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Emscripten SDK
The whole Emscripten toolchain is distributed as a standalone Emscripten SDK. The SDK provides all the required tools, such as Clang, Python, Node.js and Visual Studio integration along with an update mechanism that enables migrating to newer Emscripten versions as they are released.
You can also set up Emscripten from source, without the pre-built SDK, see "Installing from Source" below.
To get started with Emscripten development, grab one of the packages below:
Windows:
- Emscripten SDK Web Installer is a NSIS installer that always gets you the latest Emscripten SDK from the web: Downloads:
- Emscripten SDK Offline Installer is a NSIS installer that bundles together the Emscripten toolchain as an offline-installable package. Downloads:
- Portable Emscripten SDK is a zipped package of the Emscripten SDK that does not require system installation privileges. Just unzip and go:
Mac OS X:
- emsdk-portable.tar.gz: Emscripten SDK is available as a portable web-installer for OS X.
Linux:
- See the instructions section below.
As a prerelease version, you can also download the emsdk-1.13.0 package, which is the first release to migrate Emscripten to a new Clang backend. Note that this version might still be a bit rough on the edges.
Windows:
- Web Installer: emsdk-1.13.0-web-64bit.exe
- Offline Installer: emsdk-1.13.0-full-64bit.exe
- Portable zip: emsdk-1.13.0-portable-64bit.zip
Mac OS X:
- Download the emsdk-portable.tar.gz above, unzip it, and execute
./emsdk update
followed by./emsdk install sdk-1.13.0-64bit
to get the new backend version.
Check one of the topics below for what to do with the package you just downloaded.
The NSIS installers register the Emscripten SDK as a 'standard' Windows application. To install the SDK, download a NSIS .exe file above, double-click on it, and run through the installer to perform the installation. After the installer finishes, the full Emscripten toolchain will be available in the directory that was chosen during the installation, and no other steps are necessary. If your system has Visual Studio 2010 installed, the vs-tool MSBuild plugin will be automatically installed as well.
The Portable Emscripten SDK is a no-installer version of the SDK package. It is identical to the NSIS installer, except that it does not interact with the Windows registry, which allows Emscripten to be used on a computer without administrative privileges, and gives the ability to migrate the installation from one location (directory or computer) to another by just copying/zipping up the directory contents.
If you want to use the Portable Emscripten SDK, the initial setup process is as follows:
- Download and unzip the portable SDK package to a directory of your choice. This directory will contain the Emscripten SDK.
- Open a command prompt to the directory of the SDK.
- Run
emsdk update
. This will fetch the latest registry of available tools. - Run
emsdk install latest
. This will download and install the latest SDK tools. - Run
emsdk activate latest
. This will set up ~/.emscripten to point to the SDK.
Whenever you change the location of the Portable SDK (e.g. take it to another computer), re-run step 5.
Note: On OSX, type ./emsdk
instead of emsdk
above.
If you do not want to use the SDK, there exists guides for setting up Emscripten and its prerequisites manually, see
- Build Clang on Mac OS X.
- Download a prebuilt Clang on Mac OS X.
- Get Emscripten and Clang via brew by nathanhammond.
- Manual Emscripten setup on Windows.
The SDK is not available for Linux at the moment. To get started on Linux, see installing from source in the next section. The following links may also be useful (but might be out of date):
- For help on Ubuntu, you can follow the Getting Started on Ubuntu 12.10 guide for instructions on how to obtain the prerequisites and build Clang manually using CMake.
- For help on Debian, see this guide by EarthServer.
- Debian Jessie includes a emscripten package.
- rhelmer has provided a Vagrant VM for Emscripten, see emscripten-vagrant.
- Dirk Krause created an Amazon EC2 image for Emscripten.
Instead of using the SDK, you can grab the code and dependencies yourself. This is the preferred path on Linux, where the Emscripten SDK is currently not available.
Get the following:
- The Emscripten code, from github (git clone git://github.com/kripken/emscripten.git. The master branch is fine, it is guaranteed to always be stable. We merge to master only after all tests pass.)
- Emscripten's LLVM and Clang. Emscripten now has an LLVM backend ("fastcomp"), which means you need to use our LLVM+Clang. See "Getting Fastcomp" in the LLVM Backend page. (See also notes on that link about how to disable fastcomp and use a stock version of LLVM, if you want, although that is not recommended.)
- Node.js (0.8 or above; 0.10.17 or above to run websocket-using servers in node)
- Python 2.7.3
- Optionally, if you want to use Closure Compiler to minify your code as much as possible, you will also need Java.
Operating system notes:
- If you are on OS X, homebrew should be able to get you LLVM and Clang. They will probably show up in /usr/bin or /usr/local/bin.
- A complete OS X guide for getting Emscripten and all the dependencies the test suite needs is at https://gist.github.com/1974955 (note that you don't need everything there just to run this tutorial)
Additional Notes:
- Python is probably already installed if you are on Linux or OS X.
- Node.js and LLVM should have convenient binaries for your OS, but installing them from source is easy, just compile them in their directories, you don't need to bother with installing them systemwide (you will point Emscripten to them in the next step, where you set up directories).
The tools in the Emscripten toolchain can be accessed in various ways. Which one you use depends on your preference.
The Emscripten compiler is available on the command line by invoking emcc
or em++
. They are located in the folder emsdk/emscripten/<version>/
in the SDK. You can add this directory to PATH to get an easy access to the toolchain.
Check out the tutorial! See the Emscripten Tutorial page for help on how to get going with the tools from command line.
Start the Emscripten Command Prompt from Start Menu -> All Programs -> Emscripten -> Emscripten Command Prompt. This will spawn a new command prompt that has all the tools for the currently activated SDK version set to PATH. The Emscripten Command Prompt is analogous to the Visual Studio Command Prompt that ships with installations of Visual Studio.
After installing the vs-tool plugin, a new 'Emscripten' configuration will appear to the list of all Solution Configurations in Visual Studio. Activating that configuration for a solution/project will make Visual Studio run the project build through Emscripten, producing .html or .js output, depending on the project properties you set up.
The Emscripten SDK is effectively a small package manager for tools that are used in conjunction with Emscripten. The following glossary highlights the important concepts to help understanding the internals of the SDK:
- Tool: The basic unit of software bundled in the SDK. A Tool has a name and a version. For example, 'clang-3.2-32bit' is a Tool that contains the 32-bit version of the Clang v3.2 compiler.
- SDK: A set of tools. For example, 'sdk-1.5.6-32bit' is an SDK consisting of the tools clang-3.2-32bit, node-0.10.17-32bit, python-2.7.5.1-32bit and emscripten-1.5.6.
- Active Tool/SDK: Emscripten stores compiler configuration in a user-specific file ~/.emscripten. This file points to paths for Emscripten, Python, Clang and so on. If the file ~/.emscripten is configured to point to a Tool in a specific directory, then that tool is denoted as being active. The Emscripten Command Prompt always gives access to the currently active Tools. This mechanism allows switching between different SDK versions easily.
-
emsdk: This is the name of the manager script that Emscripten SDK is accessed through. Most operations are of the form
emsdk command
. To access the emsdk script, launch the Emscripten Command Prompt.
The following tasks are common with the Emscripten SDK:
Run emsdk help
or just emsdk
to get information about all available commands.
To get a list of all currently installed tools and SDK versions, and all available tools, run emsdk list
.
- A line will be printed for each tool/SDK that is available for installation.
- The text
INSTALLED
will be shown for each tool that has already been installed. - If a tool/SDK is currently active, a star (*) will be shown next to it.
Run the command emsdk install <tool/sdk name>
to download and install a new tool or an SDK version.
Run the command emsdk uninstall <tool/sdk name>
to delete the given tool or SDK from the local harddrive completely.
The command emsdk update
will fetch package information for all new tools and SDK versions. After that, run emsdk install <tool/sdk name>
to install a new version.
You can toggle between different tools and SDK versions by running emsdk activate <tool/sdk name>
.
A common and supported use case of the Emscripten SDK is to enable the workflow where you directly interact with the github repositories. This allows you to obtain new features and latest fixes immediately as they are pushed to the github repository, without having to wait for release to be tagged. You do not need a github account or a fork of Emscripten to do this. To switch to using the latest upstream git development branch incoming
, run the following:
emsdk install git-1.8.3 # Install git. Skip if the system already has it.
emsdk install sdk-incoming-64bit # Clone+pull the latest kripken/emscripten/incoming.
emsdk activate sdk-incoming-64bit # Set the incoming SDK as the currently active one.
If you want to use the upstream stable branch master
, then replace -incoming-
with -master-
above.
It is also possible to use your own fork of the Emscripten repository via the SDK. This is achieved with standard git machinery, so there if you are already acquainted with working on multiple remotes in a git clone, these steps should be familiar to you. This is useful in the case when you want to make your own modifications to the Emscripten toolchain, but still keep using the SDK environment and tools. To set up your own fork as the currently active Emscripten toolchain, first install the sdk-incoming
SDK like shown in the previous section, and then run the following commands in the emsdk directory:
cd emscripten/incoming
# Add a git remote link to your own repository.
git remote add myremote https://github.com/mygituseraccount/emscripten.git
# Obtain the changes in your link.
git fetch myremote
# Switch the emscripten-incoming tool to use your fork.
git checkout -b myincoming --track myremote/incoming
In this way you can utilize the Emscripten SDK tools while using your own git fork. You can switch back and forth between remotes via the git checkout
command as usual.
If you installed the SDK using a NSIS installer on Windows, launch 'Control Panel' -> 'Uninstall a program' -> 'Emscripten SDK'.
If you want to remove a Portable SDK, just delete the directory where you put the Portable SDK into.
-
On OSX, the git tool will not be installed automatically. Git is not a required core component, and is only needed if you want to use one of the development branches emscripten-incoming or emscripten-master directly, instead of the fixed releases. To install git on OSX, you can
- Install XCode, and in XCode, install XCode Command Line Tools. This will provide git to the system PATH. For more help on this step, see http://stackoverflow.com/questions/9329243/xcode-4-4-command-line-tools
- Install git directly from http://git-scm.com/
-
Also, on OSX, java is not bundled with the Emscripten SDK. After installing emscripten via emsdk, typing 'emcc --help' should pop up a OSX dialog "Java is not installed. To open java, you need a Java SE 6 runtime. Would you like to install one now?" that will automatically download a Java runtime to the system.
-
Emscripten requires the command line tool 'python2' to be present on OSX. On default OSX installations, this does not exist. To manually work around this issue, see step 10 at https://github.com/kripken/emscripten/wiki/Getting-started-on-Mac-OS-X
- The Visual Studio integration with the vs-tool package only supports Visual Studio 2010 at the moment, and requires the 32-bit version of emsdk to be used.