+VII) Unix->Windows cross-compiling using configure
+--------------------------------------------------
+
+First you'll need a cross-compiler; linux glibc binaries of MinGW and
+Cygwin (both based on egcs) can be found at
+ftp://ftp.objsw.com/pub/crossgcc/linux-x-win32. Alternative binaries,
+based on the latest MinGW release can be found at
+http://members.telering.at/jessich/mingw/mingwcross/mingw_cross.html
+Otherwise you can compile one yourself.
+
+[ A Note about Cygwin and MinGW: the main difference is that Cygwin
+binaries are always linked against cygwin.dll. This dll encapsulates most
+standard Unix C extensions, which is very handy if you're porting unix
+software to windows. However, wxMSW doesn't need this, so MinGW is
+preferable if you write portable C(++). ]
+
+You might want to build both Unix and Windows binaries in the same source
+tree; to do this make subdirs for each e.g. unix and win32. If you've
+already build wxWindows in the main dir, do a 'make distclean' there,
+otherwise configure will get confused. (In any case, read the section 'Unix
+using configure' and make sure you're able to build a native wxWindows
+library; cross-compiling errors can be pretty obscure and you'll want to be
+sure that your configure setup is basically sound.)
+
+To cross compile the windows library, do
+-> cd win32
+(or whatever you called it)
+Now run configure. There are two ways to do this
+-> ../configure --host=i586-mingw32 --build=i586-linux --with-mingw
+where --build= should read whatever platform you're building on. Configure
+will notice that build and host platforms differ, and automatically prepend
+i586-mingw32- to gcc, ar, ld, etc (make sure they're in the PATH!).
+The other way to run configure is by specifying the names of the binaries
+yourself:
+-> CC=i586-mingw32-gcc CXX=i586-mingw32-g++ RANLIB=i586-mingw32-ranlib \
+ DLLTOOL=i586-mingw32-dlltool LD=i586-mingw32-ld NM=i586-mingw32-nm \
+ ../configure --host=i586-mingw32 --with-mingw
+
+(all assuming you're using MinGW)
+By default this will compile a DLL, if you want a static library,
+specify --disable-shared.
+
+Type
+-> make
+and wait, wait, wait. Don't leave the room, because the minute you do there
+will be a compile error :-)
+
+NB: if you are using a very old compiler you risk to get quite a few warnings
+ about "ANSI C++ forbids implicit conversion from 'void *'" in all places
+ where va_arg macro is used. This is due to a bug in (some versions of)
+ MinGW headers which may be corrected by upgrading your compier,
+ otherwise you might edit the file
+
+ ${install_prefix}/lib/gcc-lib/i586-mingw32/egcs-2.91.57/include/stdarg.h
+
+ (instead of egcs-2.91.57 you may have something different), searching for
+ the lines
+
+/* Define __gnuc_va_list. */
+
+#ifndef __GNUC_VA_LIST
+#define __GNUC_VA_LIST
+#if defined(__svr4__) || defined(_AIX) || defined(_M_UNIX) || defined(__NetBSD__)
+typedef char *__gnuc_va_list;
+#else
+typedef void *__gnuc_va_list;
+#endif
+#endif
+
+ and adding "|| defined(_WIN32)" to the list of platforms on which
+ __gnuc_va_list is char *.
+
+If this is successful, you end up with a wx23_2.dll/libwx23_2.a in win32/lib
+(or just libwx_msw.a if you opted for a static build).
+Now try building the minimal sample:
+
+-> cd samples/minimal
+-> make
+
+and run it with wine, for example (or copy to a Windows box)
+-> wine minimal.exe
+
+If all is well, do an install; from win32
+-> make install
+
+Native and cross-compiled installations can co-exist peacefully
+(as long as their widget sets differ), except for wx-config. You might
+want to rename the cross-compiled one to i586-mingw32-wx-config, or something.
+
+Cross-compiling TODO:
+---------------------
+- resource compiling must be done manually for now (should/can we link the
+default wx resources into libwx_msw.a?) [ No we can't; the linker won't
+link it in... you have to supply an object file ]
+- static executables are HUGE -- there must be room for improvement.