This document is an overview of building and installing Modules on a Windows platform.
Modules consists of one Tcl script so to run it from a user shell the only
requirement is to have a working version of tclsh (version 8.4 or later)
available on your system. tclsh is a part of Tcl.
A specific distribution zipball is provided to install Modules on a Windows platform. Content of this distribution zipball is ready for use and does not require a specific build step. All scripts and documentation found in this zipball are pre-built so there is no specific tools are required to install Modules from the Windows-specific distribution zipball.
- Install a Tcl binary distribution for Windows like ActiveTcl or Magicsplat Tcl/Tk for Windows. Follow instructions provided with the chosen distribution to install it.
Once installed, verify that the
tclshcommand is correctly found in definedPATHby typing the following command from a Windowscmdshell (windowsstring should be obtained as result):> echo puts $tcl_platform(platform) | tclsh windows
Download Modules specific distribution zipball for Windows from SourceForge or GitHub. Such distribution archives are available for Modules release starting version
4.5.0and can be distinguished from the source tarball by the-winsuffix in their name.
- Unpack downloaded zip file then enter deflated directory and execute the
INSTALL.batscript file found in it. This script installs files by default inC:\Program Files\Environment Modules\directory and adds thebindirectory in this installation location to the system-widePATHenvironment variable.
Note
INSTALL.bat script may require to be run with administrator
rights to perform installation correctly.
Once installed, verify that the
modulecommand is correctly found in definedPATHby typing the following command from a Windowscmdshell:> module -V Modules Release 4.4.1 (2020-01-03)
Installation location can be adapted by running the INSTALL.bat script
from a cmd console shell and passing desired installation target as
argument. For instance to install Modules in C:\EnvironmentModules
directory:
> INSTALL.bat C:\EnvironmentModules
Modules installation is now operational and you can setup your modulefiles. By
default, the modulefiles directory in installation directory is defined as
a modulepath and contains few modulefile examples:
> module avail ------- C:/Program Files/Environment Modules/modulefiles -------- module-git module-info null
Documentation of the :ref:`module(1)` and :ref:`ml(1)` commands and
:ref:`modulefile(4)` syntax can be found in the doc directory in
installation directory.