DepSelectorLibgecode
This library vendors Gecode 3.7.3 as a rubygem so it can easily be used with the dep-selector project.
Gecode is a fast CSP solver library written in C++. We created this library to install it in order to optimize the following criteria:
- Allow users to install libraries that depend on gecode without extra steps.
- Install the correct version of gecode for dep-selector. The current release line of gecode is 4.x, but dep-selector uses ~> 3.5.
- Configure the source installation for shortest compilation time by excluding unnecessary components. Gecode has a reputation for taking a long time to compile, but in fact most of that time is spent building examples and documentation. We've disabled these, along with the flatzinc interpreter.
Installation
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'dep-selector-libgecode'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install dep-selector-libgecode
Installation on Windows
- The recommended installation method is ChefDK and the following steps can be skipped if you choose this method.
- Don't set
USE_SYSTEM_GECODE
to anything. The build only checks for the presence of this variable, not the value. - Install ruby. Install DevKit(preferred), or install mingw and add it to your PATH. You can use the Chef omnibus MSI to get a working ruby and devkit.
- Install a working tar, and include it in your PATH. There is a tar binary
that comes with the git package, but it is horribly broken and only good for
generating core dumps. Before you build anything check
where tar
to make sure the tar from git is not the first one in your PATH. The chef-client omnibus package has a tar that works (easiest), or you can get one from here: http://gnuwin32.sourceforge.net/packages/gtar.htm -
gem install berkshelf
should work now. - Examples for automating these builds can also be found at omnibus-chef and omnibus-software.
Requirements
This gem runs make with concurrent jobs to speed build time, so it uses about 2GB of RAM during the build. If this doesn't work for your environment, see 'Using a System Gecode Instead' below. Better yet, if you only want to install Berkshelf, try using ChefDK instead of a gem install.
Using a System Gecode Instead
Use the "USE_SYSTEM_GECODE" environment variable when installing to make dep-selector-libgecode use the system version, instead of downloading the source and building its own copy:
$ USE_SYSTEM_GECODE=1 gem install dep-selector-libgecode
WARNING: Ensure that your system packages provide Gecode version 3 and not version 4. Version 4 does not work with dep-selector.
Usage
DepSelectorLibgecode
provides helper functions for locating the
vendored gecode after installation:
require 'dep-selector-libgecode'
# The vendored lib dir:
DepSelectorLibgecode.opt_path
# The include dir (where the headers are):
DepSelectorLibgecode.include_path
Vendoring Native Gems (docs for Maintainers)
The rake native
command can be used to build a native "fat" gem.
It is recommended to use the following process:
% git clean -ffdx
% git checkout -- .
% rake native
% gem push pkg/dep-selector-libgecode-1.3.0-x86_64-darwin-15.gem # obviously use the filename you actually built here
Without cleaning up the repo first and nuking stuff in ext/ and pkg/ the rake native
command will fail.
Licensing
The packaging code here is released under the terms of the Apache2 license. Gecode itself is released under the terms of the MIT license.
See CONTRIBUTING.md for more information.
Contributing
See CONTRIBUTING.md for more information.