E.4 Installation Problems
This section contains a list of problems (and some apparent problems that don’t really mean anything is wrong) that may show up during installation of Octave.
- On some SCO systems,
info
fails to compile ifHAVE_TERMIOS_H
is defined in config.h. Simply removing the definition from info/config.h should allow it to compile. - If
configure
findsdlopen
,dlsym
,dlclose
, anddlerror
, but not the header file dlfcn.h, you need to find the source for the header file and install it in the directory usr/include. This is reportedly a problem with Slackware 3.1. For Linux/GNU systems, the source for dlfcn.h is in theldso
package. - Building .oct files doesn’t work.
You should probably have a shared version of
libstdc++
. A patch is needed to build shared versions of version 2.7.2 oflibstdc++
on the HP-PA architecture. You can find the patch at ftp://ftp.cygnus.com/pub/g++/libg++-2.7.2-hppa-gcc-fix. - On some DEC alpha systems there may be a problem with the
libdxml
library, resulting in floating point errors and/or segmentation faults in the linear algebra routines called by Octave. If you encounter such problems, then you should modify the configure script so thatSPECIAL_MATH_LIB
is not set to-ldxml
. - On FreeBSD systems Octave may hang while initializing some internal constants. The fix appears to be to use
options GPL_MATH_EMULATE
rather than
options MATH_EMULATE
in the kernel configuration files (typically found in the directory /sys/i386/conf). After making this change, you’ll need to rebuild the kernel, install it, and reboot.
- If you encounter errors like
passing `void (*)()' as argument 2 of `octave_set_signal_handler(int, void (*)(int))'
or
warning: ANSI C++ prohibits conversion from `(int)' to `(…)'
while compiling sighandlers.cc, you may need to edit some files in the
gcc
include subdirectory to add proper prototypes for functions there. For example, Ultrix 4.2 needs proper declarations for thesignal
function and theSIG_IGN
macro in the file signal.h.On some systems the
SIG_IGN
macro is defined to be something like this:#define SIG_IGN (void (*)())1
when it should really be something like:
#define SIG_IGN (void (*)(int))1
to match the prototype declaration for the
signal
function. This change should also be made for theSIG_DFL
andSIG_ERR
symbols. It may be necessary to change the definitions in sys/signal.h as well.The
gcc
fixincludes
andfixproto
scripts should probably fix these problems whengcc
installs its modified set of header files, but I don’t think that’s been done yet.You should not change the files in /usr/include. You can find the
gcc
include directory tree by running the commandgcc -print-libgcc-file-name
The directory of
gcc
include files normally begins in the same directory that contains the file libgcc.a. - Some of the Fortran subroutines may fail to compile with older versions of the Sun Fortran compiler. If you get errors like
zgemm.f: zgemm: warning: unexpected parent of complex expression subtree zgemm.f, line 245: warning: unexpected parent of complex expression subtree warning: unexpected parent of complex expression subtree zgemm.f, line 304: warning: unexpected parent of complex expression subtree warning: unexpected parent of complex expression subtree zgemm.f, line 327: warning: unexpected parent of complex expression subtree pcc_binval: missing IR_CONV in complex op make[2]: *** [zgemm.o] Error 1
when compiling the Fortran subroutines in the liboctave/external subdirectory, you should either upgrade your compiler or try compiling with optimization turned off.
- On NeXT systems, if you get errors like this:
/usr/tmp/cc007458.s:unknown:Undefined local symbol LBB7656 /usr/tmp/cc007458.s:unknown:Undefined local symbol LBE7656
when compiling Array.cc and Matrix.cc, try recompiling these files without -g.
- Some people have reported that calls to system() and the pager do not work on SunOS systems. This is apparently due to having
G_HAVE_SYS_WAIT
defined to be 0 instead of 1 when compilinglibg++
. - On systems where the reference BLAS library is used the following matrix-by-vector multiplication incorrectly handles NaN values of the form
NaN * 0
.[NaN, 1; 0, 0] * [0; 1] ⇒ [ 1 0 ] correct result ⇒ [ NaN 0 ]
Install a different BLAS library such as OpenBLAS or ATLAS to correct this issue.
- On NeXT systems, linking to libsys_s.a may fail to resolve the following functions
_tcgetattr _tcsetattr _tcflow
which are part of libposix.a. Unfortunately, linking Octave with -posix results in the following undefined symbols.
.destructors_used .constructors_used _objc_msgSend _NXGetDefaultValue _NXRegisterDefaults .objc_class_name_NXStringTable .objc_class_name_NXBundle
One kluge around this problem is to extract termios.o from libposix.a, put it in Octave’s src directory, and add it to the list of files to link together in the makefile. Suggestions for better ways to solve this problem are welcome!
- If Octave crashes immediately with a floating point exception, it is likely that it is failing to initialize the IEEE floating point values for infinity and NaN.
If your system actually does support IEEE arithmetic, you should be able to fix this problem by modifying the function
octave_ieee_init
in the file lo-ieee.cc to correctly initialize Octave’s internal infinity and NaN variables.If your system does not support IEEE arithmetic but Octave’s configure script incorrectly determined that it does, you can work around the problem by editing the file config.h to not define
HAVE_ISINF
,HAVE_FINITE
, andHAVE_ISNAN
.In any case, please report this as a bug since it might be possible to modify Octave’s configuration script to automatically determine the proper thing to do.
- If Octave is unable to find a header file because it is installed in a location that is not normally searched by the compiler, you can add the directory to the include search path by specifying (for example)
CPPFLAGS=-I/some/nonstandard/directory
as an argument toconfigure
. Other variables that can be specified this way areCFLAGS
,CXXFLAGS
,FFLAGS
, andLDFLAGS
. Passing them as options to the configure script also records them in the config.status file. By default,CPPFLAGS
andLDFLAGS
are empty,CFLAGS
andCXXFLAGS
are set to"-g -O2"
andFFLAGS
is set to"-O"
.
© 1996–2020 John W. Eaton
Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one.Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions.
https://octave.org/doc/v5.2.0/Installation-Problems.html