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Sage: Open Source Mathematical Software "Creating a Viable Open Source Alternative to Magma, Maple, Mathematica, and MATLAB" Copyright (C) 2005-2012 William Stein and the Sage Development Team http://www.sagemath.org Over 200 people have contributed code to Sage. Please see the following web page for a list: http://www.sagemath.org/development-map.html In many cases, documentation for modules and functions list the authors. GETTING STARTED --------------- This README.txt contains build instructions for Sage. If you downloaded a binary, you do not need to do anything; just execute: ./sage from the command line. If you downloaded the sources, please read below on how to build Sage and work around common issues. If you have questions or encounter problems, please do not hesitate to email the sage-support mailing list: http://groups.google.com/group/sage-support SUPPORTED PLATFORMS ------------------- Sage fully supports several Linux distributions, recent versions of Mac OS X, as well as a number of Solaris and OpenSolaris releases. There should be no serious bugs in an officially released version of Sage on any of the fully supported platforms, but any major issues with a particular release will be documented on an errata page: http://wiki.sagemath.org/errata Ports are in progress to some other, less common platforms. The list of supported platforms and their current statuses are given at the following web page: http://wiki.sagemath.org/SupportedPlatforms If you are interested in helping port Sage to a new platform, please let us know at the sage-devel mailing list: http://groups.google.com/group/sage-devel QUICK INSTRUCTIONS TO BUILD FROM SOURCE --------------------------------------- The following steps briefly outline the process of building Sage from source. More detailed instructions, including how to build faster on multicore machines are contained later in this README and in the Installation Guide: http://www.sagemath.org/doc/installation 1. Make sure you have the dependencies and 3 GB of free disk space. Linux: gcc, make, m4, perl, ranlib, and tar. (install these using your package manager) On recent Debian or Ubuntu systems (in particular Ubuntu 12.04 "Precise"), you need the dpkg-dev package. OS X: Xcode. Make sure you have installed the most recent version of Xcode. For pre-Lion versions of OS X, you can download Xcode from http://developer.apple.com/downloads/. For OS X Lion, you can install it using the App Store. With Xcode 4.3 or later, you need to install the "Command Line Tools": from the File menu, choose "Preferences", then the "Downloads" tab, and then "Install" the Command Line Tools. Other platforms: See detailed instructions below. 2. Extract the tarball: tar xvf sage-*.tar 3. cd into the Sage directory and type make: cd sage-*/ make That's it! Everything is automatic and non-interactive. The build should work fine on all fully supported platforms. If it does not, we want to know! ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES --------------------- There are a lot of environment variables which control the install process of Sage, see: http://sagemath.org/doc/installation/source.html#environment-variables SELINUX -------- On Linux, if you get this error message: Error: cannot restore segment prot after reloc: Permission denied the problem is probably related to SELinux. See the following URL for further information: http://www.exelisvis.com/Support/HelpArticleDetail/ArticleId/3092.aspx IMPLEMENTATION -------------- Sage has significant components written in the following languages: C/C++, Python, Cython, Lisp, and Fortran. Lisp (ECL), Python, and Cython are built as part of Sage and a GNU Fortran (gfortran) binary is included (OS X only), so you do not need them in order to build Sage. MORE DETAILED INSTRUCTIONS TO BUILD FROM SOURCE ----------------------------------------------- 1. Make sure you have about 3 GB of free disk space. 2. Install build dependencies. Linux: See quick instructions above. OS X: Make sure you have XCode version >= 2.4, i.e. "gcc -v" should output build >= 5363. If you don't, go to: http://developer.apple.com/ sign up, and download the free XCode package. Only OS X >= 10.4 is supported. Solaris and OpenSolaris: Building Sage on these platforms is more tricky than on Linux or OS X. For details on how to build Sage on these platforms, see: http://wiki.sagemath.org/solaris Windows: Not supported. A solution is to download and install VirtualBox, install Linux into it, etc. NOTE: On some operating systems, it might be necessary to install gas/as, gld/ld, gnm/nm. On most platforms, these are automatically installed when you install the programs listed above. 3. Extract the Sage source tarball and cd into a directory with no spaces in it. If you have a machine with 4 processors, say, type the following to configure the build script to perform a parallel compilation of Sage using 4 jobs: export MAKE="make -j4" (With 4 processors, you might also consider "-j5" or "-j6" -- building with more jobs than CPU cores can speed things up.) You might in addition pass a "-l" flag to "make": this sets a load limit, so for example if you execute export MAKE="make -j4 -l5.5" then "make" won't start more than one job at a time if the system load average is above 5.5. See http://www.gnu.org/software/make/manual/make.html#Options-Summary and http://www.gnu.org/software/make/manual/make.html#Parallel. If you want to run the test suite for each individual spkg as it is installed, type: export SAGE_CHECK="yes" before starting the Sage build. This will run each test suite and will raise an error if any failures occur. Python's test suite has been disabled by default, because it causes failures on most systems. To renable the Python testsuite, set the environment variable SAGE_CHECK_PACKAGES to "python". To start the build, type: make 4. Wait about 1 hour to 14 days, depending on your computer (it took about 2 weeks to build Sage on the T-Mobile G1 Android cell phone). 5. Type "./sage" to try it out. 6. OPTIONAL: Start Sage and run the command install_scripts("/usr/local/bin/") # change /usr/local/bin/ Type "install_scripts?" in Sage for more details about what this command does. 7. OPTIONAL: Type "make ptest" to test all examples in the documentation (over 93,000 lines of input!) -- this takes from 30 minutes to several hours. Don't get too disturbed if there are 2 to 3 failures, but always feel free to email the section of logs/ptest.log that contains errors to the sage-support mailing list. If there are numerous failures, there was a serious problem with your build. 8. OPTIONAL: If you want to (try to) build the documentation, run: sage --docbuild --help for instructions. The HTML version of the documentation is built during the compilation process of Sage and resides in the directory: $SAGE_ROOT/devel/sage/doc/output/html/ LaTeX is required to build the PDF version of the documentation. 9. OPTIONAL: It is highly recommended that you install the optional GAP database by typing: ./sage --optional then installing (with "./sage -i") the package whose name begins with database_gap. This will download the package from sage.math.washington.edu and install it. While you're at it, you might install other databases of interest to you. 10. OPTIONAL: It is recommended that you have both LaTeX and the ImageMagick tools (e.g. the "convert" command) installed since some plotting functionality benefits from it. 11. OPTIONAL: Read this if you are intending to run a Sage notebook server for multiple users. For security (i.e., to run "notebook(secure=True)") you may wish users to access the server using the HTTPS protocol. You also may want to use OpenID for user authentication. The first of these requires you to install pyOpenSSL, and they both require OpenSSL. If you have OpenSSL and the OpenSSL development headers installed on your system, you can install pyOpenSSL by building Sage and then typing ./sage -i pyopenssl Note that this command requires internet access. Alternatively, "make ssl" builds Sage and installs pyOpenSSL. If you are missing either OpenSSL or OpenSSL's development headers, you can install a local copy of both into your Sage installation first. Ideally, this should be done before installing Sage; otherwise, you should at least rebuild Sage's Python, and ideally any part of Sage relying on it. So the procedure is as follows (again, with a computer connected to the internet). Starting from a fresh Sage tarball: ./sage -i patch ./sage -i openssl make ssl Alternatively, if you've already built Sage: ./sage -i openssl ./sage -f python # rebuilds Python SAGE_UPGRADING=yes make ssl The third line will rebuild all parts of Sage that depend on Python; this can take a while. PROBLEMS -------- If you have problems building Sage, check the Sage Installation Guide, and also note the following. Each separate component of Sage is contained in an spkg; these are stored in spkg/standard/. As each one is built, a build log is stored in logs/pkgs/, so you can browse these to find error messages. If an spkg fails to build, the whole build process will stop soon after, so check the most recent log files first, or run grep -li "^Error" logs/pkgs/* from the top-level Sage directory to find log files with error messages in them. Send (a small part of) the relevant log file to the sage-devel mailing list, making sure to include at least some of the error messages; probably someone there will have some helpful suggestions. SUPPORTED COMPILERS ------------------- Sage includes a GCC (GNU Compiler Collection) package. In order to build Sage, you need a C compiler which can build GCC and its prerequisites. gcc version 4.0.1 or later should probably work. On Solaris or OpenSolaris, building with the Sun compiler should also work. The GCC package in Sage is not always installed. It is determined automatically whether it needs to be installed. You can override this by setting the environment variable SAGE_INSTALL_GCC=yes (to force installation of GCC) or SAGE_INSTALL_GCC=no (to disable installation of GCC). If you don't want to install GCC, you need to have recent versions of gcc, g++ and gfortran; moreover, the versions must be equal. There are some known problems with old assemblers, in particular when building the ECM package. You should ensure that your assembler understands all instructions for your processor. On Linux, this means you need a recent version of binutils; on OS X you need a recent version of XCode. RELOCATION ---------- You *should* be able to move the sage-x.y.z/ directory anywhere you want. If you copy the sage script or make a symbolic link to it, you should modify the script to reflect this (as instructed at the top of the script). It is best if the path to Sage does not have any spaces in it. For a system-wide installation, as root you can move the sage-x.y.z/ directory to a system-wide directory. Afterwards, you need to start up Sage as root at least once prior to using the system-wide Sage as a normal user. See the Installation Guide for further information on performing a system-wide installation: http://www.sagemath.org/doc/installation/source.html#installation-in-a-multiuser-environment If you find anything that doesn't work correctly after you moved the directory, please email the sage-support mailing list. REDISTRIBUTION -------------- Your local Sage install is almost exactly the same as any "developer" install. You can make changes to documentation, source, etc., and very easily package the complete results up for redistribution just like we do. 1. To make your own source tarball (sage-x.y.z.tar) of Sage, type: sage --sdist x.y.z where the version is whatever you want. 2. To make a binary distribution with your currently installed packages, type: sage --bdist x.y.z 3. To make a binary that will run on the widest range of target machines, set the SAGE_FAT_BINARY environment variable to "yes" before building Sage: export SAGE_FAT_BINARY="yes" make ./sage --bdist x.y.z-fat In all cases, the result is placed in the directory "$SAGE_ROOT/dist/". CHANGES TO INCLUDED SOFTWARE ---------------------------- All software included with Sage is copyrighted by the respective authors and released under an open source license that is "GPL version 3 or later" compatible. See the file COPYING.txt for more details. Almost every spkg in $SAGE_ROOT/spkg/standard/ is a bzip2-compressed tarball (currently, the only exception is the bzip2 spkg itself, which is gzip-compressed). You can extract it with: tar xvf name-*.spkg Inside the spkg, there is a file SPKG.txt that details all changes made to the given package for inclusion with Sage. The inclusion of such a file detailing changes is specifically required by some of the packages included with Sage (e.g. for GAP).
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