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Zyn-Fusion Build System

This is the CMake build system (together with other scripts, if possible) used to generate the Zyn-Fusion packages.

This repository (and only this repository) is licensed under the WTFPL.


Introduction

The new-generation Zyn-Fusion's build system has been totally rewritten in CMake. You can build on both Windows and Linux, and cross-build for Windows is also well supported.

Zyn-Fusion depends on several external projects. By using CMake, managing those dependencies can be much more easier. And you can easily setup build environments in different platforms.

Built files will be put in directory ./build/ (can be specified when invoking CMake) :

  • ./build/zyn-fusion-<SYSTEM_NAME>: Ready-to-use Zyn-Fusion files. You can directly use them as you wish, or copy this folder into your DAW's search-path. SYSTEM_NAME depends on which target you've built for, for instance, Windows or Linux kernel name (same as uname -s).

Build for Linux (native build)

Linux version will link to shared libraries, so you need to install all those necessary dependency libs. Different distributions have different package names.

a. Install dependencies

# Arch Linux
sudo pacman -S fftw mxml liblo zlib		# Dependency libs
sudo pacman -S git ruby ruby-rake tar zip wget cmake bison autoconf automake libtool patch	# Build tools

# Debian/Ubuntu
sudo apt install libfftw3-dev libmxml-dev liblo-dev zlib	# Dependency libs
sudo apt install git ruby ruby-dev bison autotools-dev automake libtool premake4 cmake	# Build tools

b. Build Zyn-Fusion

# Fetch this repository
git clone git://github.com/anclark/zyn-fusion-build.git -b new-generation ~/zyn-fusion-build
cd ~/zyn-fusion-build

# Configure CMake
cmake -S . -B build

# Build and install
cd build
make -j2
make install

# Or directly run `make install` instead. It will build first
make -j2 install

NOTICE: You need to run install-linux.sh within the built folder to install Zyn-Fusion properly, or it won't run, moreover you'll only see a black window on your host.

Building for Windows (cross-compile on Linux)

Windows builds will build dependency libs from their source code. Build system will automatically fetch them, then build.

a. Install build tools

# Arch Linux
sudo pacman -S git ruby ruby-rake tar zip wget cmake bison autoconf automake libtool patch mingw-w64-gcc

# Debian/Ubuntu
sudo apt install git ruby ruby-dev bison autotools-dev automake libtool patch premake4 cmake mingw-w64-gcc

b. Build Zyn-Fusion

# Fetch this repository
git clone git://github.com/anclark/zyn-fusion-build.git -b new-generation ~/zyn-fusion-build
cd ~/zyn-fusion-build

# Configure CMake. Here applying CMake var CROSS_WINDOWS enables cross build
cmake -S . -B build -DCROSS_WINDOWS=1

# Build and install
cd build
make -j2
make install

# Or directly run `make install` instead. It will build first
make -j2 install

Building for Windows (cross-compile on WSL2)

If you use Windows, and don't want to install any Linux distribution, WSL2 is the best choice for you. With Microsoft's powerful new-generation engine, building Zyn-Fusion with WSL2 can be as fast as a real Linux distribution.

All steps are same as above (Building for Windows, cross-compile on Linux).

WSL2 dependencies

Notice that some dependencies will be different from real Linux distribution. Here are two examples:

# Alpine Linux (use `doas` for root access)
doas apk add git mingw-w64-gcc ruby ruby-rake cmake gcc g++ libtool automake autoconf m4 curl patch

# Ubuntu
sudo apt install git ruby ruby-dev bison autotools-dev automake libtool patch premake4 cmake mingw-w64-gcc

I recommend you to try Alpine Linux. It's light-weight and fast, and very suitable for WSL2.

Building for Windows (native build via Msys2)

WARNING!

Due to Msys2 Cygwin's low performance, building process will be tremendously slow!

It's highly recommended to cross-build instead.

a. Preparations

You must install Msys2 first, then remember running mingw64.exe shell in Msys2 install path.

Or you can also add the following two directories into the top of your Windows PATH list, so you can directly run commands in Powershell:

  • <MSYS2_INSTALL_PATH>\mingw64\bin
  • <MSYS2_INSTALL_PATH>\usr\bin

The default MSYS environment is based on Cygwin, which won't work! But you can try cross-build there.

b. Install dependencies

pacman -S git ruby gcc bison util-macros automake libtool mingw-w64-x86_64-cmake cmake \
					mingw-w64-x86_64-mruby python3 autoconf zip make wget patch \
					mingw-w64-x86_64-gcc mingw-w64-x86_64-make mingw-w64-x86_64-pkg-config \
					mingw-w64-x86_64-gcc-fortran mingw-w64-x86_64-gcc-libgfortran

c. Build

# Fetch this repository
git clone git://github.com/anclark/zyn-fusion-build.git -b new-generation ~/zyn-fusion-build
cd ~/zyn-fusion-build

# Configure CMake. Only MSYS Makefile is supported as generator
cmake -S . -B build -G "MSYS Makefiles"

# Build and install
cd build
make -j2
make install

# Or directly run `make install` instead. It will build first
make -j2 install

CMake options

You can specify some options when invoking CMake. They will control Zyn-Fusion or build system's behavior.

-DCROSS_WINDOWS=1

Enable cross-build for Windows if your host is Linux.

-DPARALLEL_BUILD_DEPS=1

Enable parallel build on dependencies.

Trade-off is that you cannot use -jn when invoking make in build path, as it may slow down your machine.

-DPARALLEL_BUILD_ZYNADDSUBFX=1

Enable parallel build on ZynAddSubFX.

Trade-off is that you may not compile Zest at the same time via make -jn, as it may slow down your machine, moreover your terminal output may mess up.

-DPARALLEL_BUILD_ZEST=1

Enable parallel build on Zest (EXPERIMENTAL).

Trade-off is that you may not compile ZynAddSubFX and other dependencies at the same time via make -jn, as it may slow down your machine.

-DDEMO_MODE=1

Enable demo build.

Demo build will automatically go mute every 10 minutes.

Multi-build support

If you are on Linux, it's possible to build both Windows and Linux version within the same source tree. Build system will separate built files and ZynAddSubFX/Zest source trees by target.

Simply specify different build directories when invoking CMake:

cmake -S . -B build-windows -DCROSS_WINDOWS=1
cmake -S . -B build-linux

Then go to those directories and run make install.

ccache support

If you frequently build Zyn-Fusion, you can use ccache to speed up build process.

1. For CMake targets

BEFORE configuration of this build system, you should set environment variables to let CMake make use of ccache:

export CMAKE_C_COMPILER_LAUNCHER=ccache CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER_LAUNCHER=ccache

This takes effect on ZynAddSubFX and dependencies using CMake as build system (Zlib, PortAudio).

NOTICE: Applying environment variables for already configured build system does NOT take effect!

Otherwise, you need to go to each project's build directory, then modify CMakeCache.txt, adding the two entries above.

2. For non-CMake targets

Zest and other dependencies (FFTW3, MXML) does not use CMake. So you need to override each compiler with a respective symbolic link to ccache.

For example, create a directory /home/yourname/.local/bin, then create links there:

cd /home/yourname/.local/bin/

# Override GCC with ccache
ln -s /usr/bin/ccache gcc
ln -s /usr/bin/ccache g++

# Override MinGW-w64 cross compilers
ln -s /usr/bin/ccache x86_64-w64-mingw32-gcc
ln -s /usr/bin/ccache x86_64-w64-mingw32-g++

# Override Clang with ccache (optional)
ln -s /usr/bin/ccache clang
ln -s /usr/bin/ccache clang++

Add this directory as the first entry of PATH:

export PATH=/home/yourname/.local/bin/:$PATH

Then, re-run build process.

Authors

  • Zyn-Fusion maintainer: @fundamental

  • This build system: @anclark

    Based on the original build scripts by @fundamental.

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  • CMake 100.0%