You can put the SVN files anywhere. Having no spaces in the path is
probably good, but maybe not mandatory.
Cygwin is useful to have and can't hurt as far as I know.
.hc
On Jul 8, 2010, at 4:56 PM, Pierre-Olivier Boulant wrote:
Tortoisesvn is getting all the files from svn.
Is there somewhere special I should download them to? I used a
folder on a secondary partition to keep the main partition being
overflowed with compilation files.
F:\pd-ext-compilation\svn\sources\...
I couldn't find any hints on WindowsMinGW wiki as what functions I
needed. I'll give it a first try wit the old version. And I'll look
into the newer files a bit later.
With MinGW, MSYS, should I get Cygwin too?
pob
On 08/07/2010 22:30, Hans-Christoph Steiner wrote:
On Jul 8, 2010, at 4:24 PM, Pierre-Olivier Boulant wrote:
I used the "old" MSYS 1.0.11.
I didn't catch all I should do with the newer ones.
There are several "base system"/"CORE" files and for the functions
too. Which one(s) is/are the one(s) I need to download. (bin ext
doc dbg dev src lic) ? All of them? Is there a way in Sourceforge
to get all files in one go instead of one by one.
You probably don't need everything. I'd follow the WindowsMinGW
page on that.
Can I just overwrite the old versions with the newer ones so as to
keep the general structure of MSYS? Or is this bad practice?
I've generally deleted the old copies before installing new ones.
Do I need to install tortoisesvn to get the pd-extended 0.42.5 svn?
You need either SVN or rsync. The command line versions of both
are in Cygwin and easy to install there. You could also use
tortoisesvn
Sorry again for the beginner's questions. :)
Keep them coming, getting 64-bit builds on Windows will be a
valuable contribution!
.hc
pob
On 08/07/2010 21:49, Hans-Christoph Steiner wrote:
Its not as complicated as it looks, its mostly a matter of
getting the files in the right places. You should also install
MSYS, check the WindowsMinGW page for how. But perhaps you
should use a newer version of MSYS. Then try a build, download
the Pd-extended source, and do this from the MSYS shell:
cd pd/src
make -f makefile.mingw
My guess is that the 64-bit instructions are going to end up
looking quite similar to the WindowsMinGW page.
.hc
On Jul 8, 2010, at 3:38 PM, Pierre-Olivier Boulant wrote:
Hello Hans and everyone,
Thank you for the encouragment. It might take time, indeed. :)
OK, I installed the tdm-gcc.tdragon.net x32 and x64 MinGW.
On 08/07/2010 21:09, Hans-Christoph Steiner wrote:
Working on this is definitely not a waste of time, but it is
not a simple project. We all start somewhere, so motivation is
the key rather than skills.
I would avoid trying to build anything and instead install from
binaries. Building compilers can be a real pain. Cygwin is
quite easy to install, so I see no harm in installing it.
I created a wiki page to document our progress, everyone should
write notes there:
https://puredata.info/docs/developer/Windows64BitMinGWX64
Upon looking at it, I think a good place to start is by
downloading the most recent of mingw-w64-bin-x86_64:
http://www.drangon.org/mingw/
This looks even more promising though:
http://tdm-gcc.tdragon.net/
.hc
On Jul 2, 2010, at 6:10 PM, Pierre-Olivier Boulant wrote:
Hello everyone,
I'm new here. I've offered to help with the Windows 64bit
build. I'm really new to compiling software, so I'll probalby
need some help to get started. If you think this is
unmanageable for a beginner don't be afraid to tell me so. I
have some good will and patience, but I don't want to waste
anyone's time. :)
I'm reading the MinGW-w64 pages on Sourceforge.
I should be looking for a native compiler for w64, but I can't
seem to find any. I suppose since it's a native compiler I can
build it myself. Is this correct. Then, should I download a
tarball and compile from the source?
Otherwise I found what seems to be a native version here:
http://www.drangon.org/mingw/
I cannont find either the MinGW-get installer mentioned on the
32bit version of the instructions. I suppose there is nothing
similar for the 64bit version for the time being.
I suppose I have to get Cygwin for compilation too. Anything I
should pay special attention to concerning this?
Thanks for your help
Pierre-Olivier
On 02/07/2010 22:46, Hans-Christoph Steiner wrote:
A Windows 7 build sounds like a good idea. The first place
to start is getting a MinGW-w64 build environment setup. If
you get that installed, then first try just building the core
of pd-extended without all the libraries. That shouldn't be
too hard to get going.
http://mingw-w64.sourceforge.net/
Here is the whole instructions for the 32-bit environment:
http://puredata.info/docs/developer/WindowsMinGW
Perhaps it makes sense to continue this discussion on pd-dev?
.hc
On Jul 1, 2010, at 4:56 PM, Pierre-Olivier Boulant wrote:
Hello,
I've been using Puredata for a year now and I'd be glad to
help with the new release.
I'll be getting a new computer for performances in the
coming up week.
It will be an Asus N82 (it's not on their website at the
moment).
Intel Core i7 - 720QM (quad core) with 4GB of RAM an Nvidia
Geforce GT335M
The OS is a Windows 7 64bit. I might install some linux
distro too alongside the original OS.
I can leave the computer on as much as needed for the
autobuild process. I will use the computer for my own too.
But I can leave it on at night.
I don't know if you want specifically Windows XP or if
Windows 7 which is more and more widespread now can do too.
You can contact me with this email or with skype (same email
address).
Cheers
Pierre-Olivier
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