README
INSTALLATION

General
=======

Since libmwaw was based on librevenge code (for convenience), you need to install
librevenge in order to build libmwaw. You can get librevenge from:

- librevenge <http://libwpd.sourceforge.net/download.html>

Unix/Linux/Darwin
==========

Installation on Unix/Linux/Darwin should be simple.
Simply execute the following sequence of commands:

./configure [--with-sharedptr=boost|c++11|tr1]; make ; sudo make install

Myself, I build using following options: "./configure --with-sharedptr=tr1"

Extensive installation instructions can be found in the INSTALL file.

Windows
=========================================
Beta tester needed to test the compilation and report problems

Windows - Microsoft(tm) Visual Studio/C++
=========================================

A workspace for MSVC6 can be found in the ./build/win32/ directory.
This workspace contains a projects file to compile a release version or 
a debug version of libmwaw. 

NOTE: Using the MSVC build system will result in a static library only. 
No dll can be created yet using this build system. If you want to create 
a dll, please use the MingW build system (see below for details).


Windows - MinGW
===============

First of all, in order to use libmwaw in your application, you do not need
to build it yourself. If you have access to a binary distribution, you
are encouraged to use it. If for whatever reason you still want to build
libmwaw using MinGW, read following instructions.


* Build environment and dependencies

In order to build libmwaw, you have to have installed MinGW distribution from
http://www.mingw.org. Because the build system of libmwaw uses autotools, you
must install also the MSys packages. It is advisable to install all recent
packages into a path that does not contain spaces. Besides the MinGW
distribution, you have to install the _runtime_ and _development_ packages of
libmwaw dependency librevenge from librevenge.sourceforge.net/download.html. The packages
you need are librevenge-{version}-MinGW.zip and librevenge-devel-{version}-MinGW.zip


* Build procedure

1. Unpack the source code by running:

  gunzip -dc libmwaw-{version}.tar.gz | tar xpf

You can also use WinZip or any other GUI compression tool.

2. Next, run:

  export ACLOCAL_FLAGS='-I <pkg-config installation prefix>/share/aclocal'; \
  ./autogen.sh

Some versions of libtool have bug that prevents MinGW from creating shared
libraries. The autogen.sh script "libtoolizes" the package using the libtool
included with MinGW distribution. Like that you are sure that your libtool is
able to create DLLs.
The ACLOCAL_FLAGS variable is there in order to allow the auto* scripts to find
the pkg.m4 macro that is part of the pkg-config distribution. If this macro is
not found, the generated configure script will be ending with an error.

3. Time to configure libmwaw; run:

  ./configure [--prefix=<target>] [--enable-static] [--disable-shared] [--with-sharedptr=boost|c++11|tr1]

By default, the configure script uses as prefix "/usr/local" and configures to
create only shared libraries.

4. Nearly done. Make sure you have a clean build by running:
 
  make clean all

5. And last but not least, compile and install libmwaw by running:

  make install [-i]

If you configure using "--enable-static --disable-shared" (pure static library
creation), the libtool import libraries are not created. Make will try to install
them and will stop with error. The "-i" option makes it to report the error, but
not to stop. Like that the installation will succeed.




   =============================================
   ==    INSTALLATION OF Mwaw2odf             ==
   =============================================

If we want to compile mwaw2odf ( which is a part of writerperfect),
you must first download libodfgen and writerperfect in
<http://libwpd.sourceforge.net/download.html> and finally, in each
directories, execute configure with the options corresponding to you
computer and launch make to recompile.

   =============================================
   ==    American fuzzy loop                  ==
   =============================================

After installing afl from http://lcamtuf.coredump.cx/afl/, you can
call:

  CXX=afl-g++ ./configure [--with-sharedptr=boost|c++11|tr1]
  make clean all install

or if you compile with clang:

  CXX=afl-clang++ ./configure [--with-sharedptr=boost|c++11|tr1]
  make clean all install
  
the next step consists in regrouping a list of test files in some
directory (for instance input) ; finally, you can launch the afl-fuzz:

  afl-fuzz -i input -o output mwaw2raw @@

   =============================================
   ==    Emscripten                           ==
   =============================================

After installing Emscripten from http://emscripten.org, you need first
install of a version of librevenge compiled with Emscripten (for instance,
you can configure it with --prefix=/usr/local/em/).

I use the following commands to compile libmwaw in bytecode:

  emconfigure ./configure PKG_CONFIG_LIBDIR=/usr/local/em/lib/pkgconfig/ [--with-sharedptr=boost|c++11|tr1] --prefix=/usr/local/em/
  emmake make clean all install
  
TODO: explain how to create final executables from the created bytecode files.

   =============================================

That's all folks! While no mailing exists, for more information, ask
questions directly to osnola@users.sourceforge.net. Remember that Uncle Google can
also be of big help especially when the problem is not with libmwaw, but with one of its 
dependencies.