Installation
The ViennaRNA Package comes with a variety of executable programs
and scripts as well as a C-library that provides access to our
implemented algorithms. Moreover, the C-library is wrapped to
scripting languages such as Perl 5
and Python
.
Note
For best portability the ViennaRNA package uses the GNU
autoconf
and automake
tools to prepare the compilation
from source code. Read the Configuration section
before you install our software if you intend to deviate
from the default setup.
Installing from Source
The instructions below are for installing the ViennaRNA package from source. However, pre-compiled binaries for various Linux distributions, as well as for Windows users are available at the download section of the official ViennaRNA homepage.
See also…
Quick-start
Usually you’ll just download the latest source tarball, unpack, configure and make. To do this type:
tar -zxvf ViennaRNA-2.6.4.tar.gz
cd ViennaRNA-2.6.4
./configure
make
sudo make install
Installing from git repository
You can also get the latest source code from our git repository hosted at https://github.com:
git clone https://github.com/ViennaRNA/ViennaRNA.git
However, to proceed with the configuration and installation you need to perform
some additional steps before actually running the ./configure
script:
Unpack the
libsvm
archive to allow for SVM Z-score regression with the programRNALfold
:
tar -xzf src/libsvm-3.31.tar.gz -C src
Unpack the
dlib
archive to allow for concentration dependency computations with the programRNAmultifold
:
tar -xjf src/dlib-19.24.tar.bz2 -C src
Install the additional maintainer tools
gengetopt
,help2man
,flex
,xxd
, andswig
if necessary. For instance, in RedHat based distributions, the following packages need to be installed:gengetopt
(to generate command line parameter parsers)help2man
(to generate the man pages)yacc
,flex
andflex-devel
(to generate sources forRNAforester
)vim-common
(for thexxd
program)swig
(to generate the scripting language interfaces)liblapacke
(forRNAxplorer
)liblapack
(forRNAxplorer
)A
fortran
compiler, e.g.gcc-gfortran
(forRNAxplorer
)
Finally, run the
autoconf
/automake
toolchain:
autoreconf -i
After that, you can compile and install the ViennaRNA Package as if obtained from the distribution tarball.
Building the reference manual
Our implementations are documented with extra comments that are automatically parsed by doxygen. The extracted API documentation is then processed further by breathe and finally integrated into a comprehensive reference manual written in ReStructuredText. This manual is then usually compiled into HTML and PDF format by Sphinx.
We provide pre-compiled versions of the reference manual in our distribution tarballs and HTML versions at https://www.tbi.univie.ac.at/RNA/ViennaRNA/refman and https://viennarna.readthedocs.io. However, under certain circumstances users might want to compile the reference manual themselves, e.g. when installing from git repository.
To succeed with the compilation the following tools are required:
doxygen
(to extract the API documentation)
sphinx-build
(to compile the manual)
pdflatex
(to compile a PDF version of the manual)
In addition, we use the following sphinx extensions:
sphinx-multiproject
myst-parser
sphinx-copybutton
sphinxcontrib-bibtex
sphinx-rtd-theme
If all the above programs and python
packages are available, compilation
of the reference manual should succeed without any further problems.
Installation without root privileges
If you do not have root privileges on your computer, you might want to install the ViennaRNA
Package to a location where you actually have write access to. To do so, you can set the
installation prefix of the ./configure
script like so:
./configure --prefix=/home/username/.local
make install
This will install the entire ViennaRNA Package into your home’s ~/.local/
directory that
is commonly used for user-installed software. Just make sure that your PATH
environment
variable contains the $HOME/.local/bin
directory such that our executables are looked-up
for at the proper location.
Tip
The --prefix
can be any other directory if you want to keep your installed
software separate from each other. The make install
command will then create the corresponding
bin/
, lib/
, share/
directories within the directory you specified.
MacOS X users
Although users will find /usr/bin/gcc
and /usr/bin/g++
executables in their directory
tree, these programs are not at all what they pretend to be. Instead of including the GNU
programs, Apple decided to install clang
/llvm
in disguise. Unfortunately, the default
version of clang
/llvm
does not support OpenMP
(yet), but only complains at a late
stage of the build process when this support is required. Therefore, it seems necessary to
deactivate OpenMP support, e.g.:
./configure --disable-openmp
See also…
Using conda
The ViennaRNA Package is also available for the conda
or mamba
package
manager. The only requirement is to set up the bioconda
channels
conda config --add channels defaults
conda config --add channels bioconda
conda config --add channels conda-forge
conda config --set channel_priority strict
and then you can easily install the viennarna bioconda package through
conda install viennarna
Binary packages
For convenience, we provide pre-compiled binary packages and installers for several Linux-based platforms, Microsoft Windows, and Mac OS X. They can be obtained from our official website.
Python interface only
The Python 3 interface for the ViennaRNA Package library is
available at PyPI and can
be installed independently using Python’s pip
:
python -m pip install viennarna
Building the Python package
Our source tree allows for building/installing the Python 3 interface
separately. For that, we provide the necessary packaging files
pyproject.toml
, setup.cfg
, setup.py
and MANIFEST.in
.
They are created by our autoconf
toolchain after a successful
run of ./configure
. Particular default compile-time features may be
(de-)activated by setting the corresponding boolean flags in
setup.cfg
. Running
python -m build
will then create a source distribution (sdist
) and a binary
package (wheel
) in the dist/
directory. These files can be
easily installed via Python’s pip
.
Note
If you are about to create the Python interface from a fresh
clone of our git repository, you require additional steps after
running ./configure
as described above. In particular, some
autogenerated static files that are compiled into RNAlib must
be generated. To do so, run
cd src/ViennaRNA/static
make
cd ../../..
Additionally, if building the reference manual is not explicitly turned off, the Python interface requires docstrings to be generated. They are taken from the doxygen xml output which can be created by
cd doc
make refman-html
cd ..
Finally, the swig wrapper must be build using
cd interfaces/Python
make RNA/RNA.py
cd ../..
After these steps, the Python sdist
and wheel
packages can
be build as usual.
Unofficial Julia Interface
An unofficial interface of the ViennaRNA Package for the Julia Programming Language exists at JuliaHub.