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Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <withnall@endlessm.com>
204 lines
8.9 KiB
Plaintext
204 lines
8.9 KiB
Plaintext
Tor Lillqvist <tml@iki.fi>
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Hans Breuer <hans@breuer.org>
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Note that this document is not really maintained in a serious
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fashion. Lots of information here might be misleading or outdated. You
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have been warned.
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The general parts, and the section about gcc and autoconfiscated
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build, and about a Visual Studio build are by Tor Lillqvist.
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General
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=======
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For prebuilt binaries (DLLs and EXEs) and developer packages (headers,
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import libraries) of GLib, Pango, GTK+ etc for Windows, go to
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http://www.gtk.org/download-windows.html . They are for "native"
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Windows meaning they use the Win32 API and Microsoft C runtime library
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only. No POSIX (Unix) emulation layer like Cygwin in involved.
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To build GLib on Win32, you can use either gcc ("mingw") or the
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Microsoft compiler and tools. For the latter, MSVC6 and later have
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been used successfully. Also the Digital Mars C/C++ compiler has
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reportedly been used.
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You can also cross-compile GLib for Windows from Linux using the
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cross-compiling mingw packages for your distro.
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Note that to just *use* GLib on Windows, there is no need to build it
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yourself.
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On Windows setting up a correct build environment can be quite a task,
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especially if you are used to just type "./configure; make" on Linux,
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and expect things to work as smoothly on Windows.
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The following preprocessor macros are to be used for conditional
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compilation related to Win32 in GLib-using code:
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- G_OS_WIN32 is defined when compiling for native Win32, without
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any POSIX emulation, other than to the extent provided by the
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bundled Microsoft C library (msvcr*.dll).
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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 by a GLib
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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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These macros are defined in glibconfig.h, and are thus available in
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all source files that include <glib.h>.
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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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- __DMC__ is defined when using the Digital Mars C/C++ compiler
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G_OS_WIN32 implies using the Microsoft C runtime, normally
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msvcrt.dll. GLib is not known to work with the older crtdll.dll
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runtime, or the static Microsoft C runtime libraries libc.lib and
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libcmt.lib. It apparently does work with the debugging version of
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msvcrt.dll, msvcrtd.dll. If compiled with Microsoft compilers newer
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than MSVC6, it also works with their compiler-specific runtimes, like
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msvcr70.dll or msvcr80.dll. Please note that it's non totally clear if
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you would be allowed by the license to distrubute a GLib linked to
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msvcr70.dll or msvcr80.dll, as those are not part of the operating
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system, but of the MSVC product. msvcrt.dll is part of Windows.
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For people using Visual Studio 2005 or later:
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If you are building GLib-based libraries or applications, or GLib itself
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and you see a C4819 error (or warning, before C4819 is treated as an error
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in msvc_recommended_pragmas.h), please be advised that this error/warning should
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not be disregarded, as this likely means portions of the build is not being
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done correctly, as this is an issue of Visual Studio running on CJK (East Asian)
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locales. This is an issue that also affects builds of other projects, such as
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QT, Firefox, LibreOffice/OpenOffice, Pango and GTK+, along with many other projects.
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To overcome this problem, please set your system's locale setting for non-Unicode to
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English (United States), reboot, and restart the build, and the code should build
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normally. See also this GNOME Wiki page [1] that gives a bit further info on this.
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Building software that use GLib or GTK+
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=======================================
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Building software that just *uses* GLib or GTK+ also require to have
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the right compiler set up the right way. If you intend to use gcc,
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follow the relevant instructions below in that case, too.
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Tor uses gcc with the -mms-bitfields flag which means that in order to
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use the prebuilt DLLs (especially of GTK+), if you compile your code
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with gcc, you *must* also use that flag. This flag means that the
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struct layout rules are identical to those used by MSVC. This is
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essential if the same DLLs are to be usable both from gcc- and
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MSVC-compiled code. Such compatibility is desirable.
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When using the prebuilt GLib DLLs that use msvcrt.dll from code that
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uses other C runtimes like for example msvcr70.dll, one should note
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that one cannot use such GLib API that take or returns file
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descriptors. On Windows, a file descriptor (the small integer as
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returned by open() and handled by related functions, and included in
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the FILE struct) is an index into a table local to the C runtime
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DLL. A file descriptor in one C runtime DLL does not have the same
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meaning in another C runtime DLL.
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Building GLib
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=============
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Again, first decide whether you really want to do this.
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Before building GLib you must also have a GNU gettext-runtime
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developer package. Get prebuilt binaries of gettext-runtime from
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http://www.gtk.org/download-windows.html .
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Autoconfiscated build (with gcc)
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================================
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Tor uses gcc 3.4.5 and the rest of the mingw utilities, including MSYS
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from www.mingw.org. Somewhat earlier or later versions of gcc
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presumably also work fine.
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Using Cygwin's gcc with the -mno-cygwin switch is not recommended. In
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theory it should work, but Tor hasn't tested that lately. It can
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easily lead to confusing situations where one mixes headers for Cygwin
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from /usr/include with the headers for native software one really
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should use. Ditto for libraries.
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If you want to use mingw's gcc, install gcc, win32api, binutils and
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MSYS from www.mingw.org.
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Tor invokes configure using:
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CC='gcc -mtune=pentium3 -mthreads' CPPFLAGS='-I/opt/gnu/include' \
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LDFLAGS='-L/opt/gnu/lib -Wl,--enable-auto-image-base' CFLAGS=-O2 \
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./configure --disable-gtk-doc --prefix=$TARGET
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The /opt/gnu mentioned contains the header files for GNU and (import)
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libraries for GNU libintl. The build scripts used to produce the
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prebuilt binaries are included in the "dev" packages.
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Please note that the ./configure mechanism should not blindly be used
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to build a GLib to be distributed to other developers because it
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produces a compiler-dependent glibconfig.h. For instance, the typedef
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for gint64 is long long with gcc, but __int64 with MSVC.
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Except for this and a few other minor issues, there shouldn't be any
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reason to distribute separate GLib headers and DLLs for gcc and MSVC6
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users, as the compilers generate code that uses the same C runtime
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library.
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The DLL generated by either compiler is binary compatible with the
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other one. Thus one either has to manually edit glibconfig.h
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afterwards, or use the supplied glibconfig.h.win32 which has been
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produced by running configure twice, once using gcc and once using
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MSVC, and merging the resulting files with diff -D.
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For MSVC7 and later (Visual C++ .NET 2003, Visual C++ 2005, Visual C++
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2008 etc) it is preferred to use specific builds of GLib DLLs that use
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the same C runtime as the code that uses GLib. Such DLLs should be
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named differently than the ones that use msvcrt.dll.
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For GLib, the DLL that uses msvcrt.dll is called libglib-2.0-0.dll,
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and the import libraries libglib-2.0.dll.a and glib-2.0.lib. Note that
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the "2.0" is part of the "basename" of the library, it is not
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something that libtool has added. The -0 suffix is added by libtool
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and is the value of "LT_CURRENT - LT_AGE". The 0 should *not* be
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thought to be part of the version number of GLib. The LT_CURRENT -
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LT_AGE value will on purpose be kept as zero as long as binary
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compatibility is maintained. For the gory details, see configure.ac
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and libtool documentation.
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Building with Visual Studio
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===========================
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A more detailed outline of building GLib with its dependencies can
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now be found on the GNOME wiki:
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https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/GTK%2B/Win32/MSVCCompilationOfGTKStack
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Please do not build GLib in paths that contain spaces in them, as
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this may cause problems during compilation and during usage of the
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library.
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In an unpacked tarball, you will find in build\win32\vs9 (VS 2008) and
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build\win32\vs10 (VS 2010) a solution file that can be used to build
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the GLib DLLs and some auxiliary programs under VS 2008 and VS 2010
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(Express Edition will suffice with the needed dependencies) respectively.
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Read the README.txt file in those folders for more
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information. Note that you will need a libintl implementation, zlib, and
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libFFI.
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If you are building from a GIT checkout, you will first need to use some
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Unix-like environment or run win32/setup.py,
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which will expand the VS 2008/2010 project files, the DLL resouce files and
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other miscellanious files required for the build. Run win32/setup.py
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as follows:
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$python win32/setup.py --perl path_to_your_perl.exe
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for more usage on this script, run
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$python win32/setup.py -h/--help
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[1]: https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/GTK%2B/Win32/MSVCCompilationOfGTKStack under "Preparations"
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