[Paraview] Development Install Tree

Dave Partyka dave.partyka at kitware.com
Fri Mar 12 13:11:40 EST 2010


I just tried this on my Debian machine and the biggest executable in my bin
dir weighs in at 2.5 MB. Note that this is a Debug build as my Release build
tree is a bit out of date at the moment. Also all of the CMake files appear
to be in ParaView-3.7.0-Linux-x86_64/lib/paraview-3.7/CMake/ and all of the
vtk libs are in in ParaView-3.7.0-Linux-x86_64/lib/paraview-3.7/. So this is
really puzzling. Have you tried doing this from a fresh clean build?

On Fri, Mar 12, 2010 at 12:15 PM, Mark Olesen <Mark.Olesen at faurecia.com>wrote:

> On Fri, 2010-03-12 at 09:57 -0500, Utkarsh Ayachit wrote:
> > I haven't really read  the full thread but I saw that everyone seems
> > to using "make install". A couple of comments about that.
> >
> > Currently, we recommend users to use "cpack" to create the package
> > (tgz or what have you) instead of "make install" since currently,
> > "make install" doesn't support component-based install i.e. ParaView
> > source cannot pick which "INSTALL" command have any effect based on
> > their "COMPONENT". Consequently, you might end up with more stuff in
> > your install tree than expected.
> >
> > To run cpack on ParaView application, you do something as follows:
> >
> > cpack -G TGZ --config
> >
> <path-to-paraview-build-dir>/Applications/ParaView/CPackParaViewConfig.cmake
>
>
> Even after having previously built everything (make && make
> HTMLDocumentation, as well as make preinstall for good measure) the
> above mentioned cpack command still takes about 5minutes to compile
> stuff and pack everything up.
>
> The resulting tar.gz file may look fairly clean, but all of the cmake
> files are missing (which means it can't be used for building plugins).
> I thought that the cpack was supposed to pick up what was specified to
> cmake, but it didn't seem to know that
> PARAVIEW_INSTALL_DEVELOPMENT:BOOL=ON had been specified ... and it still
> can't find its documentation.
>
>
> Another interesting result (I really didn't expect this):
> All of the VTK libraries have been eliminated and instead the bin/
> directory contains monster binaries: paraview, pvdataserver,
> pvrenderserver, pvserver with about 162M-177MB each.
>
>
> I don't mean to be particular obtuse, but how in the world does one
> manage achieve the following:
>  A working paraview
>  - that is fully relocatable
>  - that can be used for building plugins
>  - that also manages to find its own documentation.
>
> I'm obviously doing something wrong - could someone please supply a
> recipe for doing this?
>
>
> /mark
>
>
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