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1 ------------------------------------------------------------------------
2 How to build the sources from CVS
3 ------------------------------------------------------------------------
4
5 Please use the install.txt files in docs/gtk, docs/msw, docs/motif, docs/mac
6 etc. alongside these instructions.
7
8 I) Windows using plain makefiles
9 ----------------------------------------
10
11 a) If using Microsoft Visual C++ 5.0 or 6.0
12
13 Ensure that the command-line compiler and tools (including
14 nmake) are installed and ready to run. Depending on your
15 installation there may be a batch file (named something like
16 VCVARS32.BAT) that needs to be run to set correct environment
17 varaibles and PATH entries.
18
19 Continue with item c) below.
20
21
22 b) If using the MinGW or Cygwin compilers
23
24 You can get MinGW from http://www.mingw.org/
25
26 Cygwin is available at http://sources.redhat.com/cygwin/
27
28 The makefile might have small problems with Cygwin's tools
29 so it is recommended to use MinGW and its toolchain instead
30 if possible.
31
32 -> Set your path so that it includes the directory
33 where your compiler and tools reside
34
35 -> If your are using an old MinGW version (gcc-2.95 or older),
36 you might need to fix some headers with the patches contained
37 in the wxWin\Mingw32-gcc295.patches file. PLEASE APPLY THESE
38 PATCHES BY HAND! There are apparently a few different versions
39 of the headers floating around. Note that these patches are
40 not needed if you are using MinGW gcc-2.95.2 or newer.
41
42 -> Edit wx/src/makeg95.env and set the MINGW32 variable at the top of
43 the file to either 1 (you have MinGW) or 0 (you have Cygwin).
44 Also set the MINGW32VERSION variable appropiately.
45
46
47 c) Build instructions
48
49 -> Assumming that you installed the wxWindows sources
50 into c:\wxWin
51 -> Copy c:\wxWin\include\wx\msw\setup0.h
52 to c:\wxWin\include\wx\msw\setup.h
53 -> Edit c:\wxWin\include\wx\msw\setup.h to choose
54 the features you would like to compile wxWindows with[out].
55
56 and std iostreams are disabled with
57 #define wxUSE_STD_IOSTREAM 0
58
59 -> type: cd c:\wxWin\src\msw
60 -> type: make -f makefile.g95 (if using GNU tools)
61 or type: nmake -f makefile.vc (if using MS VC++)
62
63 See also docs/msw/install.txt for additional compilation options.
64
65 d) Borland (including free command line tools)
66 Download tools from http://www.borland.com/downloads/
67
68 See docs/msw/install.txt for details; in brief
69
70 -> type set WXWIN=c:\wxwindows
71 -> type cd %WXWIN%\src\msw
72 -> type make -f makefile.b32
73
74 II) Unix ports
75 --------------
76
77 Building wxGTK or wxMotif completely without configure
78 won't ever work, but there is now a new makefile system
79 that works without libtool and automake, using only
80 configure to create what is needed.
81
82 In order to create configure, you need to have the
83 GNU autoconf package (version 2.13 or 2.14) installed
84 on your system and type run "autoconf" in the base
85 directory (or run the autogen.sh script in the same
86 directory, which just calls autoconf).
87
88 Set WXWIN environment variable to the base directory such
89 as ~/wxWindows (this is actually not really needed).
90
91 -> type: export WXWIN=~/wxWindows
92 -> type: md mybuild
93 -> type: cd mybuild
94 -> type: ../configure --with-motif
95 or type: ../configure --with-gtk
96 -> type: make
97 -> type: su <type root password>
98 -> type: make install
99 -> type: ldconfig
100 -> type: exit
101
102 Call configure with --disable-shared to create a static
103 library. Calling "make uninstall" will remove the installed
104 library and "make dist" will create a distribution (not
105 yet complete).
106
107 III) Windows using configure
108 ----------------------------------------
109
110 wxWindows can be built on Windows using MSYS (see
111 http://www.mingw.org/), which is a POSIX build environment
112 for Windows. With MSYS you can just ./configure && make (see also VII,
113 Unix->Windows cross-compiling using configure).
114
115 Of course, you can also build the library using plain makefiles (see
116 section I).
117
118 IV) Classic MacOS using CodeWarrior (eg MacOS 8.x/9.x)
119 ----------------------------------------
120
121 Refer to the readme.txt and install.txt files in docs/mac to build
122 wxWindows under Classic Mac OS using CodeWarrior.
123
124 If you are checking out the CVS sources using cvs under Mac OS X and
125 compiling under Classic Mac OS:
126
127 - make sure that all text files have a Mac OS type of 'TEXT' otherwise
128 CodeWarrior may ignore them. Checking out the CVS sources using cvs
129 under Mac OS X creates untyped files which can lead to compilation
130 errors under CodeWarrior which are hard to track down.
131
132 - convert the xml files to CodeWarrior binary projects using the supplied
133 AppleScript in docs/mac (M5xml2mcp.applescript for CodeWarrior 5.3)
134
135 V) MacOS X using configure and the Developer Tools
136 ----------------------------------------
137
138 You need to have the Developer Tools installed. If this is not the case,
139 you will need to register at the Apple Developer web site (this is a free
140 registration) in order to download the Developer Tools installer.
141
142 In order to create configure, you need to have the
143 GNU autoconf package (version 2.13 or 2.14) installed
144 on your system and type run "autoconf" in the base
145 directory (or run the autogen.sh script in the same
146 directory, which just calls autoconf).
147
148 -> type: mkdir macbuild
149 -> type: cd macbuild
150 -> type: ../configure --with-mac
151 or type: ../configure
152 -> type: make
153
154 VI) OS/2
155 ----------------------------------------
156
157 VII) Unix->Windows cross-compiling using configure
158 --------------------------------------------------
159
160 First you'll need a cross-compiler; linux glibc binaries of MinGW and
161 Cygwin (both based on egcs) can be found at
162 ftp://ftp.objsw.com/pub/crossgcc/linux-x-win32. Alternative binaries,
163 based on the latest MinGW release can be found at
164 http://members.telering.at/jessich/mingw/mingwcross/mingw_cross.html
165 Otherwise you can compile one yourself.
166
167 [ A Note about Cygwin and MinGW: the main difference is that Cygwin
168 binaries are always linked against cygwin.dll. This dll encapsulates most
169 standard Unix C extensions, which is very handy if you're porting unix
170 software to windows. However, wxMSW doesn't need this, so MinGW is
171 preferable if you write portable C(++). ]
172
173 You might want to build both Unix and Windows binaries in the same source
174 tree; to do this make subdirs for each e.g. unix and win32. If you've
175 already build wxWindows in the main dir, do a 'make distclean' there,
176 otherwise configure will get confused. (In any case, read the section 'Unix
177 using configure' and make sure you're able to build a native wxWindows
178 library; cross-compiling errors can be pretty obscure and you'll want to be
179 sure that your configure setup is basically sound.)
180
181 To cross compile the windows library, do
182 -> cd win32
183 (or whatever you called it)
184 Now run configure. There are two ways to do this
185 -> ../configure --host=i586-mingw32 --build=i586-linux --with-mingw
186 where --build= should read whatever platform you're building on. Configure
187 will notice that build and host platforms differ, and automatically prepend
188 i586-mingw32- to gcc, ar, ld, etc (make sure they're in the PATH!).
189 The other way to run configure is by specifying the names of the binaries
190 yourself:
191 -> CC=i586-mingw32-gcc CXX=i586-mingw32-g++ RANLIB=i586-mingw32-ranlib \
192 DLLTOOL=i586-mingw32-dlltool LD=i586-mingw32-ld NM=i586-mingw32-nm \
193 ../configure --host=i586-mingw32 --with-mingw
194
195 (all assuming you're using MinGW)
196 By default this will compile a DLL, if you want a static library,
197 specify --disable-shared.
198
199 Type
200 -> make
201 and wait, wait, wait. Don't leave the room, because the minute you do there
202 will be a compile error :-)
203
204 NB: if you are using a very old compiler you risk to get quite a few warnings
205 about "ANSI C++ forbids implicit conversion from 'void *'" in all places
206 where va_arg macro is used. This is due to a bug in (some versions of)
207 MinGW headers which may be corrected by upgrading your compier,
208 otherwise you might edit the file
209
210 ${install_prefix}/lib/gcc-lib/i586-mingw32/egcs-2.91.57/include/stdarg.h
211
212 (instead of egcs-2.91.57 you may have something different), searching for
213 the lines
214
215 /* Define __gnuc_va_list. */
216
217 #ifndef __GNUC_VA_LIST
218 #define __GNUC_VA_LIST
219 #if defined(__svr4__) || defined(_AIX) || defined(_M_UNIX) || defined(__NetBSD__)
220 typedef char *__gnuc_va_list;
221 #else
222 typedef void *__gnuc_va_list;
223 #endif
224 #endif
225
226 and adding "|| defined(_WIN32)" to the list of platforms on which
227 __gnuc_va_list is char *.
228
229 If this is successful, you end up with a wx23_2.dll/libwx23_2.a in win32/lib
230 (or just libwx_msw.a if you opted for a static build).
231 Now try building the minimal sample:
232
233 -> cd samples/minimal
234 -> make
235
236 and run it with wine, for example (or copy to a Windows box)
237 -> wine minimal.exe
238
239 If all is well, do an install; from win32
240 -> make install
241
242 Native and cross-compiled installations can co-exist peacefully
243 (as long as their widget sets differ), except for wx-config. You might
244 want to rename the cross-compiled one to i586-mingw32-wx-config, or something.
245
246 Cross-compiling TODO:
247 ---------------------
248 - resource compiling must be done manually for now (should/can we link the
249 default wx resources into libwx_msw.a?) [ No we can't; the linker won't
250 link it in... you have to supply an object file ]
251 - static executables are HUGE -- there must be room for improvement.
252