Installation Guide |
3. Tips for Installing on Windows
To compile and run Geant4 under Windows systems, some additional information
and tools are required, although the installation produre is similar to that
required on a UNIX based system. On Windows, the Cygwin toolset and the
Microsoft Visual C++ compiler are used.
Cygwin32 is a UNIX development environment available for Microsoft Windows.
You can freely obtain Cygwin32 from
Cygwin or
Cygwin/X.
We do not support direct use of Visual Studio; i.e. we do not provide
Visual Studio workspace (.dsw) or project (.dsp) files, nor we do provide
makefiles for the nmake application of MS Visual C++.
We use several of the tools provided by the Cygwin toolset:
The usage of Cygwin32 for the build environment results in a build procedure similar to that on a UNIX system. The documentation in the User's Guide for Application Developers, Section 10.5, is largely applicable in this case.
The following steps are required to install geant4:
. geant4-setup.shincluding the leading dot and blank space. You could also have this as your .bashrc file. The commands in the command file should be:
# Set G4SYSTEM export G4SYSTEM=WIN32-VC # # Set Path to CLHEP export CLHEP_BASE_DIR=C:/usr/local # # --- Other optional settings #Turn on verbose to show command used for compilation #export CPPVERBOSE=1 #Note, in the example above, CLHEP was installed in C:/usr/local, therefore include/CLHEP and lib/CLHEP.lib must be included therein.
The binary of the example is placed by default into the geant4/bin/WIN32-VC directory. You may run it either from this directory or from the examples/novice/N01 directory; sample input and output files are placed in each of the examples/novice directories. Some of the examples will need to read data files, and the place has to be given in environment variables again similar to the following example:
# # Environment variables needed to find geant4 data files: # # Data for neutron scattering processes, # distributed in a separate tar file, then placed under data export NeutronHPCrossSections=c:/usr/local/geant4/data/G4NDL # # Nuclear Photon evaporation data, # distributed with the source files under data export G4LEVELGAMMADATA=c:/usr/local/geant4/data/PhotonEvaporation # # Data for radiative decay hadronic processes under data, # distributed in a separate tar file export G4RADIOACTIVEDATA=c:/usr/local/geant4/data/RadiativeDecay # # Data for low energy electromagnetic processes, # distributed in a separate tar file, then placed under data export G4LEDATA=c:/usr/local/geant4/data/G4EMLOW #
All compiler and linker options are set in config/sys/WIN32-VC.gmk. If you require options different from our choice, you can modify this file.
DLLs (Dynamic Link Libraries) on Windows are supported for .NET VC++ and can be built for the compound kernel libraries of Geant4 (see the Installation Procedure of this Guide for a dissertation on global/compound libraries).
The libraries can be built either manually, issuing the command:
make dllfrom the directory $G4INSTALL/source or by specifying it through the Configure script used for the installation.
export PATH=$PATH:/usr/local/geant4/lib/$G4SYSTEMYou may then be able to run successfully your application.