3.6 KiB
Here's how you can install Crow on your favorite GNU/Linux distro.
Getting Crow
Requirements
-
C++ compiler with at least C++11 support.
-
Asio development headers.
-
(optional) ZLib for HTTP Compression.
-
(optional) OpenSSL for HTTPS support.
-
(optional) CMake for building tests, examples, and/or installing Crow.
-
(optional) Python3 to build tests and/or examples. !!! note
Crow's CI uses
g++-9.4
andclang-10.0
running on AMD64 (x86_64) and ARM64v8 architectures.
Using a package Manager
You can install Crow on GNU/Linux as a pre-made package === "Debian/Ubuntu"
Simply download Crow's `.deb` file from the [release section](https://github.com/CrowCpp/Crow/releases/latest) and Install it.
=== "Arch"
Crow is available for Arch based distros through the AUR package `crow`.
Release package
Crow provides an archive containing the framework and CMake files, just copy the include
folder to /usr/local/include
and lib
folder to /usr/local/lib
.
You can also download the crow_all.h
file and simply include that into your project.
Installing from source
Using CMake
- Download Crow's source code (Either through Github's UI or by using
git clone https://github.com/CrowCpp/Crow.git
). - Run
mkdir build
inside of crow's source directory. - Navigate to the new "build" directory and run the following:
cmake .. -DCROW_BUILD_EXAMPLES=OFF -DCROW_BUILD_TESTS=OFF
- Run
make install
.
!!! note
You can ignore `-DCROW_BUILD_EXAMPLES=OFF -DCROW_BUILD_TESTS=OFF` if you want to build the Examples and Unit Tests.
!!! note
While building you can set the `CROW_FEATURES` variable (as a `;` separated list). You can use an argument such as `-DCROW_FEATURES="ssl;compression"`.
!!! note
You can uninstall Crow at a later time using `make uninstall`.
#### Manually Crow can be installed manually on your Linux computer. ##### Multiple header files === "Project Only"
Copy Crow's `include` directory to your project's `include` directory.
=== "System wide"
Copy Crow's `include` directory to the `/usr/local/include` directory.
Single header (crow_all.h)
!!! warning
`crow_all.h` is recommended only for small, possibly single source file projects, and ideally should not be installed on your system.
navigate to the scripts
directory and run ./merge_all.py ../include crow_all.h
. This will generate a crow_all.h
file that you can use in your projects.
!!! note
You can also include or exclude middlewares from your `crow_all.h` by using `-i` or `-e` followed by the middleware header file names separated by a comma (e.g. `merge_all.py ../include crow_all.h -e cookie_parser` to exclude the cookie parser middleware).
Compiling your project
Using CMake
In order to get your CMake project to work with Crow, all you need are the following lines in your CMakeLists.txt:
find_package(Crow)
target_link_libraries(your_project PUBLIC Crow::Crow)
From there CMake should handle compiling and linking your project. !!! note
For optional features like HTTP Compression or HTTPS you can set the `CROW_FEATURES` variable using lines such as `set(CROW_FEATURES "ssl;compression")`, `set(CROW_FEATURES ssl compression)`, or `set(CROW_FEATURES ssl)`.
Directly using a compiler
All you need to do is run the following command:
g++ main.cpp -lpthread
You can use arguments like -DCROW_ENABLE_DEBUG
, -DCROW_ENABLE_COMPRESSION -lz
for HTTP Compression, or -DCROW_ENABLE_SSL -lssl
for HTTPS support, or even replace g++ with clang++.