INSTALLING THE SOFTWARE

This section describes how to unpack and compile the software for a
Unix machine.  Note that getting the software to work in a non-Unix
environment may be difficult or impossible.


Unpacking the files.

The software is distributed as a Unix tar archive.  To obtain the
files, download the tar archive for the desired version by anonymous
ftp or via your Web browser to a file of the form 'fbm.YYYY-MM-DD.tar', 
and then issue the Unix command

    tar xf fbm.YYYY-MM-DD.tar

If you got the archive in compressed form, as 'fbm.YYYY-MM-DD.tar.Z',
you must use the command "uncompress fbm.YYYY-MM-DD.tar.Z" before
doing the above.  The following instructions cover what to do next for
the current version; you should read the old documentation if for some
reason you are installing an older version.

The tar command should create a directory called 'fbm.YYYY-MM-DD',
where YYYY-MM-DD is the release data.  It should place numerous files
and sub-directories in this directory.  If this seems to have worked,
you can remove the file 'fbm.YYYY-MM-DD.tar'.  You should now change
into the 'fbm.YYYY-MM-DD' directory, as the following instructions
assumed that you are there.


Looking at the documentation.

The directory 'doc' contains links to all the documentation files.
The file 'manual' contains all the introductory documentation
(including this) as a simple text file; the same information is also
contained in several .doc files.  Other .doc files contain more
detailed information.  Files of the form 'Release.YYYY-MM-DD.doc'
contain information on current and past releases.  These may be of
interest if you are upgrading from an older version of the software.

If you have a Web browser, you can access all these documentation
files via 'index.html' in the 'doc' directory, as described in
Guide.doc.


Compiling the programs.

You will probably be able to compile the programs as described below
without making having to change anything.  However, it is possible
that you will want to use a different C compiler, or set certain
compilation options.  You can probably set the required options by
modifying the 'make.include' file in the main directory, which is
included at the beginning of all Makefiles, though for some problems
you might have to modify the 'Makefile' and 'xxx.make' files in the
various sub-directories, or modify the source files.

Here are some reasons that you might need to customize things:

  1) The programs are written in ANSI standard C.  If you compiler
     defaults to some other idea of what C is, you should try to
     persuade it otherwise.  On DEC Alpha machines, the "-std" flag
     does this.  It can be put in CFLAGS in 'make.include'.

  2) The programs were written with IEEE floating-point in mind, and
     therefore may occasionally perform operations that result in
     overflow or underflow.  If this causes program termination on
     your machine (eg, with a "floating point exception"), you will
     need to figure out how to disable these errors.  On DEC Alpha
     machines, for example, the problem can be fixed using a "-ieee"
     compiler option, which can be put in CFLAGS in 'make.include'.

  3) The 'util' directory contains a file of 100,000 natural random
     bytes, which are used in combination with pseudo-random numbers
     This file is accessed by many of the programs, using a path 
     name that by default points into this 'util' directory.  If you 
     plan on moving this file elsewhere, you will need to change the 
     compilation command for rand.c at the end of 'util/util.make'.

  4) If you are rather short of memory, you might want to reduce the
     size of the Max_optional_memory constant defined in gp/gp-mc.c.
     This will save memory at the cost of some time.

Once you have made any required changes, you can compile the programs
by going to the main directory where you installed the software and
issuing the command

    make-all

This will compile programs in the various sub-directories.  Note that
some modules will be compiled over again in each directory where they
are used; this is intentional.

It is possible that these compilation commands will fail for some
reason, in which case you'll have to figure out what's wrong and fix
it.  Note that the 'make-all' command just moves into each of the
directories and does a 'make' there.  You can do this manually for
each directory to see where the problem is.  For these makes to work
correctly, the programs MUST be kept in separate 'util', 'mc', 'dist',
'bvg', 'net', 'gp', and 'mix' sub-directories, with these names.


Using the programs.

Once you have successfully compiled the programs, you should put the
'bin' directory (within the main directory for this software) in your
search path.  How this is done depends on the shell program you are
using; consult a local expert if you don't know how.  This directory
contains symbolic links to all the programs making up this software.
Subsequent instructions assume that you have this 'bin' directory in
your search path.


Cleaning things up.

Once the compilations have finished, you can save some disk space by
issuing the command

    rm */*.o

when you are in the main directory.  You can get rid of the compiled
programs by using the command

    make-clean

when in the main directory.  Of course, you then won't be able to use
the programs until you do another make-all to recompile them.