f81f351b9a
Use these words and casing more consistently across text, comments and one curl tool output: AIX, ALPN, ANSI, BSD, Cygwin, Darwin, FreeBSD, GitHub, HP-UX, Linux, macOS, MS-DOS, MSYS, MinGW, NTLM, POSIX, Solaris, UNIX, Unix, Unicode, WINE, WebDAV, Win32, winbind, WinIDN, Windows, Windows CE, Winsock. Mostly OS names and a few more. Also a couple of other minor text fixups. Closes #14360 |
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.. | ||
Windows | ||
build-openssl.bat | ||
build-wolfssl.bat | ||
checksrc.bat | ||
generate.bat | ||
README.md | ||
wolfssl_options.h | ||
wolfssl_override.props |
Building via IDE Project Files
This document describes how to compile, build and install curl and libcurl from sources using legacy versions of Visual Studio 2010 - 2013.
You will need to generate the project files before using them. Please run "generate -help" for usage details.
To generate project files for recent versions of Visual Studio instead, use cmake. Refer to INSTALL-CMAKE in the docs directory.
Directory Structure
The following directory structure is used for the legacy project files:
somedirectory\
|_curl
|_projects
|_<platform>
|_<ide>
|_lib
|_src
This structure allows for side-by-side compilation of curl on the same machine using different versions of a given compiler (for example VC10 and VC12) and allows for your own application or product to be compiled against those variants of libcurl for example.
Note: Typically this side-by-side compilation is generally only required when a library is being compiled against dynamic runtime libraries.
Dependencies
The projects files also support build configurations that require third party dependencies such as OpenSSL, wolfSSL and libssh2. If you wish to support these, you will also need to download and compile those libraries as well.
To support compilation of these libraries using different versions of compilers, the following directory structure has been used for both the output of curl and libcurl as well as these dependencies.
somedirectory\
|_curl
| |_ build
| |_<architecture>
| |_<ide>
| |_<configuration>
| |_lib
| |_src
|
|_openssl
| |_ build
| |_<architecture>
| |_VC <version>
| |_<configuration>
|
|_libssh2
|_ build
|_<architecture>
|_VC <version>
|_<configuration>
As OpenSSL and wolfSSL don't support side-by-side compilation when using
different versions of Visual Studio, build helper batch files have been
provided to assist with this. Please run build-openssl -help
and/or
build-wolfssl -help
for usage details.
Building with Visual C++
To build with VC++, you will of course have to first install VC++ which is part of Visual Studio.
Once you have VC++ installed you should launch the application and open one of the solution or workspace files. The VC directory names are based on the version of Visual C++ that you will be using. Each version of Visual Studio has a default version of Visual C++. We offer these versions:
- VC10 (Visual Studio 2010 Version 10.0)
- VC11 (Visual Studio 2012 Version 11.0)
- VC12 (Visual Studio 2013 Version 12.0)
Separate solutions are provided for both libcurl and the curl command line tool as well as a solution that includes both projects. libcurl.sln, curl.sln and curl-all.sln, respectively. We recommend using curl-all.sln to build both projects.
For example, if you are using Visual Studio 2010 then you should be able to
use VC10\curl-all.sln
to build curl and libcurl.
Running DLL based configurations
If you are a developer and plan to run the curl tool from Visual Studio with any third-party libraries (such as OpenSSL, wolfSSL or libssh2) then you will need to add the search path of these DLLs to the configuration's PATH environment. To do that:
- Open the 'curl-all.sln' or 'curl.sln' solutions
- Right-click on the 'curl' project and select Properties
- Navigate to 'Configuration Properties > Debugging > Environment'
- Add
PATH='Path to DLL';C:\Windows\System32;C:\Windows;C:\Windows\System32\Wbem
... where 'Path to DLL` is the configuration specific path. For example the following configurations in Visual Studio 2010 might be:
DLL Debug - DLL OpenSSL (Win32):
PATH=..\..\..\..\..\openssl\build\Win32\VC10\DLL Debug;C:\Windows\System32;
C:\Windows;C:\Windows\System32\Wbem
DLL Debug - DLL OpenSSL (x64):
PATH=..\..\..\..\..\openssl\build\Win64\VC10\DLL Debug;C:\Windows\System32;
C:\Windows;C:\Windows\System32\Wbem
DLL Debug - DLL wolfSSL (Win32):
PATH=..\..\..\..\..\wolfssl\build\Win32\VC10\DLL Debug;C:\Windows\System32;
C:\Windows;C:\Windows\System32\Wbem
DLL Debug - DLL wolfSSL (x64):
PATH=..\..\..\..\..\wolfssl\build\Win64\VC10\DLL Debug;C:\Windows\System32;
C:\Windows;C:\Windows\System32\Wbem
If you are using a configuration that uses multiple third-party library DLLs (such as DLL Debug - DLL OpenSSL - DLL libssh2) then 'Path to DLL' will need to contain the path to both of these.
Notes
The following keywords have been used in the directory hierarchy:
<platform>
- The platform (For example: Windows)<ide>
- The IDE (For example: VC10)<architecture>
- The platform architecture (For example: Win32, Win64)<configuration>
- The target configuration (For example: DLL Debug, LIB Release - LIB OpenSSL)
Should you wish to help out with some of the items on the TODO list, or find bugs in the project files that need correcting, and would like to submit updated files back then please note that, whilst the solution files can be edited directly, the templates for the project files (which are stored in the git repository) will need to be modified rather than the generated project files that Visual Studio uses.
Legacy Windows and SSL
Some of the project configurations allow the use of Schannel, the native SSL library in Windows which forms part of Windows SSPI. However, Schannel in Windows <= XP is unable to connect to servers that no longer support the legacy handshakes and algorithms used by those versions. If you will be using curl in one of those earlier versions of Windows you should choose another SSL backend such as OpenSSL.