commit | 157c95b9889b523a3de7772e85ef9f3f69182c88 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Nicolas Williams <nico@cryptonector.com> | Thu Jan 01 03:14:55 2015 -0600 |
committer | Nicolas Williams <nico@cryptonector.com> | Thu Jan 01 03:14:55 2015 -0600 |
tree | db80d81487c043910050c7f690587c890f494559 | |
parent | 426913f127de00837d53b1df108ce13c07f21131 [diff] |
Add mkstemp() for mingw build
jq is a command-line JSON processor.
If you want to learn to use jq, read the documentation at http://stedolan.github.io/jq. This documentation is generated from the docs/ folder of this repository. You can also try it online at jqplay.org.
If you want to hack on jq, feel free, but be warned that its internals are not well-documented at the moment. Bring a hard hat and a shovel. Also, read the wiki: http://github.com/stedolan/jq/wiki
If you‘re building directly from the latest git, you’ll need flex, bison, libtool, make, autoconf and libonig installed. To build, run:
autoreconf -i ./configure make -j8 make check
After make finishes, you'll be able to use ./jq
. You can also install it using:
sudo make install
If you‘re not using the latest git version but instead building a released tarball (available on the website), then you won’t need to run autoreconf
(and shouldn‘t), and you won’t need flex or bison.
To cross-compile for OS X and Windows, see docs/Rakefile‘s build task and scripts/crosscompile. You’ll need a cross-compilation environment, such as Mingw for cross-compiling for Windows.