- Make sure you have installed CMake version 3.1 (or newer) on your system. oneTBB uses CMake build configuration.
- Configure and build oneTBB. To work with build configurations, see Build System Description.
At the command prompt, type:
cmake <options> <repo_root>
You may want to use some additional options for configuration:
Option | Purpose | Description |
---|---|---|
-G <generator> |
Specify project generator | For more information, run cmake –help . |
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug |
Specify for Debug build | Not applicable for multi-configuration generators such as Visual Studio generator. |
To build the system, run:
cmake --build . <options>
Some useful build options:
--target <target>
- specific target, "all" is default.--config <Release|Debug>
- build configuration, applicable only for multi-config generators such as Visual Studio generator.
NOTE
Be careful about installing prefix. It defaults to /usr/local
on UNIX* and c:/Program Files/${PROJECT_NAME}
on Windows* OS.
You can define custom CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX
during configuration:
cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/my/install/prefix ..
Installation can also be done using:
cmake --install <project-binary-dir>
Special --install
target can alternatively be used for installation, e.g. make install
.
You can use the install
components for partial installation.
The following install components are supported:
runtime
- oneTBB runtime package (core shared libraries and.dll
files on Windows* OS).devel
- oneTBB development package (header files, CMake integration files, library symbolic links, and.lib
files on Windows* OS).tbb4py
- oneTBB Module for Python.
If you want to install specific components after configuration and build, run:
cmake -DCOMPONENT=<component> [-DBUILD_TYPE=<build-type>] -P cmake_install.cmake
Simple packaging using CPack is supported. The following commands allow you to create a simple portable package that includes header files, libraries, and integration files for CMake:
cmake <options> ..
cpack
The following example demonstrates how to install oneTBB for single-configuration generators (e.g. GNU Make, Ninja, etc.).
# Do our experiments in /tmp
cd /tmp
# Clone oneTBB repository
git clone https://github.com/oneapi-src/oneTBB.git
cd oneTBB
# Create binary directory for out-of-source build
mkdir build && cd build
# Configure: customize CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX and disable TBB_TEST to avoid tests build
cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/tmp/my_installed_onetbb -DTBB_TEST=OFF ..
# Build
cmake --build .
# Install
cmake --install .
# Well done! Your installed oneTBB is in /tmp/my_installed_onetbb
The following example demonstrates how to install oneTBB for multi-configuration generators such as Visual Studio*.
Choose the configuration during the build and install steps:
REM Do our experiments in %TMP%
cd %TMP%
REM Clone oneTBB repository
git clone https://github.com/oneapi-src/oneTBB.git
cd oneTBB
REM Create binary directory for out-of-source build
mkdir build && cd build
REM Configure: customize CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX and disable TBB_TEST to avoid tests build
cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=%TMP%\my_installed_onetbb -DTBB_TEST=OFF ..
REM Build "release with debug information" configuration
cmake --build . --config relwithdebinfo
REM Install "release with debug information" configuration
cmake --install . --config relwithdebinfo
REM Well done! Your installed oneTBB is in %TMP%\my_installed_onetbb