Octave in home directory: Difference between revisions
m (moved Octave in Userland to Octave in home directory) |
|
(No difference)
|
Revision as of 01:12, 20 February 2014
Installing in Userland is a methode to install GNU Octave next to your repository installation at the same time. This works with every Linux distribution and is especially for old Ubuntu LTS versions very profitable!
One advantage is that you do not clutter your system by running sudo make install. Another advantage is that you can keep your octave installation that is provided by your distribution.
1. Install dependencies
Take a look at Building for Linux systems and Building.
General information you can gather from the `./configure` summary or read the INSTALL.OCTAVE file that comes distributed with Octave.
2. Download Octave Sourcecode
Take a release from ftp.gnu.org, e.g. 3.8.0.
wget ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/octave/octave-3.8.0.tar.bz2 tar xfvj octave-3.8.0.tar.bz2 cd octave-3.8.0/
or clone current stable branch
hg clone http://hg.octave.org/octave/ cd octave/
3. configure
Only if you want to install from mercurial (hg.octave.org), you have to do first:
./bootstrap
Now it's time to run ./configure with a prefix that points to a directory in your home directory. E.g., my username is maxpower and I want to install Octave to ~/.octave38/
./configure --prefix=/home/maxpower/.octave38/
Pay attention to the configure summary at the end (See chapter 1).
4. make & make install
After you have successful configured octave without errors (warnings may be okey), you can run make. If you have a dual core cpu, you can run make with two threads like that (increase -j number if you have more cpu cores).
make -j2
This may take now ~30-300 Minutes (depends on the speed of your cpu and the size of your RAM) :)
Feel free to run make check too.
When make -j2 finished without errors, simply run without sudo/root permissions
make install
Octave will now be installed to /home/maxpower/.octave38/
5. create a smart bashrc entry
echo "alias octave38='~/.octave38/bin/octave'" >> ~/.bashrc . ~/.bashrc # this will update your bashrc without doing logout and login!
If you simply enter octave, you'll start your repository installation provided by your distribution. But when you enter octave38, you'll start your new snappy octave version installed to your home directory.
Uninstall
Methode A
If you're still have the compiled source folder, just do make uninstall from it. And don't forget to remove the alias octave38 entry in your ~/.bashrc.
Methode B
Just delete (e.g. rm -rf ~/.octave38/) the install folder and remove the alias octave38 entry from your ~/.bashrc.