This file gives information regarding the cvs tree of flex. The cvs tree of flex contains the files which are under version control by the flex maintainers for the flex project. You can learn about the details of retrieving a copy of the cvs flex tree from flex's SourceForge project page at: http://sourceforge.net/projects/flex If you are not interested in flex development or you are not in need of the latest bleeding-edge features, then the cvs flex tree is not for you. When you get a distribution of flex, a large number of intermediate files needed to make building flex easy are included. You don't have that in the cvs tree. You will need various external tools in order to build the distribution. Here is a (hopefully complete and correct) list of the required tools. Always get the latest version of each tool; we list the versions used in development of flex, but the listed versions may not work for you. compiler suite; e.g., gcc bash or some other fairly robust sh-style shell GNU bison; to generate parse.c from parse.y GNU m4 1.4; required by GNU autoconf (yes, it *must* be GNU m4) GNU autoconf 2.60 and GNU automake 1.10; for generating Makefiles etc. GNU gettext 0.14.5; for i18n flex (latest beta release); for bootstrap of scan.l help2man 1.36; to generate the flex man page tar, gzip, etc.; for packaging of the source distribution GNU texinfo 4.8; to build and test the flex manual perl; GNU automake and GNU autoconf now depend on perl to run GNU indent 2.8; for indenting the flex source the way we want it done Once you have all the necessary tools installed, life becomes simple. To prepare the flex tree for building, run the script: $ ./autogen.sh in the top level of the flex source tree. This script calls the various tools needed to get flex ready for the GNU-style configure script to be able to work. From this point on, building flex follows the usual configure, make, make install routine.