.. _building: Building open62541 ================== Building the Examples --------------------- Using the GCC compiler, the following calls build the examples on Linux. .. code-block:: bash cp /path-to/open62541.* . # copy single-file distribution to the local directory cp /path-to/examples/server_variable.c . # copy the example server gcc -std=c99 open62541.c server_variable.c -o server Building the Library -------------------- Building with CMake on Ubuntu or Debian ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. code-block:: bash sudo apt-get install git build-essential gcc pkg-config cmake python python-six # enable additional features sudo apt-get install cmake-curses-gui # for the ccmake graphical interface sudo apt-get install libmbedtls-dev # for encryption support sudo apt-get install check # for unit tests sudo apt-get install python-sphinx graphviz # for documentation generation sudo apt-get install python-sphinx-rtd-theme # documentation style cd open62541 mkdir build cd build cmake .. make # select additional features ccmake .. make # build documentation make doc # html documentation make doc_pdf # pdf documentation (requires LaTeX) Building with CMake on Windows ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Here we explain the build process for Visual Studio (2013 or newer). To build with MinGW, just replace the compiler selection in the call to CMake. - Download and install - Python 2.7.x (Python 3.x works as well): https://python.org/downloads - Install python-six with the pip package manager (``pip install six``) - CMake: http://www.cmake.org/cmake/resources/software.html - Microsoft Visual Studio: https://www.visualstudio.com/products/visual-studio-community-vs - Download the open62541 sources (using git or as a zipfile from github) - Open a command shell (cmd) and run .. code-block:: bat cd \open62541 mkdir build cd build \cmake.exe .. -G "Visual Studio 14 2015" :: You can use use cmake-gui for a graphical user-interface to select features - Then open :file:`build\open62541.sln` in Visual Studio 2015 and build as usual Building on OS X ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - Download and install - Xcode: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/xcode/id497799835?ls=1&mt=12 - Homebrew: http://brew.sh/ - Pip (a package manager for python, may be preinstalled): ``sudo easy_install pip`` - Run the following in a shell .. code-block:: bash brew install cmake pip install six # python 2/3 compatibility workarounds pip install sphinx # for documentation generation pip install sphinx_rtd_theme # documentation style brew install graphviz # for graphics in the documentation brew install check # for unit tests brew install userspace-rcu # for multi-threading support Follow Ubuntu instructions without the ``apt-get`` commands as these are taken care of by the above packages. Building on OpenBSD ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The procedure below works on OpenBSD 5.8 with gcc version 4.8.4, cmake version 3.2.3 and Python version 2.7.10. - Install a recent gcc, python and cmake: .. code-block:: bash pkg_add gcc python cmake - Tell the system to actually use the recent gcc (it gets installed as egcc on OpenBSD): .. code-block:: bash export CC=egcc CXX=eg++ - Now procede as described for Ubuntu/Debian: .. code-block:: bash cd open62541 mkdir build cd build cmake .. make Build Options ------------- The open62541 project uses CMake to manage the build options, for code generation and to generate build projects for the different systems and IDEs. The tools *ccmake* or *cmake-gui* can be used to graphically set the build options. Most options can be changed manually in :file:`ua_config.h` (:file:`open62541.h` for the single-file release) after the code generation. But usually there is no need to adjust them. Build Type and Logging ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ **CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE** - ``RelWithDebInfo`` -O2 optimization with debug symbols - ``Release`` -O2 optimization without debug symbols - ``Debug`` -O0 optimization with debug symbols - ``MinSizeRel`` -Os optimization without debug symbols **UA_LOGLEVEL** The SDK logs events of the level defined in ``UA_LOGLEVEL`` and above only. The logging event levels are as follows: - 600: Fatal - 500: Error - 400: Warning - 300: Info - 200: Debug - 100: Trace UA_BUILD_* group ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ By default only the shared object libopen62541.so or the library open62541.dll and open62541.dll.a resp. open62541.lib are build. Additional artifacts can be specified by the following options: **UA_BUILD_EXAMPLES** Compile example servers and clients from :file:`examples/{xyz}.c`. A static and a dynamic binary is linked, respectively. **UA_BUILD_UNIT_TESTS** Compile unit tests with Check framework. The tests can be executed with ``make test`` **UA_BUILD_EXAMPLES_NODESET_COMPILER** Generate an OPC UA information model from a nodeset XML (experimental) **UA_BUILD_SELFSIGNED_CERTIFICATE** Generate a self-signed certificate for the server (openSSL required) UA_ENABLE_* group ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ This group contains build options related to the supported OPC UA features. **UA_ENABLE_SUBSCRIPTIONS** Enable subscriptions **UA_ENABLE_METHODCALLS** Enable the Method service set **UA_ENABLE_NODEMANAGEMENT** Enable dynamic addition and removal of nodes at runtime **UA_ENABLE_AMALGAMATION** Compile a single-file release into the files :file:`open62541.c` and :file:`open62541.h` **UA_ENABLE_MULTITHREADING** Enable multi-threading support **UA_ENABLE_COVERAGE** Measure the coverage of unit tests **UA_ENABLE_DISCOVERY** Enable Discovery Service (LDS) **UA_ENABLE_DISCOVERY_MULTICAST** Enable Discovery Service with multicast support (LDS-ME) **UA_ENABLE_DISCOVERY_SEMAPHORE** Enable Discovery Semaphore support Some options are marked as advanced. The advanced options need to be toggled to be visible in the cmake GUIs. **UA_ENABLE_TYPENAMES** Add the type and member names to the UA_DataType structure. Enabled by default. **UA_ENABLE_STATUSCODE_DESCRIPTIONS** Compile the human-readable name of the StatusCodes into the binary. Enabled by default. **UA_ENABLE_FULL_NS0** Use the full NS0 instead of a minimal Namespace 0 nodeset ``UA_FILE_NS0`` is used to specify the file for NS0 generation from namespace0 folder. Default value is ``Opc.Ua.NodeSet2.xml`` **UA_ENABLE_NONSTANDARD_UDP** Enable udp extension UA_DEBUG_* group ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ This group contains build options mainly useful for development of the library itself. **UA_DEBUG** Enable assertions and additional definitions not intended for production builds **UA_DEBUG_DUMP_PKGS** Dump every package received by the server as hexdump format Building a shared library ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ open62541 is small enough that most users will want to statically link the library into their programs. If a shared library (.dll, .so) is required, this can be enabled in CMake with the ``BUILD_SHARED_LIBS`` option. Note that this option modifies the :file:`ua_config.h` file that is also included in :file:`open62541.h` for the single-file distribution. Minimizing the binary size ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The size of the generated binary can be reduced considerably by adjusting the build configuration. First, in CMake, the build type can be set to ``CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=MinSizeRel``. This sets the compiler flags to minimize the binary size. The build type also strips out debug information. Second, the binary size can be reduced by removing features via the build-flags described above. Especially, logging takes up a lot of space in the binary and might not be needed in embedded scenarios. Setting ``UA_LOGLEVEL`` to a value above 600 (=FATAL) disables all logging. In addition, the feature-flags ``UA_ENABLE_TYPENAMES`` and ``UA_ENABLE_STATUSCODE_DESCRIPTIONS`` add static information to the binary that is only used for human-readable logging and debugging. The RAM requirements of a server are mostly due to the following settings: - The size of the information model - The number of connected clients - The configured maximum message size that is preallocated Installation and packaging ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ You can install open62541 using the well known `make install` command. This allows you to use pre-built libraries and headers for your own project. To override the default installation directory use ``cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/some/path``. Based on the SDK Features you selected, as described above, these features will also be included in the installation. Thus we recommend to enable as many features as possible for the installed binary. In your own CMake project you can then include the open62541 library using: .. code-block:: cmake # optionally you can also specify a specific version # e.g. find_package(open62541 0.3.0) find_package(open62541 REQUIRED COMPONENTS FullNamespace DiscoveryMulticast) add_executable(main main.cpp ) target_link_libraries(main open62541) A full list of enabled features during build time is stored in the CMake Variable ``open62541_COMPONENTS_ALL``