--- /dev/null
+..
+
+Start your Own Project
+======================
+
+It is not advised to modify the simgrid source code directly, as it
+will make it difficult to upgrade to the next version of SimGrid.
+Instead, you should create your own working directory somewhere on
+your disk (say `/home/joe/MyFirstScheduler/`), and write your code in
+there.
+
+Building your project with CMake
+--------------------------------
+
+Here is a `CMakeLists.txt` that you can use as a starting point for
+your project. It builds two simulators from a given set of source files.
+
+.. code-block:: cmake
+
+ project(MyFirstScheduler)
+
+ set(CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS "${CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS} -std=c++11")
+
+ set(CMAKE_MODULE_PATH ${CMAKE_MODULE_PATH} "${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/cmake/Modules/")
+ find_package(SimGrid REQUIRED)
+ include_directories(${SimGrid_INCLUDE_DIR})
+
+ set(SIMULATOR_SOURCES main.c other.c util.c)
+ add_executable(my_simulator ${SIMULATOR_SOURCES})
+ target_link_libraries(my_simulator ${SimGrid_LIBRARY})
+
+ set(OTHER_SOURCES blah.c bar.c foo.h)
+ add_executable(other_xp ${OTHER_SOURCES})
+ target_link_libraries(other_xp ${SimGrid_LIBRARY})
+
+
+For that, you need <a href="https://github.com/simgrid/simgrid/blob/master/FindSimGrid.cmake">FindSimGrid.cmake</a>,
+that is located at the root of the SimGrid tree. You can either copy
+this file into the `cmake/Modules` directory of your project, or use
+the version installed on the disk. Both solutions present advantages
+and drawback: if you copy the file, you have to keep it in sync
+manually but your project will produce relevant error messages when
+trying to compile on a machine where SimGrid is not installed. Please
+also refer to the file header for more information.
+
+Building your project with Makefile
+-----------------------------------
+
+Here is a Makefile that will work if your project is composed of three
+C files named ``util.h``, ``util.c`` and ``mysimulator.c``. You should
+take it as a starting point, and adapt it to your code. There is a
+plenty of documentation and tutorial on Makefile if the file's
+comments are not enough for you.
+
+.. code-block:: makefile
+
+ # The first rule of a Makefile is the default target. It will be built when make is called with no parameter
+ # Here, we want to build the binary 'mysimulator'
+ all: mysimulator
+
+ # This second rule lists the dependencies of the mysimulator binary
+ # How this dependencies are linked is described in an implicit rule below
+ mysimulator: mysimulator.o util.o
+
+ # These third give the dependencies of the each source file
+ mysimulator.o: mysimulator.c util.h # list every .h that you use
+ util.o: util.c util.h
+
+ # Some configuration
+ SIMGRID_INSTALL_PATH = /opt/simgrid # Where you installed simgrid
+ CC = gcc # Your compiler
+ WARNING = -Wshadow -Wcast-align -Waggregate-return -Wmissing-prototypes \
+ -Wmissing-declarations -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes \
+ -Wmissing-declarations -Wmissing-noreturn -Wredundant-decls \
+ -Wnested-externs -Wpointer-arith -Wwrite-strings -finline-functions
+
+ # CFLAGS = -g -O0 $(WARNINGS) # Use this line to make debugging easier
+ CFLAGS = -g -O2 $(WARNINGS) # Use this line to get better performance
+
+ # No change should be mandated past that line
+ #############################################
+ # The following are implicit rules, used by default to actually build
+ # the targets for which you listed the dependencies above.
+
+ # The blanks before the $(CC) must be a Tab char, not spaces
+ %: %.o
+ $(CC) -L$(SIMGRID_INSTALL_PATH)/lib/ $(CFLAGS) $^ -lsimgrid -o $@
+ %.o: %.c
+ $(CC) -I$(SIMGRID_INSTALL_PATH)/include $(CFLAGS) -c -o $@ $<
+
+ clean:
+ rm -f *.o *~
+ .PHONY: clean
+
+Develop in C++ with Eclipse
+----------------------------------------
+
+If you wish to develop your plugin or modify SimGrid using
+Eclipse. You have to run cmake and import it as a Makefile project.
+
+Next you have to activate C++11 in your build settings, add -std=c++11
+in the CDT GCC Built-in compiler settings.
+
+.. image:: images/eclipseScreenShot.png
+
+
+Building the Java examples in Eclipse
+-------------------------------------
+
+If you want to build our Java examples in Eclipse, get the whole
+source code and open the archive on your disk. In Eclipse, select
+the menu "File / Import", and then in the wizard "General / Existing
+Project into Workspace". On the Next page, select the directory
+"examples/java" that you can find in the SimGrid source tree as a root
+directory and finish the creation.
+
+The file ``simgrid.jar`` must be in the root directory of the SimGrid
+tree. That's where it is built by default, but if you don't want to
+compile it yourself, just grab that file from the SimGrid website and
+copy it in here.
+
+Please note that once you better understand SimGrid, you should not
+modify the examples directly but instead create your own project in
+eclipse. This will make it easier to upgrade to another version of
+SimGrid.
+
+Troubleshooting your project setup
+----------------------------------
+
+Library not found
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+When the library cannot be found, you will get such an error message similar:
+
+.. code-block:: shell
+
+ ./masterworker1: error while loading shared libraries: libsimgrid.so: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
+
+To fix this, give the path to where you installed the library into the
+``LD_LIBRARY_PATH`` variable. You can add the following line to your
+``~/.bashrc`` so that it gets executed each time you log into your
+computer.
+
+.. code-block:: shell
+
+ export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/opt/simgrid/lib
+
+
+Many undefined references
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+.. code-block:: shell
+
+ masterworker.c:209: undefined reference to `sg_version_check'
+ masterworker.c:209: undefined reference to `MSG_init_nocheck'
+ (and many other undefined references)
+
+This happens when the linker tries to use the wrong library. Use
+``LD_LIBRARY_PATH`` as in the previous item to provide the path to the
+right library.
+
+Only a few undefined references
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+Sometimes, the compilation only spits very few "undefined reference"
+errors. A possible cause is that the system selected an old version of
+the SimGrid library somewhere on your disk.
+
+Dicover which version is used with ``ldd name-of-yoursimulator``.
+Once you've found the obsolete copy of SimGrid, just erase it, and
+recompile and relaunch your program.