Table of Contents
The Berkeley DB distribution builds up to six separate libraries: the base C API Berkeley DB library and the optional C++, Java, Tcl, SQL, and JDBC API libraries. For portability reasons, each library is standalone and contains the full Berkeley DB support necessary to build applications; that is, the C++ API Berkeley DB library does not require any other Berkeley DB libraries to build and run C++ applications.
Building for Linux, Apple iOS (known as iPhone OS previously), or Mac OS X is the same as building for a conventional UNIX platform.
The Berkeley DB distribution uses the Free Software Foundation's autoconf and libtool tools to build on UNIX platforms. In general, the standard configuration and installation options for these tools apply to the Berkeley DB distribution.
To perform a standard UNIX build of Berkeley DB, change to the build_unix directory and then enter the following two commands:
../dist/configure make
This will build the Berkeley DB library.
To install the Berkeley DB library, enter the following command:
make install
To rebuild Berkeley DB, enter:
make clean make
If you change your mind about how Berkeley DB is to be configured, you must start from scratch by entering the following command:
make realclean ../dist/configure make
To uninstall Berkeley DB, enter:
make uninstall
To build multiple UNIX versions of Berkeley DB in the same source tree, create a new directory at the same level as the build_unix directory, and then configure and build in that directory as described previously.
To perform a standard UNIX build of the Berkeley DB SQL interface, go to the build_unix directory and then enter the following two commands:
../dist/configure --enable-sql make
This creates a library, libdb_sql
,
and a command line tool, dbsql
. You can
create and manipulate SQL databases using the
dbsql
shell.
You can optionally provide the
--enable-sql_compat
argument to the
configure
script. In addition to
creating libdb_sql
and
dbsql
this causes a thin wrapper
library called libsqlite3
and a command
line tool called sqlite3
to be built.
This library can be used as a drop-in replacement for
SQLite. The sqlite3
command line tool
is identical to the dbsql
executable
but is named so that existing scripts for SQLite can
easily work with Berkeley DB.
../dist/configure --enable-sql_compat make
There are several arguments you can specify when configuring the Berkeley DB SQL Interface. See Configuring the SQL Interface for more information.