Difference between revisions of "Viewer 2 Microsoft Windows Builds"
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#* This should be version 2.8.4 (or above in the 2.8.x series). Add the <code>\bin</code> directory to your path. | #* This should be version 2.8.4 (or above in the 2.8.x series). Add the <code>\bin</code> directory to your path. | ||
# [http://www.cygwin.com/ Cygwin] | # [http://www.cygwin.com/ Cygwin] | ||
#* When you run the cygwin setup utility make sure you have selected to install '''patchutils''', '''flex''', '''bison''' (all located under "devel"), '''curl''' (under "Web"), and '''unzip''' (under "Archives"), which are not part of the default install. Do not install Cygwin Python or Mercurial. You won't need to use the Cygwin shell for anything. Add the <code>\bin</code> directory to your | #* When you run the cygwin setup utility make sure you have selected to install '''patchutils''', '''flex''', '''bison''' (all located under "devel"), '''curl''' (under "Web"), and '''unzip''' (under "Archives"), which are not part of the default install. Do not install Cygwin Python or Mercurial. You won't need to use the Cygwin shell for anything. Add the <code>\bin</code> directory to the '''very end''' of your path and make sure it stays that way. | ||
# Python (either [http://www.python.org/download/ Standard Python] or [http://www.activestate.com/activepython/downloads ActivePython]) | # Python (either [http://www.python.org/download/ Standard Python] or [http://www.activestate.com/activepython/downloads ActivePython]) | ||
#* Note: Version 2.7.1 has been reported to work with the build scripts. | #* Note: Version 2.7.1 has been reported to work with the build scripts. |
Revision as of 11:35, 2 June 2011
Work in progress These instructions are not yet complete or debugged as of May 31, 2011. |
When finished, we hope this page will constitute a complete recipe for compiling viewer 2 from source on a Windows machine.
Philosophy: to keep it brief, this page should only include steps we KNOW ARE NEEDED, not random hints. Extra details or open issues can go on the talk page.
Note: Following this recipe will probably take 6 to 12 hours of wall-clock time, and 2 to 6 hours of your time, if you're starting from a fresh Windows XP/Vista/7 system. |
Establish your programming environment
This is needed for compiling any viewer based on the LL open source code and only needs to be done once.
Install and update Visual Studio and SDKs
- Install Visual Studio 2010 (Express is okay)
- If you installed VS2010 Express also install Microsoft Visual C++ 2010 Redistributable Package
- Install Windows SDK for Windows 7 and .NET Framework 4 (ISO) or Windows SDK for Windows 7 and .NET Framework 4 (Web Install)
- Note: You may need to install the .NET 4 framework: Web install or Full install.
- Install DirectX SDK (June 2010)
- Run Microsoft Update, and keep running it until no updates are needed. This may take 6~8 iterations on older versions of windows.
- Note: For windows Vista and Windows 7, you need to select "Get updates from other Microsoft products" to get the updates for Visual Studio.
- For Windows XP, use the provided link above. The Windows Update menu item on your computer is not the correct updater to use.
- During the update cycles make sure you have picked up Microsoft Visual Studio 2010 Service Pack 1 (ISO) or (Web Install)
Install required development tools
Note: The order of the following installations should not matter. |
Note: If the installer for a particular package does not update your PATH environment setting you will have to do this manually. |
- CMake
- This should be version 2.8.4 (or above in the 2.8.x series). Add the
\bin
directory to your path.
- This should be version 2.8.4 (or above in the 2.8.x series). Add the
- Cygwin
- When you run the cygwin setup utility make sure you have selected to install patchutils, flex, bison (all located under "devel"), curl (under "Web"), and unzip (under "Archives"), which are not part of the default install. Do not install Cygwin Python or Mercurial. You won't need to use the Cygwin shell for anything. Add the
\bin
directory to the very end of your path and make sure it stays that way.
- When you run the cygwin setup utility make sure you have selected to install patchutils, flex, bison (all located under "devel"), curl (under "Web"), and unzip (under "Archives"), which are not part of the default install. Do not install Cygwin Python or Mercurial. You won't need to use the Cygwin shell for anything. Add the
- Python (either Standard Python or ActivePython)
- Note: Version 2.7.1 has been reported to work with the build scripts.
- Mercurial (either TortoiseHg or Mercurial Hg)
Install optional development tools
- Unicode NSIS (Nullsoft Scriptable Install System)
- This is the package installer used to build
Second_Life_<version-code>_LindenDeveloper_Setup.exe
. You only need this package if you are going to distribute the viewer you compile or if you want to install it locally.
- In the Configure VS2010 step below you will need to add a line in the Executable Directories section:
- 64 bit systems use
%ProgramFiles(x86)%\NSIS\Unicode
- 32 bit systems use
%ProgramFiles%\NSIS\Unicode
- 64 bit systems use
- This is the package installer used to build
- Notepad++
- You need to use an editor that conforms to the Coding Standard. In particular, you must not check in files with DOS line endings except in very limited circumstances; see How to avoid DOS line endings in Windows tools.
Install Autobuild
- Open up a DOS Command window
- CD to where you want to install autobuild. Do not have any spaces in the path to this directory.
- Do:
hg clone http://hg.secondlife.com/autobuild
- Modify your path statement to include the autobuild
/bin
directory
Configure VS2010
While you may choose to use autobuild for all your compiling you still need to establish certain settings internal to VS2010.
- Start the IDE
- Navigate to Tools > Options > Projects and Solutions > Build and Run and set maximum number of parallel projects builds to
1
.
- Check Tools > Settings > Expert Settings.
You need to set a number of paths.
Note: The following steps require an open visual studio project. It does not matter which project you use, as you will only change some global settings used by all projects when they are opened. The open project itself won't be changed. |
- Open any existing project you may have or make a New Project.
At the bottom on the Solution Explorer you will see three tabs.
- Click the one on the right labeled Property Manager. (The name may be somewhat truncated.)
- On the left side click to expand any project and then click again to expand the Release folder.
- Right click on Microsoft.Cpp.Win32.user.
- Pick Properties > VC++ Directories.
This is where the build environment is pulled together into a functional VC2010 build system and also where much hand wringing, hair pulling, and fist pounding frustration takes place.
- Set Executable Directories to:
$(ExecutablePath) $(DXSDK_DIR) $(WindowsSdkDir)\Bin C:\cygwin\bin $(SystemRoot)
32 bit Executable Directories example image
- Set Include Directories to:
$(WindowsSdkDir)\Include $(WindowsSdkDir)\Include\gl $(DXSDK_DIR)\Include
32 bit Include Directories example image
- Set Library Directories to:
$(WindowsSdkDir)\Lib $(DXSDK_DIR)
32 bit Library Directories example image
Set up your source code tree
Plan your directory structure ahead of time. If you are going to be producing changes or patches you will be cloning a copy of an unaltered source code tree for every change or patch you make, so you might want to have all this work stored in it's own directory.
To get a copy of the source code tree:
- Open up a DOS Command window
- CD to where you want to install viewer-development. Do not have any spaces in this path.
- Do:
hg clone http://hg.secondlife.com/viewer-development
Let's say some time has gone by since you have performed the previous steps and now you want to develop a change or work on a jira. You will update your clean local repository with all the changes committed to viewer-development since you last synchronized your files:
- Go into
viewer-development
- Do:
hg pull -u
- Move up one level from
viewer-development
- Do:
hg clone viewer-development VWR-nnnnn
Note: nnnnn
is the jira number. You can also clone to a name of your choosing if you are making changes not associated with the LL jira system.
Prepare third party libraries
Most third party libraries needed to build the viewer will be automatically downloaded for you and installed into the build directory within your source tree during the configuration step below. Some few need to be manually set up, though, when using an open source developer configuration (ReleaseOS
, RelWithDebInfoOS
or DebugOS
)
Note: If you are a Linden Lab employee or otherwise have legitimate access to s3-proxy.lindenlab.com, all third party libraries should be automatically downloaded and installed for you, so you may ignore this section completely. (In that case, make sure to use one of the LL-internal configurations, i.e. one without the OS -suffix in its name.) |
Fmod method 1 (using autobuild)
CD to where you want to install the 3p-fmod repository and do:
hg clone https://bitbucket.org/lindenlab/3p-fmod
CD into the 3p-fmod
directory you created and build it:
autobuild build --all
Package the results:
autobuild package
Update autobuild with the filename and hash just displayed. CD to the directory where you cloned viewer-development and do:
copy autobuild.xml my_autobuild.xml set AUTOBUILD_CONFIG_FILE=my_autobuild.xml autobuild installables edit fmod platform=windows hash=<hash> url=file:///<fmod-filespec>
Example:
copy autobuild.xml my_autobuild.xml autobuild installables edit fmod platform=windows hash=0f196f00e7dff49f22252efb68525658 url=file:///C:/3p-fmod/fmod-3.75-windows-20110531.tar.bz2
Note: Having to copy autobuild.xml and modify the copy from within a cloned repository is a lot of work for every repository you make, but this is the only way to guarantee you pick up upstream changes to autobuild.xml and do not send up a modified autobuild.xml when you do an hg push. |
Fmod method 2 (using switches)
[To be written up]
Configuring the Viewer
If you are compiling with Fmod you will need to do:
set AUTOBUILD_CONFIG_FILE=my_autobuild.xml
At the command line in the source tree's root directory (presumably a directory you have cloned from viewer-development, as it is not a good idea to work in viewer-development, unless you are only compiling for youself) e.g. C:\linden\VWR-12345\
) run:
autobuild configure -c [CONFIGURATION]
where [CONFIGURATION]
is one of those listed at Building the Viewer with Autobuild#Build a desired configuration (ReleaseOS
, RelWithDebInfoOS
, DebugOS
)
Compiling the Viewer
Compiling the viewer with autobuild
You can compile the viewer with either autobuild (the encouraged/supported method) or with the VS IDE.
When compiling with autobuild you will have the best chance of success if you:
- Navigate into the VS2010 program menu
- Click on Visual Studio Command Prompt (2010)
Important: If you are building with Fmod and have followed the previous Fmod setup instructions AND you are now using a new command window you will need to redo the set AUTOBUILD_CONFIG_FILE=my_autobuild.xml . |
- Run:
autobuild build -c [CONFIGURATION] --no-configure
There are some useful switches to know about, so your commands may look like this:
autobuild configure -c ReleaseOS -- -DLL_TESTS:BOOL=OFF -DPACKAGE:BOOL=OFF -DFMOD:BOOL=TRUE autobuild build -c ReleaseOS --no-configure
Note: It is possible to use autobuild to do both the configure step (only needed once) and the build step with one command. I find it is clearer and saves a bit of time if these steps are done separately. |
Compiling the viewer with the IDE
The autobuild configure step created the \build-vc100
directory at the root of the source tree. In here is the SecondLife.sln
solution file.
Start the IDE and open this solution.
You need to adjust the Platform Toolset setting.
- Select all the projects in the Solution Explorer list on the left of the screen.
- Click on the first project and scroll to the bottom of this list and Shift ⇧-click on the last project.
- Right click on the selected list
- Navigate to Properties > Configuration Properties > General > Platform Toolset
- Change this value to
Windows7.1SDK
You might want to change the build type in the drop-down from Debug to Release or RelWithDebInfo.
Push F7 to start the compiler.
Running your newly built viewer
- Make a shortcut for
Drive:\your-path\build-vc100\newview\Release\secondlife-bin.exe
- Right-click the shortcut, Properties, and set "Start in:" to
Drive:\your-path\indra\newview
Handling Problems
If you encounter errors or run into problems following the instructions above, please first check whether someone else already had the same issue. A solution might be known already. See the issue list below, check the talk page (and report useful experiences there) and search our issue tracker. Even when no description of your problem has been written down yet, someone might know about it, so get in touch with the community to get help.
Getting help
- Subscribe to OpenSource-Dev Mailing List (subscribe) and post your question there.
- For faster response, find a free IRC client program and join #opensl on freenode, the general open source viewer discussion and development channel. Hopefully a helpful person is online when you ask your question.
Common Issues/Bugs/Glitches And Solutions
Not being able to find objidl.h in the Microsoft Windows SDK, when compiling llwindow
https://lists.secondlife.com/pipermail/opensource-dev/2011-April/006562.html
- Can be caused by path problems or some installation conflicts with the DirectX SDK.
stdint.h typedef conflicts between Quicktime and VS2010
https://lists.secondlife.com/pipermail/opensource-dev/2011-April/006565.html
- Can be solved by some small edits to header files to make sure the two don't bash on each other.
Eliminate depreciated switches messages and use memory more efficiently
The VS2010 compiler uses a lot of memory while compiling the viewer. If you run out of memory you will start to page heavily and your compile time will become much longer. The /Zm1000 switch affects compiler memory usage.
You may see this message while compiling
use 'EHsc' instead of 'GX'
Here is how to free up some memory the compiler allocates and to eliminate these messages:
- Edit
\CMake 2.8\share\cmake-2.8\Modules\Platform\Windows-cl.cmake
- Replace line 156 with:
IF(MSVC10) SET(CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS_INIT "/DWIN32 /D_WINDOWS /W3 /EHsc /GR") ELSEIF(NOT MSVC10) SET(CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS_INIT "/DWIN32 /D_WINDOWS /W3 /Zm1000 /EHsc /GR") ENDIF(MSVC10)
- Replace line 172 with:
IF(MSVC10) SET(CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS_INIT "/DWIN32 /D_WINDOWS /W3 /EHsc /GR") ELSEIF(NOT MSVC10) SET(CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS_INIT "/DWIN32 /D_WINDOWS /W3 /Zm1000 /GX /GR") ENDIF(MSVC10)
- Replace line 184 with :
IF(MSVC10) SET(CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS_INIT "/DWIN32 /D_WINDOWS /W3 /EHsc /GR") ELSEIF(NOT MSVC10) SET(CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS_INIT "/DWIN32 /D_WINDOWS /W3 /Zm1000 /GX /GR") ENDIF(MSVC10)
References
Tip of the hat to Nicky_Perian for User:Nicky_Perian/Visual_Studio_10_Autobuild