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INSTALL
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INSTALL
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Building and Installing HTSlib
==============================
Requirements
============
Building HTSlib requires a few programs and libraries to be present.
See the "System Specific Details" below for guidance on how to install
these.
At least the following are required:
GNU make
C compiler (e.g. gcc or clang)
In addition, building the configure script requires:
autoheader
autoconf
Running the configure script uses awk, along with a number of
standard UNIX tools (cat, cp, grep, mv, rm, sed, among others). Almost
all installations will have these already.
Running the test harness (make test) uses:
bash
perl
HTSlib uses the following external libraries. Building requires both the
library itself, and include files needed to compile code that uses functions
from the library. Note that some Linux distributions put include files in
a development ('-dev' or '-devel') package separate from the main library.
zlib (required)
libbz2 (required, unless configured with --disable-bz2)
liblzma (required, unless configured with --disable-lzma)
libcurl (optional, but strongly recommended)
libcrypto (optional for Amazon S3 support; not needed on MacOS)
Disabling libbzip2 and liblzma will make some CRAM files unreadable, so
is not recommended.
Using libcurl provides HTSlib with better network protocol support, for
example it enables the use of https:// URLs. It is also required if
direct access to Amazon S3 or Google Cloud Storage is enabled.
Amazon S3 support requires an HMAC function to calculate a message
authentication code. On MacOS, the CCHmac function from the standard
library is used. Systems that do not have CChmac will get this from
libcrypto. libcrypto is part of OpenSSL or one of its derivatives (LibreSSL
or BoringSSL).
On Microsoft Windows we recommend use of Mingw64/Msys2. Note that
currently for the test harness to work you will need to override the
test temporary directory with e.g.: make check TEST_OPTS="-t C:/msys64/tmp/_"
Whilst the code may work on Windows with other environments, these have
not be verified.
Building Configure
==================
This step is only needed if configure.ac has been changed, or if configure
does not exist (for example, when building from a git clone). The
configure script and config.h.in can be built by running:
autoheader
autoconf
If you have a full GNU autotools install, you can alternatively run:
autoreconf
Basic Installation
==================
To build and install HTSlib, 'cd' to the htslib-1.x directory containing
the package's source and type the following commands:
./configure
make
make install
The './configure' command checks your build environment and allows various
optional functionality to be enabled (see Configuration below). If you
don't want to select any optional functionality, you may wish to omit
configure and just type 'make; make install' as for previous versions
of HTSlib. However if the build fails you should run './configure' as
it can diagnose the common reasons for build failures.
The 'make' command builds the HTSlib library and and various useful
utilities: bgzip, htsfile, and tabix. If compilation fails you should
run './configure' as it can diagnose problems with your build environment
that cause build failures.
The 'make install' command installs the libraries, library header files,
utilities, several manual pages, and a pkgconfig file to /usr/local.
The installation location can be changed by configuring with --prefix=DIR
or via 'make prefix=DIR install' (see Installation Locations below).
Configuration
=============
By default, './configure' examines your build environment, checking for
requirements such as the zlib development files, and arranges for a plain
HTSlib build. The following configure options can be used to enable
various features and specify further optional external requirements:
--enable-plugins
Use plugins to implement exotic file access protocols and other
specialised facilities. This enables such facilities to be developed
and packaged outwith HTSlib, and somewhat isolates HTSlib-using programs
from their library dependencies. By default (or with --disable-plugins),
any enabled pluggable facilities (such as libcurl file access) are built
directly within HTSlib.
The <https://github.com/samtools/htslib-plugins> repository contains
several additional plugins, including the iRODS (<http://irods.org/>)
file access plugin previously distributed with HTSlib.
--with-plugin-dir=DIR
Specifies the directory into which plugins built while building HTSlib
should be installed; by default, LIBEXECDIR/htslib.
--with-plugin-path=DIR:DIR:DIR...
Specifies the list of directories that HTSlib will search for plugins.
By default, only the directory specified via --with-plugin-dir will be
searched; you can use --with-plugin-path='DIR:$(plugindir):DIR' and so
on to cause additional directories to be searched.
--enable-libcurl
Use libcurl (<http://curl.haxx.se/>) to implement network access to
remote files via FTP, HTTP, HTTPS, etc. By default, HTSlib uses its
own simple networking code to provide access via FTP and HTTP only.
--enable-gcs
Implement network access to Google Cloud Storage. By default or with
--enable-gcs=check, this is enabled when libcurl is enabled.
--enable-s3
Implement network access to Amazon AWS S3. By default or with
--enable-s3=check, this is enabled when libcurl is enabled.
--disable-bz2
Bzip2 is an optional compression codec format for CRAM, included
in HTSlib by default. It can be disabled with --disable-bz2, but
be aware that not all CRAM files may be possible to decode.
--disable-lzma
LZMA is an optional compression codec for CRAM, included in HTSlib
by default. It can be disabled with --disable-lzma, but be aware
that not all CRAM files may be possible to decode.
--with-libdeflate
Libdeflate is a heavily optimized library for DEFLATE-based compression
and decompression. It also includes a fast crc32 implementation.
By default, ./configure will probe for libdeflate and use it if
available. To prevent this, use --without-libdeflate.
The configure script also accepts the usual options and environment variables
for tuning installation locations and compilers: type './configure --help'
for details. For example,
./configure CC=icc --prefix=/opt/icc-compiled
would specify that HTSlib is to be built with icc and installed into bin,
lib, etc subdirectories under /opt/icc-compiled.
If dependencies have been installed in non-standard locations (i.e. not on
the normal include and library search paths) then the CPPFLAGS and LDFLAGS
environment variables can be used to set the options needed to find them.
For example, NetBSD users may use:
./configure CPPFLAGS=-I/usr/pkg/include \
LDFLAGS='-L/usr/pkg/lib -Wl,-R/usr/pkg/lib'
to allow compiling and linking against dependencies installed via the ports
collection.
Installation Locations
======================
By default, 'make install' installs HTSlib libraries under /usr/local/lib,
HTSlib header files under /usr/local/include, utility programs under
/usr/local/bin, etc. (To be precise, the header files are installed within
a fixed 'htslib' subdirectory under the specified .../include location.)
You can specify a different location to install HTSlib by configuring
with --prefix=DIR or specify locations for particular parts of HTSlib by
configuring with --libdir=DIR and so on. Type './configure --help' for
the full list of such install directory options.
Alternatively you can specify different locations at install time by
typing 'make prefix=DIR install' or 'make libdir=DIR install' and so on.
Consult the list of prefix/exec_prefix/etc variables near the top of the
Makefile for the full list of such variables that can be overridden.
You can also specify a staging area by typing 'make DESTDIR=DIR install',
possibly in conjunction with other --prefix or prefix=DIR settings.
For example,
make DESTDIR=/tmp/staging prefix=/opt
would install into bin, lib, etc subdirectories under /tmp/staging/opt.
System Specific Details
=======================
Installing the prerequisites is system dependent and there is more
than one correct way of satisfying these, including downloading them
from source, compiling and installing them yourself.
For people with super-user access, we provide an example set of commands
below for installing the dependencies on a variety of operating system
distributions. Note these are not specific recommendations on distribution,
compiler or SSL implementation. It is assumed you already have the core set
of packages for the given distribution - the lists may be incomplete if
this is not the case.
Debian / Ubuntu
---------------
sudo apt-get update # Ensure the package list is up to date
sudo apt-get install autoconf automake make gcc perl zlib1g-dev libbz2-dev liblzma-dev libcurl4-gnutls-dev libssl-dev
Note: libcurl4-openssl-dev can be used as an alternative to libcurl4-gnutls-dev.
RedHat / CentOS
---------------
sudo yum install autoconf automake make gcc perl-Data-Dumper zlib-devel bzip2 bzip2-devel xz-devel curl-devel openssl-devel
Alpine Linux
------------
sudo apk update # Ensure the package list is up to date
sudo apk add autoconf automake make gcc musl-dev perl bash zlib-dev bzip2-dev xz-dev curl-dev libressl-dev
OpenSUSE
--------
sudo zypper install autoconf automake make gcc perl zlib-devel libbz2-devel xz-devel libcurl-devel libopenssl-devel