# How to compile and install Infer ## Pre-compiled versions We provide a source release of Infer packaged with pre-build binaries for clang and facebook-clang-plugins for Linux and MacOS. We encourage you to use this release as compiling clang is time-consuming. Install the dependencies as explained in the next section, then follow the instructions in [Infer's getting-started page](http://fbinfer.com/docs/getting-started.html) to compile and install Infer. Alternatively, we also provide a docker image in the docker/ directory. Simply go to that directory and run `./run.sh` to get started with a working installation of Infer. ## Infer dependencies for MacOSX Here are the prerequisites to be able to compile Infer on MacOSX. This is required to be able to [use the release](http://fbinfer.com/docs/getting-started.html) (faster), or to compile everything from source (see the end of this document). - opam >= 1.2.0 (instructions [here](https://opam.ocaml.org/doc/Install.html#OSX)) - Python 2.7 - Java (only needed for the Java analysis) - clang in Xcode command line tools. You can install them with the command `xcode-select --install` (only needed for the C/Objective-C analysis) - Xcode >= 6.1 (only needed for the C/Objective-C analysis) - autoconf >= 2.63 and automake >= 1.11.1 (if building from git) You can install some of these dependencies using [Homebrew](http://brew.sh/): ```sh brew install autoconf automake opam caskroom/cask/brew-cask && \ brew cask install caskroom/versions/java7 ``` ## Infer dependencies for Linux Here are the prerequisites to be able to compile Infer on Linux. This is required to be able to [use the release](http://fbinfer.com/docs/getting-started.html) (faster), or to compile everything from source (see the end of this document). - opam >= 1.2.0 - Python 2.7 - Java (only needed for the Java analysis) - gcc >= 4.7.2 or clang >= 3.1 (only needed for the C/Objective-C analysis) - autoconf >= 2.63 and automake >= 1.11.1 (if building from git) See also the distro-specific instructions for Ubuntu and Debian below. ## Install Infer from source Run the following commands to get Infer up and running: ```sh # Checkout Infer git clone https://github.com/facebook/infer.git cd infer # Compile Infer ./build-infer.sh java # Install Infer into your PATH export PATH=`pwd`/infer/bin:$PATH ``` Replace `./build-infer.sh java` with `./build-infer.sh clang` to build the C and Objective-C analyzer from source. Beware that this command may take a really long time because it will compile a custom version of clang. This custom version is used by Infer to parse C and Objective-C source code. We encourage you to use [a release](https://github.com/facebook/infer/releases/) instead, which ship with clang already compiled. See `./build-infer.sh --help` for more options, eg `./build-infer.sh` on its own will build the analyzers for both Java and C/ObjC. ## Install Infer from source without opam If for some reason you prefer to install Infer's OCaml dependencies by some means other than opam, you can still compile Infer by running: ```sh ./autogen.sh ./configure make # or make java # Install Infer into your PATH export PATH=`pwd`/infer/bin:$PATH ``` ## How to install the dependencies on Linux Here are instructions on how to install the dependencies needed to compile Infer on a few Linux distributions. ### Debian 7 and Ubuntu 14.04 LTS ```sh sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get upgrade sudo apt-get install -y \ autoconf \ automake \ build-essential \ git \ libgmp-dev \ libmpc-dev \ libmpfr-dev \ m4 \ openjdk-7-jdk \ python-software-properties \ unzip \ zlib1g-dev ``` ### Ubuntu 12.04.4 LTS ```sh sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ubuntu-toolchain-r/test sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get upgrade sudo apt-get install -y \ autoconf \ automake \ build-essential \ g++-4.8 \ gcc-4.8 \ git \ libgmp-dev \ libmpc-dev \ libmpfr-dev \ m4 \ openjdk-7-jdk \ python-software-properties \ unzip \ zlib1g-dev sudo update-alternatives \ --install /usr/bin/gcc gcc /usr/bin/gcc-4.8 60 \ --slave /usr/bin/g++ g++ /usr/bin/g++-4.8 ``` ### Setting up opam Unfortunately, the version of opam that ships with some Linux distributions is broken, so you'll have to get it from the web: ```sh wget https://github.com/ocaml/opam/releases/download/1.2.2/opam-1.2.2-x86_64-Linux chmod +x opam-1.2.2-x86_64-Linux sudo cp opam-1.2.2-x86_64-Linux /usr/local/bin/opam opam init --comp=4.02.3 ``` Alternatively, follow the instructions [from the opam webpage](https://opam.ocaml.org/doc/Install.html).