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[![Travis](https://api.travis-ci.org/mapbox/mapbox-gl-native.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/mapbox/mapbox-gl-native/builds)
An OpenGL renderer for [Mapbox Vector Tiles](https://www.mapbox.com/blog/vector-tiles), consisting of a C++ library for OS X and Linux and SDK bindings for iOS and Android.
# Depends
- Modern C++ compiler that supports `-std=c++14` (clang++ 3.5 or later or g++-4.9 or later)
- [Boost headers](http://boost.org/)
- [`zlib`](http://www.zlib.net/)
- [`libpng`](http://www.libpng.org/pub/png/libpng.html)
- [`libuv 0.10+`](https://github.com/joyent/libuv)
- [`glfw 3.1+`](http://www.glfw.org/)
- [`libcurl`](http://curl.haxx.se/libcurl/) (depends on OpenSSL; Linux only)
- Apple Command Line Tools (for build on OS X; available at [Apple Developer](https://developer.apple.com/downloads))
- `pkg-config` (for build only)
- [Homebrew](http://brew.sh) (for building on OS X)
- [Cask](http://caskroom.io/) (for building Android on OS X)
- Python 2.x (for build only)
# Build instructions
We try to link to as many system-provided libraries as possible. When these are unavailable or too outdated, we run a thin build-script layer called [Mason](https://github.com/mapbox/mason) to automate builds, and load precompiled binary packages when possible.
Be sure to pull down all submodules first:
git submodule init
git submodule update
## OS X
Prerequisites include the Boost headers (for routines provided therein) and ImageMagick (for tests). To install all prerequisites, use [Homebrew](http://brew.sh/) and type `brew install pkg-config boost imagemagick`.
To create projects, you can run:
- `make xproj`: Creates an Xcode project with OS X-specific handlers for HTTP downloads and settings storage. It uses [GLFW](http://www.glfw.org) for window handling.
- `make lproj`: Creates an Xcode project with platform-independent handlers for downloads and settings storage. This is what is also being built on Linux.
- `make osx run-osx`: Builds and runs the OS X application on the command line with `xcodebuild`.
- `make linux run-linux`: Builds and runs the Linux application with `make`.
- `make test-*` Builds and runs all tests. You can specify individual tests by replacing * with their name.
Note that you can't have more than one project in Xcode open at a time since they the static library project is shared across the OS X, Linux and iOS project.
Target OS X: 10.9+
## iOS
### Use
#### CocoaPods
CocoaPods is preferred. As of yet, Mapbox GL isn't in the global specs repo, but you can use it like so in your `Podfile`:
```ruby
use_frameworks!
pod 'MapboxGL', :podspec => 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mapbox/mapbox-gl-native/master/ios/MapboxGL.podspec'
```
Once the library stabilizes, a mere `pod 'MapboxGL'` will work.
#### Manually
1. Use [Homebrew](http://brew.sh/) to install Boost headers: `brew install boost`.
1. Install [appledoc](http://appledoc.gentlebytes.com/appledoc/) for API docs generation. We recommend [`2.2v963`](https://github.com/tomaz/appledoc/releases/tag/v2.2-963), which currently isn't available in Homebrew.
1. Run `make ipackage`. The packaging script will produce the statically-linked `libMapboxGL.a`, `MapboxGL.bundle` for resources, a `Headers` folder, and a `Docs` folder with HTML API documentation.
1. Copy the contents of `build/ios/pkg/static` into your project. It should happen automatically, but ensure that:
- `Headers` is in your *Header Search Paths* (`HEADER_SEARCH_PATHS`) build setting.
- `MapboxGL.bundle` is in your target's *Copy Bundle Resources* build phase.
- `libMapboxGL.a` is in your target's *Link Binary With Libraries* build phase.
1. Add the following Cocoa framework dependencies to your target's *Link Binary With Libraries* build phase:
- `CoreTelephony.framework`
- `GLKit.framework`
- `ImageIO.framework`
- `MobileCoreServices.framework`
- `QuartzCore.framework`
- `SystemConfiguration.framework`
- `libc++.dylib`
- `libsqlite3.dylib`
- `libz.dylib`
1. Add `-ObjC` to your target's "Other Linker Flags" build setting (`OTHER_LDFLAGS`).
1. [Set the Mapbox API access token](#mapbox-api-access-tokens).
1. `#import "MapboxGL.h"`
### Development
If you want to build from source and/or contribute to development of the project, run `make iproj`, which will create and open an Xcode project which can build the entire library from source as well as an Objective-C test app. If you don't have an Apple Developer account, change the destination from "My Mac" to a simulator such as "iPhone 6" before you run and build the app.
You can run `make itest` to run the included integration tests. Requires `gem install xcpretty`. If you want to run the tests in Xcode instead, first `make ipackage` to create a local static library version, then open `test/ios/ios-tests.xcodeproj`, and lastly `Command + U` on the `Mapbox GL Tests` application target.
Target devices: iPhone 4S and above (5, 5c, 5s, 6, 6 Plus) and iPad 2 and above (3, 4, Mini, Air, Mini 2, Air 2).
Target iOS: 7.0 through latest 8.x.
## Linux
We are using Ubuntu for development. While the software should work on other distributions as well, we are not providing explicit build instructions here.
Install GCC 4.9+ if you are running Ubuntu 13.10 or older. Alternatively, you can also use Clang 3.5+.
sudo add-apt-repository --yes ppa:ubuntu-toolchain-r/test
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install gcc-4.9 g++-4.9
export CXX=g++-4.9
Ensure you have git and other build essentials:
sudo apt-get install curl git build-essential zlib1g-dev automake \
libtool xutils-dev make cmake pkg-config python-pip \
libcurl4-openssl-dev libpng-dev libsqlite3-dev
Install glfw3 dependencies:
sudo apt-get install libxi-dev libglu1-mesa-dev x11proto-randr-dev \
x11proto-xext-dev libxrandr-dev \
x11proto-xf86vidmode-dev libxxf86vm-dev \
libxcursor-dev libxinerama-dev
Finally, install Boost. If you're running Ubuntu 12.04 or older, you need to install a backport PPA since the version provided by APT doesn't contain Boost Geometry:
sudo add-apt-repository --yes ppa:boost-latest/ppa
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install libboost1.55-dev
Otherwise, you can just install
sudo apt-get install libboost-dev libboost-program-options-dev
Then, you can then proceed to build the library:
git submodule update --init
make linux
Set an access token as described below, and then run:
make run-linux
## Android
Target devices: All Android devices on Android 4.0 or newer (API level >= 14).
### On Linux
Install a few build dependencies:
apt-get install -y make git build-essential automake \
libtool make cmake pkg-config lib32stdc++6 lib32z1
Install Oracle JDK 7 (requires license agreement) from http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/jdk7-downloads-1880260.html
export JAVA_HOME="/dir/to/jdk1.7.0_71"
Install the [Android NDK Revision 10d](https://developer.android.com/tools/sdk/ndk/index.html).
export ANDROID_NDK_PATH="/dir/to/android-ndk-r10d"
Install the Android SDK. We recommend doing this by way of [Android Studio](https://developer.android.com/sdk/installing/studio.html).
export ANDROID_HOME="/dir/to/android-sdk-linux"
Run:
make android
You can then open `android/java` in Android Studio via "Import Non-Android Studio Project".
### On OS X
Install Oracle JDK 7+:
brew cask install java
Install the [Android NDK Revision 10d](https://developer.android.com/tools/sdk/ndk/index.html) for 64-bit OS X:
brew install android-ndk
This will also install the dependency `android-sdk`.
Install [Android Studio](https://developer.android.com/sdk/installing/studio.html):
brew cask install android-studio
android
By default, the SDK will be installed to `/usr/local/opt/android-sdk`. If you open Android Studio at this point, you may get an error message telling you that it can't find a JVM, it's because you installed a custom Java VM from Oracle. Follow [these instructions](http://tools.android.com/recent/androidstudio1rc3_releasecandidate3released) to start Android Studio. You'll wind up setting these environment variables in your .bash_profile or similar:
echo "export ANDROID_HOME=`brew --prefix android-sdk`" >> .bash_profile
echo "export ANDROID_NDK_PATH=`brew --cellar android-ndk`/r10d" >> .bash_profile
# Replace <path to JDK> with something like /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.0_31.jdk
echo "export JAVA_HOME=<path to JDK>" >> .bash_profile
echo "export STUDIO_JDK=$JAVA_HOME" >> .bash_profile
Run:
make android
open -a Android\ Studio
You can then open `android/java` in Android Studio via "Import Non-Android Studio Project".
# Troubleshooting
To trigger a complete rebuild, run `make clean` and then start over generating the Xcode projects or Makefiles as described above.
If you are having trouble getting the dependencies right, you can blow away the `mason_packages` directory, or run `make distclean`. This means the Makefile and configure script will automatically install the dependencies again on the next try.
On OS X, you can also try clearing the Xcode cache with `make clear_xcode_cache`.
# Mapbox API access tokens
The demo applications use Mapbox vector tiles, which **require a Mapbox account and API access token**. Obtain an access token on the [Mapbox account page](https://www.mapbox.com/account/apps/).
For iOS and OS X use of the demo apps in Xcode, setup the access token by editing the scheme for the application target, then adding an environment variable with the name `MAPBOX_ACCESS_TOKEN`.
![edit scheme](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/98601/5460702/c4610262-8519-11e4-873a-8597821da468.png)
![setting access token in Xcode scheme](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/162976/5349358/0a086f00-7f8c-11e4-8433-bdbaccda2b58.png)
For Linux, set the environment variable `MAPBOX_ACCESS_TOKEN` to your token.
For Android, gradle will take the value of `MAPBOX_ACCESS_TOKEN` and save it to `android/java/app/src/main/res/raw/token.txt` where the app will read it from.
# Style
Some styles in JSON format are included at `./styles`. See the [style spec](https://github.com/mapbox/mapbox-gl-style-spec) for more details.
# Usage
## Desktop
- Press `X` to reset the transform
- Press `N` to reset north
- Press `Tab` to toggle debug information
- Press `Esc` to quit
## Mobile
- Pan to move
- Pinch to zoom
- Use two fingers to rotate
- Double-tap to zoom in one level
- Two-finger single-tap to zoom out one level
- Double-tap, long-pressing the second, then pan up and down to "quick zoom" (iPhone only, meant for one-handed use)
# Other notes
Under early development, this project was called LLMR (Low-Level Map Renderer), in case you see any lingering references to it.
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