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Mail Archives: djgpp/2000/05/16/19:53:08

Message-ID: <000901bfbf8f$a6460b20$e813ddcc@lhaglund>
From: "Josh Haglund" <lhaglund AT wiktel DOT com>
To: <djgpp AT delorie DOT com>
References: <Pine DOT LNX DOT 4 DOT 10 DOT 10005142307200 DOT 1101-100000 AT vsnl DOT net DOT in> <001901bfbdae$102ff200$da13ddcc AT lhaglund> <391F4B05 DOT 67D60D9B AT yahoo DOT com> <001301bfbdf9$7121a540$1d12ddcc AT lhaglund> <392177F3 DOT DD0056E4 AT ujf-grenoble DOT fr>
Subject: setdjgpp
Date: Tue, 16 May 2000 18:37:06 -0500
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Reply-To: djgpp AT delorie DOT com

@echo off
Where would I put the lines in this?
How about someone send me everything they think I need? Ready to go?

if "%2" == "" goto error

rem Everything else is set in djgpp.env now.
set DJGPP=%2/djgpp.env

rem  Don't forget to change your PATH!

goto exit


:error
echo.
echo You must call this with DJGPP's installation directory passed
echo twice, first with DOS-style slashes, then with Unix-style
echo slashes.  Example:
echo.
echo   c:\stuff\djgpp\setdjgpp c:\stuff\djgpp c:/stuff/djgpp
echo.

:exit

Josh Haglund
lhaglund AT wiktel DOT com

----- Original Message -----
From: Maurice Lombardi <Maurice DOT Lombardi AT ujf-grenoble DOT fr>
Newsgroups: comp.os.msdos.djgpp
To: <djgpp AT delorie DOT com>
Sent: Tuesday, May 16, 2000 11:31 AM
Subject: Re: Prashant -how to use djgpp


> Josh Haglund a écrit :
> >
> > Prashant,
> >
> > So if the source for Crafty was in C:/windows/desktop/Crafty
> > and for Djgpp is under C:/Djgpp
> >
> > what would I do from there?
> >
> > I edited the Makefile underder C:/windows/desktop/Crafty/Makefile
> > Here what it looks like:
> >
> > # To build crafty:
> > #
> > #         Uncomment the sections relevant to your architecture.
> > #   You may need to tune the two gcc lines below to match your compiler.
> > #   You want to set up for maximum optimization, but typically you will
> > #   need to experiment to see which options provide the fastest code.
> > #   This is optimized for pgcc, which is a fairly current compiler.
> > #
> > #   The currently available targets:
> > #
> > #     AIX      {IBM machines running AIX}
> > #     ALPHA    {DEC Alpha running OSF/1-Digital Unix}
> > #     CRAY1    {any Cray-1 compatible architecture including XMP, YMP,
> > #               C90, etc.}
> > #     HP       {HP workstation running HP_UX operating system (unix)}
> > #     LINUX    {80X86 architecture running LINUX (unix)}
> > #     NT_i386  {80X86 architecture running Windows 95 or NT}
> > #     NT_AXP   {DEC Alpha running Windows NT}
> > #     DOS      {PC running dos/windows, using DJGPP port of gcc to
compile}
> > #     NEXT     {NextStep}
> > #     OS/2     {IBM OS/2 warp}
> > #     SGI      {SGI Workstation running Irix (SYSV/R4) Unix}
> > #     SUN      {Sun SparcStation running Solaris (SYSV/R4) Unix}
> > #     SUN_BSD  {Sun SparcStation running SunOS (BSD) Unix}
> > #     FreeBSD  {80X86 architecture running FreeBSD (unix)}
> > #
> > #   The next options are optimizations inside Crafty that you will have
> > #   test to see if they help.  on some machines, these will slow things
> > #   by up to 10%, while on other machines these options will result in
> > #   improving search speed up to 20%.  NOTE:  if you are running Linux
> > #   or have a SUN Sparc-20 machine, the default configurations below
> > #   will use the hand-written assembly modules.  Typical performance
> > #   improvement is 33%, but this only applies to X86 machines and the
> > #   Sun Sparc-20.
> > #
> > #   1.  opt = -DCOMPACT_ATTACKS
> > #   2.  opt = -DCOMPACT_ATTACKS -DUSE_ATTACK_FUNCTIONS
> > #
> > #   Finally, if you have a Symmetric MultiProcessor machine, you should
> > #   add -DSMP to the opt definition for your make configuration, and
then
> > #   add -DCPUS=N where N is the number of processors (max) you will use.
> > #
> > #   if you want 6 man EGTB support, you will need to add -DEGTB6 to the
> > #   options above.
> > #
> > #
> > # AIX
> > #target  = AIX
> > #CC      = cc
> > #CFLAGS  = -O2
> > #CPP  = $(CC)
> > #LDFLAGS =
> > #opt     = -DCOMPACT_ATTACKS -DUSE_ATTACK_FUNCTIONS
> > #opt     = -DCOMPACT_ATTACKS
> >
> > # ALPHA
> > #target  = ALPHA
> > #CC      = cc
> > #Note: "-arch host" assumes you will run the binary on exactly the
> > # same kind of ALPHA you compiled it on.  Omit it if you want to run
> > # the same binary on several kinds of Alpha.  If you are on an early
> > # EV6 that does not have the CIX instruction set extension, a compiler
> > # bug (?) causes these instructions to be generated anyway.  If this
> > # happens you'll see a message about "instr emulated" after starting
> > # crafty; to fix it, change "-arch host" to "-arch ev56 -tune host"
> > # and recompile.
> > #CFLAGS  = -std -fast -O4 -pthread -newc -arch host
> > #CPP  = cxx
> > #LDFLAGS = $(CFLAGS)
> > #LIBS    = -lpthread -lexc
> > #opt     = -DSMP -DCPUS=8 -DFAST -DPOSIX
> >
>
> uncomment the lines  below DOS
>
> > # DOS
> > # target  = DOS
> > # CC      = gcc
> > # CFLAGS  = -fomit-frame-pointer -m486 -O3
> > # CPP   = $(CC)
> > # LDFLAGS =
> > # opt     = -DCOMPACT_ATTACKS -DUSE_ATTACK_FUNCTIONS \
> > #           -DUSE_ASSEMBLY_A -DUSE_ASSEMBLY_B
> > # asm     = X86.o
> >
>
> comment out the lines below FreeBSD
>
> > # FreeBSD (gcc 2.6.3)
> > target  = FreeBSD
> > CC      = gcc
> > CFLAGS  = -fomit-frame-pointer -m486 -O3 -Wall
> > CPP  = $(CC)
> > LDFLAGS =
> > #opt     = -DCOMPACT_ATTACKS -DUSE_ATTACK_FUNCTIONS \
> > #          -DUSE_ASSEMBLY_A -DUSE_ASSEMBLY_B -DFAST
> >
> > # FreeBSD (pgcc)
> > #target  = FreeBSD
> > #CC      = gcc
> > #CFLAGS  = -pipe -D_REENTRANT -mpentium -O -Wall
> > #CPP  = $(CC)
> > #LDFLAGS =
> > #opt     = -DCOMPACT_ATTACKS -DUSE_ATTACK_FUNCTIONS \
> > #          -DUSE_ASSEMBLY_A -DUSE_ASSEMBLY_B -DFAST
> >
> > # HP
> > #target  = HP
> > #CC      = cc
> > #OPT     = +O3 +Onolimit
> > #CFLAGS  = +ESlit -Ae +w1
> > #CPP  = $(CC)
> > #LDFLAGS = $(OPT) $(CFLAGS)
> > #opt     =
> >
> > # LINUX (gcc 2.95)
> > # Note: You have to uncomment exactly ONE of the `asm' lines below.
> > #target  = LINUX
> > #CC      = gcc
> > #CPP = g++
> > #CFLAGS  = -Wall -pipe -D_REENTRANT -march=i686 -O -fforce-mem \
> > #          -fomit-frame-pointer -mpreferred-stack-boundary=2
> > #LDFLAGS = -lpthread
> > #opt     = -DCOMPACT_ATTACKS -DUSE_ATTACK_FUNCTIONS \
> > #          -DUSE_ASSEMBLY_A -DUSE_ASSEMBLY_B -DFAST -DSMP -DCPUS=4 -DDGT
> >
> > # Uncomment the FIRST `asm' line for a.out systems.
> > # Uncomment the SECOND `asm' line for ELF systems.
> > #
> > #asm     = X86-aout.o
> > #asm     = X86-elf.o
> >
> > # NEXT
> > #target  = NEXT
> > #CC      = /bin/cc
> > #CFLAGS  = -O2
> > #CPP  = $(CC)
> > #LDFLAGS = $(CFLAGS)
> > #opt     = -DCOMPACT_ATTACKS
> >
> > # OS2 (emx09c)
> > #  target  = OS2
> > #  CC      = gcc
> > #  CFLAGS  = -fomit-frame-pointer -m486 -O3 -Wall
> > #  CPP     = $(CC)
> > #  LDFLAGS = -Zexe -Zcrtdll -s
> > #  opt = -DCOMPACT_ATTACKS -DUSE_ATTACK_FUNCTIONS \
> > #        -DUSE_ASSEMBLY_A -DUSE_ASSEMBLY_B -DFAST -DOS2
> > #  asm     = X86.o
> >
> > # SGI
> > #target  = SGI
> > #AS      = /bin/as
> > #CC      = cc
> > #AFLAGS  = -P
> > #CFLAGS  = -g -32 -mips2 -cckr
> > #CPP  = $(CC)
> > #LDFLAGS =
> > #opt     = -DCOMPACT_ATTACKS -DUSE_ATTACK_FUNCTIONS
> > #opt     =
> >
> > # SUN
> > #target  = SUN
> > #AS      = /usr/ccs/bin/as
> > #CC      = cc
> > #AFLAGS  = -P
> > #CPP  = $(CC)
> > #CFLAGS  = -fast -xO5 -xunroll=20
> > #LDFLAGS = -lpthread
> > #opt     = -DCOMPACT_ATTACKS -DUSE_ATTACK_FUNCTIONS \
> > #          -DUSE_ASSEMBLY_A -DSMP -DCPUS=4 -DMUTEX -DPOSIX
> > #asm     = Sparc.o
> >
> > # Do not change anything below this line!
> >
> > opts = $(opt) -D$(target)
> >
> > objects = searchr.o search.o thread.o searchmp.o repeat.o next.o nexte.o
> > \
> >        nextr.o history.o quiesce.o evaluate.o movgen.o make.o unmake.o
> > hash.o \
> >        attacks.o swap.o boolean.o utility.o valid.o probe.o book.o
data.o
> > \
> >        drawn.o edit.o enprise.o epd.o epdglue.o init.o input.o
interupt.o
> > \
> >        iterate.o main.o option.o output.o phase.o ponder.o preeval.o
> > resign.o \
> >        root.o learn.o setboard.o test.o time.o validate.o annotate.o
> > \
> >        analyze.o evtest.o bench.o egtb.o dgt.o $(asm)
> >
> > includes = data.h chess.h
> >
> > epdincludes = epd.h epddefs.h epdglue.h
> >
> > eval_users = data.o evaluate.o preeval.o
> >
> > crafty: $(objects)
> >  $(CC) $(LDFLAGS) -o crafty $(objects) -lm  $(LIBS)
> >  @rm -f X86-elf.S
> >  @rm -f X86-aout.S
> >
> > dgt:    dgtdrv.o
> >  @cc -O -o dgt dgtdrv.c
> >
> > egtb.o: egtb.cpp
> >  $(CPP) -c $(CFLAGS) $(opts) egtb.cpp
> > clean:
> >  -rm -f *.o crafty X86-elf.X X86-aout.S
> >
> > $(objects): $(includes)
> >
> > $(eval_users): evaluate.h
> >
> > epd.o epdglue.o option.o init.o : $(epdincludes)
> >
> > c.o:
> >  $(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(opts) -c $*.c
> >
> > s.o:
> >  $(AS) $(AFLAGS) -o $*.o $*.s
> >
> > X86-aout.o:
> >  sed -e 's/ALIGN/4/' X86.s > X86-aout.S
> >  $(CC) -c X86-aout.S
> >  @rm X86-aout.S
> >
> > X86-elf.o:
> >  sed -e '/ _/s// /' -e '/^_/s///' -e 's/ALIGN/16/' X86.s > X86-elf.S
> >  $(CC) -c X86-elf.S
> >  @rm X86-elf.S
> >
> > What do I need to do now?
> > Where do I type make?
>
> cd C:\windows\desktop\Crafty
> make
>
>
> > C:/Djgpp/bin/make.exe?
> >
> > When you say bsh*.zip, which one are you taking about?
> > bsh203b, or bsh203s or bsh203d or all of them?
>
> bsh203b, may not be mandatory, but no harm in any case.
> you probably need also sed302b.zip (there are sed commands in this
> makefile)
>
> >
> > I'm running windows 95 if thats of help.
> > What do I do now?
> > I got all of those bsh*.zips I named above and extracted them etc..
>
> have you set
> set DJGPP=c:\djgpp\djgpp.env
> PATH=.\;C:\DJGPP\BIN;%PATH%
> A good place to put these lines is in a file setdjgpp.bat called from
> the property/program/batch file of a specialized dos box
>
>
>
> --
>        Maurice Lombardi
> Laboratoire de  Spectrometrie Physique,
> Universite Joseph Fourier de Grenoble, BP87
> 38402 Saint Martin d'Heres Cedex     FRANCE
> Tel: 33 (0)4 76 51 47 51
> Fax: 33 (0)4 76 51 45 44
> mailto:Maurice DOT Lombardi AT ujf-grenoble DOT fr

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