Sorry, "output" was ambiguous. I'm not interested in the log files at this time, but in the installation files. I want to try to install the result of your build on a Windows 7 machine.

On 9/19/2016 6:22 PM, John D'Orazio wrote:
I wound up building in stages, since the build was breaking here and there.
I just picked it up from where it left off as I fixed things. So I don't
have a single output... unless there is a log file that collects various
build stages together into one single output?
I would also recommend installing as many packages in cygwin as possible
without going through the extra step of installing lynx or apt-cyg... While
that does make the environment more similar to a linux build environment,
it's still an extra step and I believe it could be indicated as a second
possibliity. Somewhere in the Step by Step guide I added which packages to
choose in the cygwin interface if installing them from the cygwin
interface. I think installing the packages from the cygwin interface should
be indicated as the first step to take when first installing cygwin, adding
all the necessary packages along with the first install.
The only package I couldn't find from the cygwin interface was the Perl
LWP::UserAgent package, so I installed that using "cpan -i LWP::UserAgent".


On Tue, Sep 20, 2016 at 12:25 AM, Patricia Shanahan <p...@acm.org> wrote:

Congratulations! I'm about to do a Windows 10 build on a new machine, so
please make sure the step-by-step incorporates all that you learned in the
process.

I have a specific test I would like run. The current release process calls
for doing the Windows builds on Windows 7. I am wondering if that is
necessary. Could you test your Windows 10 build on a Windows 7 machine? Or
send me the output - that may be quicker than waiting for my Windows 10
build to go through.


On 9/19/2016 1:46 PM, John D'Orazio wrote:

I have now successfully completed the build on Windows 10, and after
changing the install path of NSIS to one without spaces, packaging also
completed successfully. I have added "Windows 10" alongside "Windows 7"
and
"Windows 8.1" in the Step by Step guide.

On Mon, Sep 19, 2016 at 7:50 PM, Patricia Shanahan <p...@acm.org> wrote:

I had installed 64-bit Cygwin installed here before I started on compiling
AOO. I hit problems, and had to go to the recommended 32-bit Cygwin.

However, things have changed a bit since then, so it may be worth seeing
if it works.

On 9/19/2016 8:59 AM, John D'Orazio wrote:
...

I also read somewhere that maybe using 64 bit cygwin can resolve the
occupied addresses and child_fork_process errors. I made an attempt at
getting the build environment ready in 64 bit cygwin but configure is
complaining about not finding Visual Studio C++, while this does not
happen
in 32 bit cygwin (I'm passing in the with-cl-home flag so it shouldn't
have
any problem finding it... I'm reading it has something to do with
registry
keys, idk I have to look into this better).

...


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