Compiling aoTuV: Difference between revisions

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# Get the patched ''libvorbis source code'' from the [http://www.geocities.jp/aoyoume/aotuv/ aoTuV website]
# Get the patched ''libvorbis source code'' from the [http://www.geocities.jp/aoyoume/aotuv/ aoTuV website]
# unpack the tarball and change into to the directory aotuv-b4_20050617_111merged/
# unpack the tarball and change into a temporary directory then you can use to build the software.
# If you want to overwrite your existing vorbis libraries:
# If you want to overwrite your existing vorbis libraries:
:: <code>CFLAGS=-fno-strict-aliasing sh ./configure</code>
:: <code>CFLAGS=-fno-strict-aliasing sh ./configure</code>

Latest revision as of 16:50, 12 June 2010

This information is older and requires a rewrite. It may or may not work on some of the newer AoTuV forks.

Here are notes for compiling aoTuV under Linux in case you do not want to use the pre-compiled binaries. If for example you want to optimize for your CPU, want to link other programs, or if you don't use an Intel-compatible CPU henceforth (AMD64 architectures).

  1. Get the patched libvorbis source code from the aoTuV website
  2. unpack the tarball and change into a temporary directory then you can use to build the software.
  3. If you want to overwrite your existing vorbis libraries:
CFLAGS=-fno-strict-aliasing sh ./configure
make
make install
If you want to keep your existing libraries:
CFLAGS=-fno-strict-aliasing sh ./configure --prefix=/usr/local
make
make install
Call oggenc as
LD_PRELOAD=`echo /usr/local/lib/libvorbis*.so` oggenc -q4 foo.wav

The flag -fno-strict-aliasing is necessary if you compile with gcc 4, see the thread on HydrogenAudio.