Described on the homepage: http://www.dynare.org/
Most users should use the precompiled package available for your OS, also available via the Dynare homepage: http://www.dynare.org/download/dynare-stable.
To contribute to Dynare and participate in the Dynare community, please see: CONTRIBUTING.md
Most of the source files are covered by the GNU General Public Licence version 3 or later (there are some exceptions to this, see license.txt in Dynare distribution for specifics).
Here, we explain how to build from source:
- Dynare, including preprocessor and MEX files for MATLAB and Octave
- Dynare++
- all the associated documentation (PDF and HTML)
This source can be retrieved in three forms:
- via git, at https://git.dynare.org/Dynare/dynare.git
- using the stable source archive of the latest Dynare version (currently 4.4) from http://www.dynare.org/download/dynare-stable/
- using a source snapshot of the unstable version, from http://www.dynare.org/download/dynare-unstable/source-snapshot
Note that if you obtain the source code via git, you will need to install more tools (see below).
The first section of this page gives general instructions, which apply to all platforms. Then some specific platforms are discussed.
Note: Here, when we refer to 32-bit or 64-bit, we refer to the type of MATLAB installation, not the type of Windows installation. It is perfectly possible to run a 32-bit MATLAB on a 64-bit Windows: in that case, instructions for Windows 32-bit should be followed. To determine the type of your MATLAB installation, type:
>> computer
at the MATLAB prompt: if it returns PCWIN64
, GLNX64
or MACI64
, then you
have a 64-bit MATLAB; if it returns PCWIN
, MACI
or GLNX
, then you have a
32-bit MATLAB.
Contents
A number of tools and libraries are needed in order to recompile everything. You don't necessarily need to install everything, depending on what you want to compile.
- A POSIX compliant shell and an implementation of Make (mandatory)
- The GNU Compiler Collection, with gcc, g++ and gfortran (mandatory)
- MATLAB (if you want to compile the MEX for MATLAB)
- GNU Octave, with the development headers (if you want to compile the MEX for Octave)
- Boost libraries, version 1.36 or later (with the filesystem library compiled)
- Bison, version 3.0 or later (only if you get the source through Git)
- Flex, version 2.5.4 or later (only if you get the source through Git)
- Autoconf, version 2.62 or later (only if you get the source through Git) (see Installing an updated version of Autoconf in your own directory, in GNU/Linux)
- Automake, version 1.11.2 or later (only if you get the source through Git) (see Installing an updated version of AutoMake in your own directory, in GNU/Linux)
- An implementation of BLAS and LAPACK: either ATLAS, OpenBLAS, Netlib (BLAS, LAPACK) or MKL (only if you want to build Dynare++)
- An implementation of POSIX Threads (optional, for taking advantage of multi-core)
- MAT File I/O library (if you want to compile Markov-Switching code, the estimation DLL, k-order DLL and Dynare++)
- SLICOT (if you want to compile the Kalman steady state DLL)
- GSL library (if you want to compile Markov-Switching code)
- A decent LaTeX distribution (if you want to compile PDF documentation), ideally with Beamer
- For building the reference manual:
- GNU Texinfo
- Latex2HTML, if you want nice mathematical formulas in HTML output
- Doxygen (if you want to build Dynare preprocessor source documentation)
- For Octave, the development libraries corresponding to the UMFPACK packaged with Octave
If you have downloaded the sources from an official source archive or the source snapshot, just unpack it.
If you want to use Git, do the following from a terminal:
git clone --recursive https://git.dynare.org/Dynare/dynare.git
cd dynare
autoreconf -si
The last line runs Autoconf and Automake in order to prepare the build environment (this is not necessary if you got the sources from an official source archive or the source snapshot).
Simply launch the configure script from a terminal:
./configure
If you have MATLAB, you need to indicate both the MATLAB location and version. For example, on GNU/Linux:
./configure --with-matlab=/usr/local/MATLAB/R2013a MATLAB_VERSION=8.1
Note that the MATLAB version can also be specified via the MATLAB family product release (R2009a, R2008b, ...).
Alternatively, you can disable the compilation of MEX files for MATLAB with the --disable-matlab
flag, and MEX files for Octave with --disable-octave
.
You may need to specify additional options to the configure script, see the platform specific instructions below.
Note that if you don't want to compile the C/C++ programs with debugging information, you can specify the CFLAGS
and CXXFLAGS
variables to the configure script, such as:
./configure CFLAGS="-O3" CXXFLAGS="-O3"
To remove debugging information for MATLAB MEX functions, the analagous call would be:
./configure MATLAB_MEX_CFLAGS="-O3" MATLAB_MEX_CXXFLAGS="-O3"
If you want to give a try to the parallelized versions of some mex files (A_times_B_kronecker_C
and sparse_hessian_times_B_kronecker_C
used to get the reduced form of the second order approximation of the model) you can add the --enable-openmp
flag, for instance:
./configure --with-matlab=/usr/local/MATLAB/R2013a MATLAB_VERSION=8.1 --enable-openmp
If the configuration goes well, the script will tell you which components are correctly configured and will be built.
Binaries and Info documentation are built with:
make
PDF and HTML documentation are respectively built with:
make pdf
make html
The testsuites can be run with:
make check
Note that running the testsuite with Octave requires the additional packages
pstoedit
, epstool
, xfig
, and gnuplot
.
The Git source comes with unit tests (in the MATLAB functions) and integration tests (under the tests
subfolder). All the tests can be run with:
make check
In the tests
subfolder. If Dynare has been compiled against MATLAB and Octave, the tests will be run with MATLAB and Octave. Depending on
your PC, this can take several hours. It is possible to run the tests only with MATLAB:
make check-matlab
or only with Octave:
make check-octave
A summary of the results is available in tests/run_test_matlab_output.txt
or tests/run_test_octave_output.txt
. Often, it does not make sense
to run the complete testsuite. For instance, if you modify codes only related to the perfect foresight model solver, you can decide to run only a
subset of the integration tests, with:
make deterministic_simulations
This will run all the integration tests in tests/deterministic_simulations
with MATLAB and Octave. Again, it is possible to do this only with MATLAB:
make m/deterministic_simulations
or with Octave:
make o/deterministic_simulations
Finally if you want to run a single integration test, e.g. deterministic_simulations/lbj/rbc.mod
with MATLAB:
make deterministic_simulations/lbj/rbc.m.trs
or with Octave:
make deterministic_simulations/lbj/rbc.o.trs
The result of the test (PASSED
or FAILED
) will be printed in the terminal, the produced log can be displayed with:
make deterministic_simulations/lbj/rbc.m.drs
or
make deterministic_simulations/lbj/rbc.o.drs
Note that only tests will be executed where the m.trs/o.trs
does not yet exist. You can run
make clean
in the tests
folder to delete files that were created by the run of the testsuite. You can also manually delete the desired m.trs/o.trs
file(s).
All the prerequisites are packaged:
build-essential
(for gcc, g++ and make)gfortran
liboctave-dev
libboost-graph-dev
andlibboost-filesystem-dev
libgsl-dev
libmatio-dev
libslicot-dev
andlibslicot-pic
libsuitesparse-dev
flex
bison
autoconf
automake
texlive
texlive-publishers
(for Econometrica bibliographic style)texlive-latex-extra
(for fullpage.sty)texlive-fonts-extra
(for ccicons)texlive-latex-recommended
texlive-science
(for amstex)texinfo
lmodern
(for macroprocessor PDF)latex2html
doxygen
You can install them all at once with:
apt install build-essential gfortran liboctave-dev libboost-graph-dev libboost-filesystem-dev libgsl-dev libmatio-dev libslicot-dev libslicot-pic libsuitesparse-dev flex bison autoconf automake texlive texlive-publishers texlive-extra-utils texlive-formats-extra texlive-latex-extra texlive-fonts-extra texlive-latex-recommended texlive-science texinfo lmodern latex2html doxygen
- Install MSYS2 (pick the 64-bit version)
- Run a MSYS MinGW 64-bit shell
- Update the system:
pacman -Syu
You may be asked to close the window at the end of the first upgrade batch, in which case you should rerun the upgrade in a new window to complete the upgrade.
- Install all needed dependencies:
pacman -S git autoconf automake-wrapper bison flex make tar texinfo mingw-w64-x86_64-gcc mingw-w64-x86_64-gcc-fortran mingw-w64-x86_64-boost mingw-w64-x86_64-gsl mingw-w64-x86_64-matio mingw-w64-x86_64-openblas
- (Optional) compile and install SLICOT, needed for the
kalman_steady_state
MEX file
wget https://deb.debian.org/debian/pool/main/s/slicot/slicot_5.0+20101122.orig.tar.gz
tar xf slicot_5.0+20101122.orig.tar.gz
cd slicot-5.0+20101122
make FORTRAN=gfortran OPTS="-O2 -fno-underscoring -fdefault-integer-8" LOADER=gfortran slicot.a
mkdir -p /usr/local/lib
cp slicot.a /usr/local/lib/libslicot64_pic.a
cd ..
- Clone and prepare the Dynare sources:
git clone --recursive https://git.dynare.org/Dynare/dynare.git
cd dynare
autoreconf -si
- Configure Dynare:
./configure --with-boost-system=boost_system-mt --with-boost-filesystem=boost_filesystem-mt --with-slicot=/usr/local --with-matlab=<…> MATLAB_VERSION=<…> --disable-octave
where the path and version of MATLAB are specified. Note that you should use
the MSYS2 notation and not put spaces in the MATLAB path, so you probably want
to use something like /c/Progra~1/MATLAB/…
.
- Compile:
make
- Run the testsuite:
make -C tests check-matlab
Note: The above assumes that you have a 64-bit version of MATLAB. It can be adapted to a 32-bit MATLAB with the following modifications:
- run the MSYS MinGW 32-bit shell
- replace
x86_64
byi686
in packages names on thepacman
command-line - for SLICOT, remove the
-fdefault-integer-8
option, and instead copy the library into/usr/local/lib/libslicot_pic.a
Note: Compiling the MEX files for Octave and the documentation under MSYS2 is currently not supported.
To simply use a snapshot of Dynare, you have two choices. On MATLAB, you can
use the snapshot build provided by
Dynare. On Octave, you can simply install Homebrew and run
brew install dynare --HEAD
(See the Install Dynare (unstable) section of
this webpage for more
details).
If you do not wish to use the snapshots provided by Dynare or Homebrew, follow the directions below to build Dynare on your local machine.
Preparatory work:
- Install the Xcode Command Line Tools:
- Open Terminal.app and type
xcode-select --install
- Open Terminal.app and type
- Install Homebrew by following the instructions on their website
The following commands will install the programs that Dynare needs to compile. They should be entered at the command prompt in Terminal.app.
brew install automake bison flex boost fftw gcc gsl hdf5 libmatio metis veclibfort
- (Optional) To compile Dynare mex files for use on Octave:
brew install octave
brew install suite-sparse
- (Optional) To compile Dynare documentation
- Install the latest version of MacTeX, deselecting the option to install Ghostscript
brew install doxygen latex2html
The following commands will download the Dynare source code and compile it. They should be entered at the command prompt in Terminal.app from the folder where you want Dynare installed.
git clone https://git.dynare.org/Dynare/dynare.git
cd dynare
PATH="/usr/local/opt/bison/bin:/usr/local/opt/flex/bin:$PATH"
autoreconf -si
./configure --disable-octave --with-matlab=/Applications/MATLAB_R2017b.app MATLAB_VERSION=R2017b
, adjusting the MATLAB path and version to accord with your local installation. If you don't have MATLAB, simply type./configure --disable-octave
make -j
- (Optional) To then build mex files for Octave, run
cd mex/build/octave
./configure CXXFLAGS="-std=c++0x"
make -j