commit | 95da151fbf8103ef616638f85a6a86dc4801e59d | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Linux Build Service Account <lnxbuild@localhost> | Wed Nov 18 22:26:58 2020 -0800 |
committer | Linux Build Service Account <lnxbuild@localhost> | Wed Nov 18 22:26:58 2020 -0800 |
tree | 6ba3858b44b450c55efaae4702d046276fc33792 | |
parent | 1509b55c68721360c2431a46d1a1eaab84846e90 [diff] | |
parent | 04000b682f7c4b9ea14d791dd144af763ef6977d [diff] |
Merge 04000b682f7c4b9ea14d791dd144af763ef6977d on remote branch Change-Id: Ib8101ad914bb45797c630cc6ba419d3716f01a65
json-c
git
, gcc
and autotools
Home page for json-c: https://github.com/json-c/json-c/wiki
Caution: do NOT use sources from svn.metaparadigm.com, they are old.
Prerequisites:
gcc
, clang
, or another C compilerlibtool
If you're not using a release tarball, you'll also need:
autoconf
(autoreconf
)automake
Make sure you have a complete libtool
install, including libtoolize
.
json-c
GitHub repo: https://github.com/json-c/json-c
$ git clone https://github.com/json-c/json-c.git $ cd json-c $ sh autogen.sh
followed by
$ ./configure $ make $ make install
To build and run the test programs:
$ make check
libjson-c
If your system has pkgconfig
, then you can just add this to your makefile
:
CFLAGS += $(shell pkg-config --cflags json-c) LDFLAGS += $(shell pkg-config --libs json-c)
Without pkgconfig
, you would do something like this:
JSON_C_DIR=/path/to/json_c/install CFLAGS += -I$(JSON_C_DIR)/include/json-c LDFLAGS+= -L$(JSON_C_DIR)/lib -ljson-c