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This is the code base for libbot2. 

Overview
========

libbot2 is a collection of several pieces of software (pods).  Some pods
may depend on others.  The current list of pods is:

  bot2-core       C library with some simple but useful routines,
                  and a set of core message types (LCM types).

  bot2-vis        C library of classes and functions for visualizing data
                  with OpenGL and GTK2.

  bot2-lcmgl      Transmitting and rendering OpenGL commands over LCM.

  bot2-procman    Process management tools for controlling many processes 
                  on one or many workstations.

  bot2-lcm-utils  LCM utility programs (tunnel LCM over TCP, chop or splice
                  log files, etc.)

Requirements
============

  These are required.
    GLib 2.0+
    CMake
    LCM       (http://lcm.googlecode.com)
    Java      (Sun JDK or OpenJDK strongly preferred)
    Python
    GTK+ 2.0+ (required by bot2-vis)
    OpenGL    (required by bot2-vis)
    GLUT
    PyGTK

  Note that some pods may have fewer requirements (e.g., if you just want
  bot2-core)

  On a Debian/Ubuntu system, the following packages should be sufficient:
    libglib2.0-dev
    cmake
    sun-java6-jdk | default-jdk | openjdk-6-jdk
    python-dev
    python-gtk2
    libgtk2.0-dev
    mesa-common-dev
    libgl1-mesa-dev
    libglu1-mesa-dev
    freeglut3-dev
    libjpeg-dev

    Additionally, you'll need to install LCM from http://lcm.googlecode.com

  On OS X, the recommended procedure is to use MacPorts and install:
    cmake
    pkgconfig
    glib2
    gtk2
    atk
    cairo
    python26
    py26-gtk
    pango
    mesa
    
    Additionally, you'll need to install LCM from http://lcm.googlecode.com

(Local) Installation
====================
  libbot2 adheres to the Pods core policy, and makes use of the Pods build tools. 
  For more information about Pods, see: https://sourceforge.net/p/pods/

  You can install libbot2 to your system by running:

  $ sudo make BUILD_PREFIX=/usr/local

  If you don't want to install libbot2 to your system, you can also build it
  inside the source directory.  To do this, run:

  $ make
  
  In this case, the executables, headers, libraries etc. will be installed according to
  the Pods core policy. If no other "build" directory is found, it will default to:
  libbot2/build/  

Uninstallation
==============

  If compiled and installed to your system, run:

  $ sudo make clean

  note: this can only be done from the libbot2 source that was used for
        installation

Documentation
=============

  To build documentation, install Doxygen and then run:

  $ cd doc
  $ doxygen

  HTML docs will then be build to doc/html/

License
=======

  libbot2 is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
  it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published 
  by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
  (at your option) any later version.

  libbot2 is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
  but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
  MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
  GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.



  You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
  along with libbot2.  If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.

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  • C 59.3%
  • Python 13.8%
  • CMake 12.4%
  • C++ 11.5%
  • Java 2.2%
  • Makefile 0.7%
  • Other 0.1%