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104 lines
2.7 KiB
Plaintext
104 lines
2.7 KiB
Plaintext
1. Installing NASM from source (Unix, MacOS X, Windows/Cygwin,
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Windows/MinGW)
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2. Installing NASM from source (Windows/MS Visual C++)
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3. Installing NASM from source (DOS-Windows-OS/2/OpenWatcom)
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1. Installing NASM from source (Unix, MacOS X, Windows/Cygwin, Windows/MinGW)
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=============================================================================
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Installing NASM is pretty straightforward on Unix or Unix-like systems
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with Perl and GNU tools installed, including MinGW for Windows with
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MSYS installed. Perl is optional for compiling unmodified sources
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from a tarball, but is required to build from git or for most source
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modifications.
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If you checked out source from git you will need to run autoconf to
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generate configure, otherwise you don't have to.
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$ autoheader
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$ autoconf
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Then run configure to detect your platform settings and generate makefiles.
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$ ./configure
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You can get information about available configuration options by
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running `./configure --help`.
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If configure fails, please file a bug report with detailed platform
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information at:
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http://www.sf.net/projects/nasm/
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If everything went okay, type
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$ make
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to build NASM, ndisasm and rdoff tools, or
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$ make everything
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to build the former plus the docs.
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You can decrease the size of produces executables by stripping off
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unnecessary information, to achieve this run
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$ make strip
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If you install to a system-wide location you might need to become
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root:
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$ su <enter root password>
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then
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$ make install
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optionally followed by
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$ make install_rdf
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Or you can
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$ make install_everything
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to install everything =)
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Thats it, enjoy!
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2. Installing NASM from source (Windows/MS Visual C++)
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======================================================
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The recommended compiler for NASM on Windows is MinGW
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(http://www.mingw.org), but it is also possible to compile with
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Microsoft Visual C++ (tested with Visual C++ 2005 Express Edition.)
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To do so, start the "Visual C++ Command Shell", go to the directory
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where the NASM source code was extracted, and run:
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> nmake /f Mkfiles/msvc.mak
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We recommend MinGW over Visual C++ 2005 as we have found it to be more
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up to date with regards to C99 compliance, and we are increasingly
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using C99 features in NASM.
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3. Installing NASM from source (DOS-Windows-OS/2/OpenWatcom)
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============================================================
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NASM has been reported to build correctly with OpenWatcom 1.7 on and
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OS/2 platform. The NASM developers have not tested this on any other
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platforms.
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A WMAKE make file is provided:
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> wmake -f Mkfiles\openwcom.mak <platform>
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... where <platform> is "dos", "win32" or "os2".
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NASM is known to NOT compile correctly using OpenWatcom 1.7.1 as a
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cross compiler with a Linux host (OpenWatcom bug report 751.)
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