                             Installing LessTif

                        by [1]The LessTif Core Team
             (last modification: $Date: 2004/04/30 20:07:22 $)

                                Introduction

   This  document  details configuring, compiling, and installing LessTif
   on various platforms.

   The  original version of this document is written in HTML; the LessTif
   build  process  uses  one  of  the  text  mode web browsers [2]lynx or
   [3]links   to   convert   it   into   plain   text.   Both   the  HTML
   (doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html)   and   the  plain  text  (Install)
   formats should be in a distribution.

   Readers that are going to install a binary version of LessTif can jump
   to the according [4]section immediately.

                             Table of contents

     * [5]Building LessTif
          + [6]Prerequisites (What you need to compile LessTif)
          + [7]Configuring LessTif
               o [8]LessTif from CVS
               o [9]LessTif source distribution
               o [10]Getting configure to find everything
               o [11]Using configure options to tune the build
          + [12]Compiling LessTif
          + [13]Platform specific issues
               o [14]OSF, Digital Unix, Tru64
               o [15]HP/UX
               o [16]OS/2
               o [17]Solaris
               o [18]Windows
     * [19]Installing LessTif Binaries
          + [20]LessTif built from source
          + [21]Binary distributions of LessTif
          + [22]Platform specific issues
               o [23]FreeBSD
               o [24]Linux
               o [25]OS/2
               o [26]Windows
          + [27]After LessTif (Getting shared libraries to work)
     * [28]Upgrading LessTif
          + [29]Default Versions
          + [30]Installation Tree
     * [31]Xlt and Xbae
     _________________________________________________________________

                              Building LessTif

              Prerequisites (What you need to compile LessTif)

   To  build  LessTif  from  the  sources  you need a number of installed
   software  packages  and  utilities.  You  can find pointers to most of
   these tools on our [32]links page.
     * C  development  system  including an ANSI C89 (or better) compiler
       such as [33]gcc and an according C library
     * the make build tool
     * X  Window  System (X11 Release 6 or higher; R5 might still work as
       well, but is no longer supported): libraries and headers
     * some UN*X standard tools, like cp, cp, install, rm, sed

   In  addition  when  building  from  CVS  instead  of  using our source
   tarballs you will need:
     * autoconf
     * automake
     * libtool
     * yacc (GNU bison)
     * (f)lex

   [34]Below we specify which versions of the auto* tools are required.

   A   large  variety  of  systems  fulfill  these  requirements  as  our
   (incomplete!)  list  of  [35]supported platforms shows. And installing
   the  missing  software  shouldn't be too hard (except for the compiler
   and X11, perhaps ;-)

                            Configuring LessTif

   Configuration  of LessTif is now handled by [36]automake, autoconf and
   libtool.  They  are GNU development tools which the LessTif developers
   use  to  generate  the  distribution's  build  scripts  and makefiles.
   Normally this shouldn't bother you.

   If  you  obtained  a copy of LessTif from our [37]CVS repository, then
   you  need  to  perform  some  additional  steps  which will create the
   "configure"  script  and  all  the "Makefile.in" files (and some other
   files). configure is a shell script which is meant to be run by people
   who compile LessTif (you, probably). It looks at your system and tries
   to  figure  out  how  exactly  to  compile.  It may need a little help
   through command-line options, though.

                              LessTif from CVS

   If you obtained your LessTif sources directly from CVS, you'll have to
   perform  some  of  the  steps  which  the  LessTif developers normally
   perform  when  creating  a  distribution.  (So,  if you did get a real
   distribution  you  don't need to do this and you can go on to the next
   section.)

   The  following  table  lists  the  current versions of the auto* tools
   which  we use currently for development. Note that the latest official
   release may still be based on a different set!

                         Tool         Version
                       automake         1.5
                       autoconf 2.52 (2.50 at least)
                       libtool         1.4.2

   We have two places where you need to run the auto* commands. These are
     * $LESSTIF (the main directory)
     * $LESSTIF/test (large number of tests for our libraries)

   The  whole process of running the auto tools and make is now automated
   by the CVSMake script which is present in LessTif's top directory. Use
   of CVSMake is mandatory! Don't bother us if you run the auto* tools in
   your own way and run into problems afterwards ...
   Note  that due to a bug in current versions of those tools you may see
   an  error or warning message while running CVSMake. (In some versions,
   it'll complain about installing some files in the LessTif directories,
   in other versions, it says AC_PROG_LEX is called multiple times.)
   If  things  run  well  afterwards  you may ignore this, of course. (so
   please try to continue first!)

   CVSMake  needs  to  be  run in the top source directory of LessTif, it
   figures  out  which  directories  need its attention and then does its
   thing.  After  running  CVSMake,  the  source tree should be ready for
   running the configure command.

   The  CVSMake  scripts now feature some command line flags which may be
   useful:
     * clean  by  default  CVSMake  cleans  up  a  couple of files in the
       current  toplevel directory. If this flag is specified it tries to
       run make maintainer-clean
     * local  -  if  applied to the toplevel CVSMake it won't run recurse
       into the non-core directories (test/)
     * nodist  -  enables  generation  of dependencies in Makefiles. This
       does   only  work  on  systems  which  are  supported  by  [38]GNU
       automake/libtool.   Starting   with   automake  1.5  finally  more
       compilers than just gcc are supported!

   Note that you may get a warning about the INSTALL file missing in some
   cases. Don't worry, it is now a generated file. If you have Lynx/links
   on your system, it'll convert doc/INSTALL.html into INSTALL. This only
   happens  during  the build process (and we're now in the configuration
   phase  which  is  still before the build); that's why you can get this
   message. By the way: it's harmless.

   The  commands  above are also the commands that you need to run if you
   have modified some of the Makefiles yourself.

   Once  you've  done  all  the  above,  you  can  continue with the next
   section.

                        LessTif source distribution

   To  configure  LessTif  for  your  system, just type 'configure'. This
   should  do  a reasonable job of locating the stuff it needs, and gives
   rather verbose output should something fail.

   The configure script has a lot of command line options which you might
   need or want to use for two main reasons :
     * the configure program doesn't work (well) for you
     * you want to tune the LessTif build process

   You can type
      configure --help

   to  get  the  list  of  all options, with a short description of each.
   We'll  cover  most  if  not all of the options in the next sections of
   this document.

    Getting configure to find everything

   configure  identifies  a  large  number  of  aspects  of your computer
   system, it checks for all those [39]prerequisites listed above.
   Two things that configure looks for on your machine are:
     * X11 headers and libraries
     * Motif headers and libraries (optional)

   Now  many  people  who  have Motif on their system don't use LessTif.
   Hmm.  Wonder  why  that is. Anyway, it wouldn't make much sense if you
   needed  Motif  in order to build LessTif. The good news is: you don't
   need  it.  The  only  reason  why you can tell configure where to find
   Motif  is so it can configure the Makefiles under test/ to be capable
   of building LessTif as well as Motif tests.

   configure  will  tell you where it has found them if it found them. If
   it  didn't  find  X,  you'll  have  to specify the path on configure's
   command line. Use these two options:
--x-includes
--x-libraries

   And to specify the Motif stuff, use these:
--with-motif-includes
--with-motif-libraries

   To  specify  the  location  of the various bits, you have to set these
   flags equal to something. An example on how to do this is:
configure --x-includes=/usr/local/X11R6/include

   The other flags behave identically.

                 Using configure options to tune the build

   As  of LessTif 0.87.2 the build system is capable of building multiple
   LessTif  libraries.  The  purpose of this is to have several libraries
   that are compatible with several releases of OSF/Motif.
   Starting  with  0.93.3  we  install  our Motif 2.1 version by default.
   Though  some  functionality is still missing it sounds more reasonable
   to   use  that  version  nowadays.  This  was  introduced  because  an
   increasing  number  of  people  are using Motif 2.* functions, and the
   binary releases of LessTif only supported the 1.2 version of Motif.

   So  if  you  actually  install  multiple versions of our libraries the
   highest one will finally be the default version.

    Choosing which versions to compile

   --enable-build-12
          build Motif-1.2 compatible version

   --enable-build-20
          build Motif-2.0 compatible version

   --enable-build-21
          build Motif-2.1 compatible version (enabled by default)

    Other options

   --enable-shared
          build shared libraries [default=yes]

   --enable-static
          build static libraries [default=no]

   --with-dbmalloc
          use dbmalloc (a tool similar to dmalloc)

   --with-dmalloc
          use dmalloc (see [40]dmalloc.com)

   --enable-maintainer-mode
          enable  make  rules  and dependencies not useful (and sometimes
          confusing) to the casual installer [default=no]

   --enable-debug
          build LessTif with debugging options [default]

   --enable-editres
          build LessTif with support for Editres protocol [default]

   --enable-nonstandard-conversions
          include nonstandard conversions [default=yes]

   --enable-production
          build  a  production version (doesn't include _LtDebug*() calls
          which  print  all  kinds  of  debugging  info depending on some
          environment variables)

   --enable-scrollbar-verbose
          configure LessTif ScrollBar to be verbose [default=no]

   --enable-verbose
          configure LessTif to be verbose [default=yes]

   --prefix=XXX
          tell  configure  where  LessTif  should  be  installed by "make
          install"

                             Compiling LessTif

   After  configuring  LessTif,  just  typing 'make' should build all the
   libraries, clients, and (optionally) tests for LessTif.

   Some  combinations of compilers and libraries may have code generation
   bugs.  If  you  see  weird problems when you debug library code, try a
   lower (or no) optimization. For the vast majority who compile with the
   default flags this is not an issue.

                          Platform specific issues

   Here  we  collect  various  hints  and  workarounds  which may help in
   building  on the specific platforms. Many are a bit outdated, since we
   usually  try  to  get  fixes in our configuration system to avoid such
   workarounds.  However  they  may  still  be  useful to resolve similar
   problems!

    OSF, Digital Unix, Tru64

   Building  on  Digital  Unix  from  scratch/CVS  using  the system's CC
   compiler  is  known  to  work after installing flex 2.5.4 and starting
   configure like
CC="cc -std1" LEX="/usr/local/bin/flex" ./configure

   Building  releases  (i.e.  source  distributions)  doesn't  require an
   installation  of  flex,  and  versions  from  0.92.32 should even work
   without specifying the "-std1" compiler flag.

    HP/UX

   On  an  HP/UX system that we have access to, the commands that we used
   to configure LessTif are :
    CC="cc -Ae"
    export CC
    ./configure --disable-static

    OS/2

   If you want to build LessTif for XFree86 OS/2 you have to use specific
   Makefiles  since  a  build  based  on  the  auto*-tools/libtool is not
   possible  (based  on  recent  auto* tools and their ports you may give
   them  a  try, of course. However it's not worthwhile and would require
   quite  some  work to get a satisfying result). They are available from
   [41]http://homepages.tu-darmstadt.de/~st002279/os2/lesstif.html.
   The  LessTif  DLLs  export  their  interfaces  via  name  and ordinal.
   Compatibility  to older versions is ensured by using the mkdef_emx.cmd
   script (see scripts/OS2/).
   Those  Makefiles  don't support building the supplied example programs
   in  the test/ tree yet. If you want to easily build some of them check
   out the REXX script "ble.cmd" in scripts/OS2/.
   Further  OS/2-specific  problems  are  addressed  within the according
   section of our [42]FAQ.

    Solaris

   On some older SunOS systems without proper ANSI C support you need to
#define VOID_SPRINTF

   to get the code built. You might put it in by hand in the config.h.

   On a Sun Solaris 2.6 SPARC with the SUNWspro compiler. In order to get
   past an undefined _Xconst in lesstif-0.88.1/lib/Xm/AtomMgr.c, I hacked
   in the following lines at the front of
   lesstif-0.88.1/include/LTconf.h:
#define FUNCPROTO 1
#include <X11/Xfuncproto.h>

   (This might be obsolete meanwhile)

    Windows

   For  a  long  time, LessTif had to be built as static libraries on the
   Windows  platform.  (Initially  there  were  several  versions of un*x
   support  on  Windows,  now  only  Cygwin  gets mentioned a lot.) Since
   October 2003, LessTif is available as shared library on Cygwin.

   LessTif  compiles almost out of the box under Cygwin. However you will
   need to install XFree86 4.x or higher from
   [43]http://xfree86.cygwin.com.

   For  U/WIN  you  will  need  to  install  GCC, libtools, automake, and
   autoconf etc. Please check the URL
   [44]ftp://ftp.xraylith.wisc.edu/pub/khan/gnu-win32/uwin/.

   For  Interix,  you  will  need  GCC  from Microsoft Interix URL. After
   installing  GCC, download automake, autoconf and libtools, compile and
   install them.
     _________________________________________________________________

                        Installing LessTif Binaries

                         LessTif built from source

   Installing  LessTif  is  as  easy as typing 'make install' - given you
   managed to build it as described [45]above!
   Check  out  the  [46]related options for configure which control where
   LessTif gets installed.

                      Binary distributions of LessTif

   Binary  versions  of LessTif are built and made available as a service
   to  people  who  want  to  use  LessTif  without  having to compile it
   themselves. As we're concentrating on developing and improving LessTif
   itself,  we  consider  binary  releases to be a side product, which we
   only  generate  once in a while - generally at each minor release. Our
   release policy is detailed in [47]release-policy.html.

   Binary  versions  usually  exist for Linux (various versions), FreeBSD
   and  OS/2,  others  may  be created occasionally as well, e.g. Windows
   binaries based on Cygwin.

   Specifically  for Linux, the binaries that we provide are RPM files. A
   LessTif  release has more than one RPM file, each containing a part of
   LessTif.  The  [48]Download page explains the difference between them.
   Important  to  know  is  that the "main" RPM is really only a runtime,
   whereas the stuff needed for development is in a separate RPM.

                          Platform specific issues

    FreeBSD

   Starting  with  the  0.80a  (0.80  pre-release),  the  FreeBSD  binary
   distribution is provided as a pkg_add installable file.

   Pkg_add(8) is FreeBSD's installation tool.

   Installation of LessTif with pkg_add creates a directory /usr/lesstif,
   under  which all of LessTif is placed. As the file /usr/lesstif/README
   explains,   you   should  put  /usr/lesstif/bin  in  your  $path,  add
   /usr/lesstif/lib to your LD_LIBRARY_PATH or to the options of ldconfig
   in  /etc/rc, and point your compiler to include files and libraries by
   adding
    -I/usr/lesstif/include -L/usr/lesstif/lib

   to its command line. See also [49]below.

    Linux

   From Matthew Simpson (matthewsimpson@home.com)

   LessTif Binary Installation

   The  following procedure worked for installing the binary version 0.82
   LessTif  onto  my  Redhat  4.2 Linux system. I did not have a previous
   installation  of  either  the  source or binary LessTif, so this works
   from  scratch.  I am documenting this days later, so please correct as
   needed. The binary installation is simple:
    1. After  downloading  the  binary  distribution,  log in as root and
       place the file in /usr
    2. gunzip it: gunzip lesstif-0.82-linux.tar.gz
    3. untar  it: tar -xvf lesstif-0.82-linux.tar The result will be this
       directory: /usr/lesstif
    4. Remove the tar file if desired: rm lesstif-0.82-linux.tar
    5. Edit  /etc/ld.so.conf  and add the following line for the untarred
       LessTif library:
/usr/lesstif/lib
    6. Run this: ldconfig
       LessTif Window Manager:
       To  ignore  your default window manager and instead load mwm, make
       or  copy  these  files  as yourself or root (whichever you use) to
       your home directory:
    7. Put  a  .xinitrc file in your home directory. Add this to the last
       line, replacing the call to any other window manager:
eval "exec /usr/lesstif/bin/mwm"
       Or for better tracking, use this line instead:
eval "exec /usr/lesstif/bin/mwm" -debug >"$HOME"/.MWM-errors 2>&1
       (The  redirections rules for > and 2>&1 syntax are specific to sh,
       which  is  what  my  startx  script  uses.  The rules are slightly
       different  for  tcsh.) This will dump any errors to a file in your
       home  directory  called .MWM-errors. If no errors occur, this file
       will not get created. If this file already exists, new errors will
       be appended to it. To get a new file each time you log in or start
       X, add this to your .login or startx file:
rm -f $HOME/.MWM-errors
       To  automatically execute your window manager upon login, add this
       to the end of your .login file (this is using tcsh syntax):
if ( ! -e /tmp/.X0-lock ) then
echo "Starting X Windows..."
rm -f $HOME/.MWM-errors
startx
endif
    8. Copy this:
       cp /usr/lesstif/lib/X11/app-defaults/Mwm .
       This  is  where  you set your personal app-defaults. Uncomment the
       lines  mentioned  at  the  end  of  this  file  to get some pretty
       borders.  Here are some other things I changed: Double clicking an
       icon was set too fast. To slow it down:
       Mwm*doubleClickTime: 1000
       To  allow  automatic  window focus whenever the mouse pointer hits
       it:
       Mwm*keyboardFocusPolicy: pointer
    9. Copy this to your home directory:
       cp /usr/lesstif/lib/X11/mwm/system.mwmrc .mwmrc
       (Note  that you should rename it from system.mwmrc to .mwmrc) This
       is  where you set up your personal root menus. If you use XFree86,
       look   in   /usr/X11R6/bin   for  most  of  the  already-installed
       applications you like to execute through the root window pull-down
       menus.  More  menus  and  sub-menus can be added as desired. Since
       /usr/X11R6/bin  is  in  your path, you need not type the full path
       names  into  .mwmrc.  Applications  in other directories will need
       paths or soft links set up.
       When  setting  up  these  two  files  I did not have a LessTif mwm
       manual  page  available.  However,  if  you  have  Unix and Motif
       available at work (such as on SGI products), just do a man mwm and
       print  it out for reference. Most will apply to LessTif mwm. (Even
       though  SGI uses their own version called 4Dwm, they still provide
       the mwm manual pages with the IRIX 6.2 release.)
   10. run startx

   Hope  this helps someone. These directions may be over simplified, but
   I  wanted  to be specific. Thanks for LessTif. I am learning M*tif but
   have a long way to go.

   Matt Simpson

    OS/2

   The  OS/2  binary  distribution is provided as a Zip file. Put it into
   your  X11ROOT  directory  and  unzip  the  archive.  This installs all
   libraries  and  executables (Xm.dll, Xm_20.dll, mwm.exe, ...). It puts
   everything   in   place  to  be  used  within  a  valid  XFree86  OS/2
   configuration, so you don't have to adjust anything manually.

    Windows

   (From: Suhaib Siddiqi)
   First      install      Cygwin/Xfree86      in     /usr/X11R6     from
   [50]http://xfree86.cygwin.com Then copy lesstif-0.92.98-cygwin.tar.bz2
   to \cygwin directory and open Cygwin bash shell:
cd /
bunzip2 lesstif-0.92.98.tar.bz2
tar xvf lesstif-0.92.98.tar

   You should be set to go.

              After LessTif (Getting shared libraries to work)

   Shared  library  configuration  differs from system to system. Here is
   the lowdown on getting them to work on the systems that support them.
     * Linux
       There are two ways to have shared libraries available under linux:
          + Use the LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable.
          + Use ldconfig.
       The  second  option  is  only  available  to  those with superuser
       access,  so  if  you  don't,  or  you specifically want to use the
       library  that  was  just  built  (for  running the tests), use the
       LD_LIBRARY_PATH variable.
       The  LD_LIBRARY_PATH variable is to contain a colon separated list
       of  paths  to  be  searched for shared libraries. This variable is
       consulted  before the information compiled by ldconfig, so even if
       you have LessTif already installed on your system you can use this
       variable  to force the use of the newly built library. Below is an
       example:
       Assume  you  told  configure  to  install  LessTif  in  your  home
       directory  "/home/lesstifuser".  To  keep any existing settings in
       that  variable  we put our new setting in front of older ones. The
       syntax used below assumes that you're usig a bash shell:
$ LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/home/lesstifuser:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH
$ export LD_LIBRARY_PATH
       In  case  you didn't specify any prefix check where "make install"
       actually puts the libraries.
       If  you have superuser access and want LessTif to be installed for
       system-wide  use,  make  sure the directory to which the libraries
       were installed is listed in /etc/ld.so.conf. Then (as root) type
ldconfig -v
       to make them available.
       If  you're  not  sure  which  library  is  being  used (either the
       system-wide  installed  one, or one you've just compiled), use the
       'ldd'  command.  After generating an executable linked dynamically
       with  LessTif, type ldd <executable-name>. This will output a list
       of  the  paths to all the shared libraries this executable depends
       on.
     * HPUX 9
       Nothing additional needs to be done. Just make sure the linker can
       find the libraries when generating the executable (the -L flag).
     * NetBSD/FreeBSD/OpenBSD
       Same as for Linux.
     _________________________________________________________________

                             Upgrading LessTif

  Default versions

   Usually  upgrading  LessTif  from one version to the other is a rather
   simple task. The challenge is to recognize that the default version of
   our libraries has changed in the past.

                    LessTif Version     Motif Compatibility
                         <0.92              1.2 (1.2.x)
                 0.92.x, 0.93.1, 0.93.2         2.0
                        >=0.93.3                2.1

  Installation Tree

   Starting  from  0.93.5  we  changed  the  way that LessTif install its
   files.   Earlier   releases   used   to   put   most  of  their  stuff
   libraries/headers  in  their  own  subdirectory  $(prefix)/LessTif and
   afterwards  create symbolic links for libraries and headers. Advantage
   was  that  people could more easily switch between different installed
   versions, i.e. from "Motif 1.2" to "Motif 2.0". Drawback was that this
   couldn't   be  done  in  a  fully  portable  fashion,  i.e.  at  least
   installation  from  sources  failed  on  some systems though they were
   supported  by  libtool  (which is the more crucial factor which limits
   portability:  we  can  only  build  our libraries on systems which are
   supported by this powerful tool, see section [51]Prerequisites).

   To  simplify  this whole process for the maintainers (who have to deal
   with  all  the bug reports ;-) and to enhance portability we abandoned
   this approach. We now install directly in the proper directories below
   $(prefix)  and  only put documentation and non-Motif standard stuff in
   $(prefix)/LessTif.

   Having  said  this  we  have  to  acknowledge  that upgrading an older
   release  to 0.93.5 (or better) may fail for some reasons: installation
   tools  may  fail  or  refuse  to  remove the old symbolic links to now
   obsolete  locations. So before doing the upgrade remove your whole old
   $(prefix)/LessTif  tree  and  in addition the following symbolic links
   (if  they  exist)  below  $(prefix).  However ensure that you know und
   understand what you are doing, don't remove a non-LessTif installation
   this  way!  (e.g.  if  your  system  has  libraries  with  a different
   extension  than  .so  those  links  were  not  created  by  a  LessTif
   installation from sources, but perhaps a very different installation!)
bin/mwm
bin/uil
bin/xmbind
include/Dt
include/Mrm
include/Xm
include/uil
lib/libDt.so*
lib/libDtPrint.so*
lib/libMrm.so*
lib/libUil.so*
lib/libXm.so*

   The  asterisk is the usual wildcard which indicates different suffixes
   here.
     _________________________________________________________________

                                Xlt and Xbae

   The  Xlt  and  Xbae  widget sets are two widget sets that used to come
   with  LessTif distributions, but that aren't part of the Motif clone.
   Accordingly  we finally removed them from the LessTif distribution and
   promoted  them  to  stand-alone  projects  which  have  their  own CVS
   repositories!
   If you want to learn more about them check out the according pages for
   [52]Xbae and [53]Xlt.
     _________________________________________________________________


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    Last modified on $Date: 2004/04/30 20:07:22 $

References

   1. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/core.html
   2. http://lynx.browser.org/
   3. http://links.browser.org/
   4. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#Binary_distributions_of_LessTif
   5. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#Building
   6. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#Prerequisites
   7. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#Configuring_LessTif
   8. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#LessTif_from_CVS
   9. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#LessTif_source_distribution
  10. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#find_everything
  11. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#tune_the_build
  12. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#Compiling_LessTif
  13. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#Building_Platforms
  14. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#compile_DU
  15. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#compile_HPUX
  16. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#compile_OS2
  17. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#compile_SOLARIS
  18. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#compile_Windows
  19. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#Installing_LessTif
  20. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#LessTif_built_from_source
  21. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#Binary_distributions_of_LessTif
  22. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#Installing_Platforms
  23. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#bin_FreeBSD
  24. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#bin_Linux
  25. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#bin_OS2
  26. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#bin_Windows
  27. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#After_LessTif
  28. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#Upgrading
  29. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#DefaultVersions
  30. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#InstallationTree
  31. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#Xlt_and_Xbae
  32. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/links.html#tools
  33. http://gcc.gnu.org/
  34. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#LessTif_from_CVS
  35. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/platforms.html
  36. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/links.html#tools
  37. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/cvs.html
  38. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/links.html#tools
  39. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#Prerequisites
  40. http://dmalloc.com/
  41. http://homepages.tu-darmstadt.de/~st002279/os2/lesstif.html
  42. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/FAQ.html#Platform_OS2
  43. http://xfree86.cygwin.com/
  44. ftp://ftp.xraylith.wisc.edu/pub/khan/gnu-win32/uwin/
  45. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#Building
  46. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#tune_the_build
  47. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/release-policy.html
  48. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/download.html
  49. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#After_LessTif
  50. http://xfree86.cygwin.com/
  51. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/INSTALL.html#Prerequisites
  52. http://www.sourceforge.net/projects/xbae
  53. http://www.sourceforge.net/projects/xlt
  54. http://validator.w3.org/check/referer
  55. file://localhost/home/danny/tmp/ltrel/lesstif/doc/www.lesstif.org/feedback.html
