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  43. <a href="http://luajit.org"><span>Lua<span id="logo">JIT</span></span></a>
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  45. <div id="head">
  46. <h1>Installation</h1>
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  84. </div>
  85. <div id="main">
  86. <p>
  87. LuaJIT is only distributed as a source package. This page explains
  88. how to build and install LuaJIT with different operating systems
  89. and C&nbsp;compilers.
  90. </p>
  91. <p>
  92. For the impatient (on POSIX systems):
  93. </p>
  94. <pre class="code">
  95. make &amp;&amp; sudo make install
  96. </pre>
  97. <p>
  98. LuaJIT currently builds out-of-the box on most systems.
  99. Here's the compatibility matrix for the supported combinations of
  100. operating systems, CPUs and compilers:
  101. </p>
  102. <table class="compat">
  103. <tr class="compathead">
  104. <td class="compatcpu">CPU / OS</td>
  105. <td class="compatos"><a href="#posix">Linux</a> or<br><a href="#android">Android</a></td>
  106. <td class="compatos"><a href="#posix">*BSD, Other</a></td>
  107. <td class="compatos"><a href="#posix">OSX 10.3+</a> or<br><a href="#ios">iOS 3.0+</a></td>
  108. <td class="compatos"><a href="#windows">Windows<br>98/XP/Vista/7</a></td>
  109. </tr>
  110. <tr class="odd separate">
  111. <td class="compatcpu">x86 (32 bit)</td>
  112. <td class="compatos">GCC 4.x<br>GCC 3.4</td>
  113. <td class="compatos">GCC 4.x<br>GCC 3.4</td>
  114. <td class="compatos">GCC 4.x<br>GCC 3.4</td>
  115. <td class="compatos">MSVC, MSVC/EE<br>WinSDK<br>MinGW, Cygwin</td>
  116. </tr>
  117. <tr class="even">
  118. <td class="compatcpu">x64 (64 bit)</td>
  119. <td class="compatos">GCC 4.x</td>
  120. <td class="compatos compatno">&nbsp;</td>
  121. <td class="compatos">GCC 4.x</td>
  122. <td class="compatos">MSVC + SDK v7.0<br>WinSDK v7.0</td>
  123. </tr>
  124. <tr class="odd">
  125. <td class="compatcpu">ARMv5+<br>ARM9E+</td>
  126. <td class="compatos">GCC 4.2+</td>
  127. <td class="compatos">GCC 4.2+</td>
  128. <td class="compatos">GCC 4.2+</td>
  129. <td class="compatos compatno">&nbsp;</td>
  130. </tr>
  131. <tr class="even">
  132. <td class="compatcpu">PPC/e500v2</td>
  133. <td class="compatos">GCC 4.3+</td>
  134. <td class="compatos">GCC 4.3+</td>
  135. <td class="compatos compatno">&nbsp;</td>
  136. <td class="compatos compatno">&nbsp;</td>
  137. </tr>
  138. </table>
  139. <h2>Configuring LuaJIT</h2>
  140. <p>
  141. The standard configuration should work fine for most installations.
  142. Usually there is no need to tweak the settings. The following files
  143. hold all user-configurable settings:
  144. </p>
  145. <ul>
  146. <li><tt>src/luaconf.h</tt> sets some configuration variables.</li>
  147. <li><tt>Makefile</tt> has settings for <b>installing</b> LuaJIT (POSIX
  148. only).</li>
  149. <li><tt>src/Makefile</tt> has settings for <b>compiling</b> LuaJIT
  150. under POSIX, MinGW or Cygwin.</li>
  151. <li><tt>src/msvcbuild.bat</tt> has settings for compiling LuaJIT with
  152. MSVC or WinSDK.</li>
  153. </ul>
  154. <p>
  155. Please read the instructions given in these files, before changing
  156. any settings.
  157. </p>
  158. <h2 id="posix">POSIX Systems (Linux, OSX, *BSD etc.)</h2>
  159. <h3>Prerequisites</h3>
  160. <p>
  161. Depending on your distribution, you may need to install a package for
  162. GCC, the development headers and/or a complete SDK. E.g. on a current
  163. Debian/Ubuntu, install <tt>libc6-dev</tt> with the package manager.
  164. </p>
  165. <p>
  166. Download the current source package of LuaJIT (pick the .tar.gz),
  167. if you haven't already done so. Move it to a directory of your choice,
  168. open a terminal window and change to this directory. Now unpack the archive
  169. and change to the newly created directory:
  170. </p>
  171. <pre class="code">
  172. tar zxf LuaJIT-2.0.0-beta8.tar.gz
  173. cd LuaJIT-2.0.0-beta8</pre>
  174. <h3>Building LuaJIT</h3>
  175. <p>
  176. The supplied Makefiles try to auto-detect the settings needed for your
  177. operating system and your compiler. They need to be run with GNU Make,
  178. which is probably the default on your system, anyway. Simply run:
  179. </p>
  180. <pre class="code">
  181. make
  182. </pre>
  183. <p>
  184. This always builds a native x86, x64 or PPC binary, depending on the host OS
  185. you're running this command on. Check the section on
  186. <a href="#cross">cross-compilation</a> for more options.
  187. </p>
  188. <p>
  189. By default, modules are only searched under the prefix <tt>/usr/local</tt>.
  190. You can add an extra prefix to the search paths by appending the
  191. <tt>PREFIX</tt> option, e.g.:
  192. </p>
  193. <pre class="code">
  194. make PREFIX=/home/myself/lj2
  195. </pre>
  196. <p>
  197. Note for OSX: <tt>MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET</tt> is set to <tt>10.4</tt>
  198. in <tt>src/Makefile</tt>. Change it, if you want to build on an older version.
  199. </p>
  200. <h3>Installing LuaJIT</h3>
  201. <p>
  202. The top-level Makefile installs LuaJIT by default under
  203. <tt>/usr/local</tt>, i.e. the executable ends up in
  204. <tt>/usr/local/bin</tt> and so on. You need root privileges
  205. to write to this path. So, assuming sudo is installed on your system,
  206. run the following command and enter your sudo password:
  207. </p>
  208. <pre class="code">
  209. sudo make install
  210. </pre>
  211. <p>
  212. Otherwise specify the directory prefix as an absolute path, e.g.:
  213. </p>
  214. <pre class="code">
  215. make install PREFIX=/home/myself/lj2
  216. </pre>
  217. <p>
  218. Obviously the prefixes given during build and installation need to be the same.
  219. </p>
  220. <p style="color: #c00000;">
  221. Note: to avoid overwriting a previous version, the beta test releases
  222. only install the LuaJIT executable under the versioned name (i.e.
  223. <tt>luajit-2.0.0-beta8</tt>). You probably want to create a symlink
  224. for convenience, with a command like this:
  225. </p>
  226. <pre class="code" style="color: #c00000;">
  227. sudo ln -sf luajit-2.0.0-beta8&nbsp;/usr/local/bin/luajit
  228. </pre>
  229. <h2 id="windows">Windows Systems</h2>
  230. <h3>Prerequisites</h3>
  231. <p>
  232. Either install one of the open source SDKs
  233. (<a href="http://mingw.org/"><span class="ext">&raquo;</span>&nbsp;MinGW</a> or
  234. <a href="http://www.cygwin.com/"><span class="ext">&raquo;</span>&nbsp;Cygwin</a>), which come with a modified
  235. GCC plus the required development headers.
  236. </p>
  237. <p>
  238. Or install Microsoft's Visual C++ (MSVC). The freely downloadable
  239. <a href="http://www.microsoft.com/Express/VC/"><span class="ext">&raquo;</span>&nbsp;Express Edition</a>
  240. works just fine, but only contains an x86 compiler.
  241. </p>
  242. <p>
  243. The freely downloadable
  244. <a href="http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/windowsserver/bb980924.aspx"><span class="ext">&raquo;</span>&nbsp;Windows SDK</a>
  245. only comes with command line tools, but this is all you need to build LuaJIT.
  246. It contains x86 and x64 compilers.
  247. </p>
  248. <p>
  249. Next, download the source package and unpack it using an archive manager
  250. (e.g. the Windows Explorer) to a directory of your choice.
  251. </p>
  252. <h3>Building with MSVC</h3>
  253. <p>
  254. Open a "Visual Studio .NET Command Prompt", <tt>cd</tt> to the
  255. directory where you've unpacked the sources and run these commands:
  256. </p>
  257. <pre class="code">
  258. cd src
  259. msvcbuild
  260. </pre>
  261. <p>
  262. Then follow the installation instructions below.
  263. </p>
  264. <h3>Building with the Windows SDK</h3>
  265. <p>
  266. Open a "Windows SDK Command Shell" and select the x86 compiler:
  267. </p>
  268. <pre class="code">
  269. setenv /release /x86
  270. </pre>
  271. <p>
  272. Or select the x64 compiler:
  273. </p>
  274. <pre class="code">
  275. setenv /release /x64
  276. </pre>
  277. <p>
  278. Then <tt>cd</tt> to the directory where you've unpacked the sources
  279. and run these commands:
  280. </p>
  281. <pre class="code">
  282. cd src
  283. msvcbuild
  284. </pre>
  285. <p>
  286. Then follow the installation instructions below.
  287. </p>
  288. <h3>Building with MinGW or Cygwin</h3>
  289. <p>
  290. Open a command prompt window and make sure the MinGW or Cygwin programs
  291. are in your path. Then <tt>cd</tt> to the directory where
  292. you've unpacked the sources and run this command for MinGW:
  293. </p>
  294. <pre class="code">
  295. mingw32-make
  296. </pre>
  297. <p>
  298. Or this command for Cygwin:
  299. </p>
  300. <pre class="code">
  301. make
  302. </pre>
  303. <p>
  304. Then follow the installation instructions below.
  305. </p>
  306. <h3>Installing LuaJIT</h3>
  307. <p>
  308. Copy <tt>luajit.exe</tt> and <tt>lua51.dll</tt> (built in the <tt>src</tt>
  309. directory) to a newly created directory (any location is ok).
  310. Add <tt>lua</tt> and <tt>lua\jit</tt> directories below it and copy
  311. all Lua files from the <tt>lib</tt> directory of the distribution
  312. to the latter directory.
  313. </p>
  314. <p>
  315. There are no hardcoded
  316. absolute path names &mdash; all modules are loaded relative to the
  317. directory where <tt>luajit.exe</tt> is installed
  318. (see <tt>src/luaconf.h</tt>).
  319. </p>
  320. <h2 id="cross">Cross-compiling LuaJIT</h2>
  321. <p>
  322. The build system has limited support for cross-compilation. For details
  323. check the comments in <tt>src/Makefile</tt>. Here are some popular examples:
  324. </p>
  325. <p>
  326. You can cross-compile to a <b>32 bit binary on a multilib x64 OS</b> by
  327. installing the multilib development packages (e.g. <tt>libc6-dev-i386</tt>
  328. on Debian/Ubuntu) and running:
  329. </p>
  330. <pre class="code">
  331. make CC="gcc -m32"
  332. </pre>
  333. <p>
  334. You can cross-compile for a <b>Windows target on Debian/Ubuntu</b> by
  335. installing the <tt>mingw32</tt> package and running:
  336. </p>
  337. <pre class="code">
  338. make HOST_CC="gcc -m32" CROSS=i586-mingw32msvc- TARGET_SYS=Windows
  339. </pre>
  340. <p>
  341. You can cross-compile for an <b>ARM target</b> on an x86 or x64 host
  342. system using a standard GNU cross-compile toolchain (Binutils, GCC,
  343. EGLIBC). The <tt>CROSS</tt> prefix may vary depending on the
  344. <tt>--target</tt> of the toolchain:
  345. </p>
  346. <pre class="code">
  347. make HOST_CC="gcc -m32" CROSS=arm-linux-gnueabi- TARGET=arm
  348. </pre>
  349. <p>
  350. You can cross-compile for <b id="android">Android (ARM)</b> using the <a href="http://developer.android.com/sdk/ndk/index.html"><span class="ext">&raquo;</span>&nbsp;Android NDK</a>.
  351. The environment variables need to match the install locations and the
  352. desired target platform. E.g. Android&nbsp;2.2 corresponds to ABI level&nbsp;8:
  353. </p>
  354. <pre class="code">
  355. NDK=/opt/android/ndk
  356. NDKABI=8
  357. NDKVER=$NDK/toolchains/arm-linux-androideabi-4.4.3
  358. NDKP=$NDKVER/prebuilt/linux-x86/bin/arm-linux-androideabi-
  359. NDKF="--sysroot $NDK/platforms/android-$NDKABI/arch-arm"
  360. make HOST_CC="gcc -m32" CROSS=$NDKP TARGET_FLAGS="$NDKF" TARGET=arm
  361. </pre>
  362. <p>
  363. You can cross-compile for <b id="ios">iOS 3.0+</b> (iPhone/iPad) using the <a href="http://developer.apple.com/devcenter/ios/index.action"><span class="ext">&raquo;</span>&nbsp;iOS SDK</a>.
  364. The environment variables need to match the iOS SDK version:
  365. </p>
  366. <p style="font-size: 8pt;">
  367. Note: <b>the JIT compiler is disabled for iOS</b>, because regular iOS Apps
  368. are not allowed to generate code at runtime. You'll only get the performance
  369. of the LuaJIT interpreter on iOS. This is still faster than plain Lua, but
  370. much slower than the JIT compiler. Please complain to Apple, not me.
  371. Or use Android. :-p
  372. </p>
  373. <pre class="code">
  374. ISDK=/Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/Developer
  375. ISDKVER=iPhoneOS4.3.sdk
  376. ISDKP=$ISDK/usr/bin/
  377. ISDKF="-arch armv6 -isysroot $ISDK/SDKs/$ISDKVER"
  378. make HOST_CC="gcc -m32 -arch i386" CROSS=$ISDKP TARGET_FLAGS="$ISDKF" \
  379. TARGET=arm TARGET_SYS=iOS
  380. </pre>
  381. <p>
  382. You can cross-compile for a <b>PPC/e500v2 target</b> on an x86 or x64 host system
  383. using a standard GNU cross-compile toolchain (Binutils, GCC, EGLIBC).
  384. The <tt>CROSS</tt> prefix may vary depending on the <tt>--target</tt>
  385. of the toolchain:
  386. </p>
  387. <pre class="code">
  388. make HOST_CC="gcc -m32" CROSS=powerpc-e500v2-linux-gnuspe- TARGET=ppcspe
  389. </pre>
  390. <p>
  391. Whenever the <b>host OS and the target OS differ</b>, you need to specify
  392. <tt>TARGET_SYS</tt> or you'll get assembler or linker errors. E.g. if
  393. you're compiling on a Windows or OSX host for embedded Linux or Android,
  394. you need to add <tt>TARGET_SYS=Linux</tt> to the examples above. For a
  395. minimal target OS, you may need to disable the built-in allocator in
  396. <tt>src/Makefile</tt> and use <tt>TARGET_SYS=Other</tt>.
  397. </p>
  398. <h2 id="embed">Embedding LuaJIT</h2>
  399. <p>
  400. LuaJIT is API-compatible with Lua 5.1. If you've already embedded Lua
  401. into your application, you probably don't need to do anything to switch
  402. to LuaJIT, except link with a different library:
  403. </p>
  404. <ul>
  405. <li>It's strongly suggested to build LuaJIT separately using the supplied
  406. build system. Please do <em>not</em> attempt to integrate the individual
  407. source files into your build tree. You'll most likely get the internal build
  408. dependencies wrong or mess up the compiler flags. Treat LuaJIT like any
  409. other external library and link your application with either the dynamic
  410. or static library, depending on your needs.</li>
  411. <li>If you want to load C modules compiled for plain Lua
  412. with <tt>require()</tt>, you need to make sure the public symbols
  413. (e.g. <tt>lua_pushnumber</tt>) are exported, too:
  414. <ul><li>On POSIX systems you can either link to the shared library
  415. or link the static library into your application. In the latter case
  416. you'll need to export all public symbols from your main executable
  417. (e.g. <tt>-Wl,-E</tt> on Linux) and add the external dependencies
  418. (e.g. <tt>-lm -ldl</tt> on Linux).</li>
  419. <li>Since Windows symbols are bound to a specific DLL name, you need to
  420. link to the <tt>lua51.dll</tt> created by the LuaJIT build (do not rename
  421. the DLL). You may link LuaJIT statically on Windows only if you don't
  422. intend to load Lua/C modules at runtime.
  423. </li></ul>
  424. </li>
  425. <li>
  426. If you're building a 64 bit application on OSX which links directly or
  427. indirectly against LuaJIT, you need to link your main executable
  428. with these flags:
  429. <pre class="code">
  430. -pagezero_size 10000 -image_base 100000000
  431. </pre>
  432. Also, it's recommended to <tt>rebase</tt> all (self-compiled) shared libraries
  433. which are loaded at runtime on OSX/x64 (e.g. C extension modules for Lua).
  434. See: <tt>man rebase</tt>
  435. </li>
  436. </ul>
  437. <p>Additional hints for initializing LuaJIT using the C API functions:</p>
  438. <ul>
  439. <li>Here's a
  440. <a href="http://lua-users.org/wiki/SimpleLuaApiExample"><span class="ext">&raquo;</span>&nbsp;simple example</a>
  441. for embedding Lua or LuaJIT into your application.</li>
  442. <li>Make sure you use <tt>luaL_newstate</tt>. Avoid using
  443. <tt>lua_newstate</tt>, since this uses the (slower) default memory
  444. allocator from your system (no support for this on x64).</li>
  445. <li>Make sure you use <tt>luaL_openlibs</tt> and not the old Lua 5.0 style
  446. of calling <tt>luaopen_base</tt> etc. directly.</li>
  447. <li>To change or extend the list of standard libraries to load, copy
  448. <tt>src/lib_init.c</tt> to your project and modify it accordingly.
  449. Make sure the <tt>jit</tt> library is loaded or the JIT compiler
  450. will not be activated.</li>
  451. <li>The <tt>bit.*</tt> module for bitwise operations
  452. is already built-in. There's no need to statically link
  453. <a href="http://bitop.luajit.org/"><span class="ext">&raquo;</span>&nbsp;Lua BitOp</a> to your application.</li>
  454. </ul>
  455. <h2 id="distro">Hints for Distribution Maintainers</h2>
  456. <p>
  457. The LuaJIT build system has extra provisions for the needs of most
  458. POSIX-based distributions. If you're a package maintainer for
  459. a distribution, <em>please</em> make use of these features and
  460. avoid patching, subverting, autotoolizing or messing up the build system
  461. in unspeakable ways.
  462. </p>
  463. <p>
  464. There should be absolutely no need to patch <tt>luaconf.h</tt> or any
  465. of the Makefiles. And please do not hand-pick files for your packages &mdash;
  466. simply use whatever <tt>make install</tt> creates. There's a reason
  467. for all of the files <em>and</em> directories it creates.
  468. </p>
  469. <p>
  470. The build system uses GNU make and auto-detects most settings based on
  471. the host you're building it on. This should work fine for native builds,
  472. even when sandboxed. You may need to pass some of the following flags to
  473. <em>both</em> the <tt>make</tt> and the <tt>make install</tt> command lines
  474. for a regular distribution build:
  475. </p>
  476. <ul>
  477. <li><tt>PREFIX</tt> overrides the installation path and should usually
  478. be set to <tt>/usr</tt>. Setting this also changes the module paths and
  479. the <tt>-rpath</tt> of the shared library.</li>
  480. <li><tt>DESTDIR</tt> is an absolute path which allows you to install
  481. to a shadow tree instead of the root tree of the build system.</li>
  482. <li>Have a look at the top-level <tt>Makefile</tt> and <tt>src/Makefile</tt>
  483. for additional variables to tweak. The following variables <em>may</em> be
  484. overridden, but it's <em>not</em> recommended, except for special needs
  485. like cross-builds:
  486. <tt>BUILDMODE, CC, HOST_CC, STATIC_CC, DYNAMIC_CC, CFLAGS, HOST_CFLAGS,
  487. TARGET_CFLAGS, LDFLAGS, HOST_LDFLAGS, TARGET_LDFLAGS, TARGET_SHLDFLAGS,
  488. TARGET_FLAGS, LIBS, HOST_LIBS, TARGET_LIBS, CROSS, HOST_SYS, TARGET_SYS
  489. </tt></li>
  490. </ul>
  491. <p>
  492. The build system has a special target for an amalgamated build, i.e.
  493. <tt>make amalg</tt>. This compiles the LuaJIT core as one huge C file
  494. and allows GCC to generate faster and shorter code. Alas, this requires
  495. lots of memory during the build. This may be a problem for some users,
  496. that's why it's not enabled by default. But it shouldn't be a problem for
  497. most build farms. It's recommended that binary distributions use this
  498. target for their LuaJIT builds.
  499. </p>
  500. <p>
  501. The tl;dr version of the above:
  502. </p>
  503. <pre class="code">
  504. make amalg PREFIX=/usr && \
  505. make install PREFIX=/usr DESTDIR=/tmp/buildroot
  506. </pre>
  507. <p>
  508. Finally, if you encounter any difficulties, please
  509. <a href="contact.html">contact me</a> first, instead of releasing a broken
  510. package onto unsuspecting users. Because they'll usually gonna complain
  511. to me (the upstream) and not you (the package maintainer), anyway.
  512. </p>
  513. <br class="flush">
  514. </div>
  515. <div id="foot">
  516. <hr class="hide">
  517. Copyright &copy; 2005-2011 Mike Pall
  518. <span class="noprint">
  519. &middot;
  520. <a href="contact.html">Contact</a>
  521. </span>
  522. </div>
  523. </body>
  524. </html>