151 lines
5.5 KiB
Plaintext
151 lines
5.5 KiB
Plaintext
Building Ardour for Windows
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The windows build is compiled and tested with the MinGW compiler that is
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packaged in Fedora, Currently using Fedora 19. There are many cross compiled
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"mingw" libraries that Ardour requires that are available on Fedora but
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not all are yet.
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Prerequisites
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For setting up the required packages to build Ardour refer to the README
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file located at https://github.com/mojofunk/fedora-mingw-ardour
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Configuring
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After all the necessary packages are installed the next step is to call
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one of the configure scripts configure-debug.sh or configure-release.sh.
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The configure-debug.sh script will enable debugging support and install
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the tests to the package directory. It will also mean the GDB debugger
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is packaged.
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The configure-release.sh is intended for releases only, none of the tests
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will be built and all the binaries will be optimized and stripped.
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These scripts both source the mingw-env.sh script to setup the appropriate
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environment variables and then call waf with a specific set of parameters
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that are appropriate to configure for the windows build.
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There is also configure-distcc-debug.sh and configure-distcc-release.sh that
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configure to use distcc for building.
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Building
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After the build is configured the waf.sh script is used to build the Ardour
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application and all necessary libraries. The waf.sh script is not strictly
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needed, it just saves having to change working directories.
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Packaging
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When the build is successful the package.sh script will call waf install
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and then move some of the installed files to appropriate locations for a
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windows executable. This could probably be done in the waf scripts specifically
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for the windows build but I felt it simpler to do it in the packaging script
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for now.
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--------- NOTE --------------------
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package_win32.sh is an updated/extended version of package.sh from Valeriy. It
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should probably be merged with package.sh at some point. It uses a number of
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additional resources located under mingw64/
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-----------------------------------
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The packaging script then copies the JACK deamon and all the required mingw
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shared libraries from the host system into the packaging directory. The
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shared libraries or dll's are placed in the same directory as the Ardour
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executable so they are found at runtime.
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Once the package.sh script has been run then the package directory located
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in the Ardour source root directory will contain everything necessary to run
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the Ardour executable.
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The make-installer.sh script is only really relevant when configure-release.sh
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has been used to configure the build. The script creates a basic and little
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tested windows installer for Ardour using the Nullsoft Scriptable Installer
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System(NSIS).
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Running
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The Ardour windows binary is intended to be run and tested on windows. Testing
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is mainly performed using Windows XP, but should work on Vista/7. It is only
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a 32bit binary at the moment but that may change with mingw64.
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The binary does not run successfully under WINE but that may change with updates
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and or bug fixes.
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When running Ardour for debugging purposes it is best to start the jack server
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in a separate terminal(Command Prompt) before starting Ardour so that they are
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not both writing to the same terminal. This will probably be fixed at some point
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so when jackd is started by Ardour the output is redirected etc.
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The cptovmshare.sh script will copy the package to a directory specified in the
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ARDOUR_VM_SHARE_DIR for testing in a virtual machine.
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Testing
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When configured for debugging there are a number of test programs(prefixed with
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test_) included in the package.
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The tests for libpbd, libevoral and libardour can be run under wine from the
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windows packaging directory using the wine-*-tests.sh scripts
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Debugging
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Ardour has some verbose logging/debugging output that can be useful that is used
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with the -D option.
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When configured for debugging the package contains gdb along with a .gdbinit
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file to automatically set the source directory so that the "list" gdb command
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will show the source code corresponding to the current stack frame.
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New versions of gdb will not load a .gdbinit file unless it is located in the directory
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set in the HOME environment variable and auto-load safe-path is set appropriately.
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So the gdbinit_home file needs to be moved to directory set in %USERPROFILE% and
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gdb started via gdb.bat for source file listing to work.
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The gdb batch scripts cannot be used if the package directory is on a network share
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so the package will need to be copied to a local drive first.
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When starting gdb using gdb.bat the Ardour executable needs to be set as the program
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to be debugged with the "file" command
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e.g (gdb) file ardour-3.5.exe
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You can then set a break point at main() with the "break" command as usual
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e.g (gdb) break main
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To set a breakpoint in a dll/shared library like libardour you need to wait for
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the symbols to be loaded which only occurs once the program has been executed using
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the "run" command
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You can set a breakpoint at a function
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e.g break `Somenamespace::somepartialsymbolname + tab to list symbols
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then remove ` to set the breakpoint.
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If you press tab with when there are thousands of possible matching symbols be
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prepared to wait a long time(this can also cause gdb to use a lot of memory).
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For this reason I prefer to set breakpoints by specifying the source file and line
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number.
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e.g (gdb) break audiosource.cc:976
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using "catch throw" or "catch catch" can be useful to break at points where exceptions
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are thrown or caught.
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They are a number of glib debugging options see
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http://developer.gnome.org/glib/2.30/glib-running.html
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use $ set G_DEBUG=fatal_warnings to get backtrace
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