If you have used one of the older installation methods for the prover tools, read the next section first, then continue here.
If you already have a Diem development environment running, and just want to add prover tools, run (in the Diem root directory):
./scripts/dev_setup.sh -yp
. ~/.profile
This command should work on MacOS and Linux flavors like Ubuntu or CentOS. (Windows is currently not supported).
Notice that you have to include environment variable definitions in ~/.profile
into your shell. Depending on your
setup, the ~/.profile
may be already automatically loaded for each login shell, or it may not. If not, you may
need to add . ~/.profile
to your ~/.bash_profile
or other shell configuration manually.
The dev-setup.sh
command can be used to set up other parts of the Diem tool chain; use -h
for more information.
Specifically, if you have a fresh Diem enlistment and machine, you can use the following to install basic build
tools like Rust together with prover tools:
./scripts/dev_setup.sh -typ
. ~/.profile
Older installation methods of the prover tools stored z3, dotnet, and boogie at /usr/local/bin
and
/usr/local/share/dotnet
, which required root access. The new method described above stores all needed
tools in the user's $HOME
directory. This is the preferred way since it avoids messing with root access.
If you still have the tools at the public location, and/or have a custom installation of .Net, you may want
to consider to remove those to avoid any version mismatch, specifically if you plan on calling boogie
and z3
directly from the command line.
Also remove any definitions of environment variables Z3_EXE
and BOOGIE_EXE
from your .bashrc
or elsewhere.
The correct variable definitions have been automatically added to your .profile
when calling dev-setup.sh
.