Brad Miller 083c90d377 Added libnipalu to make vision programs link properly
Change-Id: Ib45dbc2944f80bba1063cbd7c7875d3cf215584b
2015-12-24 21:35:31 -05:00
2015-11-21 18:26:49 -05:00
2015-12-17 10:56:37 -08:00
2015-11-21 18:26:49 -05:00
2014-03-03 11:30:55 -05:00
2015-08-18 10:39:25 -04:00
2015-11-21 18:26:49 -05:00
2015-09-19 17:40:32 -04:00
2015-11-21 18:26:49 -05:00

Building WPILib

Building WPILib is very straightforward. WPILib uses Gradle to compile. It only has a few dependencies on outside tools, including the ARM cross compiler.

Requirements

Setup

Clone the WPILib Repo. If the toolchains are not installed, install them, and make sure they are available on the system PATH.

Building

All build steps are executed using the Gradle wrapper, gradlew. Each target that Gradle can build is referred to as a task. The most common Gradle task to use is build. This will build all of the outputs created by WPILib. To run, open a console and cd into the cloned WPILib directory. Then:

./gradlew build

To build a specific subproject, such as wpilibc, you must access the subproject and run the build task only on that project. Accessing a subproject in Gradle is quite easy. Simply use :subproject_name:task_name with the Gradle wrapper. For example, building just wpilibc:

./gradlew :wpilibc:build

If you also want simulation to be build, add -PmakeSim. This requires gazebo_transport. We have tested on 14.04 and 15.05, but any correct install of gazebo should work, even on windows if you build from source. Correct means cmake needs to be able to find gazebo-config.cmake, which you get for free with ubuntu installs.

./gradlew build -PmakeSim

Note that java sim libraries build either way, because they don't depend on gazebo, only on JavaGazebo. C++ simulation tasks (including plugins, gz_msgs, and wpilibcSim) all depend on gazebo_transport. In order for this to build you must have installed gazebo. See The Gazebo website for installation instructions. If you prefer to use Cmake directly, the you can still do so. The common cmake tasks are wpilibcSim, frc_gazebo_plugins, and gz_msgs

mkdir build
cd build
cmake ..
make

The gradlew wrapper only exists in the root of the main project, so be sure to run all commands from there. All of the subprojects have build tasks that can be run. Gradle automatically determines and rebuilds dependencies, so if you make a change to the HAL and then run :wpilibc:build, the HAL will be rebuilt, then wpilibc.

There are a few tasks other than build available. To see them, run the meta-task tasks. This will print a list of all available tasks, with a description of each task.

Publishing

If you are building to test with the eclipse plugins or just want to export the build as a Maven-style dependency, simply run the publish task. This task will publish all available packages to ~/releases/maven/development. If you need to publish the project to a different repo, you can specify it with -Prepo=repo_name. Valid options are:

  • development - The default repo.
  • beta - Publishes to ~/releases/maven/beta.
  • stable - Publishes to ~/releases/maven/stable.
  • release - Publishes to ~/releases/maven/release.

The following maven targets a published by this task:

  • edu.wpi.first.wpilib.cmake:cpp-root:1.0.0 - RoboRIO C++
  • edu.wpi.first.wpilibc.simulation:WPILibCSim:0.1.0 - Simulation C++
  • edu.wpi.first.wpilibj:wpilibJavaFinal:0.1.0-SNAPSHOT - RoboRIO Java
  • edu.wpi.first.wpilibj:wpilibJavaSim:0.1.0-SNAPSHOT - Simulation Java
  • edu.wpi.first.wpilibj.simulation:SimDS:0.1.0-SNAPSHOT - The driverstation for controlling simulation.
  • org.gazebosim:JavaGazebo:0.1.0-SNAPSHOT - Gazebo protocol for Java.
Description
WPILib - FRC Robotics Library
Readme 465 MiB
Languages
C++ 53.8%
Java 32.8%
Python 6.6%
C 2.6%
Starlark 1.7%
Other 2.4%