Octave in home directory: Difference between revisions

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  ./configure --prefix=/home/maxpower/.octave38/
  ./configure --prefix=/home/maxpower/.octave38/


Another way, if you intend to compile for yourself a lot of utilities, is to mirror the main /usr structure into your own dir:
An alternative is presented in section 6. Use it if you intent to compile from yourself many packages.
./configure --prefix=${HOME}/usr
 
Pay attention to the configure summary at the end (See chapter 1), install missing required packages if any.  
Pay attention to the configure summary at the end (See chapter 1), install missing required packages if any.  


Line 58: Line 58:


== 6. Managing your own program hierarchy  (the LFS way) ==
== 6. Managing your own program hierarchy  (the LFS way) ==
LFS stands for "Linux From Scratch". If you want your own set of programs, a few commands in your .profile will help:
LFS stands for "Linux From Scratch". If you intend to compile for yourself a lot of utilities, you may use a specific "usr" hierachy into your own dir. Go back to step 2, and configure octave as:
 
./configure --prefix=${HOME}/usr
 
The other steps (make; make install) do not change. In order to use your own hierachy, you should set a few environment variables in your .profile:


   # set LD_LIBRARY_PATH if not set
   # set LD_LIBRARY_PATH if not set
Line 67: Line 71:
         (echo $PATH | grep -q $HOME/usr/bin) || export PATH="$HOME/bin:$HOME/usr/bin:$HOME/usr/local/bin:$PATH"
         (echo $PATH | grep -q $HOME/usr/bin) || export PATH="$HOME/bin:$HOME/usr/bin:$HOME/usr/local/bin:$PATH"
   fi
   fi
   # export MANPATH="$MANPATH:/usr/local/teTeX/man"
    
   # set MANPATH so it includes user's private bin if it exists
   # set MANPATH so it includes user's private bin if it exists
   if [ -d "$HOME/usr/share/man" ] ; then
   if [ -d "$HOME/usr/share/man" ] ; then
     (echo $MANPATH | grep -q $HOME/usr/share/man) || export MANPATH="$HOME/usr/local/share/man:$HOME/usr/share/man:`manpath -q`"
     (echo $MANPATH | grep -q $HOME/usr/share/man) || export MANPATH="$HOME/usr/local/share/man:$HOME/usr/share/man:`manpath -q`"
   fi
   fi
 
   if [ -d "$HOME/usr/share/info" ]; then
   if [ -d "$HOME/usr/share/info" ]; then
     export INFOPATH="$INFOPATH:$HOME/usr/share/info"
     export INFOPATH="$INFOPATH:$HOME/usr/share/info"
   fi
   fi
 
   if [ -d "$HOME/usr/lib/python" ]; then
   if [ -d "$HOME/usr/lib/python" ]; then
     (echo $PYTHONPATH | grep -q $HOME/usr/lib/python) || export PYTHONPATH="$HOME/usr/local/lib/python:$HOME/usr/lib/python"
     (echo $PYTHONPATH | grep -q $HOME/usr/lib/python) || export PYTHONPATH="$HOME/usr/local/lib/python:$HOME/usr/lib/python"
   fi
   fi
 
   if [ -d "$HOME/usr/lib/pkgconfig" ]; then
   if [ -d "$HOME/usr/lib/pkgconfig" ]; then
     (echo $PKG_CONFIG_PATH | grep -q $HOME/usr/lib/pkgconfig) || export PKG_CONFIG_PATH="$HOME/usr/lib/pkgconfig"
     (echo $PKG_CONFIG_PATH | grep -q $HOME/usr/lib/pkgconfig) || export PKG_CONFIG_PATH="$HOME/usr/lib/pkgconfig"

Revision as of 14:48, 22 February 2014

Installing in your home directory is a method 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 useful!

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 development 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/

An alternative is presented in section 6. Use it if you intent to compile from yourself many packages.

Pay attention to the configure summary at the end (See chapter 1), install missing required packages if any.

4. make & make install

After you have successful configured octave without errors (warnings may be okay), 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 either /home/maxpower/.octave38/, either ${HOME}/usr


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.


6. Managing your own program hierarchy (the LFS way)

LFS stands for "Linux From Scratch". If you intend to compile for yourself a lot of utilities, you may use a specific "usr" hierachy into your own dir. Go back to step 2, and configure octave as:

./configure --prefix=${HOME}/usr

The other steps (make; make install) do not change. In order to use your own hierachy, you should set a few environment variables in your .profile:

 # set LD_LIBRARY_PATH if not set
 (echo $LD_LIBRARY_PATH | grep -q lib) || export LD_LIBRARY_PATH="/usr/local/lib:$HOME/usr/lib:$HOME/usr/local/lib"

 # set PATH so it includes user's private bin if it exists
 if [ -d "$HOME/bin" ] ; then
       (echo $PATH | grep -q $HOME/usr/bin) || export PATH="$HOME/bin:$HOME/usr/bin:$HOME/usr/local/bin:$PATH"
 fi
 
 # set MANPATH so it includes user's private bin if it exists
 if [ -d "$HOME/usr/share/man" ] ; then
   (echo $MANPATH | grep -q $HOME/usr/share/man) || export MANPATH="$HOME/usr/local/share/man:$HOME/usr/share/man:`manpath -q`"
 fi
 
 if [ -d "$HOME/usr/share/info" ]; then
   export INFOPATH="$INFOPATH:$HOME/usr/share/info"
 fi
 
 if [ -d "$HOME/usr/lib/python" ]; then
   (echo $PYTHONPATH | grep -q $HOME/usr/lib/python) || export PYTHONPATH="$HOME/usr/local/lib/python:$HOME/usr/lib/python"
 fi
 
 if [ -d "$HOME/usr/lib/pkgconfig" ]; then
   (echo $PKG_CONFIG_PATH | grep -q $HOME/usr/lib/pkgconfig) || export PKG_CONFIG_PATH="$HOME/usr/lib/pkgconfig"
 fi

This way, most ordinary commands like "man octave", "info octave", or launching octave itself, will first explore your own hierachy.


Uninstall

Method 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.

Method B

Just delete (e.g. rm -rf ~/.octave38/) the install folder and remove the alias octave38 entry from your ~/.bashrc.