1First, read the README file. If you're still happy... 2 3First you need to obtain and install the CVS executables. If you got 4a distribution which contains executables, consult the installation 5instructions for that distribution. If you got source code, do not 6panic. On many platforms building CVS from source code is a 7straightforward process requiring no programming knowledge. See the 8section BUILDING FROM SOURCE CODE at the end of this file, which 9includes a list of platforms which have been tested. 10 11------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 12 131) Take a look at the CVS documentation, if desired. For most 14 purposes you want doc/cvs.texinfo, also known as _Version Management 15 with CVS_ by Per Cederqvist et al. Looking at it might be as simple 16 as "info cvs" but this will depend on your installation; see README 17 for more details. 18 19 See what CVS can do for you, and if it fits your environment (or can 20 possibly be made to fit your environment). If things look good, 21 continue on. Alternately, just give CVS a try first then figure out 22 what it is good for. 23 242) Set the CVSROOT environment variable to where you want to put your 25 source repository. See the "Setting up the repository" section of 26 the Cederqvist manual for details, but the quick summary is just to 27 pick some directory. We'll use /src/master as an example. For 28 users of a POSIX shell (sh/bash/ksh) on unix, the following 29 commands can be placed in user's ~/.profile, ~/.bash_profile file; 30 or in the site-wide /etc/profile: 31 32 CVSROOT=/src/master; export CVSROOT 33 34 For C shell users on unix place the following commands in the 35 user's ~/.cshrc, ~/.login, or /etc/chsrc file: 36 37 setenv CVSROOT /src/master 38 39 For Windows users, supposing the repository will be in 40 d:\src\master, place the following line in c:\autoexec.bat. On 41 Windows 95, autoexec.bat might not already exist. In that case, 42 just create a new file containing the following line. 43 44 set CVSROOT=:local:d:\src\master 45 46 If these environment variables are not already set in your current 47 shell, set them now by typing the above line at the command prompt 48 (or source the login script you just edited). 49 The instructions for the remaining steps assume that you have set 50 the CVSROOT environment variable. 51 523) Create the master source repository. Again, the details are in 53 the "Setting up the repository" section of cvs.texinfo; the 54 one-line summary is: 55 56 $ cvs init 57 58 In this and subsequent examples we use "$" to indicate the command 59 prompt; do not type the "$". 60 614) It might be a good idea to jump right in and put some sources or 62 documents directly under CVS control. From within the top-level 63 directory of your source tree, run the following commands: 64 65 $ cvs import -m "test distribution" ccvs CVS_DIST CVS-TEST 66 67 (Those last three items are, respectively, a repository location, a 68 "vendor tag", and a "release tag". You don't need to understand 69 them yet, but read the section "Starting new projects" in the 70 Cederqvist manual for details). 71 725) Having done step 4, one should be able to checkout a fresh copy of the 73 sources you just imported and hack away at the sources with the 74 following command: 75 76 $ cd 77 $ cvs checkout ccvs 78 79 This will make the directory "ccvs" in your current directory and 80 populate it with the appropriate files and directories. 81 826) You may wish to customize the various administrative files, in particular 83 modules. See the Cederqvist manual for details. 84 857) Read the NEWS file to see what's new. 86 878) Hack away. 88 89------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 90 91BUILDING FROM SOURCE CODE 92 93Tested platforms 94 95CVS has been tested on the following platforms. The most recent 96version of CVS reported to have been tested is indicated, but more 97recent versions of CVS probably will work too. Please send updates to 98this list to bug-cvs@gnu.org (doing so in the form of a diff 99to this file, or at least exact suggested text, is encouraged). 100"tested" means, at a minimum, that CVS compiles and appears to work on 101simple (manual) testing. In many cases it also means "make check" 102and/or "make remotecheck" passes, but we don't try to list the 103platforms for which that is true. 104 105Alpha: 106 DEC Alpha running OSF/1 version 1.3 using cc (about 1.4A2) 107 DEC Alpha running OSF/1 version 2.0 (1.8) 108 DEC Alpha running OSF/1 version 2.1 (about 1.4A2) 109 DEC Alpha running OSF/1 version 3.0 (1.5.95) (footnote 7) 110 DEC Alpha running OSF/1 version 3.2 (1.9) 111 Alpha running alpha-dec-osf4.0 (1.10) 112 DEC Alpha running Digital UNIX v4.0C using gcc 2.7.2.2 (1.9.14) 113 DEC Alpha running VMS 6.2 (1.8.85 client-only) 114 Alpha running NetBSD 1.2E (1.10) 115Cray: 116 J90 (CVS 970215 snapshot) 117 T3E (CVS 970215 snapshot) 118HPPA: 119 HP 9000/710 running HP-UX 8.07A using gcc (about 1.4A2) 120 HPPA running HP-UX 9 (1.8) 121 HPPA 1.1 running HP-UX A.09.03 (1.5.95) (footnote 8) 122 HPPA 1.1 running HP-UX A.09.04 (1.7.1) 123 HPPA running HP-UX 9.05 (1.9) 124 HPPA running HP-UX 10.01 (1.7) 125 HPPA running HP-UX 10.20 (1.10.7) 126 NextSTEP 3.3 (1.7) 127i386 family: 128 Solaris 2.4 using gcc (about 1.4A2) 129 Solaris 2.6 (1.9) 130 UnixWare v1.1.1 using gcc (about 1.4A2) 131 Unixware 2.1 (1.8.86) 132 Unixware 7 (1.9.29) 133 ISC 4.0.1 (1.8.87) 134 Linux (kernel 1.2.x) (1.8.86) 135 Linux (kernel 2.0.x, RedHat 4.2) (1.10) 136 Linux (kernel 2.0.x, RedHat 5.x) (1.10) 137 Linux (kernel 2.2.x, RedHat 6.x) (1.10.8) 138 Linux (kernel 2.2.x, RedHat 7.x) (1.11) 139 BSDI 4.0 (1.10.7) 140 FreeBSD 2.1.5-stable (1.8.87) 141 NextSTEP 3.3 (1.7) 142 SCO Unix 3.2.4.2, gcc 2.7.2 (1.8.87) (footnote 4) 143 SCO OpenServer 5.0.5 (1.10.2) 144 Sequent DYNIX/ptx4.0 (1.10 or so) (remove -linet) 145 Sequent Dynix/PTX 4.1.4 (1.9.20 or so + patches) 146 Lynx 2.3.0 080695 (1.6.86) (footnote 9) 147 Windows NT 3.51 (1.8.86 client; 1.8.3 local) 148 Windows NT 3.51 service pack 4 (1.9) 149 Windows NT 3.51 service pack 5 (1.9) -- DOES NOT WORK (footnote 11) 150 Windows NT 4.0 (1.9 client and local) 151 Windows NT 4.0 (1.11 client and local - build & test, but no test suite) 152 Windows 95 (1.9 client and local) 153 QNX (1.9.1 + patches for strippath() and va_list) 154 OS/2 Version 3 using IBM C/C++ Tools 2.01 (1.8.86 + patches, client) 155 OS/2 Version 3 using EMX 0.9c (1.9.22, client) 156 OS/2 Version 3 using Watcom version ? (? - has this been tested?) 157m68k: 158 Sun 3 running SunOS 4.1.1_U1 w/ bundled K&R /usr/5bin/cc (1.8.86+) 159 NextSTEP 3.3p1 (1.8.87) 160 Lynx 2.3.0 062695 (1.6.86) (footnote 9) 161 NetBSD/mac68k (1.9.28) 162m88k: 163 Data General AViiON running dgux 5.4R2.10 (1.5) 164 Data General AViiON running dgux 5.4R3.10 (1.7.1) 165 Harris Nighthawk 5800 running CX/UX 7.1 (1.5) (footnote 6) 166MIPS: 167 DECstation running Ultrix 4.2a (1.4.90) 168 DECstation running Ultrix 4.3 (1.10) 169 SGI running Irix 4.0.5H using gcc and cc (about 1.4A2) (footnote 2) 170 SGI running Irix 5.3 (1.10) 171 SGI running Irix 6.2 using SGI MIPSpro 6.2 and beta 7.2 compilers (1.9) 172 SGI running Irix-6.2 (1.9.8) 173 SGI running IRIX 6.4 (1.10) 174 SGI running IRIX 6.5 (1.10.7) 175 Siemens-Nixdorf RM600 running SINIX-Y (1.6) 176PowerPC or RS/6000: 177 IBM RS/6000 running AIX 3.1 using gcc and cc (1.6.86) 178 IBM RS/6000 running AIX 3.2.5 (1.8) 179 IBM RS/6000 running AIX 4.1 (1.9) 180 IBM RS/6000 running AIX 4.3 (1.10.7) 181 Lynx 2.3.1 120495 (1.6.86) (footnote 9) 182 Lynx 2.5 (1.9) (footnote 10) 183 MkLinux DR3 GENERIC #6 (1.10.5.1) (presumably LinuxPPC too) 184SPARC: 185 Sun SPARC running SunOS 4.1.x (1.10) 186 Sun SPARCstation 10 running Solaris 2.3 using gcc and cc (about 1.4A2) 187 Sun SPARCstation running Solaris 2.4 using gcc and cc (about 1.5.91) 188 Sun SPARC running Solaris 2.5 (1.8.87) 189 Sun SPARC running Solaris 2.5.1 using gcc 2.7.2.2 (1.9.14) 190 Sun SPARC running Solaris 2.6 (1.10.7) 191 Sun UltraSPARC running Solaris 2.6 using gcc 2.8.1 (1.10) 192 NextSTEP 3.3 (1.7) 193 Sun SPARC running Linux 2.0.17, gcc 2.7.2 (1.8.87) 194VAX: 195 VAX running VMS 6.2 (1.9+patches, client-only) 196 (see README.VMS for information on necessary hacks). 197 198(footnote 2) 199 Some Irix 4.0 systems may core dump in malloc while running 200 CVS. We believe this is a bug in the Irix malloc. You can 201 workaround this bug by linking with "-lmalloc" if necessary. 202 (about 1.4A2). 203 204(footnote 4) Comment out the include of sys/time.h in src/server.c. (1.4.93) 205 You also may have to make sure TIME_WITH_SYS_TIME is undef'ed. 206 207(footnote 6) Build in ucb universe with COFF compiler tools. Put 208 /usr/local/bin first in PATH while doing a configure, make 209 and install of GNU diffutils-2.7, rcs-5.7, then cvs-1.5. 210 211(footnote 7) Manoj Srivastava <srivasta@pilgrim.umass.edu> reports 212 success with this configure command: 213 CC=cc CFLAGS='-O2 -Olimit 2000 -std1' ./configure --verbose alpha-dec-osf 214 215(footnote 8) Manoj Srivastava <srivasta@pilgrim.umass.edu> reports 216 success with this configure command: 217 CC=cc CFLAGS='+O2 -Aa -D_HPUX_SOURCE' ./configure --verbose hppa1.1-hp-hpux 218 219(footnote 9) 220 Had to configure with ./configure --host=<arch>-lynx. 221 222 In src/cvs.h, protected the waitpid prototype with ifdef _POSIX_SOURCE. 223 (I might try building with gcc -mposix -D_POSIX_SOURCE.) 224 225 LynxOS has <dirent.h>, but you don't want to use it. 226 You want to use <sys/dir.h> instead. 227 So after running configure I had to undef HAVE_DIRENT_H and 228 define HAVE_SYS_DIR_H. 229 230(footnote 10) 231 Had to compile with "make LIBS=-lbsd" (to get gethostbyname 232 and getservbyname). 233 234(footnote 11) 235 when I do a `cvs init' I get this message: 236 ci: 'RCS/loginfo,v' is not a regular file 237 ci: RCS/loginfo,v: Invalid argument 238 cvs [init aborted]: failed to checkin n:/safe/CVSROOT/loginfo 239 240------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 241 242Building from source code under Unix: 243 2441) Run "configure": 245 246 $ ./configure 247 248 You can specify an alternate destination to override the default with 249 the --prefix option: 250 251 $ ./configure --prefix=/usr/local/gnu 252 253 or some path that is more appropriate for your site. The default prefix 254 value is "/usr/local", with binaries in sub-directory "bin", manual 255 pages in sub-directory "man", and libraries in sub-directory "lib". 256 257 A normal build of CVS will create an executable which supports 258 local, server, or client CVS (if you don't know the difference, 259 it is described in the Repository chapter of doc/cvs.texinfo). If 260 you do not intend to use client or server CVS, you may want to 261 prevent these features from being included in the executable you 262 build. You can do this with the --disable-client and 263 --disable-server options: 264 265 $ ./configure --disable-client --disable-server 266 267 Typically this can reduce the size of the executable by around 30%. 268 269 Unlike previous versions of CVS, you do not need to install RCS 270 or GNU diff. 271 272 NOTE: The configure program will cache the results of the previous 273 configure execution. If you need to re-run configure from scratch, you 274 may need to run "make distclean" first to remove the cached 275 configuration information. 276 277 If you are using gcc and are planning to modify CVS, you may want to 278 configure with -Wall; see the file HACKING for details. 279 280 If you have Kerberos 4 installed, you can specify the location of 281 the header files and libraries using the --with-krb4=DIR option. 282 DIR should be a directory with subdirectories include and lib 283 holding the Kerberos 4 header files and libraries, respectively. 284 The default value is /usr/kerberos. 285 286 If you want to enable support for encryption over Kerberos, use 287 the --enable-encryption option. This option is disabled by 288 default. 289 290 If you want to disable automatic dependency tracking in the makefiles, 291 use the '--disable-dependency-tracking' option: 292 293 $ ./configure --disable-dependency-tracking 294 295 This avoids problems on some platforms. See the note at the end of this 296 file on BSD. 297 298 Try './configure --help' for further information on its usage. 299 300 NOTE ON CVS's USE OF NDBM: 301 302 By default, CVS uses some built-in ndbm emulation code to allow 303 CVS to work in a heterogeneous environment. However, if you have 304 a very large modules database, this may not work well. You will 305 need to edit src/options.h to turn off the MY_NDBM #define and 306 re-run configure. If you do this, the following comments apply. 307 If not, you may safely skip these comments. 308 309 If you configure CVS to use the real ndbm(3) libraries and 310 you do not have them installed in a "normal" place, you will 311 probably want to get the GNU version of ndbm (gdbm) and install 312 that before running the CVS configure script. Be aware that the 313 GDBM 1.5 release does NOT install the <ndbm.h> header file included 314 with the release automatically. You may have to install it by hand. 315 316 If you configure CVS to use the ndbm(3) libraries, you cannot 317 compile CVS with GNU cc (gcc) on Sun-4 SPARC systems. However, gcc 318 2.0 may have fixed this limitation if -fpcc-struct-return is 319 defined. When using gcc on other systems to compile CVS, you *may* 320 need to specify the -fpcc-struct-return option to gcc (you will 321 *know* you have to if "cvs checkout" core dumps in some ndbm 322 function). You can do this as follows: 323 324 $ CC='gcc -fpcc-struct-return' ./configure 325 326 for sh, bash, and ksh users and: 327 328 % setenv CC 'gcc -fpcc-struct-return' 329 % ./configure 330 331 for csh and tcsh users. 332 333 END OF NOTE FOR NDBM GUNK. 334 3352) Edit src/options.h. The defaults should be reasonable, and in fact 336 if you are lazy you can safely skip this step. 337 3383) Try to build it: 339 340 $ make 341 342 This will (hopefully) make the needed CVS binaries within the 343 "src" directory. If something fails for your system, and you want 344 to submit a bug report, you may wish to include your 345 "config.status" file, your host type, operating system and 346 compiler information, make output, and anything else you think 347 will be helpful. 348 3493a) Run the regression tests (optional). 350 351 You may also wish to validate the correctness of the new binary by 352 running the regression tests. If they succeed, that is nice to 353 know. However, if they fail, it doesn't tell you much. Often it 354 will just be a problem with running the tests on your machine, 355 rather than a problem with CVS. Unless you will have the time to 356 determine which of the two it is in case of failure, you might 357 want to save yourself the time and just not run the tests. 358 359 If you want to run the tests, see the file TESTS for more information. 360 3614) Install the binaries/documentation: 362 363 $ make install 364 365 Depending on your installation's configuration, you may need to be 366 root to do this. 367 368------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 369 370Detailed information about your interaction with "configure": 371 372The "configure" script and its interaction with its options and the 373environment is described here. For more detailed documentation about 374"configure", please refer to the GNU Autoconf documentation. 375 376Supported options are: 377 378 --srcdir=DIR Useful for compiling on many different 379 machines sharing one source tree. 380 --prefix=DIR The root of where to install the 381 various pieces of CVS (/usr/local). 382 --exec_prefix=DIR If you want executables in a 383 host-dependent place and shared 384 things in a host-independent place. 385 386The following environment variables override configure's default 387behaviour: 388 389 CC If not set, tries to use gcc first, 390 then cc. Also tries to use "-g -O" 391 as options, backing down to -g 392 alone if that doesn't work. 393 INSTALL If not set, tries to use "install", then 394 "./install-sh" as a final choice. 395 RANLIB If not set, tries to determine if "ranlib" 396 is available, choosing "echo" if it doesn't 397 appear to be. 398 YACC If not set, tries to determine if "bison" 399 is available, choosing "yacc" if it doesn't 400 appear to be. 401 402------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 403 404Building from source code under Windows NT/95/98/2000: 405 406You may find interesting information in windows-NT/README. 407 4081) Using Microsoft Visual C++ 5.x, open the project `cvsnt.dsp', 409 in the top directory of the CVS distribution. If you have an older 410 version of Visual C++, take a look at windows-NT/README. 4112) Choose "Build cvs.exe" from the "Project" menu. 4123) MSVC will place the executable file cvs.exe in WinRel, or whatever 413 your target directory is. 414 415* From the top level directory, with MSVC++ 6.0 installed, something like the 416following also works: 417 418 C:\> vcvars32 419 C:\> nmake /f cvsnt.mak CFG="cvsnt - Win32 Debug" 420 421* You might also try http://wincvs.org & http://www.cvsnt.org 422 423------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 424 425Building from source code under other platforms: 426 427For OS/2, see os2/README and emx/README. 428 429For VMS, see README.VMS 430 431For Macintosh, see macintosh/README.MacCVS, or, since that file isn't there 432anymore, you might try http://wincvs.org . 433 434For a Java client, see jCVS (which is a separate package from CVS 435itself, but which might be preferable to the Macintosh port mentioned 436above, for example). 437 438 **** **** 439 440Builds are breaking on some systems (notably, 441BSD/OS thor.sdrc.com 4.0.1 BSDI BSD/OS 4.0.1 Kernel #3: Thu Mar 9 11:29:16 EST 2000 442) due to Automake's dependency tracking code. The work around for this is to 443comile without it by passing the '--disable-dependency-tracking' option to 444configure: 445 446 $ ./configure --disable-dependency-tracking 447 448This will allow a compile but make will no longer be tracking header 449dependencies. This means that if you make any changes to header files you may 450have to run 'make clean' before running a 'make' to get everything to compile. 451 452------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 453