default "site-lib" directory. Default: For installations in the /usr hierarchy, "$stdlib/site-lib", where $stdlib is the location of Ocaml's standard library. For installations in the /opt hierarchy, "$stdlib/../site-lib", i.e. parallel to $stdlib. -config <file> set the location of the configuration file. Default: <bindir>/../etc/findlib.conf -no-topfind the "topfind" script is not installed in the standard library directory. (This is not a good idea in general, because #use "topfind" will not work when this option is enabled.) -with-toolbox also compile and install the "toolbox". This requires that labltk is available. The toolbox contains the "make_wizard" to easily create findlib-enabled Makefiles. -cygpath Cygwin environment only: If "ocamlc -where" does not output a Unix-style path, this option can be used to apply the "cygpath" command to it. Use this option if you see backslashes or drive letters in Makefile.config. ALTERNATIVES: If the "configure" script does not work properly (very unlikely), do cp Makefile.config.pattern Makefile.config and edit Makefile.config by hand. If the generated META files do not work, edit them (this is very very unlikely). Note: The META files are generated from the META.in files in the same directories by sed: sed -e 's/%%findlib_version%%/<version>/g' <more parameters...> site-lib/<name>/META.in >site-lib/<name>/META You may invoke sed manually to create different META files, but this is currently not documented. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- STEP 2: COMPILATION After configuration has been done, compile with make all This creates findlib.cma, findlib_mt.cma (the thread-safe version), and ocamlfind. If you have ocamlopt, do also make opt This creates findlib.cmxa, findlib_mt.cmxa, and ocamlfind_opt. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- STEP 3: INSTALLATION Install the findlib library, the ocamlfind frontend, and the core library configurations with: make install (A "make uninstall" removes them.) With make clean the build directory is cleaned up. OPTIONAL (BUT RECOMMENDED): If you want a separate directory for DLLs, create this directory now: mkdir `ocamlfind printconf destdir`/stublibs If you do this, you must also tell OCaml that DLLs can be found in this directory: Add the absolute path of this directory to the ld.conf file (type "ocamlfind printconf ldconf" to get the location of the ld.conf file). Every line of this text file lists one possible directory for DLLs. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- MACOS X: Findlib can be installed as described. There is even a script to create a MacOS X package, use "make package-macosx" to invoke it. As I do not have access to a Mac box, I cannot test this script, but I fully trust the author that it works. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- WINDOWS: Ocaml for Windows exists in three flavours: (1) Ocaml as Cygwin program (2) Ocaml as Mingw program (i.e. the gcc toolchain is used but Ocaml is a native Windows program) (3) Ocaml as VC program In all three cases you need Cygwin to build and install findlib, because "configure" and the Makefile are both Cygwin scripts. The golden rule to make everything work is this: PASS CYGWIN-STYLE PATHS TO CONFIGURE! Even in cases (2) and (3)! That means use something like /cygdrive/c/path and not c:\path when you specify where -bindir, -config etc. are. The point is that "configure" itself is a Cygwin script, and therefore expects Cygwin input. At the right moment, the paths are back-translated to their Windows counterparts. Until OCaml 3.08 you must specify whether you have (2) or (3) by the configure switches - "-system mingw" for (2) - "-system win32" for (3) - nothing for (1) Since OCaml 3.09 this is no longer necessary because "ocamlc -config" outputs the required information. In previous versions of Findlib there was a single switch -cygpath for both (2) and (3). It is now interpreted as -system mingw (as it was meant as that).