| The Steps to Build Git with VS2015 or VS2017 from the command line. |
| |
| 1. Install the "vcpkg" open source package manager and build essential |
| third-party libraries. The steps for this have been captured in a |
| set of convenience scripts. These can be run from a stock Command |
| Prompt or from an SDK bash window: |
| |
| $ cd <repo_root> |
| $ ./compat/vcbuild/vcpkg_install.bat |
| |
| The vcpkg tools and all of the third-party sources will be installed |
| in this folder: |
| <repo_root>/compat/vcbuild/vcpkg/ |
| |
| A file will be created with a set of Makefile macros pointing to a |
| unified "include", "lib", and "bin" directory (release and debug) for |
| all of the required packages. This file will be included by the main |
| Makefile: |
| <repo_root>/compat/vcbuild/MSVC-DEFS-GEN |
| |
| 2. OPTIONALLY copy the third-party *.dll and *.pdb files into the repo |
| root to make it easier to run and debug git.exe without having to |
| manipulate your PATH. This is especially true for debug sessions in |
| Visual Studio. |
| |
| Use ONE of the following forms which should match how you want to |
| compile git.exe. |
| |
| $ ./compat/vcbuild/vcpkg_copy_packages.bat debug |
| $ ./compat/vcbuild/vcpkg_copy_packages.bat release |
| |
| 3. Build git using MSVC from an SDK bash window using one of the |
| following commands: |
| |
| $ make MSVC=1 |
| $ make MSVC=1 DEBUG=1 |
| |
| ================================================================ |
| |
| Alternatively, run `make vcxproj` and then load the generated `git.sln` in |
| Visual Studio. The initial build will install the vcpkg system and build the |
| dependencies automatically. This will take a while. |
| |
| Instead of generating the `git.sln` file yourself (which requires a full Git |
| for Windows SDK), you may want to consider fetching the `vs/master` branch of |
| https://github.com/git-for-windows/git instead (which is updated automatically |
| via CI running `make vcxproj`). The `vs/master` branch does not require a Git |
| for Windows to build, but you can run the test scripts in a regular Git Bash. |
| |
| Note that `make vcxproj` will automatically add and commit the generated `.sln` |
| and `.vcxproj` files to the repo. This is necessary to allow building a |
| fully-testable Git in Visual Studio, where a regular Git Bash can be used to |
| run the test scripts (as opposed to a full Git for Windows SDK): a number of |
| build targets, such as Git commands implemented as Unix shell scripts (where |
| `@@SHELL_PATH@@` and other placeholders are interpolated) require a full-blown |
| Git for Windows SDK (which is about 10x the size of a regular Git for Windows |
| installation). |
| |
| If your plan is to open a Pull Request with Git for Windows, it is a good idea |
| to drop this commit before submitting. |
| |
| ================================================================ |
| The Steps of Build Git with VS2008 |
| |
| 1. You need the build environment, which contains the Git dependencies |
| to be able to compile, link and run Git with MSVC. |
| |
| You can either use the binary repository: |
| |
| WWW: http://repo.or.cz/w/msvcgit.git |
| Git: git clone git://repo.or.cz/msvcgit.git |
| Zip: http://repo.or.cz/w/msvcgit.git?a=snapshot;h=master;sf=zip |
| |
| and call the setup_32bit_env.cmd batch script before compiling Git, |
| (see repo/package README for details), or the source repository: |
| |
| WWW: http://repo.or.cz/w/gitbuild.git |
| Git: git clone git://repo.or.cz/gitbuild.git |
| Zip: (None, as it's a project with submodules) |
| |
| and build the support libs as instructed in that repo/package. |
| |
| 2. Ensure you have the msysgit environment in your path, so you have |
| GNU Make, bash and perl available. |
| |
| WWW: http://repo.or.cz/w/msysgit.git |
| Git: git clone git://repo.or.cz/msysgit.git |
| Zip: http://repo.or.cz/w/msysgit.git?a=snapshot;h=master;sf=zip |
| |
| This environment is also needed when you use the resulting |
| executables, since Git might need to run scripts which are part of |
| the git operations. |
| |
| 3. Inside Git's directory run the command: |
| make command-list.h |
| to generate the command-list.h file needed to compile git. |
| |
| 4. Then either build Git with the GNU Make Makefile in the Git projects |
| root |
| make MSVC=1 |
| or generate Visual Studio solution/projects (.sln/.vcproj) with the |
| command |
| perl contrib/buildsystems/generate -g Vcproj |
| and open and build the solution with the IDE |
| devenv git.sln /useenv |
| or build with the IDE build engine directly from the command line |
| devenv git.sln /useenv /build "Release|Win32" |
| The /useenv option is required, so Visual Studio picks up the |
| environment variables for the support libraries required to build |
| Git, which you set up in step 1. |
| |
| Done! |