homebrew-core/Formula/octave.rb

113 lines
3.4 KiB
Ruby

require 'formula'
def no_magick?
ARGV.include? '--without-graphicsmagick'
end
def no_native?
ARGV.include? '--without-fltk'
end
def run_tests?
ARGV.include? '--test'
end
def snow_leopard_64?
# 64 bit builds on 10.6 require some special handling.
MACOS_VERSION == 10.6 and MacOS.prefer_64_bit?
end
class Octave < Formula
homepage 'http://www.gnu.org/software/octave/index.html'
url 'http://ftpmirror.gnu.org/octave/octave-3.6.2.tar.bz2'
mirror 'http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/octave/octave-3.6.2.tar.bz2'
sha1 '145fef0122268086727a60e1c33e29d56fd546d7'
depends_on 'pkg-config' => :build
depends_on 'gnu-sed' => :build
depends_on 'texinfo' => :build # OS X's makeinfo won't work for this
depends_on :x11
depends_on 'fftw'
# When building 64-bit binaries on Snow Leopard, there are naming issues with
# the dot product functions in the BLAS library provided by Apple's
# Accelerate framework. See the following thread for the gory details:
#
# http://www.macresearch.org/lapackblas-fortran-106
#
# We can work around the issues using dotwrp.
depends_on 'dotwrp' if snow_leopard_64?
# octave refuses to work with BSD readline, so it's either this or --disable-readline
depends_on 'readline'
depends_on 'curl' if MacOS.leopard? # Leopard's libcurl is too old
# additional features
depends_on 'suite-sparse'
depends_on 'glpk'
depends_on 'graphicsmagick' unless no_magick?
depends_on 'hdf5'
depends_on 'pcre'
depends_on 'fltk' unless no_native?
depends_on 'qhull'
depends_on 'qrupdate'
# required for plotting if we don't have native graphics
depends_on 'gnuplot' if no_native?
def options
[
['--without-graphicsmagick', 'Compile without GraphicsMagick'],
['--without-fltk', 'Compile without fltk (disables native graphics)'],
['--test', 'Run tests before installing'],
]
end
def install
ENV.fortran
# yes, compiling octave takes a long time, but using -O2 gives negligible savings
# build time with -O2: user 58m5.295s sys 7m29.064s
# build time with -O3: user 58m58.054s sys 7m52.221s
ENV.m64 if MacOS.prefer_64_bit?
ENV.append_to_cflags "-D_REENTRANT"
args = [
"--disable-dependency-tracking",
"--prefix=#{prefix}",
# Cant use `-framework Accelerate` because `mkoctfile`, the tool used to
# compile extension packages, can't parse `-framework` flags.
"--with-blas=#{'-ldotwrp ' if snow_leopard_64?}-Wl,-framework -Wl,Accelerate"
]
args << "--without-framework-carbon" if MacOS.lion?
system "./configure", *args
system "make all"
system "make check 2>&1 | tee make-check.log" if run_tests?
system "make install"
prefix.install ["test/fntests.log", "make-check.log"] if run_tests?
end
def caveats
native_caveats = <<-EOS.undent
Octave supports "native" plotting using OpenGL and FLTK. You can activate
it for all future figures using the Octave command
graphics_toolkit ("fltk")
or for a specific figure handle h using
graphics_toolkit (h, "fltk")
Otherwise, gnuplot is still used by default, if available.
EOS
gnuplot_caveats = <<-EOS.undent
When plotting with gnuplot, you should set "GNUTERM=x11" before running octave;
if you are using Aquaterm, use "GNUTERM=aqua".
EOS
s = gnuplot_caveats
s = native_caveats + s unless no_native?
end
end