To build MOOSE
from source, you need cmake
and python-setuptools
. We
recommend to use Python 3.5 or higher. Python 2.7 is also supported.
Before running the following command to build and install, make sure that followings are installed.
- gsl-1.16 or higher.
- python-numpy
On Ubuntu-16.04 or higher, these dependencies can be installed with:
sudo apt-get install python-pip python-numpy cmake libgsl-dev g++
Now use pip
to download and install the pymoose
.
$ pip install git+https://github.com/BhallaLab/moose-core --user
pip
builds pymoose
with default options, it runs cmake
behind the scene.
If you are developing moose, build it with different options, or needs to test
and profile it, cmake
based flow is recommended.
Install the required dependencies and download the latest source code of moose from github.
$ git clone https://github.com/BhallaLab/moose-core --depth 50
$ cd moose-core
$ mkdir _build
$ cd _build
$ cmake ..
$ make -j3
$ ctest -j3 --output-on-failure
This will build moose, ctest
will run few tests to check if build process was
successful.
To install MOOSE into non-standard directory, pass additional argument
-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=path/to/install/dir
to during configuration. E.g.,
$ mkdir _build && cd _build # inside moose-core directory. $ cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=$HOME/.local .. $ make && make install
Will build and install pymoose to ~/.local
.
To use a non-default python installation, set
PYTHON_EXECUTATBLE=/path/to/python
e.g.,
$ cmake -DPYTHON_EXECUTABLE=/opt/bin/python3 ..
Now you can import moose in a Python script or interpreter with the statement:
>>> import moose
>>> moose.test() # will take time. Not all tests will pass.
SBML support is enabled by installing
python-libsbml.
Alternatively, it can be installed by using python-pip
$ sudo pip install python-libsbml