rrdbuild - Instructions for building RRDtool
If you downloaded the source of rrdtool you have to compile it. This document will give some information on how this is done.
RRDtool relies on services of thrid part libraries. Some of these libraries may already be installed on your system. You have to compile copies of the other ones before you can build RRDtool.
This document will tell you about all the necessary steps to get going.
These instructions assume you are using a bash shell. If you use csh/tcsh, then you can either type bash to switch to bash for the compilation or if you know what you are doing just replace the export bits with setenv.
We further assume that your copies of tar and make are actually GNU tar and GNU make respectively. It could be that they are installed as gtar and gmake on your system.
Before you start to build RRDtool, you have to decide two things:
Once you have decided. Save the two locations into environment variables.
BUILD_DIR=/tmp/rrdbuild INSTALL_DIR=/usr/local/rrdtool-1.2.99907080300
If your /tmp is mounted with the option noexec (RHEL seems todo that) you have to choose a different directory!
Now make sure the BUILD_DIR exists and go there:
mkdir -p $BUILD_DIR cd $BUILD_DIR
Lets first assume you already have all the necessary libraries pre-installed.
wget http://oss.oetiker.ch/rrdtool/pub/rrdtool-1.2.99907080300.tar.gz gunzip -c rrdtool-1.2.99907080300.tar.gz | tar xf - cd rrdtool-1.2.99907080300 ./configure --prefix=$INSTALL_DIR && make && make install
Ok, this was very optimistic. This try will probably have ended with configure complaining about several missing libraries. If you are on a Linux or *bsd system you may want to just install the missing bits from your software repository. When you do that, make sure you also get the -dev package for each library you install. Once you have the missing bits on board, just re-run the last line of the instructions above.
But again this may have been too optimistic, and you actually have to compile your own copies of some of the required libraries. Things like libpng and zlib are pretty standard so you will probably have them on your system anyway. Freetype, Fontinst, Cairo, Pango may be installed, but it is possible that they are pretty old and thus don't live up to the expectations, so you may want to compile their latest versions.
If you are woking with AIX, you may find the the --disable-shared option will cause things to break for you. In that case you may have to install the shared libraries into the rrdtool PREFIX and work with --disable-static instead.
Another hint to get rrdtool working on AIX is to use the IBM XL C Compiler:
export CC=/usr/vac/bin/cc export PERLCC=$CC
(Better instructions for AIX welcome!)
In order to build the libraries you need a compiler on your system. Unfortunately compilers are not all alike. This has an effect on the CFLAGS you want to set. The examples below are for the popular GCC compiler suite. If you have an other compile you have to use the following settings:
CFLAGS="-xO3 -kPIC"
Some libraries want to know where other libraries are. For this to work, set the following environamen variable
export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=${INSTALL_DIR}/lib/pkgconfig export PATH=$INSTALL_DIR/bin:$PATH
Since we are compiling libraries dynamically, you they must further know where to find each other. This is done by setting an appropriate LDFLAG. Unfortunatly the syntax differs from system to system:
export LDFLAGS=-R${INSTALL_DIR}/lib
export LDFLAGS="-Wl,--rpath -Wl,${INSTALL_DIR}/lib"
export LDFLAGS="+b${INSTALL_DIR}/lib"
export LDFLAGS="-Wl,-blibpath:${INSTALL_DIR}/lib"
If you have GNUmake installed and it is not called 'make', then do
export MAKE=gmake export GNUMAKE=gmake
otherwhise just do
export MAKE=make
=item Building zlib
Chances are very high that you already have that on your system ...
cd $BUILD_DIR wget http://oss.oetiker.ch/rrdtool/pub/libs/zlib-1.2.3.tar.gz gunzip -c zlib-1.2.3.tar.gz | tar xf - cd zlib-1.2.3 ./configure --prefix=$INSTALL_DIR CFLAGS="-O3 -fPIC" $MAKE $MAKE install
cd $BUILD_DIR wget http://oss.oetiker.ch/rrdtool/pub/libs/libpng-1.2.18.tar.gz gunzip -c libpng-1.2.18.tar.gz | tar xf - cd libpng-1.2.10 env CFLAGS="-O3 -fPIC" ./configure --prefix=$INSTALL_DIR $MAKE $MAKE install
cd $BUILD_DIR wget http://oss.oetiker.ch/rrdtool/pub/libs/freetype-2.3.5.tar.gz gunzip -c freetype-2.3.5.tar.gz | tar xf - cd freetype-2.3.5 ./configure --prefix=$INSTALL_DIR CFLAGS="-O3 -fPIC" $MAKE $MAKE install
If you run into problems building freetype on Solaris, you may want to try to add the following at the start the configure line:
env EGREP=egrep
cd $BUILD_DIR wget http://oss.oetiker.ch/rrdtool/pub/libs/fontconfig-2.4.2.tar.gz gunzip -c fontconfig-2.4.2.tar.gz | tar xf - cd fontconfig-2.4.2 ./configure --prefix=$INSTALL_DIR CFLAGS="-O3 -fPIC" $MAKE $MAKE install
cd $BUILD_DIR wget http://oss.oetiker.ch/rrdtool/pub/libs/cairo-1.4.10.tar.gz gunzip -c cairo-1.4.10.tar.gz | tar xf - cd cairo-1.4.10 ./configure --prefix=$INSTALL_DIR \ --enable-xlib=no \ --enable-xlib-render=no \ --enable-win32=no \ CFLAGS="-O3 -fPIC" $MAKE $MAKE install
cd $BUILD_DIR wget http://oss.oetiker.ch/rrdtool/pub/libs/glib-2.12.13.tar.gz gunzip -c glib-2.12.13.tar.gz | tar xf - cd glib-2.12.13 ./configure --prefix=$INSTALL_DIR CFLAGS="-O3 -fPIC" $MAKE $MAKE install
cd $BUILD_DIR wget http://oss.oetiker.ch/rrdtool/pub/libs/pango-1.17.5.tar.gz gunzip -c pango-1.17.5.tar.gz | tar xf - cd pango-1.17.5 ./configure --prefix=$INSTALL_DIR CFLAGS="-O3 -fPIC" $MAKE $MAKE install
Now all the dependent libraries are built and you can try again. This time you tell configure where it should be looking for libraries and include files. This is done via environment variables. Depending on the shell you are running, the syntax for setting environment variables is different.
And finally try building again. We disable the python and tcl bindings because it seems that a fair number of people have ill configured python and tcl setups that would prevent rrdtool from building if they are included in their current state.
cd $BUILD_DIR/rrdtool-1.2.99907080300 ./configure --prefix=$INSTALL_DIR --disable-tcl --disable-python $MAKE clean $MAKE $MAKE install
SOLARIS HINT: if you want to build the perl module for the native perl (the one shipping with solaris) you will need the sun forte compiler installed on your box or you have to hand-tune bindings/perl-shared/Makefile while building!
Now go to $INSTALL_DIR/share/rrdtool/examples/ and run them to see if your build has been successful.
Tobias Oetiker <tobi@oetiker.ch>