xref: /freebsd/contrib/bc/manuals/build.md (revision 81ad6265)
1# Build
2
3This `bc` attempts to be as portable as possible. It can be built on any
4POSIX-compliant system.
5
6To accomplish that, a POSIX-compatible, custom `configure.sh` script is used to
7select build options, compiler, and compiler flags and generate a `Makefile`.
8
9The general form of configuring, building, and installing this `bc` is as
10follows:
11
12```
13[ENVIRONMENT_VARIABLE=<value>...] ./configure.sh [build_options...]
14make
15make install
16```
17
18To get all of the options, including any useful environment variables, use
19either one of the following commands:
20
21```
22./configure.sh -h
23./configure.sh --help
24```
25
26***WARNING***: even though `configure.sh` supports both option types, short and
27long, it does not support handling both at the same time. Use only one type.
28
29To learn the available `make` targets run the following command after running
30the `configure.sh` script:
31
32```
33make help
34```
35
36See [Build Environment Variables][4] for a more detailed description of all
37accepted environment variables and [Build Options][5] for more detail about all
38accepted build options.
39
40## Windows
41
42For releases, Windows builds of `bc`, `dc`, and `bcl` are available for download
43from <https://git.gavinhoward.com/gavin/bc> and GitHub.
44
45However, if you wish to build it yourself, this `bc` can be built using Visual
46Studio or MSBuild.
47
48Unfortunately, only one build configuration (besides Debug or Release) is
49supported: extra math and history enabled, NLS (locale support) disabled, with
50both calculators built. The default [settings][11] are `BC_BANNER=1`,
51`{BC,DC}_SIGINT_RESET=0`, `{BC,DC}_TTY_MODE=1`, `{BC,DC}_PROMPT=1`.
52
53The library can also be built on Windows.
54
55### Visual Studio
56
57In Visual Studio, open up the solution file (`bc.sln` for `bc`, or `bcl.sln` for
58the library), select the desired configuration, and build.
59
60### MSBuild
61
62To build with MSBuild, first, *be sure that you are using the MSBuild that comes
63with Visual Studio*.
64
65To build `bc`, run the following from the root directory:
66
67```
68msbuild -property:Configuration=<config> vs/bc.sln
69```
70
71where `<config>` is either one of `Debug` or `Release`.
72
73To build the library, run the following from the root directory:
74
75```
76msbuild -property:Configuration=<config> vs/bcl.sln
77```
78
79where `<config>` is either one of `Debug`, `ReleaseMD`, or `ReleaseMT`.
80
81## POSIX-Compatible Systems
82
83Building `bc`, `dc`, and `bcl` (the library) is more complex than on Windows
84because many build options are supported.
85
86### Out-of-Source Builds
87
88Out-of-source builds are done by calling `configure.sh` from the directory where
89the build will happen. The `Makefile` is generated into that directory, and the
90build can happen normally from there.
91
92For example, if the source is in `bc`, the build should happen in `build`, then
93call `configure.sh` and `make` like so:
94
95```
96../bc/configure.sh
97make
98```
99
100***WARNING***: The path to `configure.sh` from the build directory must not have
101spaces because `make` does not support target names with spaces.
102
103### Cross Compiling
104
105To cross-compile this `bc`, an appropriate compiler must be present and assigned
106to the environment variable `HOSTCC` or `HOST_CC` (the two are equivalent,
107though `HOSTCC` is prioritized). This is in order to bootstrap core file(s), if
108the architectures are not compatible (i.e., unlike i686 on x86_64). Thus, the
109approach is:
110
111```
112HOSTCC="/path/to/native/compiler" ./configure.sh
113make
114make install
115```
116
117`HOST_CC` will work in exactly the same way.
118
119`HOSTCFLAGS` and `HOST_CFLAGS` can be used to set compiler flags for `HOSTCC`.
120(The two are equivalent, as `HOSTCC` and `HOST_CC` are.) `HOSTCFLAGS` is
121prioritized over `HOST_CFLAGS`. If neither are present, `HOSTCC` (or `HOST_CC`)
122uses `CFLAGS` (see [Build Environment Variables][4] for more details).
123
124It is expected that `CC` produces code for the target system and `HOSTCC`
125produces code for the host system. See [Build Environment Variables][4] for more
126details.
127
128If an emulator is necessary to run the bootstrap binaries, it can be set with
129the environment variable `GEN_EMU`.
130
131### Build Environment Variables
132
133This `bc` supports `CC`, `HOSTCC`, `HOST_CC`, `CFLAGS`, `HOSTCFLAGS`,
134`HOST_CFLAGS`, `CPPFLAGS`, `LDFLAGS`, `LDLIBS`, `PREFIX`, `DESTDIR`, `BINDIR`,
135`DATAROOTDIR`, `DATADIR`, `MANDIR`, `MAN1DIR`, `MAN3DIR`, `EXECSUFFIX`,
136`EXECPREFIX`, `LONG_BIT`, `GEN_HOST`, and `GEN_EMU` environment variables in
137`configure.sh`. Any values of those variables given to `configure.sh` will be
138put into the generated Makefile.
139
140More detail on what those environment variables do can be found in the following
141sections.
142
143#### `CC`
144
145C compiler for the target system. `CC` must be compatible with POSIX `c99`
146behavior and options. However, **I encourage users to use any C99 or C11
147compatible compiler they wish.**
148
149If there is a space in the basename of the compiler, the items after the first
150space are assumed to be compiler flags, and in that case, the flags are
151automatically moved into CFLAGS.
152
153Defaults to `c99`.
154
155#### `HOSTCC` or `HOST_CC`
156
157C compiler for the host system, used only in [cross compiling][6]. Must be
158compatible with POSIX `c99` behavior and options.
159
160If there is a space in the basename of the compiler, the items after the first
161space are assumed to be compiler flags, and in that case, the flags are
162automatically moved into HOSTCFLAGS.
163
164Defaults to `$CC`.
165
166#### `CFLAGS`
167
168Command-line flags that will be passed verbatim to `CC`.
169
170Defaults to empty.
171
172#### `HOSTCFLAGS` or `HOST_CFLAGS`
173
174Command-line flags that will be passed verbatim to `HOSTCC` or `HOST_CC`.
175
176Defaults to `$CFLAGS`.
177
178#### `CPPFLAGS`
179
180Command-line flags for the C preprocessor. These are also passed verbatim to
181both compilers (`CC` and `HOSTCC`); they are supported just for legacy reasons.
182
183Defaults to empty.
184
185#### `LDFLAGS`
186
187Command-line flags for the linker. These are also passed verbatim to both
188compilers (`CC` and `HOSTCC`); they are supported just for legacy reasons.
189
190Defaults to empty.
191
192#### `LDLIBS`
193
194Libraries to link to. These are also passed verbatim to both compilers (`CC` and
195`HOSTCC`); they are supported just for legacy reasons and for cross compiling
196with different C standard libraries (like [musl][3]).
197
198Defaults to empty.
199
200#### `PREFIX`
201
202The prefix to install to.
203
204Can be overridden by passing the `--prefix` option to `configure.sh`.
205
206Defaults to `/usr/local`.
207
208***WARNING***: Locales ignore the prefix because they *must* be installed at a
209fixed location to work at all. If you do not want that to happen, you must
210disable locales (NLS) completely.
211
212#### `DESTDIR`
213
214Path to prepend onto `PREFIX`. This is mostly for distro and package
215maintainers.
216
217This can be passed either to `configure.sh` or `make install`. If it is passed
218to both, the one given to `configure.sh` takes precedence.
219
220Defaults to empty.
221
222#### `BINDIR`
223
224The directory to install binaries in.
225
226Can be overridden by passing the `--bindir` option to `configure.sh`.
227
228Defaults to `$PREFIX/bin`.
229
230#### `INCLUDEDIR`
231
232The directory to install header files in.
233
234Can be overridden by passing the `--includedir` option to `configure.sh`.
235
236Defaults to `$PREFIX/include`.
237
238#### `LIBDIR`
239
240The directory to install libraries in.
241
242Can be overridden by passing the `--libdir` option to `configure.sh`.
243
244Defaults to `$PREFIX/lib`.
245
246#### `DATAROOTDIR`
247
248The root directory to install data files in.
249
250Can be overridden by passing the `--datarootdir` option to `configure.sh`.
251
252Defaults to `$PREFIX/share`.
253
254#### `DATADIR`
255
256The directory to install data files in.
257
258Can be overridden by passing the `--datadir` option to `configure.sh`.
259
260Defaults to `$DATAROOTDIR`.
261
262#### `MANDIR`
263
264The directory to install manpages in.
265
266Can be overridden by passing the `--mandir` option to `configure.sh`.
267
268Defaults to `$DATADIR/man`
269
270#### `MAN1DIR`
271
272The directory to install Section 1 manpages in. Because both `bc` and `dc` are
273Section 1 commands, this is the only relevant section directory.
274
275Can be overridden by passing the `--man1dir` option to `configure.sh`.
276
277Defaults to `$MANDIR/man1`.
278
279#### `MAN3DIR`
280
281The directory to install Section 3 manpages in.
282
283Can be overridden by passing the `--man3dir` option to `configure.sh`.
284
285Defaults to `$MANDIR/man3`.
286
287#### `EXECSUFFIX`
288
289The suffix to append onto the executable names *when installing*. This is for
290packagers and distro maintainers who want this `bc` as an option, but do not
291want to replace the default `bc`.
292
293Defaults to empty.
294
295#### `EXECPREFIX`
296
297The prefix to append onto the executable names *when building and installing*.
298This is for packagers and distro maintainers who want this `bc` as an option,
299but do not want to replace the default `bc`.
300
301Defaults to empty.
302
303#### `LONG_BIT`
304
305The number of bits in a C `long` type. This is mostly for the embedded space.
306
307This `bc` uses `long`s internally for overflow checking. In C99, a `long` is
308required to be 32 bits. For this reason, on 8-bit and 16-bit microcontrollers,
309the generated code to do math with `long` types may be inefficient.
310
311For most normal desktop systems, setting this is unnecessary, except that 32-bit
312platforms with 64-bit longs may want to set it to `32`.
313
314Defaults to the default value of `LONG_BIT` for the target platform. For
315compliance with the `bc` spec, the minimum allowed value is `32`.
316
317It is an error if the specified value is greater than the default value of
318`LONG_BIT` for the target platform.
319
320#### `GEN_HOST`
321
322Whether to use `gen/strgen.c`, instead of `gen/strgen.sh`, to produce the C
323files that contain the help texts as well as the math libraries. By default,
324`gen/strgen.c` is used, compiled by `$HOSTCC` and run on the host machine. Using
325`gen/strgen.sh` removes the need to compile and run an executable on the host
326machine since `gen/strgen.sh` is a POSIX shell script. However, `gen/lib2.bc` is
327perilously close to 4095 characters, the max supported length of a string
328literal in C99 (and it could be added to in the future), and `gen/strgen.sh`
329generates a string literal instead of an array, as `gen/strgen.c` does. For most
330production-ready compilers, this limit probably is not enforced, but it could
331be. Both options are still available for this reason.
332
333If you are sure your compiler does not have the limit and do not want to compile
334and run a binary on the host machine, set this variable to "0". Any other value,
335or a non-existent value, will cause the build system to compile and run
336`gen/strgen.c`.
337
338Default is "".
339
340#### `GEN_EMU`
341
342The emulator to run bootstrap binaries under. This is only if the binaries
343produced by `HOSTCC` (or `HOST_CC`) need to be run under an emulator to work.
344
345Defaults to empty.
346
347### Build Options
348
349This `bc` comes with several build options, all of which are enabled by default.
350
351All options can be used with each other, with a few exceptions that will be
352noted below.
353
354**NOTE**: All long options with mandatory argumenst accept either one of the
355following forms:
356
357```
358--option arg
359--option=arg
360```
361
362#### Predefined Builds
363
364To quickly get a release build of a `bc` and `dc` that is (by default)
365compatible with the BSD `bc` and `dc`, use the `-p` or `--predefined-build-type`
366options:
367
368```
369./configure.sh -pBSD
370./configure.sh --predefined-build-type=BSD
371```
372
373Both commands are equivalent.
374
375To quickly get a release build of a `bc` and `dc` that is (by default)
376compatible with the GNU `bc` and `dc`, use the `-p` or `--predefined-build-type`
377options:
378
379```
380./configure.sh -pGNU
381./configure.sh --predefined-build-type=GNU
382```
383
384Both commands are equivalent.
385
386#### Library
387
388To build the math library, use the following commands for the configure step:
389
390```
391./configure.sh -a
392./configure.sh --library
393```
394
395Both commands are equivalent.
396
397When the library is built, history and locales are disabled, and the
398functionality for `bc` and `dc` are both enabled, though the executables are
399*not* built. This is because the library's options clash with the executables.
400
401To build an optimized version of the library, users can pass optimization
402options to `configure.sh` or include them in `CFLAGS`.
403
404The library API can be found in `manuals/bcl.3.md` or `man bcl` once the library
405is installed.
406
407The library is built as `bin/libbcl.a`.
408
409#### `bc` Only
410
411To build `bc` only (no `dc`), use any one of the following commands for the
412configure step:
413
414```
415./configure.sh -b
416./configure.sh --bc-only
417./configure.sh -D
418./configure.sh --disable-dc
419```
420
421Those commands are all equivalent.
422
423***Warning***: It is an error to use those options if `bc` has also been
424disabled (see below).
425
426#### `dc` Only
427
428To build `dc` only (no `bc`), use either one of the following commands for the
429configure step:
430
431```
432./configure.sh -d
433./configure.sh --dc-only
434./configure.sh -B
435./configure.sh --disable-bc
436```
437
438Those commands are all equivalent.
439
440***Warning***: It is an error to use those options if `dc` has also been
441disabled (see above).
442
443#### History
444
445To disable hisory, pass either the `-H` flag or the `--disable-history` option
446to `configure.sh`, as follows:
447
448```
449./configure.sh -H
450./configure.sh --disable-history
451```
452
453Both commands are equivalent.
454
455***WARNING***: Of all of the code in the `bc`, this is the only code that is not
456completely portable. If the `bc` does not work on your platform, your first step
457should be to retry with history disabled.
458
459This option affects the [build type][7].
460
461##### Editline
462
463History support can be provided by editline, in order to implement `vi`-like
464keybindings and other features.
465
466To enable editline support, pass either the `-e` flag or the `--enable-editline`
467option to `configure.sh`, as follows:
468
469```
470./configure.sh -e
471./configure.sh --enable-editline
472```
473
474Both commands are equivalent.
475
476This is ignored if history is disabled.
477
478This option is only used if it is after any other `-e`/`--enable-editline`
479options, any `-r`/`--enable-readline` options, and any
480`-i`/`--enable-internal-history` options.
481
482##### Readline
483
484History support can be provided by readline, in order to implement `vi`-like
485keybindings and other features.
486
487To enable readline support, pass either the `-r` flag or the `--enable-readline`
488option to `configure.sh`, as follows:
489
490```
491./configure.sh -r
492./configure.sh --enable-readline
493```
494
495Both commands are equivalent.
496
497This is ignored if history is disabled.
498
499This option is only used if it is after any other `-r`/`--enable-readline`
500options, any `-e`/`--enable-editline` options, and any
501`-i`/`--enable-internal-history` options.
502
503##### Internal History
504
505History support is also available as an internal implementation with no
506dependencies. This is the default if editline and readline are not selected.
507
508However, if `-p` option is used, then this option can be useful for selecting
509the internal history regardless of what the predefined build has.
510
511To enable the internal history, pass either the `-i` flag or the
512`--enable-internal-history` option to `configure.sh` as follows:
513
514```
515./configure.sh -i
516./configure.sh --enable-internal-history
517```
518
519This option is only used if it is after any other
520`-i`/`--enable-internal-history` options, any `-e`/`--enable-editline` options,
521and any `-r`/`--enable-readline` options.
522
523#### NLS (Locale Support)
524
525To disable locale support (use only English), pass either the `-N` flag or the
526`--disable-nls` option to `configure.sh`, as follows:
527
528```
529./configure.sh -N
530./configure.sh --disable-nls
531```
532
533Both commands are equivalent.
534
535NLS (locale support) is automatically disabled when building for Windows or on
536another platform that does not support the POSIX locale API or utilities.
537
538This option affects the [build type][7].
539
540***WARNING***: Locales ignore the prefix because they *must* be installed at a
541fixed location to work at all. If you do not want that to happen, you must
542disable locales (NLS) completely.
543
544#### Extra Math
545
546This `bc` has 7 extra operators:
547
548* `$` (truncation to integer)
549* `@` (set precision)
550* `@=` (set precision and assign)
551* `<<` (shift number left, shifts radix right)
552* `<<=` (shift number left and assign)
553* `>>` (shift number right, shifts radix left)
554* `>>=` (shift number right and assign)
555
556There is no assignment version of `$` because it is a unary operator.
557
558The assignment versions of the above operators are not available in `dc`, but
559the others are, as the operators `$`, `@`, `H`, and `h`, respectively.
560
561In addition, this `bc` has the option of outputting in scientific notation or
562engineering notation. It can also take input in scientific or engineering
563notation. On top of that, it has a pseudo-random number generator. (See the
564full manual for more details.)
565
566Extra operators, scientific notation, engineering notation, and the
567pseudo-random number generator can be disabled by passing either the `-E` flag
568or the `--disable-extra-math` option to `configure.sh`, as follows:
569
570```
571./configure.sh -E
572./configure.sh --disable-extra-math
573```
574
575Both commands are equivalent.
576
577This `bc` also has a larger library that is only enabled if extra operators and
578the pseudo-random number generator are. More information about the functions can
579be found in the Extended Library section of the full manual.
580
581This option affects the [build type][7].
582
583#### Karatsuba Length
584
585The Karatsuba length is the point at which `bc` and `dc` switch from Karatsuba
586multiplication to brute force, `O(n^2)` multiplication. It can be set by passing
587the `-k` flag or the `--karatsuba-len` option to `configure.sh` as follows:
588
589```
590./configure.sh -k32
591./configure.sh --karatsuba-len 32
592```
593
594Both commands are equivalent.
595
596Default is `32`.
597
598***WARNING***: The Karatsuba Length must be a **integer** greater than or equal
599to `16` (to prevent stack overflow). If it is not, `configure.sh` will give an
600error.
601
602#### Settings
603
604This `bc` and `dc` have a few settings to override default behavior.
605
606The defaults for these settings can be set by package maintainers, and the
607settings themselves can be overriden by users.
608
609To set a default to **on**, use the `-s` or `--set-default-on` option to
610`configure.sh`, with the name of the setting, as follows:
611
612```
613./configure.sh -s bc.banner
614./configure.sh --set-default-on=bc.banner
615```
616
617Both commands are equivalent.
618
619To set a default to **off**, use the `-S` or `--set-default-off` option to
620`configure.sh`, with the name of the setting, as follows:
621
622```
623./configure.sh -S bc.banner
624./configure.sh --set-default-off=bc.banner
625```
626
627Both commands are equivalent.
628
629Users can override the default settings set by packagers with environment
630variables. If the environment variable has an integer, then the setting is
631turned **on** for a non-zero integer, and **off** for zero.
632
633The table of the available settings, along with their defaults and the
634environment variables to override them, is below:
635
636```
637| Setting         | Description          | Default      | Env Variable         |
638| =============== | ==================== | ============ | ==================== |
639| bc.banner       | Whether to display   |            0 | BC_BANNER            |
640|                 | the bc version       |              |                      |
641|                 | banner when in       |              |                      |
642|                 | interactive mode.    |              |                      |
643| --------------- | -------------------- | ------------ | -------------------- |
644| bc.sigint_reset | Whether SIGINT will  |            1 | BC_SIGINT_RESET      |
645|                 | reset bc, instead of |              |                      |
646|                 | exiting, when in     |              |                      |
647|                 | interactive mode.    |              |                      |
648| --------------- | -------------------- | ------------ | -------------------- |
649| dc.sigint_reset | Whether SIGINT will  |            1 | DC_SIGINT_RESET      |
650|                 | reset dc, instead of |              |                      |
651|                 | exiting, when in     |              |                      |
652|                 | interactive mode.    |              |                      |
653| --------------- | -------------------- | ------------ | -------------------- |
654| bc.tty_mode     | Whether TTY mode for |            1 | BC_TTY_MODE          |
655|                 | bc should be on when |              |                      |
656|                 | available.           |              |                      |
657| --------------- | -------------------- | ------------ | -------------------- |
658| dc.tty_mode     | Whether TTY mode for |            0 | BC_TTY_MODE          |
659|                 | dc should be on when |              |                      |
660|                 | available.           |              |                      |
661| --------------- | -------------------- | ------------ | -------------------- |
662| bc.prompt       | Whether the prompt   | $BC_TTY_MODE | BC_PROMPT            |
663|                 | for bc should be on  |              |                      |
664|                 | in tty mode.         |              |                      |
665| --------------- | -------------------- | ------------ | -------------------- |
666| dc.prompt       | Whether the prompt   | $DC_TTY_MODE | DC_PROMPT            |
667|                 | for dc should be on  |              |                      |
668|                 | in tty mode.         |              |                      |
669| --------------- | -------------------- | ------------ | -------------------- |
670| bc.expr_exit    | Whether to exit bc   |            1 | BC_EXPR_EXIT         |
671|                 | if an expression or  |              |                      |
672|                 | expression file is   |              |                      |
673|                 | given with the -e or |              |                      |
674|                 | -f options.          |              |                      |
675| --------------- | -------------------- | ------------ | -------------------- |
676| dc.expr_exit    | Whether to exit dc   |            1 | DC_EXPR_EXIT         |
677|                 | if an expression or  |              |                      |
678|                 | expression file is   |              |                      |
679|                 | given with the -e or |              |                      |
680|                 | -f options.          |              |                      |
681| --------------- | -------------------- | ------------ | -------------------- |
682| bc.digit_clamp  | Whether to have bc   |            0 | BC_DIGIT_CLAMP       |
683|                 | clamp digits that    |              |                      |
684|                 | are greater than or  |              |                      |
685|                 | equal to the current |              |                      |
686|                 | ibase when parsing   |              |                      |
687|                 | numbers.             |              |                      |
688| --------------- | -------------------- | ------------ | -------------------- |
689| dc.digit_clamp  | Whether to have dc   |            0 | DC_DIGIT_CLAMP       |
690|                 | clamp digits that    |              |                      |
691|                 | are greater than or  |              |                      |
692|                 | equal to the current |              |                      |
693|                 | ibase when parsing   |              |                      |
694|                 | numbers.             |              |                      |
695| --------------- | -------------------- | ------------ | -------------------- |
696```
697
698These settings are not meant to be changed on a whim. They are meant to ensure
699that this bc and dc will conform to the expectations of the user on each
700platform.
701
702#### Install Options
703
704The relevant `autotools`-style install options are supported in `configure.sh`:
705
706* `--prefix`
707* `--bindir`
708* `--datarootdir`
709* `--datadir`
710* `--mandir`
711* `--man1dir`
712* `--man3dir`
713
714An example is:
715
716```
717./configure.sh --prefix=/usr
718make
719make install
720```
721
722They correspond to the environment variables `$PREFIX`, `$BINDIR`,
723`$DATAROOTDIR`, `$DATADIR`, `$MANDIR`, `$MAN1DIR`, `$MAN3DIR`, and respectively.
724
725***WARNING***: Locales ignore the prefix because they *must* be installed at a
726fixed location to work at all. If you do not want that to happen, you must
727disable locales (NLS) completely.
728
729***WARNING***: If the option is given, the value of the corresponding
730environment variable is overridden.
731
732***WARNING***: If any long command-line options are used, the long form of all
733other command-line options must be used. Mixing long and short options is not
734supported.
735
736##### Manpages
737
738To disable installing manpages, pass either the `-M` flag or the
739`--disable-man-pages` option to `configure.sh` as follows:
740
741```
742./configure.sh -M
743./configure.sh --disable-man-pages
744```
745
746Both commands are equivalent.
747
748##### Locales
749
750By default, `bc` and `dc` do not install all locales, but only the enabled
751locales. If `DESTDIR` exists and is not empty, then they will install all of
752the locales that exist on the system. The `-l` flag or `--install-all-locales`
753option skips all of that and just installs all of the locales that `bc` and `dc`
754have, regardless. To enable that behavior, you can pass the `-l` flag or the
755`--install-all-locales` option to `configure.sh`, as follows:
756
757```
758./configure.sh -l
759./configure.sh --install-all-locales
760```
761
762Both commands are equivalent.
763
764***WARNING***: Locales ignore the prefix because they *must* be installed at a
765fixed location to work at all. If you do not want that to happen, you must
766disable locales (NLS) completely.
767
768### Optimization
769
770The `configure.sh` script will accept an optimization level to pass to the
771compiler. Because `bc` is orders of magnitude faster with optimization, I
772***highly*** recommend package and distro maintainers pass the highest
773optimization level available in `CC` to `configure.sh` with the `-O` flag or
774`--opt` option, as follows:
775
776```
777./configure.sh -O3
778./configure.sh --opt 3
779```
780
781Both commands are equivalent.
782
783The build and install can then be run as normal:
784
785```
786make
787make install
788```
789
790As usual, `configure.sh` will also accept additional `CFLAGS` on the command
791line, so for SSE4 architectures, the following can add a bit more speed:
792
793```
794CFLAGS="-march=native -msse4" ./configure.sh -O3
795make
796make install
797```
798
799Building with link-time optimization (`-flto` in clang) can further increase the
800performance. I ***highly*** recommend doing so.
801
802I do ***NOT*** recommend building with `-march=native`; doing so reduces this
803`bc`'s performance.
804
805Manual stripping is not necessary; non-debug builds are automatically stripped
806in the link stage.
807
808### Debug Builds
809
810Debug builds (which also disable optimization if no optimization level is given
811and if no extra `CFLAGS` are given) can be enabled with either the `-g` flag or
812the `--debug` option, as follows:
813
814```
815./configure.sh -g
816./configure.sh --debug
817```
818
819Both commands are equivalent.
820
821The build and install can then be run as normal:
822
823```
824make
825make install
826```
827
828### Stripping Binaries
829
830By default, when `bc` and `dc` are not built in debug mode, the binaries are
831stripped. Stripping can be disabled with either the `-T` or the
832`--disable-strip` option, as follows:
833
834```
835./configure.sh -T
836./configure.sh --disable-strip
837```
838
839Both commands are equivalent.
840
841The build and install can then be run as normal:
842
843```
844make
845make install
846```
847
848### Build Type
849
850`bc` and `dc` have 8 build types, affected by the [History][8], [NLS (Locale
851Support)][9], and [Extra Math][10] build options.
852
853The build types are as follows:
854
855* `A`: Nothing disabled.
856* `E`: Extra math disabled.
857* `H`: History disabled.
858* `N`: NLS disabled.
859* `EH`: Extra math and History disabled.
860* `EN`: Extra math and NLS disabled.
861* `HN`: History and NLS disabled.
862* `EHN`: Extra math, History, and NLS all disabled.
863
864These build types correspond to the generated manuals in `manuals/bc` and
865`manuals/dc`.
866
867### Binary Size
868
869When built with both calculators, all available features, and `-Os` using
870`clang` and `musl`, the executable is 140.4 kb (140,386 bytes) on `x86_64`. That
871isn't much for what is contained in the binary, but if necessary, it can be
872reduced.
873
874The single largest user of space is the `bc` calculator. If just `dc` is needed,
875the size can be reduced to 107.6 kb (107,584 bytes).
876
877The next largest user of space is history support. If that is not needed, size
878can be reduced (for a build with both calculators) to 119.9 kb (119,866 bytes).
879
880There are several reasons that history is a bigger user of space than `dc`
881itself:
882
883* `dc`'s lexer and parser are *tiny* compared to `bc`'s because `dc` code is
884  almost already in the form that it is executed in, while `bc` has to not only
885  adjust the form to be executable, it has to parse functions, loops, `if`
886  statements, and other extra features.
887* `dc` does not have much extra code in the interpreter.
888* History has a lot of const data for supporting `UTF-8` terminals.
889* History pulls in a bunch of more code from the `libc`.
890
891The next biggest user is extra math support. Without it, the size is reduced to
892124.0 kb (123,986 bytes) with history and 107.6 kb (107,560 bytes) without
893history.
894
895The reasons why extra math support is bigger than `dc`, besides the fact that
896`dc` is small already, are:
897
898* Extra math supports adds an extra math library that takes several kilobytes of
899  constant data space.
900* Extra math support includes support for a pseudo-random number generator,
901  including the code to convert a series of pseudo-random numbers into a number
902  of arbitrary size.
903* Extra math support adds several operators.
904
905The next biggest user is `dc`, so if just `bc` is needed, the size can be
906reduced to 128.1 kb (128,096 bytes) with history and extra math support, 107.6
907kb (107,576 bytes) without history and with extra math support, and 95.3 kb
908(95,272 bytes) without history and without extra math support.
909
910*Note*: all of these binary sizes were compiled using `musl` `1.2.0` as the
911`libc`, making a fully static executable, with `clang` `9.0.1` (well,
912`musl-clang` using `clang` `9.0.1`) as the compiler and using `-Os`
913optimizations. These builds were done on an `x86_64` machine running Gentoo
914Linux.
915
916### Testing
917
918The default test suite can be run with the following command:
919
920```
921make test
922```
923
924To test `bc` only, run the following command:
925
926```
927make test_bc
928```
929
930To test `dc` only, run the following command:
931
932```
933make test_dc
934```
935
936This `bc`, if built, assumes a working, GNU-compatible `bc`, installed on the
937system and in the `PATH`, to generate some tests, unless the `-G` flag or
938`--disable-generated-tests` option is given to `configure.sh`, as follows:
939
940```
941./configure.sh -G
942./configure.sh --disable-generated-tests
943```
944
945After running `configure.sh`, build and run tests as follows:
946
947```
948make
949make test
950```
951
952This `dc` also assumes a working, GNU-compatible `dc`, installed on the system
953and in the `PATH`, to generate some tests, unless one of the above options is
954given to `configure.sh`.
955
956To generate test coverage, pass the `-c` flag or the `--coverage` option to
957`configure.sh` as follows:
958
959```
960./configure.sh -c
961./configure.sh --coverage
962```
963
964Both commands are equivalent.
965
966***WARNING***: Both `bc` and `dc` must be built for test coverage. Otherwise,
967`configure.sh` will give an error.
968
969#### Problematic Tests
970
971Some tests are problematic, in that they can cause `SIGKILL` on FreeBSD or
972`SIGSEGV` on Linux from being killed by the "OOM Killer" part of the kernel. On
973Linux, these tests are usually fine, but on FreeBSD, they are usually a problem.
974
975To disable problematic tests, pass the `-P` flag or the
976`--disable-problematic-tests` option to `configure.sh` as follows:
977
978```
979./configure.sh -P
980./configure.sh --disable-problematic-tests
981```
982
983Both commands are equivalent.
984
985[1]: https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/bc.html
986[2]: https://www.gnu.org/software/bc/
987[3]: https://www.musl-libc.org/
988[4]: #build-environment-variables
989[5]: #build-options
990[6]: #cross-compiling
991[7]: #build-type
992[8]: #history
993[9]: #nls-locale-support
994[10]: #extra-math
995[11]: #settings
996