Last edited: November 2014
The Cooperative Computing Tools are Copyright (C) 2003-2004 Douglas Thain
and Copyright (C) 2005- The University of Notre Dame.
All rights reserved.
This software is distributed under the GNU General Public License.
See the file COPYING for details.
The components of the cctools are:
cd $HOME
wget http://ccl.cse.nd.edu/software/files/cctools-4.2.2-x86_64-redhat6.tar.gz
gunzip cctools-4.2.2-x86_64-redhat6.tar.gz
tar xvf cctools-4.2.2-x86_64-redhat6.tar
export PATH=$HOME/cctools-4.2.2-x86_64-redhat6/bin:$PATH
On Windows, the procedure is similar:
cd %UserProfile%
winzip32 -e cctools-4.2.1-i686-windows.zip
set PATH=%UserProfile%\cctools\bin;%PATH%
wget http://ccl.cse.nd.edu/software/files/cctools-4.2.2-source.tar.gz
gunzip cctools-4.2.2-source.tar.gz
tar xvf cctools-4.2.2-source.tar
cd cctools-4.2.2-source
./configure
make
make install
export PATH=${HOME}/cctools/bin:$PATH
Or, you can directly build the latest version from our git repository:
git clone https://github.com/cooperative-computing-lab/cctools cctools-source
cd cctools-source
./configure
make
make install
export PATH=${HOME}/cctools/bin:$PATH
The software will happily build and run without installing
any external packages. Optionally, the cctools will interoperate
with a variety of external packages for security and data access.
To use these, you must download and install them separately:
./configure --with-globus-path /usr/local/globus ...
make
make install
export PATH=${HOME}/cctools/bin:$PATH
cd $HOME
git clone https://github.com/irods/irods-source
cd irods-source
git checkout 4.0.3
packaging/build.sh --run-in-place icommands
Then, configure and build cctools relative to that installation:
git clone https://github.com/cooperative-computing-lab/cctools cctools-source
cd cctools-source
./configure --with-irods-path $HOME/irods-src ...
make
make install
xcode-select --install
Then, click "Install" in the window that appears on the screen.
If the command line tools are already installed,
you will get an error and can proceed
with the instructions in the
"Installing From Source" section above.
For OS X versions before 10.9,
you will need to first install Xcode.
Xcode can be found in the App Store or on the installation disk.