Apertium on Windows
Revision as of 14:21, 14 July 2007 by Francis Tyers (talk | contribs)
Using Cygwin
It is possible to compile Apertium for use on windows using Cygwin, which provides a UNIX-like environment in windows.
Before you begin you should install the cygwin with the following additional packages, if you find this list incomplete please update it.
- autoconf (Devel)
- automake (Devel)
- flex (Devel)
- libgcrypt (Libs)
- libtool (Devel)
- libxml2 (Devel)
- libxml2-devel (Devel)
- libxslt (Libs)
- pkg-config (Devel)
- subversion (Devel)
Steps
- Check out the repository as normal using svn.
- Patch the apertium source this patch (save it as
no_unlocked.diff
)$ patch -p1 < no_unlocked.diff
- and this one too (save as
no_ansi.diff
)$ patch -p1 < no_ansi.diff
- Make and install lttoolbox
- ./autogen.sh
- make
- make install
- Make and install apertium (required the patches from above)
- export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/usr/local/lib/pkgconfig/
- ./autogen.sh
- make
Using Mingw
From Linux (cross-compiling) (Debian/Ubuntu)
Because some of the packages required to compile Apertium are not ported to MinGW, we can make a cross-compiling in order to use Linux-based programs (e.g FLEX).
These instructions have been tested using Ubuntu 7.04 Feisty Fawn.
Setting up the environment
Packages required
- mingw32 3.4.5 (Ubuntu package)
- mingw32-binutils 2.16.91 (Ubuntu package)
- mingw32-runtime 3.12 (You need to install last Debian package from here)
- mingw32-libxml ^
- mingw32-libxml-dev ^
- mingw32-glib ^
- mingw32-glib-dev ^
- mingw32-libiconv ^
- mingw32-libiconv-dev ^
- mingw32-libz ^
- mingw32-libz-dev ^
- mingw32-pkgconfig ^
It is possible that some packages are not really required.
^ You can get them from this repository
Steps
From Windows
One could look into using the official MinGW package. This would allow compiling the packages on Linux.