Hamlib/scripts/build-w32.sh

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#!/bin/bash
# Builds Hamlib 3.x W32 binary distribution.
# A script to build a set of W32 binary DLLs from a Hamlib tarball.
# This script assumes that the Hamlib tarball has been extracted to the
# directory specified in $BUILD_DIR and that libusb-1.x.y has also
# been extracted to $BUILD_DIR. The MS VC++ Toolkit must also be installed
# and working with Wine.
#
# See README.build-win32 for complete details.
# Set this to a desired directory
BUILD_DIR=~/builds
# Set this to LibUSB archive extracted in $BUILD_DIR
LIBUSB_VER=libusb-1.0.20
# uncomment the correct HOST_ARCH= line for your minGW installation
HOST_ARCH=i686-w64-mingw32
# Set to the strip name for your version of minGW
HOST_ARCH_STRIP=i686-w64-mingw32-strip
# Error return codes. See /usr/include/sysexits.h
EX_USAGE=64
EX_NOINPUT=66
# Pass name of Hamlib archive extracted in $BUILD_DIR
if [ $# -ne 1 ]; then
echo -e "\nUsage: `basename $0` hamlib-version\n"
echo -e "See README.build-win32 for more information.\n"
exit ${EX_USAGE}
fi
# Make sure the Hamlib archive is where we expect
if [ -d ${BUILD_DIR}/$1 ]; then
echo -e "\nBuilding W32 binaries in ${BUILD_DIR}/$1\n\n"
cd ${BUILD_DIR}/$1
else
echo -e "\nBuild directory, ${BUILD_DIR}/$1 not found!\nCheck path for $1 or correct the version number.\n"
exit ${EX_NOINPUT}
fi
RELEASE=`/usr/bin/awk 'BEGIN{FS="["; RS="]"} /\[3\./ {print $2;exit}' ./configure.ac`
HL_FILENAME=hamlib-w32-${RELEASE}
INST_DIR=`pwd`/mingw32-inst
ZIP_DIR=`pwd`/${HL_FILENAME}
LIBUSB_1_0_BIN_PATH=${BUILD_DIR}/${LIBUSB_VER}
# Create W32 specific README.w32-bin file
cat > README.w32-bin <<END_OF_README
What is it?
===========
This ZIP archive or Windows installer contains a build of Hamlib-$RELEASE
cross-compiled for MS Windows 32 bit systems using MinGW under Debian
GNU/Linux 8 (nice, heh!).
The DLL has a cdecl interface for MS VC++.
This software is copyrighted. The library license is LGPL, and the *.EXE files
licenses are GPL. Hamlib comes WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY. See the LICENSE.txt,
COPYING.txt, and COPYING.LIB.txt files.
A draft user manual in HTML format is included in the doc directory. The nroff
manual pages of the utilities not included in the user manual are converted to
HTML and included in the doc directory.
Installation and Configuration
==============================
Extract the ZIP archive into a convenient location, C:\Program Files is a
reasonable choice.
Make sure *all* the .DLL files are in your PATH (leave them in the bin
directory and set the PATH). To set the PATH environment variable in Windows
2000, Windows XP, and Windows 7 (need info on Vista and Windows 8/10) do the
following:
* W2k/XP: Right-click on "My Computer"
Win7: Right-click on "Computer"
* W2k/XP: Click the "Advanced" tab of the "System Properties" dialog
Win7: Click the "Advanced system settings" link in the System dialog
* Click the "Environment Variables" button of the pop-up dialog
* Select "Path" in the "System variables" box of the "Environment Variables"
dialog
NB: If you are not the administrator, system policy may not allow editing
the path variable. The complete path to an executable file will need to be
given to run one of the Hamlib programs.
* Click the Edit button
* Now add the Hamlib path in the "Variable Value:" edit box. Be sure to put
a semi-colon ';' after the last path before adding the Hamlib path (NB. The
entire path is highlighted and will be erased upon typing a character so
click in the box to unselect the text first. The PATH is important!!)
Append the Hamlib path, e.g. C:\Program Files\hamlib-w32-3.0~git\bin
* Click OK for all three dialog boxes to save your changes.
Testing with the Hamlib Utilities
=================================
To continue, be sure you have read the README.betatester file, especially the
"Testing Hamlib" section. The primary means of testing is by way of the rigctl
utility for radios and rotctl utility for rotators. Each is a command line
program that is interactive or can act on a single command and exit.
Documentation for each utility can be found as an HTML file in the doc
directory.
In short, the command syntax is of the form:
rigctl -m 120 -r COM1 -vvvvv
-m -> Radio model 120, or Yaesu FT-817 (use 'rigctl -l' for a list)
-r -> Radio device, in this case COM1
-v -> Verbosity level. For testing four or five v characters are required.
Five 'v's set a debug level of TRACE which generates a lot of screen
output showing communication to the radio and values of important
variables. These traces are vital information for Hamlib rig backend
development.
To run rigctl or rotctl open a cmd window (Start|Run|enter 'cmd' in the
dialog). If text scrolls off the screen, you can scroll back with the mouse.
To copy output text into a mailer or editor (I recommend Notepad++, a free
editor also licensed under the GPL), highlight the text as a rectangle in the
cmd window, press <Enter> (or right-click the window icon in the upper left
corner and select Edit, then Copy), and paste it into your editor with Ctl-V
(or Edit|Paste from the typical GUI menu).
All feedback is welcome to the mail address below.
Uninstall
=========
To uninstall, simply delete the Hamlib directory. You may wish to edit the
PATH as above to remove the Hamlib bin path, if desired.
Information for w32 Programmers
=================================
There is a .LIB import library for MS-VC++ in lib/msvc. Simply #include
<hamlib/rig.h> (add directory to include path), include the .LIB in your
project and you are done. Note: MS-VC++ cannot compile all the Hamlib code, but
the API defined by rig.h has been made MSVC friendly :-)
As the source code for the library DLLs is licensed under the LGPL, your
program is not considered a "derivative work" when using the published Hamlib
API and normal linking to the front-end library, and may be of a license of
your choosing. The published Hamlib API may be found at:
http://hamlib.sourceforge.net/manuals/3.0.1/index.html
Thank You!
==========
Patches, feedback, and contributions are welcome.
Please report problems or success to hamlib-developer@lists.sourceforge.net
Cheers,
Stephane Fillod - F8CFE
Nate Bargmann - N0NB
http://www.hamlib.org
END_OF_README
# Configure and build hamlib for mingw32, with libusb-win32
./configure --host=${HOST_ARCH} \
--prefix=${INST_DIR} \
--without-cxx-binding \
--disable-static \
CPPFLAGS="-I${LIBUSB_1_0_BIN_PATH}/include" \
LDFLAGS="-L${LIBUSB_1_0_BIN_PATH}/MinGW32/dll"
make install
mkdir -p ${ZIP_DIR}/bin ${ZIP_DIR}/lib/msvc ${ZIP_DIR}/lib/gcc ${ZIP_DIR}/include ${ZIP_DIR}/doc
cp -a src/libhamlib.def ${ZIP_DIR}/lib/msvc/libhamlib-2.def; todos ${ZIP_DIR}/lib/msvc/libhamlib-2.def
cp -a ${INST_DIR}/include/hamlib ${ZIP_DIR}/include/.; todos ${ZIP_DIR}/include/hamlib/*.h
cp -a doc/Hamlib_design.png ${ZIP_DIR}/doc
cp -a doc/hamlib.html ${ZIP_DIR}/doc
# C++ binding is useless on w32 because of ABI
rm ${ZIP_DIR}/include/hamlib/{rig,rot}class.h
for f in AUTHORS ChangeLog COPYING COPYING.LIB LICENSE README README.betatester README.w32-bin THANKS ; do \
cp -a ${f} ${ZIP_DIR}/${f}.txt ; todos ${ZIP_DIR}/${f}.txt ; done
# Generate HTML documents from nroff formatted man files
for f in doc/man1/*.1; do \
/usr/bin/groff -mandoc -Thtml >${f}.html ${f}
cp -a ${f}.html ${ZIP_DIR}/doc/. ; done
cd ${BUILD_DIR}/$1
# Copy build files into specific locations for Zip file
cp -a ${INST_DIR}/bin/{rigctld.exe,rigctl.exe,rigmem.exe,rigsmtr.exe,rigswr.exe,rotctld.exe,rotctl.exe} ${ZIP_DIR}/bin/.
cp -a ${INST_DIR}/bin/libhamlib-?.dll ${ZIP_DIR}/bin/.
cp -a ${INST_DIR}/lib/libhamlib.dll.a ${ZIP_DIR}/lib/gcc/.
# NB: Strip Hamlib DLLs and EXEs
${HOST_ARCH_STRIP} ${ZIP_DIR}/bin/*.exe ${ZIP_DIR}/bin/*hamlib-*.dll
# Copy needed third party DLLs
cp -a /usr/i686-w64-mingw32/lib/libwinpthread-1.dll ${ZIP_DIR}/bin/.
cp -a ${LIBUSB_1_0_BIN_PATH}/MinGW32/dll/libusb-1.0.dll ${ZIP_DIR}/bin/libusb-1.0.dll
# Required for MinGW with GCC 4.9
cp -a /usr/lib/gcc/i686-w64-mingw32/4.9-posix/libgcc_s_sjlj-1.dll ${ZIP_DIR}/bin/libgcc_s_sjlj-1.dll
## Need VC++ free toolkit installed (default Wine directory installation shown)
( cd ${ZIP_DIR}/lib/msvc/ && wine ~/.wine/drive_c/Program\ Files/Microsoft\ Visual\ C++\ Toolkit\ 2003/bin/link.exe /lib /machine:i386 /def:libhamlib-2.def )
/usr/bin/zip -r ${HL_FILENAME}.zip `basename ${ZIP_DIR}`