There are a set of configuration options to assist you in building a small memory footprint library. These configuration options turn off specific functionality in the Berkeley DB library, reducing the code size. These configuration options include:
--enable-smallbuild
Equivalent to individually specifying all of the following
configuration options. In addition, when compiling
building with the GNU gcc compiler, this option uses the
-Os
compiler build flag instead of the
default -O3
.
--with-cryptography=no
--disable-hash
--disable-heap
--disable-queue
--disable-replication
--disable-statistics
--disable-verify
--enable-stripped_messages
Strips message text from the error messages issued by Berkeley DB. This can reduce the size of the library by roughly another 22KB.
If your library has stripped messages, you can get an idea of what text should be issued for a given error message by using the Message Reference for Stripped Libraries guide.
--disable-cryptography
and
--enable-cryptography
are
deprecated in the Berkeley DB 11gR2 release.
Use --with-cryptography=no
and --with-cryptography=yes
instead.
The following configuration options will increase the size of the Berkeley DB library dramatically and are only useful when debugging applications:
In addition, static libraries are usually smaller than shared libraries. By default Berkeley DB will build both shared and static libraries. To build only a static library, configure Berkeley DB with the Configuring Berkeley DB option.
The size of the Berkeley DB library varies depending on the compiler, machine architecture, and configuration options. As an estimate, production Berkeley DB libraries built with GNU gcc version 4.X compilers have footprints in the range of 600KB to 1.4MB on 32-bit x86 architectures, and in the range of 700KB to 1.6MB on 64-bit x86 architectures.
For assistance in further reducing the size of the Berkeley DB library, or in building small memory footprint libraries on other systems, please contact Berkeley DB support.