From: Pierre Joye Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 00:17:54 +0000 (+0000) Subject: - if they are outdated/wrong, no need to confuse the users X-Git-Tag: php-5.3.2RC2~30 X-Git-Url: https://granicus.if.org/sourcecode?a=commitdiff_plain;h=65ca56c2fe171b641032f31f7895a6ff475f474e;p=php - if they are outdated/wrong, no need to confuse the users --- diff --git a/README.WIN32-BUILD-SYSTEM b/README.WIN32-BUILD-SYSTEM index 9d8044d2e3..d7d6e5c2b3 100644 --- a/README.WIN32-BUILD-SYSTEM +++ b/README.WIN32-BUILD-SYSTEM @@ -1,179 +1,6 @@ The Win32 Build System. -$Id$ -Wez Furlong - -NOTE: - These instructions are outdated, use at your own risk. - - -If you need help with the build system, send mail to -internals-win@lists.php.net; please don't email me directly. - -=========================================================== -Contents: -1. How to build PHP under windows - a. Requirements - b. Opening a command prompt - c. Generating configure.js - d. Configuring - e. Building - f. Cleaning up - g. Running the test suite - h. snapshot building - -2. How to write config.w32 files - x. to be written. - -=========================================================== -1. How to build PHP under windows -a. Requirements - - You need: - - Windows Scripting Host (cscript.exe) - - Microsoft Build Tools from: - Microsoft Visual Studio (VC6) or later - - You also need: - - bindlib_w32 [http://www.php.net/extra/bindlib_w32.zip] - - win32build [http://www.php.net/extra/win32build.zip] - - b. Opening the Build Environment Command Prompt: - - Using Visual Studio (VC6) - 1. Install it - 2. If you have a VC++ Command Prompt icon on your start menu, - click on it to get a Command Prompt with the env vars - set up correctly. - - If not, create a new shortcut and set the Target to: - - %comspec% /k "C:\Program Files\Microsoft Visual Studio\VC98\Bin\vcvars32.bat" - - You might also want to set the prompt to start in - a convenient location (such as the root of your - PHP source checkout). - - - Using Visual Studio .Net - 1. Install it. - 2. Under the Visual Studio .Net Tools sub menu of your start - menu, you should have a Visual Studio .Net Command Prompt - icon. If not, create a new shortcut and set the Target to: - - %comspec% /k "C:\Program Files\Microsoft Visual Studio .NET 2003\Common7\Tools\vsvars32.bat" - - You might also want to set the prompt to start in - a convenient location (such as the root of your - PHP source checkout). - - - Using the Platform SDK tools - 1. Download the Platform SDK: - http://www.microsoft.com/msdownload/platformsdk/sdkupdate/ - - - You need the Core SDK, which is approx 200MB to download - and requires approx 500MB of disk space. - - The other components of the SDK are not required by PHP - - You might be able to reduce the download size by downloading - the installer control component first and then selecting - only the Build Environment (around 30MB), but I haven't - tried this. - - ** Note: it seems that MS don't include the 32 bit - build tools in the platform SDK any longer, so - you will probably have very limited luck if you - don't also have VC++ or VS.Net already installed. - - 2. Once installed, you will have an icon on your start menu - that will launch the build environment; the latest SDK's - install a number of different versions of this; you probably - want to choose the Windows 2000 Retail build environment. - Clicking on this will open a command prompt with its Path, - Include and Lib env vars set to point to the build tools - and win32 headers. - -c. Generating configure - - Change directory to where you have your PHP 5 sources. - Run buildconf.bat. - -d. Configuring - - cscript /nologo configure.js --help - - Will give you a list of configuration options; these will - have the form: - - --enable-foo or --disable-foo or --with-foo or --without-foo. - - --enable-foo will turn something on, and is equivalent to - specifying --enable-foo=yes - - --disable-foo will turn something off, and is equivalent to - specifying --enable-foo=no - - --enable-foo=shared will attempt to build that feature as - a shared, dynamically loadable module. - - Sometimes a configure option needs additional information - about where to find headers and libraries; quite often - you can specify --enable-foo=option where option could be - the path to where to find those files. If you want to - specify a parameter and build it as shared, you can use - this syntax instead: --enable-foo=shared,option - - The same rules all apply to --with-foo and --without-foo; - the only difference is the way the options are named; - the convention is that --enable-foo means that you are - switching on something that comes with PHP, whereas - --with-foo means that you want to build in something - external to PHP. - -e. Building - - Once you have successfully configured your build (make - sure you read the output from the command to make sure - it worked correctly), you can build the code; simply type - - "nmake" at the command prompt, and it will build everthing - you asked for. - - Once the build has completed, you will find your binaries - in the build dir determined by configure; this is typically - Release_TS for release builds or Debug_TS for debug builds. - If you build a non-thread-safe build, it will use Release - or Debug to store the files. Also in this build dir you - will find sub directories for each module that went into - your PHP build. The files you'll want to keep are the - .exe and .dll files directly in your build dir. - -f. Cleaning Up - - You can automatically delete everything that was built - by running "nmake clean". This will delete everything - that was put there when you ran nmake, including the - .exe and .dll files. - -g. Running the test suite - - You can verify that your build is working well by running - the regression test suite. You do this by typing - "nmake test". You can specify the tests you want to run - by defing the TESTS variable - if you wanted to run the - sqlite test suite only, you would type - "nmake /D TESTS=ext/sqlite/tests test" - -h. Snapshot Building - - If you want to set up an automated build that will tolerate - breakages in some of the modules, you can use the - --enable-snapshot-build configure option to generate a - makefile optimized for that purpose. A snapshot build will - switch the argument parser so that the default option for - configure switches that your don't specify will be set - to "shared". The effect of this is to turn on all options - unless you explicitly disable them. When you have configured - your snapshot build, you can use "nmake build-snap" to build - everything, ignoring build errors in individual extensions - or SAPI. +See http://wiki.php.net/internals/windows/stepbystepbuild vim:tw=78:sw=1:ts=1:et