There are several ways to get the sources. The most stable and tested versions are the sources shipped with each release and these are recommended as the first place to start. If you want to get a latest development sources, use anonymous GIT access but this will require installing developer tools that are not needed for the released tarballs.
The source releases contain all the HTML files and documentation provided on the Rasqal web site.
This is the recommended source to build and install Rsaqal. It ensures that a tested and working set of files are used.
The sources are available from http://download.librdf.org/source/ (master site) and also from the SourceForge site.
This is the recommended source for developers. It provides the latest beta or unstable code. For a stable version, use a release as described above.
git clone git://github.com/dajobe/rasqal.git cd rasqal
At this stage, or after a git pull you will
need to create the automake and autoconf derived files, as described
below in Create the configure program
by using the autogen.sh
script.
Building Rasqal in this way requires some particular development
tools not needed when building from snapshot releases - automake,
autoconf, libtool, gtk-doc and dependencies.
The autogen.sh
script looks for the newest versions of
the auto* tools and checks that they meet the minimum versions.
Building from development sources rather than from a release also
requires some additional development tools. Presently this includes
the flex scanner generator
version 2.5.31 or later and the GNU Bison parser generator.
The configure
script checks that the minimum versions
are present. There are optional dependencies that will be used if
present such as MPFR or GMP for decimal arithmetic and PCRE for
regex support.
Rasqal uses the GNU automake and autoconf to handle system dependency checking. It is developed and built on x86 Linux and x86 OSX but is also tested on other systems occasionally.
Required (Rasqal will not build without these):
Recommended (Optional):
If some of the recommended libraries are not present some of the tests will fail and the query engine will fail to handle regex matches or decimal arithmetic accurately.
configure
programIf there is a configure
program, skip to the next
section.
If there is no configure program, you can create it using the autogen.sh script, as long as you have the automake and autoconf tools. This is done by:
./autogen.sh
and you can also pass along arguments intended for configure (see below for what these are):
./autogen.sh --prefix=/usr/local/somewhere
On OSX you may have to explicitly set the
LIBTOOLIZE
variable for thelibtoolize
utility since on OSXlibtoolize
is a different program:LIBTOOLIZE=glibtoolize ./autogen.sh
Alternatively you can run them by hand with:
aclocal; autoheader; automake --add-missing; autoconf
The automake and autoconf tools have many different versions and at present development is being done with automake 1.11.1 (minimum version 1.11), autoconf 2.65 (minimum version 2.62) and libtool 2.2.10 (minimum version 2.2.0). These are only needed when compiling from GIT sources. autogen.sh enforces the requirements.
Rasqal also requires flex version 2.5.31 or newer (2.5.4 will not work) and GNU Bison to build lexers and parsers. These are only required when building from GIT.
Rasqal's configure supports the following options:
Pick the RDF query languages to build from the list:
rdql sparql laqrs
The default when this option is omitted is to enable all query languages
except the experimental one, laqrs.
Build raptor against the
beta Raptor
V2 APIs (libraptor2) rather than the default V1 APIs (libraptor). This
is a developer option for testing against the raptor 2 beta APIs. In
some future version, this will be the default and rasqal will depend
on raptor2. When rasqal is built in this way and librdf is built
against it, librdf also has to be built with a configure
--enable-raptor
option.
Enable signing of memory allocations so that when memory is allocated with malloc() and released free(), a check is made that the memory was allocated in the same library.
Pick a regex library to use - either pcre (default) for the PCRE or posix a POSIX regex implementation in the C library
Pick a triples source library to use - either raptor (default, and always available) or redland to use Redland. Raptor creates a simple in-store list of triples on parsing each time whereas Redland makes a much more efficient indexed in-memory store. See also --with-redland-config.
Set the path to the PCRE pcre-config program
--with-raptor=
system
or internal
This option tells Rasqal to use either the system installed version
of Raptor or a version in the sibling directory of ../raptor
If the option is omittted, Rasqal will guess and choose either the
system one, if new enough or the internal one if present. If
--with-raptor=system
is used and Rasqal discovers that
the system Raptor is too old, a warning will be given but the
configuration will continue.
Set the path to the Redland redland-config program
The default configuration will install into /usr/local:
./configure
To install into the standard Unix / Linux (and also Cygwin) system directory, use:
./configure --prefix=/usr
Append to the line any additional options you need like this:
./configure --prefix=/usr --enable-query-languages=sparql
Compile the library and the roqet utility with:
make
Note: GNU make is probably required which may be called gmake or gnumake if your system has a different make available too.
Rasqal has a built-in test suite that can be invoked with:
make check
which should emit lots of exciting test messages to the screen but
conclude with something like:
All n tests passed
if everything works correctly. There might be some regex
or decimal tests that fail if no POSIX regex library or multiple
precision numeric library was available when Rasqal was compiled.
Install the library and the roqet utility into the area
configure with --prefix
(or /usr/local if not given)
with:
make install
Note: This may require root access if the destination area is
a system directory such as /usr. In that case you may have to do
sudo make install
.
Rasqal includes a reference manual for the library but no tutorial
at this time. This is installed into
PREFIX/share/gtk-doc/html/rasqal
and is also available from the
Rasqal web site.
At present, to get a good idea of how to use Rasqal in a program, check out the source for roqet in src/roqet.c which uses the library extensively with the recommended APIs.
Rasqal provides an RDF query utility program called roqet which can do a variety of query operations on local and remote data, local and remote queries and running queries on SPARQL protocol services.
See the roqet manual page for full details using 'man roqet' or read the HTML version in docs/roqet.html or on the Rasqal website.
Copyright (C) 2003-2010 Dave Beckett
Copyright (C) 2003-2005 University of Bristol