One thing that is not clear to me, what level of access the bash shell will 
have to the windows subsystem.  Apparently you will be able to run native linux 
applications inside the shell, but it is not clear if an X server will be made 
available, and what windows application will run under the bash shell.

As to the building on windows 10, one thing that I would recommend if you go 
down this path.   Have an option added to the cofnifuration to "package" the 
results into an installer.  Thus a company that hasn't migrated to Windows 10, 
can create a VM to do the build and install (which is common anyway) and 
package up their customer installer to deploy the installation inside their 
world

Scott

-----Original Message-----
From: Development [mailto:[email protected]] 
On Behalf Of Tvete Paul
Sent: Thursday, March 31, 2016 10:17 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Development] Heads up! Fixing the build system on Windows


As you may know, Lars is leading an effort to modularize the build system. One 
of the big headaches we have is that Windows uses a completely separate 
configure.exe, leading to a lot of duplicated effort.

With the latest announcement from Microsoft, everything changes. Now that bash 
is natively supported, we will remove the ugly hack, and standardize on using 
the configure script for all platforms. The requirement for Windows 10 should 
not be a problem, since the upgrade is free anyway.

We are finalizing the changes now, and aim to go live from 5.6.1. As a bonus, 
this should speed up the CI system for everyone, since we no longer have to 
test the obsolete Windows versions.
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