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Distribute libraries (conda, maybe apt?) #274
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I believe we can deploy the feedstock to Linux/OSX/Windows without switching the build system to CMake. That being said, if the intention is to natively build for non-Unix platforms e.g. Windows then it would be safer to use a cross-platform build system that's not available only on Unix-style platforms. Since the library is quite small and with no external dependencies, swapping the build system is not that difficult. As for what should be inside the conda-forge feedstock, my suggestion would be to have the full set of libs and probably the Python bindings too. We can make incremental progress on this, by first adding the libs and then adding the rest of the components to the feedstock. |
@gnikit thanks for this help too. The Fortran libraries and Python codes will likely be distributed via conda and other channels separately, since chances can and will happen to the two repos independently. The Windows makefiles produce static libraries with |
That's good news! It simplifies the conda recipe a lot.
Yes, but I suspect to be a true Windows library it should be a |
We would like to distribute the RTE and RRTMGP libraries via conda and possibly other channels (e.g. apt-get). Libraries would be updated at each release.
For conda we will need to write a recipe and get it adopted as a feedstock. I think conda uses CMake, which we don't currently support.
We can build separate libraries for the kernels and the Fortran frontend, or libraries that combine both. The Python frontend needs just the kernels - is that what we'd start with?
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