# Installation All iceoryx libraries are deployed as independent CMake packages. Posh is using functions from hoofs and is depending on it. You are able to build posh and hoofs and integrate them into existing CMake projects. ## Prerequisites ### :octicons-package-dependencies-16: Dependencies - 64-bit hardware (e.g. x86_64 or aarch64; 32-bit hardware might work, but is not supported) - [CMake](https://cmake.org), 3.16 or later - One of the following compilers: - [GCC](https://gcc.gnu.org), 8.3 or later (5.4 currently supported too) - [Clang](https://clang.llvm.org), 9.0 or later - [MSVC](https://visualstudio.microsoft.com/de/), part of Visual Studio 2019 or later - [libacl](http://download.savannah.gnu.org/releases/acl/), 2.2 or later. Only for Linux & QNX. - optional, [ncurses](https://invisible-island.net/ncurses/), 6.2 or later. Required by introspection tool (only for Linux, QNX and MacOS). #### Optional, Cyclone DDS Gateway The Cyclone DDS gateway depends currently on [Cyclone DDS](https://github.com/eclipse-cyclonedds/cyclonedds). When building it with the CMake option `-DDDS_GATEWAY=ON` it will be automatically installed as a dependency. Furthermore, you have to install: - [GNU Bison](https://www.gnu.org/software/bison/manual/), 3.0.4 or later ### :material-apple: Mac OS Before installing iceoryx you need to install XCode and git. Optionally, ncurses library is required for the introspection client. To install ncurses locally into your build folder follow these steps ```bash cd iceoryx ICEORYX_DIR=$PWD mkdir -p build cd build git clone https://github.com/mirror/ncurses.git cd ncurses git checkout v6.2 ./configure --prefix=$ICEORYX_DIR/build/dependencies/ --exec-prefix=$ICEORYX_DIR/build/dependencies/ --with-termlib make -j12 make install ``` ### :fontawesome-brands-linux: Linux Although we strive to be fully POSIX-compliant, we recommend using Ubuntu 18.04 and at least GCC 7.5.0 for development. You will need to install the following packages: ```bash sudo apt install gcc g++ cmake libacl1-dev libncurses5-dev pkg-config ``` Additionally, there is an optional dependency to the [cpptoml](https://github.com/skystrife/cpptoml) library, which is used to parse the RouDi config file containing mempool configuration. ### :fontawesome-brands-blackberry: QNX QNX SDP 7.0 and 7.1 are supported (shipping with gcc 5.4 and gcc 8.3 respectively). The easiest way to build iceoryx on QNX is by using the build script and providing a toolchain file. We provide generic QNX SDP 7.0 toolchain files for ARM_64 and X86_64 in `./tools/toolchains/qnx` ([Direct Link](https://github.com/eclipse-iceoryx/iceoryx/tree/v2.0.0/tools/toolchains/qnx)). ARM_64: ```bash ./tools/iceoryx_build_test.sh -t /home/user/toolchains/qnx/qnx_sdp70_aarch64le.cmake ``` X86_64: ```bash ./tools/iceoryx_build_test.sh -t /home/user/toolchains/qnx/qnx_sdp70_x86_64.cmake ``` !!! attention Please ensure that the folder `/var/lock` exist and the filesystem supports file locking. ### :fontawesome-brands-windows: Windows In case you do not have a Windows installation, Microsoft provides free developer images from [here](https://developer.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/downloads/virtual-machines/). Additionally, [CMake](https://cmake.org/download/) and [git](https://gitforwindows.org/) are required. The option to add CMake to the system PATH for all users should be set when it is installed. If the developer image from Microsoft is used, Visual Studio Community 2019 is already installed, else it can be found [here](https://visualstudio.microsoft.com/de/downloads/). To be able to compile iceoryx, the `Desktop development with C++` Workload must be installed. This is done by running `VisualStudioInstaller` and selecting the `Modify` button on `Visual Studio Community 2019`. Either `VS Code` or `Developer Command Prompt` can be used to build iceoryx with CMake. Maybe one or two restarts are required to let CMake find the compiler. Alternatively, `C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2019\Community\VC\Auxiliary\Build\vcvars64.bat` can be executed in any shell to setup all the paths for compilation. ## :material-triangle: Build with CMake !!! note Building with CMake is the preferred way, for more complex actions like a coverage scan is a script available (see chapter below). The `CMakeLists.txt` from `iceoryx_meta` can be used to easily develop iceoryx with an IDE. 1. Clone the repository ```bash git clone https://github.com/eclipse-iceoryx/iceoryx.git ``` 2. Generate the necessary build files ```bash cd iceoryx cmake -Bbuild -Hiceoryx_meta # when you have installed external dependencies like ncurses you have to add them # to your prefix path cmake -Bbuild -Hiceoryx_meta -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=$(PWD)/build/dependencies/ ``` !!! tip To build all iceoryx components add `-DBUILD_ALL=ON` to the CMake command. For Windows it is currently recommended to use the `cmake -Bbuild -Hiceoryx_meta -DBUILD_TEST=ON -DINTROSPECTION=OFF -DBINDING_C=ON -DEXAMPLES=ON` instead 3. Compile the source code ```bash cmake --build build ``` !!! tip You can speed up the build by appending `-j 4` where 4 stands for the number of parallel build processes. You can choose more or less depending on your available CPU cores on your machine. 4. Install to system Mac: ```bash cmake --build build --target install ``` Linux: ```bash sudo cmake --build build --target install ``` !!! tip The installation directory is usually left at its default, which is `/usr/local` !!! note iceoryx is built in release mode as static library with `-O3` optimization by default. If you want to enable debug symbols please set `CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Deb`. ### Build options Please take a look at the CMake file [build_options.cmake](https://github.com/eclipse-iceoryx/iceoryx/blob/v2.0.0/iceoryx_meta/build_options.cmake) to get an overview of the available build options for enabling additional features. ## :material-powershell: Build with script As an alternative, we provide a build-test script which we use to integrate iceoryx into our infrastructure. The intention of the script goes beyond building iceoryx, it is also used for the code coverage scan or the address-sanitizer runs on the CI. The script currently works for Linux and QNX only, it is planned to offer a multi-platform solution. 1. Clone the repository ```bash git clone https://github.com/eclipse-iceoryx/iceoryx.git ``` 2. Build everything ```bash cd iceoryx ./tools/iceoryx_build_test.sh build-all ``` !!! note The build script is installing the header files and binaries into `build/install/prefix`. You can use the `help` argument for getting an overview of the available options: ```bash ./tools/iceoryx_build_test.sh help ``` !!! tip The examples can be built with `-DEXAMPLES=ON` with iceoryx_meta or by providing the `examples` argument to the build script. ## :material-robot: Build with colcon Alternatively, iceoryx can be built with [colcon](https://colcon.readthedocs.io/en/released/user/installation.html#using-debian-packages) to provide a smooth integration for ROS 2 developers. To build the iceoryx_integrationtest package one requires a minimal [ROS 2 installation](https://docs.ros.org/en/foxy/Installation/Linux-Install-Debians.html). Install required ROS 2 packages: ```bash sudo apt install ros-foxy-ros-testing ros-foxy-ros-base source /opt/ros/foxy/setup.bash ``` build with colcon: ```bash mkdir -p iceoryx_ws/src cd $_ git clone https://github.com/eclipse-iceoryx/iceoryx.git cd .. colcon build ``` !!! note If you don't want to install ROS 2, you can skip the iceoryx_integrationtest package by calling: ```bash colcon build --packages-skip iceoryx_integrationtest ``` This build method makes the most sense in combination with [rmw_iceoryx](https://github.com/ros2/rmw_iceoryx.git)