[6] | 1 | This is release 2.1 of GLU, a set of BDD packages and low-level utilities. |
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| 2 | |
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| 3 | If you downloaded this to compile it with VIS, stop here -- see the README |
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| 4 | file in the VIS distribution for build and installation instructions. |
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| 5 | |
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| 6 | --------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| 7 | To build GLU, you will need |
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| 8 | |
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| 9 | * An ANSI C compiler (gcc will do, as will several versions of cc) |
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| 10 | * GNU's make utility |
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| 11 | * GNU's gzip utility |
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| 12 | * Approximately 20 MB of free disk for the build |
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| 13 | * Approximately 10 MB of free disk space for the installation |
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| 14 | |
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| 15 | --------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| 16 | * Useful Addresses |
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| 17 | |
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| 18 | For the most recent version of GLU: |
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| 19 | ftp://vlsi.colorado.edu/pub/vis/ |
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| 20 | |
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| 21 | The VIS home page: |
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| 22 | http://vlsi.colorado.edu/~vis/ |
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| 23 | |
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| 24 | For the most recent version of the GNU tools: |
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| 25 | http://www.gnu.org |
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| 26 | |
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| 27 | --------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| 28 | This is the list of architecture/operating system/compiler |
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| 29 | combinations we have tested. (For installation with compilers marked |
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| 30 | with (*) please refer to the Platform Specific Instructions.) |
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| 31 | |
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| 32 | * IBM RISC System/6000 / AIX Version 4.3.3 / gcc(*) |
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| 33 | * Intel ix86 / Linux / gcc, g++, icc |
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| 34 | * Intel ix86 / Windows XP with Cygwin 1.5.16-1 / gcc, g++(*) |
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| 35 | * Intel ia64 / Linux / gcc |
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| 36 | * Sun Sparc/ Solaris 2.8 / gcc, g++, cc(*) |
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| 37 | |
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| 38 | The following instructions are for the generic build process. Before |
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| 39 | building the tool please refer to the section "* Platform Specific |
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| 40 | Instructions". |
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| 41 | |
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| 42 | --------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| 43 | To build GLU for a single operating system: |
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| 44 | |
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| 45 | * Download the most recent versions of GLU from the address above |
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| 46 | |
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| 47 | * Move to where you would like the GLU source to reside and unpack |
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| 48 | the distribution: |
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| 49 | |
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| 50 | % cd /home/vis # for example |
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| 51 | % gzip -dc /tmp/glu-2.1.tar.gz | tar xf - |
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| 52 | |
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| 53 | * Move into the glu-2.1 directory and run configure, which will determine |
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| 54 | some system-specific parameters and create the Makefile: |
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| 55 | |
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| 56 | % cd glu-2.1 |
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| 57 | % ./configure |
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| 58 | |
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| 59 | By default, this will use your system's native compiler. To use gcc, |
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| 60 | |
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| 61 | % ./configure --enable-gcc |
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| 62 | |
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| 63 | (You may wish to do this because you don't have the native compiler |
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| 64 | installed or because it is not ANSI.) |
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| 65 | |
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| 66 | Note: For some platforms where VIS is not supported for the native |
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| 67 | compiler, the default compiler is set to gcc. |
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| 68 | |
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| 69 | You can also compile glu with g++. To do so, |
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| 70 | |
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| 71 | % ./configure --enable-gcc=g++ |
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| 72 | |
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| 73 | Note: The Makefile by default uses the "-g" option for |
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| 74 | compilation. The resultant executables may be much larger than |
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| 75 | those generated without using the "-g" option. Using the |
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| 76 | "-g" option however, provides debugging capabilities. |
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| 77 | |
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| 78 | Note: The following is of interest only to people developing code |
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| 79 | within vis. For full debugging support, specify |
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| 80 | --with-comp-mode=debug. This will turn off optimization, and turn |
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| 81 | on the assertions (sanity checks) in the code. Similarly, |
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| 82 | --with-comp-mode=purify and --with-comp-mode=quantify will link vis |
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| 83 | with IBM Rational's Purify or Quantify tool. |
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| 84 | |
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| 85 | * Build the GLU system by running GNU's gmake utility: |
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| 86 | |
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| 87 | % gmake |
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| 88 | |
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| 89 | You may not have GNU make installed on your system under the name |
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| 90 | 'gmake' -- try make. If this fails, you probably need the latest |
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| 91 | version of GNU's make program -- download it from the address above. |
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| 92 | |
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| 93 | * (Optional) Test the build by invoking |
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| 94 | |
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| 95 | % gmake check |
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| 96 | |
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| 97 | This make take some time on slower machines. |
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| 98 | |
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| 99 | * Install the GLU library and its headers: |
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| 100 | |
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| 101 | % gmake install # optional |
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| 102 | |
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| 103 | By default, this will put binaries, libraries, headers, and help files |
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| 104 | in /usr/local/bin, /usr/local/lib, /usr/local/include, and /usr/local/share |
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| 105 | respectively. To choose a different location, provide a default prefix |
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| 106 | when you invoke configure, e.g., to install in /projects/glu/bin, etc., |
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| 107 | use |
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| 108 | |
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| 109 | % ./configure --prefix=/projects/glu |
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| 110 | |
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| 111 | when configuring GLU. |
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| 112 | |
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| 113 | --------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| 114 | To install GLU on multiple operating systems off the same source tree, |
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| 115 | see the file "INSTALL" in this directory. |
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| 116 | --------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| 117 | |
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| 118 | * Platform Specific Instructions |
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| 119 | |
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| 120 | Note: some instructions apply to platforms we no longer support. |
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| 121 | |
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| 122 | ** Little-endian machines: |
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| 123 | |
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| 124 | vis-cal will occasionally fail when compiled with |
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| 125 | --with-comp-mode=debug on little-endian machines like the Alphas and |
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| 126 | the Intel ix86 CPUs. |
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| 127 | |
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| 128 | ** DEC Alpha: |
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| 129 | |
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| 130 | Warnings about MIN and MAX are harmless. |
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| 131 | Warnings in the cuBdd package related to floating point are |
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| 132 | also harmless. |
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| 133 | |
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| 134 | The cc compiler will use 32-bit pointers by default. To use 64-bit |
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| 135 | pointers, invoke configure as follows: |
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| 136 | |
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| 137 | % ./configure --enable-64 |
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| 138 | |
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| 139 | The gcc compiler will always use 64-bit pointers. |
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| 140 | |
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| 141 | ** Solaris: |
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| 142 | |
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| 143 | If Sun's C compiler is not installed on your system, use gcc |
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| 144 | (./configure --enable-gcc). |
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| 145 | |
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| 146 | Warnings about redefined symbol are harmless, so are the warnings that say |
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| 147 | "end-of-loop code not reached". |
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| 148 | |
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| 149 | The target check-cmu (which is executed as part of "make check") |
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| 150 | fails with Solaris's native compiler unless -dalign is removed from |
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| 151 | CFLAGS. Although vis-cmu executes correctly even if compiled with |
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| 152 | -dalign, if you plan to extensively use vis-cmu (especially develop |
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| 153 | new code that uses MTBDDs) you should not compile with -dalign. |
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| 154 | |
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| 155 | The sun cc compiler (Workshop 6 update 1) on ix86 appears to have a |
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| 156 | bug in the optimization routines. The -xO4 an -xO5 compiler options |
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| 157 | will make vis crash. As a safety precaution, we have changed the |
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| 158 | optimization flag to be -xO3 for all Sun platforms that use the cc |
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| 159 | compiler. You can try higher optimization flags on your machine. |
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| 160 | In general, it is hard to determine cc options that will give |
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| 161 | optimal results on every platform, so it may pay off to play around |
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| 162 | with the optimization options. |
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| 163 | |
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| 164 | ** MS Windows with Cygwin: |
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| 165 | |
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| 166 | You need Red Hat's Cygwin environment (freely available from |
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| 167 | http://www.cygwin.com) to build GLU and VIS. |
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| 168 | |
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| 169 | With Cygwin the configuration script automatically selects gcc. |
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| 170 | |
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| 171 | ** AIX: |
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| 172 | |
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| 173 | The configuration script automatically selects gcc. The cal package |
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| 174 | occasionally produces incorrect result if compiled with optimization |
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| 175 | turned on. If you plan to use the cal BDD package with AIX, you |
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| 176 | should configure glu with --with-comp-mode=debug. |
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