*************** Getting Started *************** .. highlight:: c Compiling and Installing Jansson ================================ The Jansson source is available at http://www.digip.org/jansson/releases/. Unix-like systems (including MinGW) ----------------------------------- Unpack the source tarball and change to the source directory: .. parsed-literal:: bunzip2 -c jansson-|release|.tar.bz2 | tar xf - cd jansson-|release| The source uses GNU Autotools (autoconf_, automake_, libtool_), so compiling and installing is extremely simple:: ./configure make make check make install To change the destination directory (``/usr/local`` by default), use the ``--prefix=DIR`` argument to ``./configure``. See ``./configure --help`` for the list of all possible installation options. (There are no options to customize the resulting Jansson binary.) The command ``make check`` runs the test suite distributed with Jansson. This step is not strictly necessary, but it may find possible problems that Jansson has on your platform. If any problems are found, please report them. If you obtained the source from a Git repository (or any other source control system), there's no ``./configure`` script as it's not kept in version control. To create the script, the build system needs to be bootstrapped. There are many ways to do this, but the easiest one is to use ``autoreconf``:: autoreconf -vi This command creates the ``./configure`` script, which can then be used as described above. .. _autoconf: http://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/ .. _automake: http://www.gnu.org/software/automake/ .. _libtool: http://www.gnu.org/software/libtool/ .. _build-cmake: CMake (various platforms, including Windows) -------------------------------------------- Jansson can be built using CMake_. Create a build directory for an out-of-tree build, change to that directory, and run ``cmake`` (or ``ccmake``, ``cmake-gui``, or similar) to configure the project. See the examples below for more detailed information. .. note:: In the below examples ``..`` is used as an argument for ``cmake``. This is simply the path to the jansson project root directory. In the example it is assumed you've created a sub-directory ``build`` and are using that. You could use any path you want. .. _build-cmake-unix: Unix (Make files) ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Generating make files on unix: .. parsed-literal:: bunzip2 -c jansson-|release|.tar.bz2 | tar xf - cd jansson-|release| mkdir build cd build cmake .. # or `ccmake ..` for a GUI. Then to build:: make make check make install Windows (Visual Studio) ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Creating Visual Studio project files from the command line: .. parsed-literal:: cd jansson-|release| md build cd build cmake -G "Visual Studio 10" .. You will now have a *Visual Studio Solution* in your build directory. To run the unit tests build the ``RUN_TESTS`` project. If you prefer a GUI the ``cmake`` line in the above example can be replaced with:: cmake-gui .. For command line help (including a list of available generators) for CMake_ simply run:: cmake To list available CMake_ settings (and what they are currently set to) for the project, run:: cmake -LH .. Mac OSX (Xcode) ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ If you prefer using Xcode instead of make files on OSX, do the following. (Use the same steps as for :ref:`Unix `):: ... cmake -G "Xcode" .. Additional CMake settings ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Shared library """""""""""""" By default the CMake_ project will generate build files for building the static library. To build the shared version use:: ... cmake -DBUILD_SHARED=1 .. Changing install directory (same as autoconf --prefix) """""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" Just as with the autoconf_ project you can change the destination directory for ``make install``. The equivalent for autoconfs ``./configure --prefix`` in CMake_ is:: ... cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX:PATH=/some/other/path .. make install .. _CMake: http://www.cmake.org Android ------- Jansson can be built for Android platforms. Android.mk is in the source root directory. The configuration header file is located in the ``android`` directory in the source distribution. Other Systems ------------- On non Unix-like systems, you may be unable to run the ``./configure`` script. In this case, follow these steps. All the files mentioned can be found in the ``src/`` directory. 1. Create ``jansson_config.h`` (which has some platform-specific parameters that are normally filled in by the ``./configure`` script). Edit ``jansson_config.h.in``, replacing all ``@variable@`` placeholders, and rename the file to ``jansson_config.h``. 2. Make ``jansson.h`` and ``jansson_config.h`` available to the compiler, so that they can be found when compiling programs that use Jansson. 3. Compile all the ``.c`` files (in the ``src/`` directory) into a library file. Make the library available to the compiler, as in step 2. Building the Documentation -------------------------- (This subsection describes how to build the HTML documentation you are currently reading, so it can be safely skipped.) Documentation is in the ``doc/`` subdirectory. It's written in reStructuredText_ with Sphinx_ annotations. To generate the HTML documentation, invoke:: make html and point your browser to ``doc/_build/html/index.html``. Sphinx_ 1.0 or newer is required to generate the documentation. .. _reStructuredText: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/rst.html .. _Sphinx: http://sphinx.pocoo.org/ Compiling Programs that Use Jansson =================================== Jansson involves one C header file, :file:`jansson.h`, so it's enough to put the line :: #include in the beginning of every source file that uses Jansson. There's also just one library to link with, ``libjansson``. Compile and link the program as follows:: cc -o prog prog.c -ljansson Starting from version 1.2, there's also support for pkg-config_:: cc -o prog prog.c `pkg-config --cflags --libs jansson` .. _pkg-config: http://pkg-config.freedesktop.org/