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2001-09-17 Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi> * configure.in: Add variable for LT_CURRENT minus LT_AGE (the suffix used by libtool on Win32 for DLLs). Set variables for the compiled resource files on Windows. Handle the native Win32 gthread stuff. * glib/Makefile.am * gmodule/Makefile.am * gobject/Makefile.am: (Win32) Add minor hacks to link in the object file produced from the resource file. Use the lt-compile-resource script from the build module. The non-hack way would be to teach libtool, autoconf and automake about .rc files (which are a kind of source code, after all, that gets compiled to object files). But then there would be problems for those who wouldn't have bleeding edge auto* and libtool. * glib/glib.def * gobject/gobject.def: Updates. * glib/glib.rc.in * gmodule/gmodule.rc.in * gobject/gobject.rc.in * gthread/gthread.rc.in: Update InternalName and OriginalFilename to match libtool's naming convention for DLLs. * glib/gutils.c: Ditto when constructing the DLL name in the definition for GLIB_LOCALE_DIR. * glib/makefile.mingw.in * gmodule/makefile.mingw.in * gobject/makefile.mingw.in * gthread/makefile.mingw.in: Update import library names.
139 lines
5.6 KiB
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139 lines
5.6 KiB
Plaintext
General
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=======
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For more information about the port or GLib, GTk+ and the GIMP to
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native Windows, and pre-built binaries (DLLs), surf to
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http://www.gimp.org/win32/ . "Native" means that we use the Win32 API
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only, and no POSIX (Unix) emulation layer except that provided by the
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Microsoft runtime C library.
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To build GLib on Win32, you can use either gcc or the Microsoft
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compiler and tools. Both the compiler from MSVC 5.0 and from MSVC 6.0
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have been used successfully.
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But note that to just *use* GLib on Windows, there is no need to build
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it, prebuilt DLLs are available from the webiste above.
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The following preprocessor macros are used for conditional compilation
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related to Win32:
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- G_OS_WIN32 is defined when compiling for Win32, *and* without
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any POSIX emulation, other that to the extent provided by the
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bundled Microsoft C library (msvcrt.dll) and the pthreads-win32
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library. For instance, pathnames are in the native Windows syntax.
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- G_WITH_CYGWIN is defined if compiling for the Cygwin
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environment. Note that G_OS_WIN32 is *not* defined in that case, as
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Cygwin is supposed to behave like Unix. G_OS_UNIX *is* defined when
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compiling for Cygwin.
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- G_PLATFORM_WIN32 is defined when either G_OS_WIN32 or G_WITH_CYGWIN
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is defined.
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The Win32 port of GLib and related software uses only G_OS_WIN32. As
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G_OS_WIN32 is defined in glibconfig.h, it is available to all source
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files that use GLib (or GTk+, which uses GLib).
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Additionally, there are the compiler-specific macros:
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- __GNUC__ is defined when using GCC
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- _MSC_VER is defined when using the Microsoft compiler
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G_OS_WIN32 implies using the Microsoft C runtime MSVCRT.DLL. GLib is
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not known to work with the older CRTDLL.DLL runtime, or the static
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Microsoft C runtime libraries.
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Building software that use GLib or GTk+
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=======================================
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Even building software that just *use* GLib or GTk+ also require to
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have the right compiler set up the right way, so if you intend to use
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gcc, follow the relevant instructions below in that case, too.
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Libiconv
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========
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Before building GLib you must also have the libiconv library, either
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from the same website mentioned above, or from it's homepage at
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http://clisp.cons.org/~haible/packages-libiconv.html. Libiconv has
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makefiles for building with MS Visual C only, but as it is one source
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file only, building it "by hand" with gcc isn't hard.
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Where are the makefiles?
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========================
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If you are building from a CVS snapshot, you will not have any
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makefile.mingw or makefile.msc file. You should copy the corresponding
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makefile.mingw.in or makefile.msc.in file to that name, and edit the
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@GLIB_VERSION@ strings to the correct version number.
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This is done automatically when an official GLib source distribution
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package is built.
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Building GLib with gcc
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======================
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I use the latest gcc, gcc-2.95.3. Version 2.95.2 will most probably
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also work.
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You can either use gcc running on Cygwin, or the "pure" mingw
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gcc. Using the latter is much easier.
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Just fetch the latest version of gcc for mingw and the msvcrt runtime,
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from www.mingw.org.
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Set up your PATH so that the gcc from the bin directory that got
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created above is the one that gets used. Even if you run the mingw
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gcc, you still want to have Cygwin to run make in.
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Then run make -f makefile.mingw.
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I use the -fnative-struct flag, which means that in order to use the
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prebuilt DLLs (especially of GTK+), you *must* also use that flag.
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(This flag means that the struct layout is identical to that used by
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MSVC. This is essential if the same DLLs are to be usable both from
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gcc- and MSVC-compiled code, which definitely is a good thing.)
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It is also possible to use the auto*, ./configure and libtool
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mechanism when building for mingw. You should be running Cygwin, or
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maybe cross-compiling from real Unix, for the configure script to
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work, obviously. The same libtool issue has to be taken into account
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as when building for Cygwin: You most probably should have a very new
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libtool. Remember to invoke configure with CC='gcc -fnative-struct' if
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you want to produce DLLs binary compatible with the "official" ones.
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But please note that the ./configure mechanism should not blindly be
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used to build a GLib to be distributed to potential developers because
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it produces a compiler-dependent glibconfig.h (and config.h, but that
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shouldn't matter). For instance, the typedef for gint64 is long long
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with gcc, but __int64 with MSVC. Otherwise, there really shouldn't be
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any reason to distribute separate GLib DLLs for gcc and MSVC users, as
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both compiler+tools generate code that uses the same C runtime
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library. Thus one either has to edit glibconfig.h afterwards, or use
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the hand-written config.h.win32 and glibconfig.h.win32.
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There are probably also other hickups when using auto* and configure
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to build for mingw, sigh. Every now and then I try to get rid of the
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hand-written makefiles and configuration headers for Win32, and start
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fooling around with auto* etc, but after a while give up and fall
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back.
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If you want to run the Cygwin-based gcc, it gets a bit more
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complicated. We still want gcc to produce code that does not use
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Cygwin, but the msvcrt runtime. In theory it should work to use the
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-no-cygwin flag, but I haven't tested that lately.
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If you would want to use the Cygwin tools to generate a GLib that
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*does* use the Cygwin runtime, the normal Unix configuration method
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should work as if on Unix. Note that successfully producing shared
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libraries (DLLs) most probably requires you to have a very new
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libtool. (And a new libtool probably requires rather new autoconf and
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automake.)
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Building with MSVC
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==================
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If using the Microsoft toolchain, build with `nmake -f
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makefile.msc`.
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--Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
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