/** @mainpage
The official homepage is on:
- http://marc.waeckerlin.org/@PACKAGENAME@/index.html
All features are listed on the "Modules" page.
@section intro Introduction
Featureful C++ Library containing a lot of needful
things. Everything, I often need, but it's missing in C++ standard
libraries and other common 3rd party libraries, such as log4cxx, cppunit and boost.
I have paid attention to define simple and a nice to use
interfaces. The library makes use of object orientation, operator
overload and templates, where it makes sense. The library passes
several module tests before each delivery. It is therefore stable
and tested.
@section support Supported Platforms
The library is generic UNIX, but should also work on Windows. It
is sporadically tested on Windows in Cygwin. Stack trace works on
Linux only, it could theoretically work on Sun Solaris too, but
this is untested. Stack trace without symbol resolution, just
getting the raw addresses, only depends on GNU gcc and should work
on all platforms. Feedback is welcome!
@section features Missing a Feature, Found a Bug?
You are missing a feature, or an implementation is too incomplete
for the purpose you need it? Or you even found a bug? Just ask me
and I'll try to help you! My email address is in the file AUTHORS
and on my website: http://marc.waeckerlin.org
@section moreinfo Additional Information
See the "Related Pages".
- @ref readme
- @ref download
- @ref usage
- @ref threads
- @ref libversion
- @ref license
- @ref install
- @ref news
- @ref changes
*/
/** @page download Download and Installation
Download this version from here:
- Requirements:
- Boost thread library for multi threading:
http://boost.org
- log4cxx for automated tracing and function traces:
- http://logging.apache.org/log4cxx
- RPM: http://marc.waeckerlin.org/mrw-c++/log4cxx-0.9.7-1.i386.rpm
- @ref mrw::StackTrace requires:
- the GNU Binutils
- either GNU Compiler gcc or GNU C library glibc
- runs better on: either Linux or Solaris
- Binary
- Binary RPM Packages (built on i586/SuSE):
- http://marc.waeckerlin.org/@PACKAGENAME@/@PACKAGENAME@-@MAJOR@.@MINOR@.@LEAST@-1.i586.rpm
- Installation:
rpm -Uvh @PACKAGENAME@-@MAJOR@.@MINOR@.@LEAST@-1.i586.rpm
- http://marc.waeckerlin.org/@PACKAGENAME@/@PACKAGENAME@-mt-@MAJOR@.@MINOR@.@LEAST@-1.i586.rpm
- Installation:
rpm -Uvh @PACKAGENAME@-mt-@MAJOR@.@MINOR@.@LEAST@-1.i586.rpm
- http://marc.waeckerlin.org/@PACKAGENAME@/@PACKAGENAME@-devel-@MAJOR@.@MINOR@.@LEAST@-1.i586.rpm
- Installation:
rpm -Uvh @PACKAGENAME@-devel-@MAJOR@.@MINOR@.@LEAST@-1.i586.rpm
- Source
- Requirements to build from source:
- boost: http://boost.org
- cppunit: http://cppunit.sf.net
- log4cxx: http://logging.apache.org/log4cxx
- doxygen: http://doxygen.org
- graphviz: http://www.research.att.com/sw/tools/graphviz
- GNU binutils (you also need the development package, if it is
separete (e.g. in Debian))
- GNU g++, GNU make, GNU autotools: http://gnu.org
- Source TAR-Ball:
- http://marc.waeckerlin.org/@PACKAGENAME@/@PACKAGENAME@-@MAJOR@.@MINOR@.@LEAST@.tar.gz
- Installation:
-# tar xzf @PACKAGENAME@-@MAJOR@.@MINOR@.@LEAST@.tar.gz
-# cd @PACKAGENAME@-@MAJOR@.@MINOR@.@LEAST@
-# ./configure && make all install
- Source RPM Packages:
- http://marc.waeckerlin.org/@PACKAGENAME@/@PACKAGENAME@-@MAJOR@.@MINOR@.@LEAST@-1.src.rpm
- Installation:
sudo rpmbuild --rebuild @PACKAGENAME@-@MAJOR@.@MINOR@.@LEAST@-1.src.rpm
Download this documentation in PDF:
- http://marc.waeckerlin.org/@PACKAGENAME@/@PACKAGENAME@-@MAJOR@.@MINOR@.@LEAST@.pdf
*/
/** @page usage Usage of the Library: Include and Link
Include the headers you need with prefix @c mrw, e.g.:
@verbatim
\#include
@endverbatim
All classes are in the @c mrw namespace.
if you want the mrw::StackTrace to evaluate file and line numbers,
then you need to compile with debug information enabled, thats
option @c -g.
Link to the library with option @c -lmrw (or @c -lmrw-mt if your
program is multi threaded), e.g.:
@verbatim
g++ -g -o myprogram myprogram.cpp -lmrw
@endverbatim
For the @ref AutoTools "unexpected handler" you need to link to
@c -lmrwexcstderr or @c -lmrwexclog4cxx (or @c -lmrwexcstderr-mt
or @c -lmrwexclog4cxx-mt if your program is multi threaded).
For the @ref AutoFunctionTrace "automated function trace" you need
to link to @c -lmrwautofunctiontracelog4cxx (or @c
-lmrwautofunctiontracelog4cxx-mt if your program is multi
threaded). In addition, you must compile and link your program
with the GNU compiler specific option @c -finstrument-functions */
/** @page threads Thread Safety
There is a severe bug in the g++ compiler with version
>= 3.4: The macro @c _REENTRANT is always set and cannot be
used to check whether we are in a multithreaded compilation or
not! See http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11953 for
more details. Workaround: To enable multithreading, you must pass
the @c -D_MT compiler flag for the GNU gcc verions 3.4 and above!
To enable thread safety, you must link to @c libmrw-mt instead of
@c libmrw. That means, your link option is: @c -lmrw-mt
For GNU gcc verions 3.4 and above, you must use the compile option
@c -D_MT in addition, because of a severe bug in the compiler.
Different instances of classes can run in different threads, but
instances of classes can not be shared between different threads.
All classes are not thread safe, that means they should either
always be accessed from the same thread, or you are responsible
for locking.
All methods are threads safe, that means, they can be called at
the same time from different threads. But not on the same object.
This means: One instance should only be used within one single
thread. Different instances of the same class can be accessed
simultaneousely in different threads.
If you need more thread safety as a feature, please send
me an email and ask me for it (you find the address in the package
or on my personal homepage: http://marc.waeckerlin.org).
*/
/** @page libversion Library Versioning
The library and the package have the same version number. This
means, if you for example install the package versioned
mrw-c++-2.6.4.tar.gz, then it builds a shared library of the same
version, named libmrw.so.2.6.4. The naming is
version=MAJOR.MINOR.LEAST. What do the numbers mean:
- MAJOR
- If the major number is increased, then the backwards
compatibility was broken. Either there was an incompatible
change in the implementation, or in the interface, e.g. a change
in method parameters, or even parts of the library have been
removed.
- MINOR
- If the minor number changes, then it remains backward
compatible. Either there was a minor change in the
implementation or behavior of some features, a bigger bugfix, or
new feature were added. A program linked to a previous library
with smaller minor number still works, but a program linked to
newer library with a higher minor number may not work with a
library that has a lower minor number. This is a one way,
backwards only compatibility.
- LEAST
- The least number is increased for small changes, bugfixes,
changes in the documentation and so on. Except the bugs, changes
in the least number are fully forward and backward
compatible.
This means, programs linked to mrw-c++ version 2.6.4 will work
with library version 2.6.3, also with version 2.6.5, or with
version 2.7.1, but it won't work with version 2.5.4 nor with 1.1.3
nor with 3.1.4.
You can see the version of the library by issuing the command @c what.
*/
/** @page license License
@verbinclude COPYING */
/** @page readme Readme
@verbinclude README */
/** @page install Installation
@verbinclude INSTALL */
/** @page news News
@verbinclude NEWS */
/** @page changes Change Log
@verbinclude ChangeLog */
/** @brief the namespace for this library
All classes and all functions (except global operators) are placed
in this namespace.
For an overview, better see the "Modules" page.
*/
namespace mrw {
}