This is Gmsh, an automatic three-dimensional finite element mesh
generator with built-in pre- and post-processing facilities.
Gmsh is distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License,
with an exception to allow for easier linking with external
libraries. See doc/LICENSE.txt and doc/CREDITS.txt for more
information.
See the doc/ and tutorial/ directories for documentation. The
reference manual is located in doc/texinfo/. See the demos/ directory
and the web site http://geuz.org/gmsh for additional examples.
Building Gmsh from source requires CMake (http://www.cmake.org).
Building the graphical user interface requires FLTK 1.1.7 or above
(http://www.fltk.org), configured with OpenGL support.
Build Gmsh using CMake's graphical user interface
-------------------------------------------------
* Launch CMake and fill-in the two top input fields (telling where the
Gmsh source directory is located and where you want the Gmsh binary
to be created).
* Click on "Add entry" and define the variable CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH, of
type "PATH", pointing to the location(s) of any external package(s)
(FLTK, BLAS/LAPACK, etc.) installed in non-standard directories.
(If you are using our pre-compiled "gmsh dependencies" package
(http://geuz.org/gmsh/bin/Windows/gmsh-dep-msvc2008-release.zip)
with Visual Studio on Windows simply point CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH to the
"gmsh-dep" directory.)
* Click on "Configure" and choose your compiler (e.g. Visual Studio).
* Optionally change some configuration options (re-run "Configure"
every time you change some options).
* Once you are happy with all the configuration options, click on
"Generate".
* Go to the build directory and build Gmsh using your chosen compiler.
(With Visual Studio double-click on "gmsh.sln". If you are using our
pre-compiled "gmsh dependencies" package you must use the "Release"
or "RelWithDebInfo" build type.)
Build Gmsh from the command line
--------------------------------
* Create a build directory, for example as a subdirectory of Gmsh's
source directory:
mkdir build
* Run cmake from within the build directory, pointing to Gmsh's
source directory:
cd build
cmake ..
* To build and install Gmsh then simply type
make
make install
* To change build options you can use "ccmake" instead of "cmake",
e.g.:
ccmake ..
or you can specify options directly on the command line, for example
cmake -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=/opt/local ..
to specify the location of external packages installed in
non-standard directories,
cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/opt
to change the installation directory, or
cmake -DENABLE_FLTK=0 ..
to build a version of Gmsh without the FLTK graphical interface.
* You can keep multiple builds with different build options at the
same time. For example, you could configure a debug graphical build
in a "bin" subdirectory with
cd bin
cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug ..
make
make install
and static and dynamic non-graphical release libraries in a "lib"
subdirectory with
cd lib
cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release -DENABLE_FLTK=0 -DENABLE_OCC=0 ..
make lib
make shared
make install/fast
* To see a detailed compilation log use
make VERBOSE=1
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