It could happen that you do not want to install XGAP in its standard location, perhaps because you do not want to bother your system administrator and have no access to the GAP directory. In this case you can unpack XGAP in any other location within a ``pkg'' directory with the unzoo command as described above. Let us call this directory ``pkg'' for the moment. You get an ``xgap'' subdirectory with all the files of XGAP in it. You follow the standard procedure with two exceptions:
Before you can configure and compile XGAP you need a symbolic link ``cnf'' which is in the directory where ``pkg'' is and points to the ``cnf'' directory in the main GAP directory. You can install this link directly after unzooing by (remember: you are in the ``pkg'' directory!):
ln -s /usr/local/lib/gap4/cnf ..
if ``/usr/local/lib/gap4'' is the location of the main GAP installation.
You can find out where the main GAP4 installation is by starting
GAP as usual and looking at the variable GAP_ROOT_PATHS
within GAP.
Note that you have to edit the startup script ``xgap.sh'' (see previous section) to adjust the paths for ``XGAP_DIR'' and ``GAP_DIR'', and possibly the name of the GAP executable ``GAP_PRG''. Enter your GAP installation directory for the variable ``GAP_DIR'' and the name of the directory that contains ``pkg'' for the variable ``XGAP_DIR''. The variable ``GAP_PRG'' has to contain the path to the GAP executable relative to the ``bin'' subdirectory of the main GAP installation. In most cases this value will already be correct. Note however that if GAP and XGAP are compiled on different machines, then it is possible that these directory names differ for the GAP and XGAP executables respectively.
The script will automatically launch GAP with two directories as library path such that all GAP and XGAP libraries will be found.
[Up] [Previous] [Next] [Index]
xgap manual