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author | Egor Tensin <Egor.Tensin@gmail.com> | 2017-01-07 23:50:59 +0300 |
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committer | Egor Tensin <Egor.Tensin@gmail.com> | 2017-01-07 23:50:59 +0300 |
commit | 3dbb71f6b99433bae23ea8ae9e0dfd5661e043de (patch) | |
tree | d29edd88ba4fa8aba7c792f6a89dcf8ecd43bef6 /_posts/2017-01-07-building-boost.md | |
parent | make the sidebar two-column (diff) | |
download | blog-3dbb71f6b99433bae23ea8ae9e0dfd5661e043de.tar.gz blog-3dbb71f6b99433bae23ea8ae9e0dfd5661e043de.zip |
add "Building Boost on Windows"
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-rw-r--r-- | _posts/2017-01-07-building-boost.md | 220 |
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diff --git a/_posts/2017-01-07-building-boost.md b/_posts/2017-01-07-building-boost.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..193b786 --- /dev/null +++ b/_posts/2017-01-07-building-boost.md @@ -0,0 +1,220 @@ +--- +title: Building Boost on Windows +layout: post +excerpt: > + This post describes the process of building Boost on Windows using either + Visual Studio or the combination of Cygwin & MinGW-w64. +--- +Below you can find the steps required to build Boost libraries on Windows. +These steps tightly fit my typical workflow, which is to use Boost libraries in +CMake builds using either Visual Studio or the combination of Cygwin & +MinGW-w64. +I would expect, however, that the procedure for the latter toolset can easily +be adjusted for generic GCC distributions (including vanilla GCCs found in +popular Linux distributions). + +One of the features of this workflow is that I build throwaway, "run once on +each VM, record the results, and scrap it" executables not more often than not, +so I prefer to link everything statically, including for instance the C/C++ +runtimes. +This is implemented by passing `runtime-link=static` to Boost's build utility +`b2`; change this to `runtime-link=dynamic` to link the runtime dynamically. + +Visual Studio +------------- + +Statically-linked Boost libraries are built by default, both the debug and the +release versions of them. +While it is required to keep x86/x64 libraries in different directories (to +avoid file name clashes), it's not necessary to separate debug libraries from +their release counterparts, because that information is actually encoded in +file names (the "gd" suffix). + +### x86 + +``` +> cd +D:\workspace\third-party\boost_1_61_0\msvc + +> bootstrap +... + +> b2 --stagedir=stage\x86 ^ + runtime-link=static ^ + --with-filesystem ^ + --with-program_options ^ + ... +... +``` + +### x64 + +The only important difference is that you have to pass `address-model=64` to +`b2` (notice also the different "stage" directory). + +``` +> cd +D:\workspace\third-party\boost_1_61_0\msvc + +> bootstrap +... + +> b2 --stagedir=stage\x64 ^ + runtime-link=static ^ + address-model=64 ^ + --with-filesystem ^ + --with-program_options ^ + ... +... +``` + +Cygwin + MinGW-w64 +------------------ + +Contrary to the Visual Studio example above, it is required to store debug and +release libraries *as well as* x86 and x64 libraries in different directories. +It is required to avoid file name clashes; unlike the Visual Studio "toolset" +(in Boost's terms), GCC-derived toolsets don't encode any information (like +whether the debug or the release version of a library was built) in file names. + +Also, linking the runtime statically doesn't really make sense for MinGW, as it +always links to msvcrt.dll, which is [simply Visual Studio 6.0 runtime]. + +[simply Visual Studio 6.0 runtime]: https://sourceforge.net/p/mingw-w64/wiki2/The%20case%20against%20msvcrt.dll/ + +In the examples below, only the debug versions of the libraries are built. +Build the release versions by executing the same command, and substituting +`variant=release` and the proper "stage" directory path. + +### x86 + +``` +> cd +/cygdrive/d/workspace/third-party/boost_1_61_0/mingw + +> ./bootstrap.sh +... + +> cat user-config-x86.jam +using gcc : : i686-w64-mingw32-g++ ; + +> ./b2 toolset=gcc-mingw \ + target-os=windows \ + link=static \ + variant=debug \ + --stagedir=stage/x86/debug \ + --user-config=user-config-x86.jam \ + --with-filesystem \ + --with-program_options \ + ... +... +``` + +### x64 + +Notice the two major differences from the x86 example: + +* `b2 address-model=64 ...` (as in the example for Visual Studio), +* the different user configuration file, pointing to `x86_64-w64-mingw32-g++` +instead of `i686-w64-mingw32-g++`. + +Again, as in the example for Visual Studio, a different "stage" directory needs +to be specified using the `--stagedir` parameter. + +``` +> cd +/cygdrive/d/workspace/third-party/boost_1_61_0/mingw + +> ./bootstrap.sh +... + +> cat user-config-x64.jam +using gcc : : x86_64-w64-mingw32-g++ ; + +> ./b2 toolset=gcc-mingw \ + address-model=64 \ + target-os=windows \ + link=static \ + variant=debug \ + --stagedir=stage/x64/debug \ + --user-config=user-config-x64.jam \ + --with-filesystem \ + --with-program_options \ + ... +... +``` + +Usage in CMake +-------------- + +### Visual Studio + +Examples below apply to Visual Studio 2015. +You may want to adjust the paths. + +#### x86 + +``` +> cd +D:\workspace\build\test_project\msvc\x64 + +> cmake -G "Visual Studio 14 2015" ^ + -D BOOST_ROOT=D:\workspace\third-party\boost_1_61_0\msvc ^ + -D BOOST_LIBRARYDIR=D:\workspace\third-party\boost_1_61_0\msvc\stage\x86\lib ^ + -D Boost_USE_STATIC_LIBS=ON ^ + -D Boost_USE_STATIC_RUNTIME=ON ^ + ... +``` + +#### x64 + +``` +> cd +D:\workspace\build\test_project\msvc\x86 + +> cmake -G "Visual Studio 14 2015 Win64" ^ + -D BOOST_ROOT=D:\workspace\third-party\boost_1_61_0\msvc ^ + -D BOOST_LIBRARYDIR=D:\workspace\third-party\boost_1_61_0\msvc\stage\x64\lib ^ + -D Boost_USE_STATIC_LIBS=ON ^ + -D Boost_USE_STATIC_RUNTIME=ON ^ + ... +``` + +### Cygwin & MinGW-w64 + +Examples below only apply to debug CMake builds. +Notice that, contrary to the Visual Studio examples above, debug *and* release +builds must be kept in separate directories. +You may also want to adjust the paths. + +#### x86 + +``` +> cd +/cygdrive/d/workspace/build/test_project/mingw/x86/debug + +> cmake -G "Unix Makefiles" \ + -D CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug \ + -D CMAKE_C_COMPILER=i686-w64-mingw32-gcc \ + -D CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=i686-w64-mingw32-g++ \ + -D BOOST_ROOT=/cygdrive/d/workspace/third-party/boost_1_61_0/mingw \ + -D BOOST_LIBRARYDIR=/cygdrive/d/workspace/third-party/boost_1_61_0/mingw/x86/debug/lib \ + -D Boost_USE_STATIC_LIBS=ON \ + ... +``` + +#### x64 + +``` +> cd +/cygdrive/d/workspace/build/test_project/mingw/x64/debug + +> cmake -G "Unix Makefiles" \ + -D CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug \ + -D CMAKE_C_COMPILER=x86_64-w64-mingw32-gcc \ + -D CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=x86_64-w64-mingw32-g++ \ + -D BOOST_ROOT=/cygdrive/d/workspace/third-party/boost_1_61_0/mingw \ + -D BOOST_LIBRARYDIR=/cygdrive/d/workspace/third-party/boost_1_61_0/mingw/x64/debug/lib \ + -D Boost_USE_STATIC_LIBS=ON \ + ... +``` |