This is Mono.
-1. Installation
-2. Using Mono
-3. Directory Roadmap
+ 1. Installation
+ 2. Using Mono
+ 3. Directory Roadmap
1. Compilation and Installation
===============================
Available from: http://www.freedesktop.org/Software/pkgconfig
- * glib 2.0
+ * glib 2.4
Available from: http://www.gtk.org/
- Optional dependencies:
+ On Itanium, you must obtain libunwind:
+
+ http://www.hpl.hp.com/research/linux/libunwind/download.php4
- * ICU library
+ On Solaris, make sure that you used GNU tar to unpack this package, as
+ Solaris tar will not unpack this correctly, and you will get strange errors.
- http://oss.software.ibm.com/icu/index.html
+ On Solaris, make sure that you use the GNU toolchain to build the software.
- You will need this one to get complete support for the international
- features of the .NET Framework.
+ Optional dependencies:
- * Cairo and libgdiplus
+ * libgdiplus
If you want to get support for System.Drawing, you will need to get
- both Libgdiplus and Cairo.
+ Libgdiplus.
b. Building the Software
------------------------
make
make install
- Mono supports a JIT engine on x86, SPARC and PowerPC systems.
- The various commands that ship with Mono default to the JIT engine
- on x86 and SPARC, to turn it on for PPC systems, use the --with-jit=yes
- command line option to configure.
-
- MacOS X Users: you will need to download the latest Boehm GC
- Alpha release for garbage collection to work properly.
+ Mono supports a JIT engine on x86, SPARC, SPARCv9, S/390, AMD64, ARM
+ and PowerPC systems.
If you obtained this as a snapshot, you will need an existing
Mono installation. To upgrade your installation, unpack both
mv mcs-XXX mcs
cd mono
./autogen.sh --prefix=/usr/local
- make bootstrap
+ make
- c. Building the software from CVS
+ c. Building the software from SVN
---------------------------------
- If you are building the software from CVS, make sure that you
+ If you are building the software from SVN, make sure that you
have up-to-date mcs and mono sources:
- cvs co mono mcs
+ svn co svn+ssh://USER@mono-cvs.ximian.com/source/trunk/mono
+ svn co svn+ssh://USER@mono-cvs.ximian.com/source/trunk/mcs
Then, go into the mono directory, and configure:
cd mono
./autogen.sh --prefix=/usr/local
-
- Depending on whether you have an existing Mono installation or
- not, you can try the following:
-
- i. If you have an existing Mono installation
- -----------------------------------------
-
- First verify that you have a working installation:
-
- echo 'class X { static void Main () { System.Console.Write("OK");}}' > x.cs
-
- Compile:
-
- mcs x.cs
-
- And run:
-
- mono x.exe
-
- If you get the output `OK' and no errors, and you have mono
- version 0.31 or later, continue. Otherwise, you can try option
- (ii) below.
-
- You are ready to start your CVS upgrade. Compile with
-
- make bootstrap
+ make
This will automatically go into the mcs/ tree and build the
- binaries there, and copy them into the appropriate
- sub-directories of mono/runtime/.
+ binaries there.
- Now, go to step (iii) below.
+ This assumes that you have a working mono installation, and that
+ there's a C# compiler named 'mcs', and a corresponding IL
+ runtime called 'mono'. You can use two make variables
+ EXTERNAL_MCS and EXTERNAL_RUNTIME to override these. e.g., you
+ can say
- ii. If you don't have a working Mono installation
- ---------------------------------------------
+ make EXTERNAL_MCS=/foo/bar/mcs EXTERNAL_RUNTIME=/somewhere/else/mono
+
+ If you don't have a working Mono installation
+ ---------------------------------------------
If you don't have a working Mono installation, an obvious choice
is to install the latest released packages of 'mono' for your
- distribution and go back to step (i).
+ distribution and running autogen.sh; make; make install in the
+ mono module directory.
- You can also try a slightly more risky approach that should work
- almost all the time.
+ You can also try a slightly more risky approach: this may not work,
+ so start from the released tarball as detailed above.
This works by first getting the latest version of the 'monolite'
distribution, which contains just enough to run the 'mcs'
- compiler. You do this by
+ compiler. You do this with:
make get-monolite-latest
- This should place a monolite-latest.tar.gz in the parent
- directory of the 'mono' source tree. You can then run:
-
- make monolite-bootstrap
-
- This will automatically gunzip and untar the tarball, place the
- files appropriately, and then complete the bootstrap.
-
- iii. Testing and Installation
- ------------------------
-
- You can run the mono and mcs testsuites with the command:
-
- make -k bootstrap-check
+ This will download and automatically gunzip and untar the
+ tarball, and place the files appropriately so that you can then
+ just run:
- Expect to find several testsuite failures, especially in the
- mcs/ tree. As a sanity check, you can compare the failures you
- got with
+ make
- http://go-mono.com/tests/displayTestResults.php
+ To ensure that you're using the 'monolite' distribution, you can
+ also try passing EXTERNAL_MCS=false on the make command-line.
- You can now install it:
+ Testing and Installation
+ ------------------------
- make install
+ You can run (part of) the mono and mcs testsuites with the command:
- Failure to follow these steps will result in a broken installation.
+ make check
- iv. Other useful "bootstrap"-like facilities
- ----------------------------------------
+ All tests should pass.
- If you have a CVS snapshot that you keep updating periodically,
- and/or do your development in, you may try using a couple of
- specialty make targets that may be slightly faster than a
- "make bootstrap".
+ If you want more extensive tests, including those that test the
+ class libraries, you need to re-run 'configure' with the
+ '--enable-nunit-tests' flag, and try
- You can try a two-stage bootstrap with:
+ make -k check
- make faststrap
+ Expect to find a few testsuite failures. As a sanity check, you
+ can compare the failures you got with
- This assumes that you have already run a "make bootstrap" on the
- tree before.
+ http://go-mono.com/tests/displayTestResults.php
- If you want to avoid waiting even for that, you can try the
- riskier one-stage build:
+ You can now install mono with:
- make fasterstrap
+ make install
- This should be attempted only if you're sure that the sources of
- the mcs compiler itself and the sources of the libraries used by
- it have not been changed.
+ Failure to follow these steps may result in a broken installation.
2. Using Mono
=============
* runtime engine
mono program.exe
- or
- mint program.exe
* C# compiler
3. Directory Roadmap
====================
- doc/
- Contains the web site contents.
-
docs/
Technical documents about the Mono runtime.
metadata/
The object system and metadata reader.
- jit/
+ mini/
The Just in Time Compiler.
dis/
definition of the CIL bytecodes.
interp/
- Interpreter for CLI executables.
+ Interpreter for CLI executables (obsolete).
arch/
Architecture specific portions.
runtime/
- A directory holding a pre-compiled version of the Mono
- runtime.
-
+ A directory that contains the Makefiles that link the
+ mono/ and mcs/ build systems.