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curl/winbuild
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..
.gitignore Moved some patterns to subfolder's .gitignore. 2012-07-03 14:31:50 +02:00
gen_resp_file.bat winbuild: Use two space indentation 2019-05-23 21:46:26 +01:00
makedebug.cmd winbuild: Use two space indentation 2019-05-23 21:46:26 +01:00
Makefile.vc TLS naming: fix more Winssl and Darwinssl leftovers 2020-08-08 00:19:21 +02:00
MakefileBuild.vc TLS naming: fix more Winssl and Darwinssl leftovers 2020-08-08 00:19:21 +02:00
README.md winbuild/README.md: make <options> visible 2020-08-26 15:57:04 +02:00
rundebug.cmd winbuild: Add our standard copyright header to the winbuild batch files 2019-05-05 20:17:58 +01:00

Building curl with Visual C++

This document describes how to compile, build and install curl and libcurl from sources using the Visual C++ build tool. To build with VC++, you will of course have to first install VC++. The minimum required version of VC is 6 (part of Visual Studio 6). However using a more recent version is strongly recommended.

VC++ is also part of the Windows Platform SDK. You do not have to install the full Visual Studio or Visual C++ if all you want is to build curl.

The latest Platform SDK can be downloaded freely from Windows SDK and emulator archive

Prerequisites

If you wish to support zlib, openssl, c-ares, ssh2, you will have to download them separately and copy them to the deps directory as shown below:

somedirectory\
 |_curl-src
 | |_winbuild
 |
 |_deps
   |_ lib
   |_ include
   |_ bin

It is also possible to create the deps directory in some other random places and tell the Makefile its location using the WITH_DEVEL option.

Building straight from git

When you check out code git and build it, as opposed from a released source code archive, you need to first run the buildconf.bat batch file (present in the source code root directory) to set things up.

Open a command prompt

Open a Visual Studio Command prompt:

Using the 'Developer Command Prompt for VS [version]' menu entry: where [version} is the Visual Studio version. The developer prompt at default uses the x86 mode. It is required to call Vcvarsall.bat to setup the prompt for the machine type you want. This type of command prompt may not exist in all Visual Studio versions.

See also: Developer Command Prompt for Visual Studio and How to: Enable a 64-Bit, x64 hosted MSVC toolset on the command line

Using the 'VS [version] [platform] [type] Command Prompt' menu entry: where [version] is the Visual Studio version, [platform] is e.g. x64 and [type] Native of Cross platform build. This type of command prompt may not exist in all Visual Studio versions.

See also: Set the Path and Environment Variables for Command-Line Builds

Build in the console

Once you are in the console, go to the winbuild directory in the Curl sources:

cd curl-src\winbuild

Then you can call nmake /f Makefile.vc with the desired options (see below). The builds will be in the top src directory, builds\ directory, in a directory named using the options given to the nmake call.

nmake /f Makefile.vc mode=<static or dll> <options>

where <options> is one or many of:

  • VC=<6,7,8,9,10,11,12,14,15> - VC version
  • WITH_DEVEL=<path> - Paths for the development files (SSL, zlib, etc.) Defaults to sibbling directory deps: ../deps Libraries can be fetched at https://windows.php.net/downloads/php-sdk/deps/ Uncompress them into the deps folder.
  • WITH_SSL=<dll/static> - Enable OpenSSL support, DLL or static
  • WITH_NGHTTP2=<dll/static> - Enable HTTP/2 support, DLL or static
  • WITH_MBEDTLS=<dll/static> - Enable mbedTLS support, DLL or static
  • WITH_CARES=<dll/static> - Enable c-ares support, DLL or static
  • WITH_ZLIB=<dll/static> - Enable zlib support, DLL or static
  • WITH_SSH2=<dll/static> - Enable libSSH2 support, DLL or static
  • WITH_PREFIX=<dir> - Where to install the build
  • ENABLE_SSPI=<yes/no> - Enable SSPI support, defaults to yes
  • ENABLE_IPV6=<yes/no> - Enable IPv6, defaults to yes
  • ENABLE_IDN=<yes or no> - Enable use of Windows IDN APIs, defaults to yes Requires Windows Vista or later
  • ENABLE_SCHANNEL=<yes/no> - Enable native Windows SSL support, defaults to yes
  • GEN_PDB=<yes/no> - Generate Program Database (debug symbols for release build)
  • DEBUG=<yes/no> - Debug builds
  • MACHINE=<x86/x64> - Target architecture (default is x86)
  • CARES_PATH=<path> - Custom path for c-ares
  • MBEDTLS_PATH=<path> - Custom path for mbedTLS
  • NGHTTP2_PATH=<path> - Custom path for nghttp2
  • SSH2_PATH=<path> - Custom path for libSSH2
  • SSL_PATH=<path> - Custom path for OpenSSL
  • ZLIB_PATH=<path> - Custom path for zlib

Static linking of Microsoft's C RunTime (CRT):

If you are using mode=static nmake will create and link to the static build of libcurl but not the static CRT. If you must you can force nmake to link in the static CRT by passing RTLIBCFG=static. Typically you shouldn't use that option, and nmake will default to the DLL CRT. RTLIBCFG is rarely used and therefore rarely tested. When passing RTLIBCFG for a configuration that was already built but not with that option, or if the option was specified differently, you must destroy the build directory containing the configuration so that nmake can build it from scratch.

Building your own application with a static libcurl

When building an application that uses the static libcurl library on Windows, you must define CURL_STATICLIB. Otherwise the linker will look for dynamic import symbols.

Legacy Windows and SSL

When you build curl using the build files in this directory the default SSL backend will be Schannel (Windows SSPI), the native SSL library that comes with the Windows OS. Schannel in Windows <= XP is not able to connect to servers that no longer support the legacy handshakes and algorithms used by those versions. If you will be using curl in one of those earlier versions of Windows you should choose another SSL backend like OpenSSL.