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Joakim Soderberg7df99082013-02-07 20:24:19 +08001Introduction
2------------
3Libwebsockets can be built using two different build systems
4autoconf or CMake. autoconf only works on Unix systems, or mingw/cygwin
5on Windows. CMake works differently and can generate platform specific
6project files for most popular IDEs and build systems.
7
8################################### Autoconf ###################################
9
Andy Green6c1f64e2013-01-20 11:28:06 +080010Building the library and test apps
11----------------------------------
12
13You need to regenerate the autotools and libtoolize stuff for your system
14
15$ ./autogen.sh
16
Andy Green16ab3182013-02-10 18:02:31 +080017Then,
Andy Greena2156aa2013-02-02 18:10:29 +080018
19------Fedora x86_64
Andy Green6c1f64e2013-01-20 11:28:06 +080020
21 ./configure --prefix=/usr --libdir=/usr/lib64 --enable-openssl
22
Andy Greena2156aa2013-02-02 18:10:29 +080023------Apple
24
25Christopher Baker reported that this is needed
Andy Green6c1f64e2013-01-20 11:28:06 +080026
27./configure CC="gcc -arch i386 -arch x86_64" CXX="g++ -arch i386 -arch
28x86_64" CPP="gcc -E" CXXCPP="g++ -E" --enable-nofork
29
Andy Greena2156aa2013-02-02 18:10:29 +080030------mingw
31
32I did the following to get working build, ping test is disabled when
33building this way
Andy Green6c1f64e2013-01-20 11:28:06 +080034
351) install mingw64_w32 compiler packages from Fedora
362) additionally install mingw64-zlib package
373) ./configure --prefix=/usr --enable-mingw --host=x86_64-w64-mingw32
384) make
39
Andy Greena2156aa2013-02-02 18:10:29 +080040------MIPS cross-build using OpenWRT
Andy Green6c1f64e2013-01-20 11:28:06 +080041
Andy Greena2156aa2013-02-02 18:10:29 +080042 ./configure --prefix=/usr --without-extensions --host mips-openwrt-linux
43
44I did not try building the extensions since they need cross-zlib, but it
45should also be workable.
46
47------Other uClibc
48
49you may need --enable-builtin-getifaddrs if your toolchain
50doesn't have it - openWRT uclibc has it so you don't need this option.
51
52------ARM cross-build
Andy Green5c81e802013-01-20 20:14:42 +080053
54./configure --prefix=/usr --host=arm-linux-gnueabi --without-client --without-extensions
55
56you can build cross with client and extensions perfectly well, but
57apart from the size shrink this has the nice characteristic that no
58non-toolchain libraries are needed to build it.
59
Andy Green6c1f64e2013-01-20 11:28:06 +080060
61otherwise if /usr/local/... and /usr/local/lib are OK then...
62
63$ ./configure
64$ make clean
65$ make && sudo make install
66$ libwebsockets-test-server
67
68should be enough to get a test server listening on port 7861.
69
70
71Configure script options
72------------------------
73
74There are several other possible configure options
75
Andy Green23c5f2e2013-02-06 15:43:00 +090076--enable-openssl Builds in the SSL support
77
78--with-cyassl Use cyassl instead of OpenSSL... you will need CyaSSL
79 to have been configured with --enable-opensslExtra
80\ when it was built.
81
Andy Green6c1f64e2013-01-20 11:28:06 +080082--enable-libcrypto by default libwebsockets uses its own
83 built-in md5 and sha-1 implementation for
84 simplicity. However the libcrypto ones
85 may be faster, and in a distro context it
86 may be highly desirable to use a common
87 library implementation for ease of security
88 upgrades. Give this configure option
89 to disable the built-in ones and force use
90 of the libcrypto (part of openssl) ones.
91
92--with-client-cert-dir=dir tells the client ssl support where to
93 look for trust certificates to validate
94 the remote certificate against.
95
96--enable-noping Don't try to build the ping test app
97 It needs some unixy environment that
98 may choke in other build contexts, this
99 lets you cleanly stop it being built
100
101--enable-builtin-getifaddrs if your libc lacks getifaddrs, you can build an
102 implementation into the library. By default your libc
103 one is used.
104
105--without-testapps Just build the library not the test apps
106
107--without-client Don't build the client part of the library nor the
108 test apps that need the client part. Useful to
109 minimize library footprint for embedded server-only
110 case
111
112--without-server Don't build the server part of the library nor the
113 test apps that need the server part. Useful to
114 minimize library footprint for embedded client-only
115 case
116
117--without-daemonize Don't build daemonize.c / lws_daemonize
118
119--disable-debug Remove all debug logging below lwsl_notice in severity
120 from the code -- it's not just defeated from logging
121 but removed from compilation
122
Andy Green3182ece2013-01-20 17:08:31 +0800123--without-extensions Remove all code and data around protocol extensions.
124 This reduces the code footprint considerably but
125 you will lose extension features like compression.
126 However that may be irrelevant for embedded use and
127 the code / data size / speed improvements may be
128 critical.
129
Andy Greend636e352013-01-29 12:36:17 +0800130--with-latency Builds the latency-tracking code into the library...
131 this slows your library down a bit but is very useful
132 to find the cause of unexpected latencies occurring
133 inside the library. See README.test-apps for more
134 info
135
Andy Green6c1f64e2013-01-20 11:28:06 +0800136
137Externally configurable important constants
138-------------------------------------------
139
140You can control these from configure by just setting them as commandline
141args throgh CFLAGS, eg
142
143./configure CFLAGS="-DLWS_MAX_ZLIB_CONN_BUFFER=8192"
144
145
146They all have reasonable defaults usable for all use-cases except resource-
147constrained, so you only need to take care about them if you want to tune them
148to the amount of memory available.
149
Andy Green16ab3182013-02-10 18:02:31 +0800150 - LWS_MAX_HEADER_LEN default 1024: allocated area to copy http headers that
151libwebsockets knows about into. You only need to think about increasing this
152if your application might have monster length URLs for example, or some other
153header that lws cares about will be abnormally large (headers it does not
154know about are skipped).
Andy Green6c1f64e2013-01-20 11:28:06 +0800155
Andy Green16ab3182013-02-10 18:02:31 +0800156 - LWS_MAX_PROTOCOLS default 5: largest amount of different protocols the
Andy Green6c1f64e2013-01-20 11:28:06 +0800157server can serve
158
Andy Green16ab3182013-02-10 18:02:31 +0800159 - LWS_MAX_EXTENSIONS_ACTIVE default 3: largest amount of extensions we can
Andy Green6c1f64e2013-01-20 11:28:06 +0800160choose to have active on one connection
161
162 - SPEC_LATEST_SUPPORTED default 13: only change if you want to remove support
163for later protocol versions... unlikely
164
165 - AWAITING_TIMEOUT default 5: after this many seconds without a response, the
166server will hang up on the client
167
168 - CIPHERS_LIST_STRING default "DEFAULT": SSL Cipher selection. It's advisable
169to tweak the ciphers allowed to be negotiated on secure connections for
170performance reasons, otherwise a slow algorithm may be selected by the two
171endpoints and the server could expend most of its time just encrypting and
172decrypting data, severely limiting the amount of messages it will be able to
173handle per second. For example::
174
175 "RC4-MD5:RC4-SHA:AES128-SHA:AES256-SHA:HIGH:!DSS:!aNULL"
176
177 - SYSTEM_RANDOM_FILEPATH default "/dev/urandom": if your random device differs
178you can set it here
179
180 - LWS_MAX_ZLIB_CONN_BUFFER maximum size a compression buffer is allowed to
181grow to before closing the connection. Some limit is needed or any connecton
182can exhaust all server memory by sending it 4G buffers full of zeros which the
183server is expect to expand atomically. Default is 64KBytes.
184
185 - LWS_SOMAXCONN maximum number of pending connect requests the listening
186socket can cope with. Default is SOMAXCONN. If you need to use synthetic
187tests that just spam hundreds of connect requests at once without dropping
188any, you can try messing with these as well as ulimit (see later)
189(courtesy Edwin van der Oetelaar)
190
191echo "2048 64512" > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_local_port_range
192echo "1" > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_tw_recycle
193echo "1" > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_tw_reuse
194echo "10" > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_fin_timeout
195echo "65536" > /proc/sys/net/core/somaxconn
196echo "65536" > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_max_syn_backlog
197echo "262144" > /proc/sys/net/netfilter/nf_conntrack_max
198
Andy Green5c81e802013-01-20 20:14:42 +0800199
200Memory efficiency
201-----------------
202
Andy Greenab40eaa2013-01-21 13:20:33 +0800203Embedded server-only configuration without extensions (ie, no compression
204on websocket connections), but with full v13 websocket features and http
205server, built on ARM Cortex-A9:
206
Andy Greencb8febd2013-02-18 12:08:15 +0800207Update at 8dac94d (2013-02-18)
Andy Green72dfd752013-02-11 22:40:39 +0800208
209./configure --without-client --without-extensions --disable-debug --without-daemonize
210
Andy Greencb8febd2013-02-18 12:08:15 +0800211Context Creation, 1024 fd limit[2]: 16720 (includes 12 bytes per fd)
212Per-connection [3]: 72 bytes, +1328 during headers
Andy Green72dfd752013-02-11 22:40:39 +0800213
214.text .rodata .data .bss
Andy Greencb8febd2013-02-18 12:08:15 +080021511512 2784 288 4
Andy Greenab40eaa2013-01-21 13:20:33 +0800216
Andy Green5c81e802013-01-20 20:14:42 +0800217This shows the impact of the major configuration with/without options at
21813ba5bbc633ea962d46d using Ubuntu ARM on a PandaBoard ES.
219
220These are accounting for static allocations from the library elf, there are
Andy Greencb8febd2013-02-18 12:08:15 +0800221additional dynamic allocations via malloc. These are a bit old now but give
222the right idea for relative "expense" of features.
Andy Green5c81e802013-01-20 20:14:42 +0800223
224Static allocations, ARM9
225 .text .rodata .data .bss
226 All (no without) 35024 9940 336 4104
227 without client 25684 7144 336 4104
228 without client, exts 21652 6288 288 4104
229 without client, exts, debug[1] 19756 3768 288 4104
230 without server 30304 8160 336 4104
231 without server, exts 25382 7204 288 4104
232 without server, exts, debug[1] 23712 4256 288 4104
233
Andy Green5c81e802013-01-20 20:14:42 +0800234[1] --disable-debug only removes messages below lwsl_notice. Since that is
235the default logging level the impact is not noticable, error, warn and notice
236logs are all still there.
237
238[2] 1024 fd per process is the default limit (set by ulimit) in at least Fedora
Andy Greencb8febd2013-02-18 12:08:15 +0800239and Ubuntu. You can make significant savings tailoring this to actual expected
240peak fds, ie, at a limit of 20, context creation allocation reduces to 4432 +
241240 = 4672)
Andy Green5c81e802013-01-20 20:14:42 +0800242
Andy Greencb8febd2013-02-18 12:08:15 +0800243[3] known header content is freed after connection establishment
Joakim Soderberg7df99082013-02-07 20:24:19 +0800244
245
246#################################### CMake ####################################
247
248CMake is a multi-platform build tool that can generate build files for many
249different target platforms. See more info at http://www.cmake.org
250
251CMake also allows/recommends you to do "out of source"-builds, that is,
252the build files are separated from your sources, so there is no need to
253create elaborate clean scripts to get a clean source tree, instead you
254simply remove your build directory.
255
256Libwebsockets has been tested to build successfully on the following platforms
257with SSL support (both OpenSSL/CyaSSL):
258
259- Windows
260- Linux (x86 and ARM)
261- OSX
262- NetBSD
263
264Building the library and test apps
265----------------------------------
266
267The project settings used by CMake to generate the platform specific build
268files is called CMakeLists.txt. CMake then uses one of its "Generators" to
269output a Visual Studio project or Make file for instance. To see a list of
270the available generators for your platform, simply run the "cmake" command.
271
272Note that by default OpenSSL will be linked, if you don't want SSL support
273see below on how to toggle compile options.
274
275Building on Unix:
276-----------------
277
2781. Install CMake 2.6 or greater: http://cmake.org/cmake/resources/software.html
279 (Most Unix distributions comes with a packaged version also)
280
2812. Install OpenSSL.
282
2833. Generate the build files (default is Make files):
284
285 cd /path/to/src
286 mkdir build
287 cd build
288 cmake ..
289
290 (NOTE: The build/ directory can have any name and be located anywhere
291 on your filesystem, and that the argument ".." given to cmake is simply
292 the source directory of libwebsockets containing the CMakeLists.txt project
293 file. All examples in this file assumes you use "..")
294
Andy Green799ecbf2013-02-19 10:26:39 +0800295 A common option you may want to give is to set the install path, same
296 as --prefix= with autotools. It defaults to /usr/local.
297 You can do this by, eg
298
299 cmake .. -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX:PATH=/usr
300
Joakim Soderberg7df99082013-02-07 20:24:19 +08003014. Finally you can build using the generated Makefile:
302
303 make
304
305Building on Windows (Visual Studio)
306-----------------------------------
3071. Install CMake 2.6 or greater: http://cmake.org/cmake/resources/software.html
308
3092. Install OpenSSL binaries. http://www.openssl.org/related/binaries.html
310 (Preferably in the default location to make it easier for CMake to find them)
311
3123. Generate the Visual studio project by opening the Visual Studio cmd prompt:
313
314 cd <path to src>
315 md build
316 cd build
317 cmake -G "Visual Studio 10" ..
318
319 (NOTE: There is also a cmake-gui available on Windows if you prefer that)
320
3214. Now you should have a generated Visual Studio Solution in your
322 <path to src>/build directory, which can be used to build.
323
324Setting compile options
325-----------------------
326
327To set compile time flags you can either use one of the CMake gui applications
328or do it via command line.
329
330Command line
331------------
332To list avaialable options (ommit the H if you don't want the help text):
333
334 cmake -LH ..
335
336Then to set an option and build (for example turn off SSL support):
337
338 cmake -DWITH_SSL=0 ..
339or
340 cmake -DWITH_SSL:BOOL=OFF ..
341
342Unix GUI
343--------
344If you have a curses enabled build you simply type:
345(not all packages include this, my debian install does not for example).
346
347 ccmake
348
349Windows GUI
350-----------
351On windows CMake comes with a gui application:
352 Start -> Programs -> CMake -> CMake (cmake-gui)
353
354CyaSSL replacement for OpenSSL
355------------------------------
356CyaSSL is a lightweight SSL library targeted at embedded system:
357http://www.yassl.com/yaSSL/Products-cyassl.html
358
359It contains a OpenSSL compatability layer which makes it possible to pretty
360much link to it instead of OpenSSL, giving a much smaller footprint.
361
362NOTE: At the time of writing this the current release of CyaSSL contains a
363crash bug due to some APIs libwebsocket uses. To be able to use this you will
364need to use the current HEAD in their official repository:
365 https://github.com/cyassl/cyassl
366
367NOTE: cyassl needs to be compiled using the --enable-opensslExtra flag for
368this to work.
369
370Compiling libwebsockets with CyaSSL
371-----------------------------------
372
373cmake -DUSE_CYASSL=1
374 -DCYASSL_INCLUDE_DIRS=/path/to/cyassl
375 -DCYASSL_LIB=/path/to/cyassl/cyassl.a ..
376
377NOTE: On windows use the .lib file extension for CYASSL_LIB instead.
378
379Cross compiling
380---------------
381To enable cross compiling libwebsockets using CMake you need to create
382a "Toolchain file" that you supply to CMake when generating your build files.
383CMake will then use the cross compilers and build paths specified in this file
384to look for dependencies and such.
385
386Below is an example of how one of these files might look like:
387
388 #
389 # CMake Toolchain file for crosscompiling on ARM.
390 #
391 # This can be used when running cmake in the following way:
392 # cd build/
393 # cmake .. -DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=/path/to/this/file/TC_arm-linux-gcc.cmake
394 #
395
396 set(CROSS_PATH /path/to/cross_environment/uClibc)
397
398 # Target operating system name.
399 set(CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME Linux)
400
401 # Name of C compiler.
402 set(CMAKE_C_COMPILER "${CROSS_PATH}/bin/arm-linux-uclibc-gcc")
403 set(CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER "${CROSS_PATH}/bin/arm-linux-uclibc-g++")
404
405 # Where to look for the target environment. (More paths can be added here)
406 set(CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH "${CROSS_PATH}")
407
408 # Adjust the default behavior of the FIND_XXX() commands:
409 # search programs in the host environment only.
410 set(CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_MODE_PROGRAM NEVER)
411
412 # Search headers and libraries in the target environment only.
413 set(CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_MODE_LIBRARY ONLY)
414 set(CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_MODE_INCLUDE ONLY)
415
416Additional information on cross compilation with CMake:
417 http://www.vtk.org/Wiki/CMake_Cross_Compiling