1.6 KiB
Compiling from source
Basic steps.
make [target]
where[target]
is amongcuda92, cuda10x, cuda110, cuda11x, cpuonly
CUDA_VERSION=XXX python setup.py install
To run these steps you will need to have the nvcc compiler installed that comes with a CUDA installation. If you use anaconda (recommended) then you can figure out which version of CUDA you are using with PyTorch via the command conda list | grep cudatoolkit
. Then you can install the nvcc compiler by downloading and installing the same CUDA version from the CUDA toolkit archive.
For your convenience, there is an installation script in the root directory that installs CUDA 11.1 locally and configures it automatically. After installing you should add the bin
sub-directory to the $PATH
variable to make the compiler visible to your system. To do this you can add this to your .bashrc
by executing these commands:
echo "export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:/usr/local/cuda/lib64/" >> ~/.bashrc
echo "export PATH=$PATH:/usr/local/cuda/bin/" >> ~/.bashrc
source ~/.bashrc
By default, the Makefile will look at your CUDA_HOME
environmental variable to find your CUDA version for compiling the library. If this path is not set it is inferred from the path of your nvcc
compiler.
Either nvcc
needs to be in path for the CUDA_HOME
variable needs to be set to the CUDA directory root (e.g. /usr/local/cuda
) in order for compilation to succeed
If you have problems compiling the library with these instructions from source, please open an issue.