<li><a href="#scons">Building with SCons (Windows/Linux)</a>
<li><a href="#other">Building for other systems</a>
<li><a href="#libs">Library Information</a>
-<li><a href="#pkg-config">Building OpenGL programs with pkg-config
+<li><a href="#pkg-config">Building OpenGL programs with pkg-config</a>
</ol>
-<a name="prereq-general">
-<h1>1. Prerequisites for building</h1>
+<h1 id="prereq-general">1. Prerequisites for building</h1>
<h2>1.1 General</h2>
<ul>
</ul>
-<a name="prereq-dri">
-<h3>1.2 For DRI and hardware acceleration</h3>
+<h3 id="prereq-dri">1.2 For DRI and hardware acceleration</h3>
<p>
The following are required for DRI-based hardware acceleration with Mesa:
<li>Xorg server version 1.5 or later
<li>Linux 2.6.28 or later
</ul>
-</p>
<p>
If you're using a fedora distro the following command should install all
the needed dependencies:
+</p>
<pre>
sudo yum install flex bison imake libtool xorg-x11-proto-devel libdrm-devel \
gcc-c++ xorg-x11-server-devel libXi-devel libXmu-devel libXdamage-devel git \
-<a name="autoconf">
-<H1>2. Building with autoconf (Linux/Unix/X11)</H1>
+<h1 id="autoconf">2. Building with autoconf (Linux/Unix/X11)</h1>
<p>
The primary method to build Mesa on Unix systems is with autoconf.
<p>
The general approach is the standard:
+</p>
<pre>
./configure
make
sudo make install
</pre>
+<p>
But please read the <a href="autoconf.html">detailed autoconf instructions</a>
for more details.
</p>
-<a name="scons">
-<H1>3. Building with SCons (Windows/Linux)</H1>
+<h1 id="scons">3. Building with SCons (Windows/Linux)</h1>
<p>
To build Mesa with SCons on Linux or Windows do
This will create:
</p>
<ul>
-<li>build/windows-x86-debug/mesa/drivers/windows/gdi/opengl32.dll — Mesa + swrast, binary compatible with Windows's opengl32.dll
-<li>build/windows-x86-debug/gallium/targets/libgl-gdi/opengl32.dll — Mesa + Gallium + softpipe, binary compatible with Windows's opengl32.dll
+<li>build/windows-x86-debug/mesa/drivers/windows/gdi/opengl32.dll — Mesa + swrast, binary compatible with Windows's opengl32.dll
+<li>build/windows-x86-debug/gallium/targets/libgl-gdi/opengl32.dll — Mesa + Gallium + softpipe, binary compatible with Windows's opengl32.dll
</ul>
<p>
Put them all in the same directory to test them.
-<a name="other">
-<H1>4. Building for other systems</H1>
+<h1 id="other">4. Building for other systems</h1>
<p>
Documentation for other environments (some may be very out of date):
</p>
-<UL>
-<li><A HREF="README.VMS">README.VMS</A> - VMS
-<LI><A HREF="README.CYGWIN">README.CYGWIN</A> - Cygwin
-<LI><A HREF="README.WIN32">README.WIN32</A> - Win32
-</UL>
+<ul>
+<li><a href="README.VMS">README.VMS</a> - VMS
+<li><a href="README.CYGWIN">README.CYGWIN</a> - Cygwin
+<li><a href="README.WIN32">README.WIN32</a> - Win32
+</ul>
-<a name="libs">
-<H1>5. Library Information</H1>
+<h1 id="libs">5. Library Information</h1>
<p>
When compilation has finished, look in the top-level <code>lib/</code>
</p>
-<a name="pkg-config">
-<H1>6. Building OpenGL programs with pkg-config</H1>
+<h1 id="pkg-config">6. Building OpenGL programs with pkg-config</h1>
<p>
Running <code>make install</code> will install package configuration files