Sure, go ahead and download the binaries from the elastik.org page. You are done and this page is noise for you.
If, on the other hand, you need to get the latest Ilastik version and some feature you only know about because you are deep into things… then you might njoy this nice page: https://github.com/ilastik/ilastik-build-conda
Interested in tracking?
Once you reach point 2 on that page, use a modified version of this line:
-
env CPLEX_ROOT_DIR=~/Applications/IBM/ILOG/CPLEX_Studio126 conda install --channel stuarteberg ilastik-deps-tracking
Note: precondition is to have a running version of CPLEX installed on your machine.
If you set your .bashrc correctly, this should now start ilastik for you:
-
source activate ilastikenv
-
PYTHONPATH="ilastik:lazyflow:volumina" python ilastik/ilastik.py
Note: Step two above works if you are in the ‘ilastik-meta’ git repository. All libraries dowloaded for the conda environment are below your conda installation folder (in env/ilastikenv).
Hope this does the trick and your ilastik start screen looks somewhat like this:
If CPLEX refuses to work on your machine, here a description for how to get CPLEX running: http://ilastik.org/documentation/basics/installation.html
Does ilastik not show you the tracking workflows after you installed as described above — you might miss the necessary CPLEX dylibs. Here an excerpt of the ilastik installation documentation for how to create them:
First figure which gcc version you use by calling…
gcc --version
and look at the output. This should be either GCC 4.2.1
, or Apple LLVM (clang)
. The folders used to specify the location of the libraries in cases involving clang
depend on whether you installed from cplex_studio1251.macos.bin
or cplex_studio1251.osx.bin
. If you installed the first one, you need to replace x86-64_osx
by x86-64_darwin
.
- If the compiler is
GCC 4.2.1
, use the commands below (in the respective folders where the files are located)g++ -fpic -shared -Wl,-all_load libcplex.a -Wl,-noall_load -o libcplex.dylib g++ -fpic -shared -Wl,-all_load libilocplex.a -Wl,-noall_load -o libilocplex.dylib g++ -fpic -shared -Wl,-all_load libconcert.a -Wl,-noall_load -o libconcert.dylib
- If the compiler is
clang
and you have OSX version < 10.9, then you need to supply the symbols ofcplex
andconcert
when buildinglibilocplex.dylib
:g++ -fpic -shared -Wl,-all_load libcplex.a -Wl,-noall_load -o libcplex.dylib g++ -fpic -shared -Wl,-all_load libconcert.a -Wl,-noall_load -o libconcert.dylib g++ -fpic -shared -Wl,-all_load libilocplex.a -Wl,-noall_load -L. -L../../../../concert/lib/x86-64_osx/static_pic -lcplex -lconcert -o libilocplex.dylib
- If the compiler is
clang
and you have OSX 10.9 Mavericks, then you need to specify the correct C++ standard library to use in addition to the commands above:g++ -fpic -shared -Wl,-all_load libcplex.a -Wl,-noall_load -stdlib=libstdc++ -o libcplex.dylib g++ -fpic -shared -Wl,-all_load libconcert.a -Wl,-noall_load -stdlib=libstdc++ -o libconcert.dylib g++ -fpic -shared -Wl,-all_load libilocplex.a -Wl,-noall_load -L. -L../../../../concert/lib/x86-64_osx/static_pic -lcplex -lconcert -stdlib=libstdc++ -o libilocplex.dylib install_name_tool -id @executable_path/../Frameworks/libcplex.dylib libcplex.dylib install_name_tool -id @executable_path/../Frameworks/libconcert.dylib libconcert.dylib install_name_tool -id @executable_path/../Frameworks/libilocplex.dylib libilocplex.dylib install_name_tool -change libcplex.dylib @executable_path/../Frameworks/libcplex.dylib libilocplex.dylib install_name_tool -change libconcert.dylib @executable_path/../Frameworks/libconcert.dylib libilocplex.dylib
If you replace ‘@executable_path/../Frameworks' by the absolute path (this is in fact required for the whole thing to work with conda) to respective libraries you are guarenteed to
get working dylibs, and
prevent any reuse in different location... ;)
otool -L <library-name> can be used to check if your dylib mods where successful.