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  1. This is Mono.
  2. 1. Installation
  3. 2. Using Mono
  4. 3. Directory Roadmap
  5. 1. Compilation and Installation
  6. ===============================
  7. a. Build Requirements
  8. ---------------------
  9. To build Mono, you will need the following components:
  10. * pkg-config
  11. Available from: http://www.freedesktop.org/Software/pkgconfig
  12. * glib 2.4
  13. Available from: http://www.gtk.org/
  14. On Itanium, you must obtain libunwind:
  15. http://www.hpl.hp.com/research/linux/libunwind/download.php4
  16. On Solaris, make sure that you used GNU tar to unpack this package, as
  17. Solaris tar will not unpack this correctly, and you will get strange errors.
  18. On Solaris, make sure that you use the GNU toolchain to build the software.
  19. Optional dependencies:
  20. * libgdiplus
  21. If you want to get support for System.Drawing, you will need to get
  22. Libgdiplus.
  23. * libzlib
  24. This library and the development headers are required for compression
  25. file support in the 2.0 profile.
  26. b. Building the Software
  27. ------------------------
  28. If you obtained this package as an officially released tarball,
  29. this is very simple, use configure and make:
  30. ./configure --prefix=/usr/local
  31. make
  32. make install
  33. Mono supports a JIT engine on x86, SPARC, SPARCv9, S/390,
  34. S/390x, AMD64, ARM and PowerPC systems.
  35. If you obtained this as a snapshot, you will need an existing
  36. Mono installation. To upgrade your installation, unpack both
  37. mono and mcs:
  38. tar xzf mcs-XXXX.tar.gz
  39. tar xzf mono-XXXX.tar.gz
  40. mv mono-XXX mono
  41. mv mcs-XXX mcs
  42. cd mono
  43. ./autogen.sh --prefix=/usr/local
  44. make
  45. The Mono build system is silent for most compilation commands.
  46. To enable a more verbose compile (for example, to pinpoint
  47. problems in your makefiles or your system) pass the V=1 flag to make, like this:
  48. make V=1
  49. c. Building the software from SVN
  50. ---------------------------------
  51. If you are building the software from SVN, make sure that you
  52. have up-to-date mcs and mono sources:
  53. svn co svn+ssh://[email protected]/source/trunk/mono
  54. svn co svn+ssh://[email protected]/source/trunk/mcs
  55. Then, go into the mono directory, and configure:
  56. cd mono
  57. ./autogen.sh --prefix=/usr/local
  58. make
  59. For people with non-standard installations of the auto* utils and of
  60. pkg-config (common on misconfigured OSX and windows boxes), you could get
  61. an error like this:
  62. ./configure: line 19176: syntax error near unexpected token `PKG_CHECK_MODULES(BASE_DEPENDENCIES,' ...
  63. This means that you need to set the ACLOCAL_FLAGS environment var
  64. when invoking autogen.sh, like this:
  65. ACLOCAL_FLAGS="-I $acprefix/share/aclocal" ./autogen.sh --prefix=/usr/loca
  66. where $acprefix is the prefix where aclocal has been installed.
  67. This will automatically go into the mcs/ tree and build the
  68. binaries there.
  69. This assumes that you have a working mono installation, and that
  70. there's a C# compiler named 'mcs', and a corresponding IL
  71. runtime called 'mono'. You can use two make variables
  72. EXTERNAL_MCS and EXTERNAL_RUNTIME to override these. e.g., you
  73. can say
  74. make EXTERNAL_MCS=/foo/bar/mcs EXTERNAL_RUNTIME=/somewhere/else/mono
  75. If you don't have a working Mono installation
  76. ---------------------------------------------
  77. If you don't have a working Mono installation, an obvious choice
  78. is to install the latest released packages of 'mono' for your
  79. distribution and running autogen.sh; make; make install in the
  80. mono module directory.
  81. You can also try a slightly more risky approach: this may not work,
  82. so start from the released tarball as detailed above.
  83. This works by first getting the latest version of the 'monolite'
  84. distribution, which contains just enough to run the 'mcs'
  85. compiler. You do this with:
  86. make get-monolite-latest
  87. This will download and automatically gunzip and untar the
  88. tarball, and place the files appropriately so that you can then
  89. just run:
  90. make
  91. To ensure that you're using the 'monolite' distribution, you can
  92. also try passing EXTERNAL_MCS=false on the make command-line.
  93. Testing and Installation
  94. ------------------------
  95. You can run (part of) the mono and mcs testsuites with the command:
  96. make check
  97. All tests should pass.
  98. If you want more extensive tests, including those that test the
  99. class libraries, you need to re-run 'configure' with the
  100. '--enable-nunit-tests' flag, and try
  101. make -k check
  102. Expect to find a few testsuite failures. As a sanity check, you
  103. can compare the failures you got with
  104. http://go-mono.com/tests/displayTestResults.php
  105. You can now install mono with:
  106. make install
  107. Failure to follow these steps may result in a broken installation.
  108. d. Common Configuration Options
  109. -------------------------------
  110. The following are the configuration options that someone
  111. building Mono might want to use:
  112. --with-gc=[boehm, included, sgen, none]
  113. Selects the garbage collector engine to use, the
  114. default is the "included" value.
  115. included:
  116. This is the default value, and its
  117. the most feature complete, it will allow Mono
  118. to use typed allocations and support the
  119. debugger.
  120. It is essentially a slightly modified Boehm GC
  121. boehm:
  122. This is used to use a system-install Boehm GC,
  123. it is useful to test new features available in
  124. Boehm GC, but we do not recommend that people
  125. use this, as it disables a few features.
  126. sgen:
  127. The under-development Generational GC for
  128. Mono, do not use this in production.
  129. none:
  130. Disables the inclusion of a garbage
  131. collector.
  132. --with-tls=__thread,pthread
  133. Controls how Mono should access thread local storage,
  134. pthread forces Mono to use the pthread APIs, while
  135. __thread uses compiler-optimized access to it.
  136. Although __thread is faster, it requires support from
  137. the compiler, kernel and libc. Old Linux systems do
  138. not support with __thread.
  139. This value is typically pre-configured and there is no
  140. need to set it, unless you are trying to debug a
  141. problem.
  142. --with-sigaltstack=yes,no
  143. Experimental: Use at your own risk, it is known to
  144. cause problems with garbage collection and is hard to
  145. reproduce those bugs.
  146. This controls whether Mono will install a special
  147. signal handler to handle stack overflows. If set to
  148. "yes", it will turn stack overflows into the
  149. StackOverflowException. Otherwise when a stack
  150. overflow happens, your program will receive a
  151. segmentation fault.
  152. The configure script will try to detect if your
  153. operating system supports this. Some older Linux
  154. systems do not support this feature, or you might want
  155. to override the auto-detection.
  156. --with-static_mono=yes,no
  157. This controls whether `mono' should link against a
  158. static library (libmono.a) or a shared library
  159. (libmono.so).
  160. This defaults to yes, and will improve the performance
  161. of the `mono' program.
  162. This only affects the `mono' binary, the shared
  163. library libmono.so will always be produced for
  164. developers that want to embed the runtime in their
  165. application.
  166. --with-xen-opt=yes,no
  167. The default value for this is `yes', and it makes Mono
  168. generate code which might be slightly slower on
  169. average systems, but the resulting executable will run
  170. faster under the Xen virtualization system.
  171. --with-large-heap=yes,no
  172. Enable support for GC heaps larger than 3GB.
  173. This value is set to `no' by default.
  174. --with-ikvm-native=yes,no
  175. Controls whether the IKVM JNI interface library is
  176. built or not. This is used if you are planning on
  177. using the IKVM Java Virtual machine with Mono.
  178. This defaults to `yes'.
  179. --with-profile2=yes,no
  180. Whether you want to build the 2.x libraries (support
  181. for Generics and the 2.0/3.5 APIS).
  182. It defaults to `yes'.
  183. --with-moonlight=yes,no
  184. Whether you want to generate the Silverlight/Moonlight
  185. libraries and toolchain in addition to the default
  186. (1.1 and 2.0 APIs).
  187. This will produce the `smcs' compiler which will reference
  188. the Silverlight modified assemblies (mscorlib.dll,
  189. System.dll, System.Code.dll and System.Xml.Core.dll) and turn
  190. on the LINQ extensions for the compiler.
  191. --with-libgdiplus=installed,sibling,<path>
  192. This is used to configure where should Mono look for
  193. libgdiplus when running the System.Drawing tests.
  194. It defaults to `installed', which means that the
  195. library is available to Mono through the regular
  196. system setup.
  197. `sibling' can be used to specify that a libgdiplus
  198. that resides as a sibling of this directory (mono)
  199. should be used.
  200. Or you can specify a path to a libgdiplus.
  201. --disable-shared-memory
  202. Use this option to disable the use of shared memory in
  203. Mono (this is equivalent to setting the MONO_DISABLE_SHM
  204. environment variable, although this removes the feature
  205. completely).
  206. Disabling the shared memory support will disable certain
  207. features like cross-process named mutexes.
  208. --enable-minimal=LIST
  209. Use this feature to specify optional runtime
  210. components that you might not want to include. This
  211. is only useful for developers embedding Mono that
  212. require a subset of Mono functionality.
  213. The list is a comma-separated list of components that
  214. should be removed, these are:
  215. aot:
  216. Disables support for the Ahead of Time
  217. compilation.
  218. attach:
  219. Support for the Mono.Management assembly and the
  220. VMAttach API (allowing code to be injected into
  221. a target VM)
  222. com:
  223. Disables COM support.
  224. debug:
  225. Drop debugging support.
  226. decimal:
  227. Disables support for System.Decimal.
  228. full_messages:
  229. By default Mono comes with a full table
  230. of messages for error codes. This feature
  231. turns off uncommon error messages and reduces
  232. the runtime size.
  233. generics:
  234. Generics support. Disabling this will not
  235. allow Mono to run any 2.0 libraries or
  236. code that contains generics.
  237. jit:
  238. Removes the JIT engine from the build, this reduces
  239. the executable size, and requires that all code
  240. executed by the virtual machine be compiled with
  241. Full AOT before execution.
  242. large_code:
  243. Disables support for large assemblies.
  244. logging:
  245. Disables support for debug logging.
  246. pinvoke:
  247. Support for Platform Invocation services,
  248. disabling this will drop support for any
  249. libraries using DllImport.
  250. portability:
  251. Removes support for MONO_IOMAP, the environment
  252. variables for simplifying porting applications that
  253. are case-insensitive and that mix the Unix and Windows path separators.
  254. profiler:
  255. Disables support for the default profiler.
  256. reflection_emit:
  257. Drop System.Reflection.Emit support
  258. reflection_emit_save:
  259. Drop support for saving dynamically created
  260. assemblies (AssemblyBuilderAccess.Save) in
  261. System.Reflection.Emit.
  262. shadow_copy:
  263. Disables support for AppDomain's shadow copies
  264. (you can disable this if you do not plan on
  265. using appdomains).
  266. simd:
  267. Disables support for the Mono.SIMD intrinsics
  268. library.
  269. ssa:
  270. Disables compilation for the SSA optimization
  271. framework, and the various SSA-based
  272. optimizations.
  273. --enable-big-arrays
  274. This enables the use arrays whose indexes are larger
  275. than Int32.MaxValue.
  276. By default Mono has the same limitation as .NET on
  277. Win32 and Win64 and limits array indexes to 32-bit
  278. values (even on 64-bit systems).
  279. In certain scenarios where large arrays are required,
  280. you can pass this flag and Mono will be built to
  281. support 64-bit arrays.
  282. This is not the default as it breaks the C embedding
  283. ABI that we have exposed through the Mono development
  284. cycle.
  285. --enable-parallel-mark
  286. Use this option to enable the garbage collector to use
  287. multiple CPUs to do its work. This helps performance
  288. on multi-CPU machines as the work is divided across CPUS.
  289. This option is not currently the default as we have
  290. not done much testing with Mono.
  291. --enable-dtrace
  292. On Solaris and MacOS X builds a version of the Mono
  293. runtime that contains DTrace probes and can
  294. participate in the system profiling using DTrace.
  295. --disable-dev-random
  296. Mono uses /dev/random to obtain good random data for
  297. any source that requires random numbers. If your
  298. system does not support this, you might want to
  299. disable it.
  300. There are a number of runtime options to control this
  301. also, see the man page.
  302. 2. Using Mono
  303. =============
  304. Once you have installed the software, you can run a few programs:
  305. * runtime engine
  306. mono program.exe
  307. * C# compiler
  308. mcs program.cs
  309. * CIL Disassembler
  310. monodis program.exe
  311. See the man pages for mono(1), mint(1), monodis(1) and mcs(2)
  312. for further details.
  313. 3. Directory Roadmap
  314. ====================
  315. docs/
  316. Technical documents about the Mono runtime.
  317. data/
  318. Configuration files installed as part of the Mono runtime.
  319. mono/
  320. The core of the Mono Runtime.
  321. metadata/
  322. The object system and metadata reader.
  323. mini/
  324. The Just in Time Compiler.
  325. dis/
  326. CIL executable Disassembler
  327. cli/
  328. Common code for the JIT and the interpreter.
  329. io-layer/
  330. The I/O layer and system abstraction for
  331. emulating the .NET IO model.
  332. cil/
  333. Common Intermediate Representation, XML
  334. definition of the CIL bytecodes.
  335. interp/
  336. Interpreter for CLI executables (obsolete).
  337. arch/
  338. Architecture specific portions.
  339. man/
  340. Manual pages for the various Mono commands and programs.
  341. samples/
  342. Some simple sample programs on uses of the Mono
  343. runtime as an embedded library.
  344. scripts/
  345. Scripts used to invoke Mono and the corresponding program.
  346. runtime/
  347. A directory that contains the Makefiles that link the
  348. mono/ and mcs/ build systems.
  349. ../olive/
  350. If the directory ../olive is present (as an
  351. independent checkout) from the Mono module, that
  352. directory is automatically configured to share the
  353. same prefix than this module gets.