Linux Build

This document describes how to install SUMO on Linux from sources. If you don't want to extend SUMO, but merely use it, you might want to download one of our pre-built binary packages instead.

To be able to run SUMO on Linux, just follow these steps:

  1. Install all of the required tools and libraries
  2. Get the source code
  3. Build the SUMO binaries

For ubuntu this boils down to

 sudo apt-get install git cmake python3 g++ libxerces-c-dev libfox-1.6-dev libgdal-dev libproj-dev libgl2ps-dev python3-dev swig default-jdk maven libeigen3-dev
 git clone --recursive https://github.com/eclipse/sumo
 export SUMO_HOME="$PWD/sumo"
 mkdir sumo/build/cmake-build && cd sumo/build/cmake-build
 cmake ../..
 make -j$(nproc)

Each of these steps is described in more detail and with possible alternatives below.

Installing required tools and libraries#

  • For the build infrastructure you will need cmake together with a moderately recent g++ (4.8 will do) or clang++ (or any other C++11 enabled compiler).
  • The library Xerces-C is always needed. To use sumo-gui you also need Fox Toolkit in version 1.6.x. It is highly recommended to also install Proj to have support for geo-conversion and referencing. Another common requirement is network import from shapefile (arcgis). This requires the GDAL library. To compile you will need the devel versions of all packages. For openSUSE this means installing libxerces-c-devel, libproj-devel, libgdal-devel, and fox16-devel. For ubuntu the call is above. The installation of swig, python3-dev and the jdk enables also the build of libsumo while eigen3 is necessary for the overheadwire model. There are some outdated platform specific and manual build instructions for the libraries
  • Optionally you may want to add
  • ccache (to speed up builds)
  • ffmpeg-devel (for video output),
  • libOpenSceneGraph-devel (for the experimental 3D GUI),
  • gtest (for unit testing)
  • texttest, xvfb and tkdiff (for the acceptance tests)
  • flake, astyle and autopep for style checking
  • see also further dependencies for GUI testing

The package names above are for openSUSE, for ubuntu the call to get the most important optional libraries and tools is:

sudo apt-get install ccache libavformat-dev libswscale-dev libopenscenegraph-dev python3-pip python3-setuptools
sudo apt-get install libgtest-dev tkdiff xvfb flake8 astyle python3-autopep8
sudo pip3 install texttest

For the Python tools there are some requirements depending on which tools you want to use. If you want to install everything using pip do pip install -r tools/requirements.txt. To install the most common dependencies with your package manager on ubuntu do:

sudo apt-get install python3-pandas python3-rtree python3-pyproj

Getting the source code#

For the correct setting of SUMO_HOME you have to remember the correct path, where you build your SUMO, the SUMO build path. This path is shown with pwd at the end of getting the source code. If you want to develop actively on sumo we strongly recommend to use the git repository. Please build the tarball version if you need for some reason a specific version of sumo.

The following commands should be issued:

git clone --recursive https://github.com/eclipse/sumo
cd sumo
git fetch origin refs/replace/*:refs/replace/*
pwd

The additional fetch of the replacements is necessary to get a full local project history.

release version or nightly tarball#

Download sumo-src-1.14.1.tar.gz or http://sumo.dlr.de/daily/sumo-src-git.tar.gz

tar xzf sumo-src-<version>.tar.gz
cd sumo-<version>/
pwd

Definition of SUMO_HOME#

Before compiling is advisable to define the environment variable SUMO_HOME. SUMO_HOME must be set to the SUMO build path from the previous step. Assuming that you placed SUMO in the folder "/home/<user>/sumo-<version>", if you want to define only for the current session, type in the console

export SUMO_HOME="/home/<user>/sumo-<version>"

If you want to define for all sessions (i.e. for every time that you run your Linux distribution), go to your HOME folder, and find one of the next three files (depending of your Linux distribution): .bash_profile, .bash_login or .profile (Note that these files can be hidden). Then edit the file, add the line from above at the end and restart your session.

You can check that SUMO_HOME was successfully set if you type

echo $SUMO_HOME

and console shows "/home/<user>/sumo-<version>"

Building the SUMO binaries with cmake#

To build with cmake version 3 or higher is required.

Create a build folder for cmake (in the sumo root folder)

mkdir build/cmake-build
cd build/cmake-build

to build sumo with the full set of available options just like GDAL and OpenSceneGraph support (if the libraries are installed) just run:

cmake ../..

to build the debug version just use

cmake -D CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug ../..

Note

On some platforms the required cmake executable is called cmake3.

after this is finished, run

make -j $(nproc)

The nproc command gives you the number of logical cores on your computer, so that make will start parallel build jobs which makes the build a lot faster. If nproc is not available on your system, insert a fixed number here or leave the option out. You may also try

make -j $(grep -c ^processor /proc/cpuinfo)

Other useful cmake options:

  • -D PROFILING=ON enable profiling instrumentation for gprof (gcc build only)
  • -D COVERAGE=ON enable coverage instrumentation for lcov (gcc build only)
  • -D CHECK_OPTIONAL_LIBS=OFF disable all optional libraries (only include EPL compatible licensed code)
  • -D CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo enable debug symbols for debugging the release build or using a different profiler
  • -D PROJ_LIBRARY= disable PROJ
  • -D FOX_CONFIG= disable FOX toolkit (GUI and multithreading)
  • -D PYTHON_EXECUTABLE=/usr/bin/python3 select a different python version (also for libsumo / libtraci)
  • -D MVN_EXECUTABLE= disable maven packaging (especially useful if you have no network connection)

Building with clang#

If you want to use a different compiler (just for the fun of it or because it has additional features) you can enable it at configure time. Our current clang configuration for additional static code checking enables the following CXXFLAGS:

-stdlib=libstdc++ -fsanitize=undefined,address,integer,unsigned-integer-overflow -fno-omit-frame-pointer -fsanitize-blacklist=$SUMO_HOME/build/clang_sanitize_blacklist.txt

You may of course leave out all the sanitizer-checks you don't want but the stdlib option has to be set. The blacklist filters out a known bug in the cstdlib. For details see the clang documentation.

The current CMake configuration already contains this for the debug build, so for building with CMake and clang just change to your build dir and use

CXX=clang++ cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug ../..

The clang-debug-build will detect memory leaks (among other things) If the errors are reported with cryptic hexadecimal numbers as

Indirect leak of 72 byte(s) in 1 object(s) allocated from:
    #0 0xa4ee2d  (.../sumo/bin/netconvertD+0xa4ee2d) 

set the following environment variable to point to the llvm-symbolizer executable: export ASAN_SYMBOLIZER_PATH=/usr/bin/llvm-symbolizer before running the executable.

Installing the SUMO binaries#

This (optional) step will copy the SUMO binaries to another path, so that you can delete all source and intermediate files afterwards. If you do not want (or need) to do that, you can simply skip this step and run SUMO from the bin subfolder (bin/sumo-gui and bin/sumo).

If you want to install the SUMO binaries into your system, run

sudo make install

You have to adjust your SUMO_HOME variable to the install dir (usually /usr/local/share/sumo)

export SUMO_HOME=/usr/local/share/sumo

Uninstalling#

CMake provides no make uninstall so if you ever want to uninstall, run

sudo xargs rm < install_manifest.txt

from the same folder you ran make install. This will leave some empty directories, so if you want to remove them as well, double check that $SUMO_HOME points to the right directory (see above) and run

sudo xargs rm -r $SUMO_HOME

(Frequent) Rebuilds#

If you did a repository clone you can simply update it by doing git pull from inside the SUMO_HOME folder. Then change to the build directory and run make -j $(nproc) again.

If your underlying system changed (updated libraries) or you experience other build problems please try a clean build first by removing the build directory (or at least the CMakeCache.txt) and running cmake and make again before reporting a bug.

If you find yourself building very often after minor changes, consider installing ccache and run cmake again. It will be picked up automatically and can dramatically improve build speed.

Troubleshooting#

Problems with the socket subsystem#

Problem:

recv ./foreign/tcpip/libtcpip.a(socket.o) (symbol belongs to implicit dependency /usr/lib/libsocket.so.1)

Solution: http://lists.danga.com/pipermail/memcached/2005-September/001611.html

ld cannot find an existing library (Fedora-23)#

Problem:

/usr/bin/ld: cannot find -lfreetype
ls -lah /usr/lib64/libfreetype*
 lrwxrwxrwx. 1 root root   21 Jul 28 15:54 /usr/lib64/libfreetype.so.6 -> libfreetype.so.6.12.0
 lrwxr-xr-x. 1 root root 689K Jul 28 15:54 /usr/lib64/libfreetype.so.6.12.0

Solution: Install the dev package; for fedora:

sudo yum install freetype-devel

For details see stackoverflow discussion.

Additional notes for Cygwin users#

At the moment GUI building is still troublesome. It depends whether you want to use the X-Server or native Windows GUI. We tried native Windows GUI only and had to change the installed libFOX-1.4.la such that it contains

dependency_libs=' -lgdi32 -lglaux -ldl -lcomctl32 -lwsock32 -lwinspool -lmpr
-lpthread -lpng /usr/lib/libtiff.la /usr/lib/libjpeg.la -lz -lbz2 -lopengl32 -lglu32'

Your mileage may vary.