Summary: The default one will try to install rocksdb:x86-windows, which would lead to failing of the build at the last step (CMake Error, Rocksdb only supports x64). Because it will try to install a serials of x86 version package, and those cannot proceed to rocksdb:x86-windows building. By using rocksdb:x64-windows, we can make sure to install x64 version. Tested on Win10 x64. Closes https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/2941 Differential Revision: D5937139 Pulled By: sagar0 fbshipit-source-id: 15637fe23df59326a0e607bd4d5c48733e20bae3
5.8 KiB
Compilation
Important: If you plan to run RocksDB in production, don't compile using default
make
or make all
. That will compile RocksDB in debug mode, which is much slower
than release mode.
RocksDB's library should be able to compile without any dependency installed, although we recommend installing some compression libraries (see below). We do depend on newer gcc/clang with C++11 support.
There are few options when compiling RocksDB:
-
[recommended]
make static_lib
will compile librocksdb.a, RocksDB static library. Compiles static library in release mode. -
make shared_lib
will compile librocksdb.so, RocksDB shared library. Compiles shared library in release mode. -
make check
will compile and run all the unit tests.make check
will compile RocksDB in debug mode. -
make all
will compile our static library, and all our tools and unit tests. Our tools depend on gflags. You will need to have gflags installed to runmake all
. This will compile RocksDB in debug mode. Don't use binaries compiled bymake all
in production. -
By default the binary we produce is optimized for the platform you're compiling on (
-march=native
or the equivalent). SSE4.2 will thus be enabled automatically if your CPU supports it. To print a warning if your CPU does not support SSE4.2, build withUSE_SSE=1 make static_lib
or, if using CMake,cmake -DFORCE_SSE42=ON
. If you want to build a portable binary, addPORTABLE=1
before your make commands, like this:PORTABLE=1 make static_lib
.
Dependencies
-
You can link RocksDB with following compression libraries:
-
All our tools depend on:
- gflags - a library that handles command line flags processing. You can compile rocksdb library even if you don't have gflags installed.
Supported platforms
-
Linux - Ubuntu
- Upgrade your gcc to version at least 4.8 to get C++11 support.
- Install gflags. First, try:
sudo apt-get install libgflags-dev
If this doesn't work and you're using Ubuntu, here's a nice tutorial: (http://askubuntu.com/questions/312173/installing-gflags-12-04) - Install snappy. This is usually as easy as:
sudo apt-get install libsnappy-dev
. - Install zlib. Try:
sudo apt-get install zlib1g-dev
. - Install bzip2:
sudo apt-get install libbz2-dev
. - Install lz4:
sudo apt-get install liblz4-dev
. - Install zstandard:
sudo apt-get install libzstd-dev
.
-
Linux - CentOS / RHEL
-
Upgrade your gcc to version at least 4.8 to get C++11 support:
yum install gcc48-c++
-
Install gflags:
git clone https://github.com/gflags/gflags.git cd gflags git checkout v2.0 ./configure && make && sudo make install
Notice: Once installed, please add the include path for gflags to your
CPATH
environment variable and the lib path toLIBRARY_PATH
. If installed with default settings, the include path will be/usr/local/include
and the lib path will be/usr/local/lib
. -
Install snappy:
sudo yum install snappy snappy-devel
-
Install zlib:
sudo yum install zlib zlib-devel
-
Install bzip2:
sudo yum install bzip2 bzip2-devel
-
Install lz4:
sudo yum install lz4-devel
-
Install ASAN (optional for debugging):
sudo yum install libasan
-
Install zstandard:
wget https://github.com/facebook/zstd/archive/v1.1.3.tar.gz mv v1.1.3.tar.gz zstd-1.1.3.tar.gz tar zxvf zstd-1.1.3.tar.gz cd zstd-1.1.3 make && sudo make install
-
-
OS X:
- Install latest C++ compiler that supports C++ 11:
- Update XCode: run
xcode-select --install
(or install it from XCode App's settting). - Install via homebrew.
- If you're first time developer in MacOS, you still need to run:
xcode-select --install
in your command line. - run
brew tap homebrew/versions; brew install gcc48 --use-llvm
to install gcc 4.8 (or higher).
- If you're first time developer in MacOS, you still need to run:
- Update XCode: run
- run
brew install rocksdb
- Install latest C++ compiler that supports C++ 11:
-
iOS:
- Run:
TARGET_OS=IOS make static_lib
. When building the project which uses rocksdb iOS library, make sure to define two important pre-processing macros:ROCKSDB_LITE
andIOS_CROSS_COMPILE
.
- Run:
-
Windows:
- For building with MS Visual Studio 13 you will need Update 4 installed.
- Read and follow the instructions at CMakeLists.txt
- Or install via vcpkg
- run
vcpkg install rocksdb:x64-windows
- run
-
AIX 6.1
-
Install AIX Toolbox rpms with gcc
-
Use these environment variables:
export PORTABLE=1 export CC=gcc export AR="ar -X64" export EXTRA_ARFLAGS=-X64 export EXTRA_CFLAGS=-maix64 export EXTRA_CXXFLAGS=-maix64 export PLATFORM_LDFLAGS="-static-libstdc++ -static-libgcc" export LIBPATH=/opt/freeware/lib export JAVA_HOME=/usr/java8_64 export PATH=/opt/freeware/bin:$PATH
-
-
Solaris Sparc
-
Install GCC 4.8.2 and higher.
-
Use these environment variables:
export CC=gcc export EXTRA_CFLAGS=-m64 export EXTRA_CXXFLAGS=-m64 export EXTRA_LDFLAGS=-m64 export PORTABLE=1 export PLATFORM_LDFLAGS="-static-libstdc++ -static-libgcc"
-