SUMO - Latest Release (Version 1.21.0)#
Release date: 10.10.2024
Windows#
Binaries (64 bit), all dlls needed, the examples, tools, and documentation in HTML format. For an explanation of the contents and the licensing (especially concerning the "extra" build which contains GPL code to support GeoTIFFs, shapefiles and 3D models), see the notes below.
- 64-bit installer: sumo-win64-1.21.0.msi138.9 MB
- 64-bit zip: sumo-win64-1.21.0.zip118.7 MB
- 64-bit installer with all extras (contains GPL code): sumo-win64extra-1.21.0.msi171.8 MB
- 64-bit zip with all extras (contains GPL code): sumo-win64extra-1.21.0.zip151.4 MB
SUMO is also available via winget so winget install --name sumo
should give you the latest release (but not the extra version).
SUMO-Game#
- Windows binaries: sumo-game-1.21.0.zip70.5 MB
Linux#
The community maintains several repositories notably at the open build service. For a detailed list of repositories see below.
Furthermore there are a debian and an ubuntu launchpad project as well as an archlinux package:
- https://salsa.debian.org/science-team/sumo.git
- https://launchpad.net/~sumo
- https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/sumo/
There is also a flatpak available for SUMO.
To add the most recent sumo to your ubuntu you will need to do:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:sumo/stable
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install sumo sumo-tools sumo-doc
Repositories#
If the repositories do not contain the libraries (like proj and gdal) they are either part of the distribution or you will need them from another repository (you may try one of the build service repositories here too, e.g. Application:Geo). At the moment there is no documentation included in the packages. The repositories include a nightly build as well (called sumo-git).
- openSUSE Leap 15.2 repository
- openSUSE Leap 15.3 repository
- openSUSE Leap 15.4 repository
- openSUSE Leap 15.5 repository
- openSUSE Tumbleweed repository
- Fedora 36 repository
- Fedora 37 repository
- Fedora 38 repository
- Fedora 39 repository
- Fedora Rawhide repository
- CentOS 7 repository
Examples#
Adding the repository and installing (the quick and dirty way without checking GPG keys!) looks like this, for yum on CentOS 7:
yum-config-manager --add-repo=https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/science:/dlr/CentOS_7/
yum install -y --nogpgcheck epel-release
yum install -y --nogpgcheck sumo-1.21.0
and like this, for zypper on openSUSE Leap 15.3:
zypper ar https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/science:/dlr/15.3/ science:dlr
zypper in sumo=1.21.0
I you leave out the version number it will install the latest nightly build.
Direct installation without adding the repository can be done in CentOS 8 like this:
sudo yum --nogpgcheck --repofrompath=centos,https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/science:/dlr/CentOS_8 install sumo
More instructions on how to install from open build service are here for the main project and here for the playground.
Ubuntu, Debian and Arch users please see the community repositories above.
macOS#
You can read the Homebrew-based installation guide here or follow the Build instructions here.
"Bottles" are available for installing with Homebrew. They are built for the three most recent macOS versions (currently Monterey, Ventura and Sonoma) and are built from source with minimal requirements (fox, proj, xerces-c). If you need optional libraries, you can specify these on the brew command line and brew will compile SUMO from source. For details, see the Formula's README.
Application launchers#
In order to have a more native feel on macOS, we provide some application launchers (icons / shortcuts). These launchers work with all versions of SUMO and do not need to be updated.
- Download SUMO launchers0.8 MB
These launchers allow you to select sumo-gui as the default application to open .sumocfg
files on macOS, and even add sumo-gui, netedit and the OSM Web Wizard to the dock.
Important notice
In order to use the launchers, make sure you have installed SUMO beforehand (any version) and have set the SUMO_HOME environment variable.
Sources#
Download the sources, examples, and CMake-files for creating Visual Studio solutions or Linux Makefiles. This download does not contain tests. Download as:
- sumo-src-1.21.0.tar.gz72.1 MB
- sumo-src-1.21.0.zip76 MB
Python packages / Virtual environments#
Starting with SUMO 1.8.0 (for macOS since 1.12.0) the installation is also possible from the Python packaging index.
You can install either the applications: pip install eclipse-sumo
or only traci (pip install traci
), libsumo (pip install libsumo
) or sumolib (pip install sumolib
).
This should work for Windows, macOS and all Linux versions which are more recent than 2014. The applications are available for Python 2 and Python 3, libsumo only for Python 3.6 and above. This gives an easy way to test a new SUMO version via virtual environments or a nightly build using the following commands (on Linux):
python -m venv sumo_test
cd sumo_test
. bin/activate
pip install eclipse-sumo
macOS dependencies
In order to use the Python wheels on macOS you need to have all the dependencies installed and up to date via brew for instance by following the standard installation once.
Additional Tools#
To take full advantage of all Python tools
please install the dependencies via pip install -r $SUMO_HOME/tools/requirements.txt
.
SUMO - Latest Development Version#
SUMO is under active development. You can find a continuously updated list of bug-fixes and enhancements at our ChangeLog. To make use of the latest features (and to give us pre-release feedback) we encourage you to use the latest version from our code repository.
Every push to our main branch also triggers a build for Windows, Linux and macOS. The results can be found by clicking on the relevant commit here and downloading the appropriate file for your platform (you may need to sign in to GitHub).
Nightly Snapshots#
The code within the repository is compiled each night. All Windows builds are for the 64bit platform. For an explanation of the contents and the licensing (especially concerning the "extra" build which contains GPL code to support GeoTIFFs, shapefiles and 3D models), see the notes below. The following packages can be obtained:
- Sources: https://sumo.dlr.de/daily/sumo-src-git.tar.gzDecember 20 2024 23:22:23 UTC76.9 MB
- Sources: https://sumo.dlr.de/daily/sumo-src-git.zipDecember 20 2024 23:22:18 UTC80.8 MB
- Sources and static HTML documentation: https://sumo.dlr.de/daily/sumo_git.orig.tar.gzDecember 20 2024 23:22:28 UTC80.6 MB
- Windows installer: https://sumo.dlr.de/daily/sumo-win64-git.msiDecember 20 2024 00:21:08 UTC151.4 MB
- Windows zip: https://sumo.dlr.de/daily/sumo-win64-git.zipDecember 20 2024 00:19:23 UTC131 MB
- Windows installer with all extras (contains GPL code): https://sumo.dlr.de/daily/sumo-win64extra-git.msiDecember 20 2024 04:23:44 UTC230.5 MB
- Windows zip with all extras (contains GPL code): https://sumo.dlr.de/daily/sumo-win64extra-git.zipDecember 20 2024 04:21:30 UTC210.2 MB
- Windows 64-bit binaries of the SUMO game: https://sumo.dlr.de/daily/sumo-game-win64-git.zipDecember 20 2024 00:22:15 UTC77.7 MB
- Windows 64-bit debug version: https://sumo.dlr.de/daily/sumo-win64Debug-git.zipDecember 20 2024 00:33:00 UTC331.5 MB
The nightly builds are also available as Python wheels. To install the latest nightly version (it is strongly encouraged to do this in a virtual environment) use the instructions above replacing the install line with:
pip install -f https://sumo.dlr.de/daily/wheels/ eclipse-sumo
Although this is a python package, it contains all compiled SUMO binaries and should be fully functional (see the requirements in the section above). The nightly python wheels are also available for libsumo, sumolib and traci.
The Linux repositories at the open build service contain a nightly build as well. This is unfortunately not the case for the Debian, Ubuntu and Arch versions.
The corresponding documentation is also visible live including Doxygen docs. Additional artifacts such as tests results and code coverage analysis are generated every night.
Caution
The available Windows binary packages may lag behind the latest Git revision due to being compiled only once per day (around midnight, Berlin time).
If you need even more recent builds, have a look at the artifacts of the GitHub actions. You will need to click on the commit and the platform you are interested in, e.g. windows
for Windows binaries.
Older releases and alternative download#
The release directory contains all release files since 1.2.0.
Those and older releases can also be obtained via the sourceforge download portal.
If you want to try out an older version you can also use the virtual environment approach
(explained above) with a fixed version, e.g.
pip install eclipse-sumo==1.9.0
(works only for 1.8.0 and later).
If you need a complete zipped snapshot of the repository (including tests) for an older version have a look at the tags in your local repository or at GitHub tags.
Other#
Direct repository access#
You can get the very latest sources directly from our Git repository, see the FAQ on repository access. Normally, they should compile and complete our test suite successfully. To assess the current state of the build, you may take a look at the nightly test statistics.
Packages#
SUMO is available as different packages. The contents of each package is listed in the table below.
bin | build | src (source code) | user docs | developer docs (doxygen) | data | examples | tutorials | tests | tools (except jars) | jars | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
sumo-src-XXX.tar.gz sumo-src-XXX.zip |
✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |||||
sumo-win??-XXX.zip sumo-win??-XXX.msi |
✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ||||
rpm | (✔) | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ |
Dependencies for developers#
For the Windows platform you can retrieve all dependencies by cloning this repository: https://github.com/DLR-TS/SUMOLibraries, if you want to develop with Visual Studio. If you just want to run SUMO, use the binary downloads above which already contain the runtime dependencies.
Scenarios and other Data#
Note on Licensing#
SUMO is licensed under the EPL-2.0 with GPL v2 or later as a secondary license option using only open source libraries.
The standard Windows build only contains code and Windows binaries with Eclipse approved licenses (especially no GPL code). If you need features like shapefile import, GeoTIFF processing, the OpenSceneGraph 3D GUI, or video generation, download the "extra" build.
The Linux packages do not contain external libraries at all.