Difference between revisions of "Slicer:Slicer2.4 Building"

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1) '''get an anonymous checkout'''
 
1) '''get an anonymous checkout'''
  
  cvs -:pserver:anonymous@cvs.spl.harvard.edu:/projects/cvs/slicer login
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  cvs -d :pserver:anonymous@cvs.spl.harvard.edu:/projects/cvs/slicer login
  
 
and enter 'bwhspl' as the password and then
 
and enter 'bwhspl' as the password and then
  
  cvs -:pserver:anonymous@cvs.spl.harvard.edu:/projects/cvs/slicer checkout -r release-2-4-patches slicer2
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  cvs -d :pserver:anonymous@cvs.spl.harvard.edu:/projects/cvs/slicer checkout -r release-2-4-patches slicer2
  
 
2) '''build the required support libraries (Tcl/Tk, GSL, VTK, ITK)'''
 
2) '''build the required support libraries (Tcl/Tk, GSL, VTK, ITK)'''
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== Troubleshooting ==
 
== Troubleshooting ==
  
These steps are followed as part of the nightly build process for slicer as shown on the slicer dashboard [http://www.na-mic.org/Testing/Slicer [1]]. Compare the builds shown on the dashboard to the system you are trying to build on.
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These steps are followed as part of the nightly build process for slicer as shown on the slicer dashboard. Compare the builds shown on the dashboard to the system you are trying to build on.

Latest revision as of 22:24, 20 May 2008

Home < Slicer:Slicer2.4 Building

Slicer relies on several powerful support libraries. Building slicer has been significantly simplified in slicer 2.4 through the addition of the genlib script.

Generic Instructions

For anonymous checkout and build on most Linux and Solaris configurations, you only need to follow steps below.

Notes:

  • You will need a recent cvs client; version 1.11.17 is known to work.
  • You will need autoconf installed (except on Windows).
  • Windows users need to see special download instructions below.

1) get an anonymous checkout

cvs -d :pserver:anonymous@cvs.spl.harvard.edu:/projects/cvs/slicer login

and enter 'bwhspl' as the password and then

cvs -d :pserver:anonymous@cvs.spl.harvard.edu:/projects/cvs/slicer checkout -r release-2-4-patches slicer2

2) build the required support libraries (Tcl/Tk, GSL, VTK, ITK)

cd slicer2
./Scripts/genlib.tcl


3) build slicer

./Scripts/cmaker.tcl

These steps will build the entire system for you, and you can use this as the basis for further development such as writing your own custom modules.

Windows

Not all the support libraries are easy to build on windows, so you can download a set of precompiled binaries to build against. Insert the following substeps between steps 1) and 2).

1.a) download this file: Slicer2.4-Lib-win32.zip

1.b) unzip the contents into your slicer2 directory. You will end up with the following libraries

Lib/win32/CMake-build
Lib/win32/gsl
Lib/win32/tcl-build

Then continue with the build steps above.

This assumes you are building with the Microsoft Visual Studio .NET version of the development environment. If you need to use a different compiler, you need to change the GENERATOR variable in the 'slicer_variables.tcl' to 'Visual Studio 7.1'. Note that Slicer has not been fully tested on windows environments other than Microsoft Visual Studio .NET. If CMake complains that "cl" can not compile a simple test program, and you are running Visual Studio 7 .NET 2003, you need to change the GENERATOR variable to "Visual Studio 7 .NET 2003".

If you are using MS VisualStudio 6, you can download the building scripts: Slicer2-MSVC6-InstallScripts.zip. (Note that some modules may not build due to library incompatibilities).

Mac OSX

Follow the Generic install steps, but note the extra steps described here: Slicer:Patches_for_the_Mac

Troubleshooting

These steps are followed as part of the nightly build process for slicer as shown on the slicer dashboard. Compare the builds shown on the dashboard to the system you are trying to build on.