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Overview
As of version 7.5.5, Condor uses cmake to configure the build. For instructions on building Condor prior to that, see BuildingCondorOnUnixOld.
Confirm the build environment
The README.building does a decent job of covering this, but usually
you'd basically need these revisions, or later: wget-1.9.1, tar 1.14,
autoconf-2.59.
Space Needed for a Full Build
You may need around 6 Gigs to build a releasable package of Condor. If you just want to build eveything up to the releasable package, then you might need only 3 Gigs or so.
Required Prereqs
One needs, as a good start these revisions, or later, of these tools:
wget-1.9.1, tar 1.14, autoconf-2.59. If you are on a recent linux-flavor
machine, building Condor is pretty easy, the farther you get into
the fringe architectures, like ia64 hpux 11, the more prereqs you may
need. Luckily, the configure output is pretty good about telling you
about any tools you need to update.
Getting the source
Directly from the GIT repository
If you reside on the CSL networks and/or have access to our GIT repository,
then follow ManagingCondorSourceTreesWithGit up to but not including the
section entitled Working on a single person project
.
Ensure you have checked out and are about the build the correct branch you want.
If you'd like to perform the full build process, producing the sort of
package one downloads from our website with the source, then you should
grab the tarball of man pages make public
needs from AFS:
# sitting at the toplevel with src/ config/ externals/ etc.... % cp /p/condor/workspaces/externals/bundles/man/current/man-current.tar.gz externals/man/current
From our download pages
If you are building Condor sources from our
download
page. Then download the source tarball, it'll have a name similar to
condor_src-X.Y.Z-all-all.tar.gz
. X.Y.Z represents the version of Condor
for which the source creates.
When you untar the source tarball, what you get is remarkably similar to what one would check out of GIT and should be directly buildable. You will have available in the externals directory the tarball of manual pages needed by our packaging scripts.
Externals required for Building
Condor may use a sizable collection of externals which implement various feature
sets for Condor. Some examples are Kerberos, PostgreSQL, Globus. Condor sources
include an externals/
directory which contains URLs to locate the required
externals and patches to be applied. There is only a small number of externals
that Condor absolutely requires to build, these are usually quite portable.
Required Prereqs
One needs, as a good start these revisions, or later, of these tools:
cmake 2.8.3, wget-1.9.1, tar 1.14, autoconf-2.59. For a more complete list, run nmi_tools/glue/SubmitInfo.pm
and look at the listed prereqs for a platform as similar to the one you are using as possible.
Externals required for Building
Condor may use a sizable collection of externals which implement various feature
sets for Condor. Some examples are Kerberos
, OpenSSL
, Globus
. There are only a small number of externals
that Condor absolutely requires to build; these are usually quite portable.
There are
two ways to link with external packages, using the blessed and patched versions of the packages from the UW Condor externals collection, or using the native libraries installed on the build machine. We'll call these the 'UW' way and the 'proper' way. To get externals the UW way, Condor sources
include an externals/
directory which contains URLs to locate the required
externals and patches to be applied. To get externals the 'proper' way, you'll need to use your system's package manager to install the necessary development libraries.
Configure your build
See the new build instructions
The common options for configuring Condor to be built the 'UW way' are passed to cmake by running configure_uw
. This will configure the build to use the UW externals collection rather than local system libraries.
Additional arguments to cmake may be passed on the command line of configure_uw
. On most common platforms, no additional build options are required. For other platforms, there are several ways to explore the build options:
- ccmake
- cmake-gui
- cmake -i
- Use
nmi_tools/glue/SubmitInfo.pm
, which shows the build options that are used to build Condor on a wide variety of platforms in the NMI build system.- To list the platforms that SubmitInfo.pm knows:
./nmi_tools/glue/SubmitInfo.pm -l
- To list the options for a particular platform
./nmi_tools/glue/SubmitInfo.pm <
platform>
- Example:
./nmi_tools/glue/SubmitInfo.pm x86_64_opensuse_11.3
- You can also specify a regex:
./nmi_tools/glue/SubmitInfo.pm <
/regex/>
- Example:
./nmi_tools/glue/SubmitInfo.pm /opensuse/
- To list the platforms that SubmitInfo.pm knows:
- To build with the default options for your platform:
./configure_uw
- If you want to explicitly do a clipped port ('clipped' means no standard universe, no checkpointing, no checkpoint server)
./configure_uw -DCLIPPED:BOOL=ON
- Builds by default cache the externals in /scratch/condor-externals. If you are sharing the machine with others, you may collide and have problems. To fix this, add this to your invocation of configure_uw
-DEXTERNAL_STAGE:PATH=/path/to/a/private/directory
Building your source
While there are many targets to make
, I will only describe the two that are
most likely what you want.
install
make install
will make a set of executable binaries and place them in
release_dir/
. They will be dynamically linked and suitable for testing
by pointing a $(RELEASE_DIR) at it from a condir_configure file.
package
make package
will produce packages similar to what you can download from the
UW download site for the machine upon which you are building.
Running the developer test suite
Building the tests
$ make tests
Running the tests
See TestingCondorOnUnix.