Difference between revisions of "BuildingWindows"
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cd \dev\mumble | cd \dev\mumble | ||
qmake mumble.pro | qmake mumble.pro | ||
+ | lupdate mumble.pro | ||
+ | lrelease mumble.pro | ||
make clean | make clean | ||
make | make |
Revision as of 06:30, 2 December 2006
Contents
Building Mumble on Windows
Mumble has quite a few dependencies for building on Windows, and as the feature set grows, so does the list of dependencies. This page will try to detail the steps required to set up a Win32 build environment.
The paths used here equal the defaults assumed in the Mumble build files. You are free to change them, but you'll then need to change the mumble.pro file as well.
Also note, that if you are submitting a bug report for a selfbuilt executable, we expect you to either
- Follow these instructions to the letter
or
- Report any deviations from these instructions
Deviations means anything, from "I installed to the D: drive" to "I changed the gcc build options for Qt" or "I used another version of Speex".
Preparations
Create C:\dev, and inside that directory create a file prep.bat containing:
@echo off SET PATH=C:\dev\MinGW\bin;C:\dev\Qt4.2.2\bin;%PATH% SET QTDIR=C:\dev\Qt4.2.2
Start a new command shell (run cmd.exe) and
C: CD \dev prep.bat
Whenever something appears
like this
you're supposed to enter it in that command shell (or copy it from this webpage and rightclick in the command window and select Paste). When you later want to compile things, remember to call prep.bat first to set paths correctly.
Using your computer while compiling
Compilation is a almost 100% CPU bound job. The windows task switcher doesn't really understand that this isn't really an interactive application, and hence will happily make your entire desktop quite laggy just to gain 1% on the compile time. It is therefore recommended to open your task manager (Ctrl-Alt-Del), switch to Processes, locate cmd.exe, rightclick, Set Priority, BelowNormal. And answer Yes. Doing so will make sure your interactive things get priority. Note, however, that if you do other 100% cpu bound things (like play resource-intensive games), compilation will halt until you're done.
TortoiseSVN
Download the most recent version of TortoiseSVN at http://tortoisesvn.net/downloads and install it. The defaults are fine.
Download Mumble SVN
Open c:\dev, rightclick and SVN Checkout...
Repository is https://svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/mumble/trunk, checkout to C:\dev\mumble\
MinGW
Create a directory c:\dev\MinGW
Download the following files:
- http://prdownloads.sf.net/mingw/gcc-core-3.4.5-20060117-1.tar.gz?download
- http://prdownloads.sf.net/mingw/gcc-g++-3.4.5-20060117-1.tar.gz?download
- http://prdownloads.sf.net/mingw/gdb-6.3-2.exe?download
- http://prdownloads.sf.net/mingw/binutils-2.17.50-20060824-1.tar.gz?download
- http://prdownloads.sf.net/mingw/w32api-3.8.tar.gz?download
- http://prdownloads.sf.net/mingw/mingw-runtime-3.11.tar.gz?download
- http://prdownloads.sf.net/mingw/mingw32-make-3.81-1.tar.gz?download
and unzip them all to the C:\dev\MinGW directory. GDB is an installer, install it to C:\dev\MinGW
cd \dev\MinGW\bin copy mingw32-make.exe make.exe
Boost
Download http://prdownloads.sf.net/boost/boost_1_33_1.zip?download and http://prdownloads.sf.net/boost/boost-jam-3.1.13-1-ntx86.zip?download and unzip both to C:\dev\
cd \dev\boost_1_33_1 copy ..\boost-jam-3.1.13-1-ntx86\bjam.exe bjam -s"TOOLS=mingw" --prefix=C:\dev\Boost install
This might take a while, but when done you'll have Boost installed. Note that none of the other build dependencies do themselves depend on boost, so if you want you can just continue in a new command shell (but remember to call prep.bat). Once all is done, you can safely delete the boost_1_33_1 and boost-jam directories.
Microsoft Speech SDK
Go to http://www.microsoft.com/speech/download/sdk51/ and a bit down on the page is a download button for SpeechSDK51.exe. Download and install it to C:\dev\SpeechSDK
Microsoft DirectX SDK
Go to http://msdn.microsoft.com/directx/sdk/ and download the latest SDK. Install it to c:\dev\DXSDK\
Qt
Download http://www.trolltech.com/download?target=ftp://ftp.trolltech.com/qt/source/qt-win-opensource-src-4.2.2.zip and unzip to C:\dev. Rename the directory from qt-win-opensource-src-4.2.2 to Qt4.2.2
Go to C:\\dev\\Qt4.2.2\mkspecs\win32-g++ and open the file qmake.conf. Change the following lines:
QMAKE_CFLAGS_RELEASE = -O2 QMAKE_CFLAGS_DEBUG = -g QMAKE_LFLAGS = -mthreads -Wl,-enable-stdcall-fixup -Wl,-enable-auto-import -Wl,-enable-runtime-pseudo-reloc
into
QMAKE_CFLAGS_RELEASE = -O3 -march=pentium3 -mtune=pentium4 -mmmx -msse -ffast-math QMAKE_CFLAGS_DEBUG = -g -march=pentium3 -mtune=pentium4 -mmmx -msse -ffast-math QMAKE_LFLAGS = -Wl,-enable-stdcall-fixup -Wl,-enable-auto-import -Wl,-enable-runtime-pseudo-reloc
This will enable MMX and SSE instructions, and will also make sure Qt is tuned for modern architectures. It will also remove the exception threading support, which removes a few runtime dependencies.
cd \dev\Qt4.2.2 configure -debug-and-release -qt-sql-sqlite -no-qt3support -no-exceptions -qt-zlib -qt-gif -qt-libpng -qt-libmng -qt-libjpeg make
This will also take quite a while. However, once the configure stage is done, you can continue with the rest of the dependencies in a new window.
Speex
Go to C:\dev, rightclick and SVN Checkout. Repository is http://svn.xiph.org/trunk/speex. Checkout to C:\dev\speex, and set Revision to 11909.
cd \dev\mumble mkdir Debug mkdir Release cd \dev\speex\libspeex copy \dev\mumble\dependencies\libspeex.pro copy \dev\mumble\dependencies\speex.def qmake libspeex.pro mingw32-make clean mingw32-make debug release copy release\speex.dll ..\..\mumble\release copy release\libspeex.a ..\..\mumble\release copy debug\speex.dll ..\..\mumble\debug copy debug\libspeex.a ..\..\mumble\debug
This builds both a debug and release version of Speex, so you get full symbol information in your debug builds.
Building Mumble and Murmur
Once all of the above is done... Open C:\dev\mumble\mumble.pro and remove the line which says CONFIG += asio. That is only needed for ASIO support, which requires downloads of proprietary ASIO SDK to compile.
Note that this builds the debug versions, which is what we strongly recommend to use while developing. If you want to send the binary to someone else, use make release instead, which will result in a much smaller binary with fewer dependencies.
Mumble
cd \dev\mumble qmake mumble.pro lupdate mumble.pro lrelease mumble.pro make clean make
Murmur
cd \dev\mumble qmake murmur.pro make clean make