| Building Python using VC++ 6.0 or 5.0 |
| ------------------------------------- |
| This directory is used to build Python for Win32 platforms, e.g. Windows |
| 95, 98 and NT. It requires Microsoft Visual C++ 6.x or 5.x. |
| (For other Windows platforms and compilers, see ../PC/readme.txt.) |
| |
| All you need to do is open the workspace "pcbuild.dsw" in MSVC++, select |
| the Debug or Release setting (using Build -> Set Active Configuration...), |
| and build the projects. |
| |
| The proper order to build subprojects: |
| |
| 1) pythoncore (this builds the main Python DLL and library files, |
| python21.{dll, lib} in Release mode) |
| NOTE: in previous releases, this subproject was |
| named after the release number, e.g. python20. |
| |
| 2) python (this builds the main Python executable, |
| python.exe in Release mode) |
| |
| 3) the other subprojects, as desired or needed (note: you probably don't |
| want to build most of the other subprojects, unless you're building an |
| entire Python distribution from scratch, or specifically making changes |
| to the subsystems they implement; see SUBPROJECTS below) |
| |
| When using the Debug setting, the output files have a _d added to |
| their name: python21_d.dll, python_d.exe, parser_d.pyd, and so on. |
| |
| SUBPROJECTS |
| ----------- |
| These subprojects should build out of the box. Subprojects other than the |
| main ones (pythoncore, python, pythonw) generally build a DLL (renamed to |
| .pyd) from a specific module so that users don't have to load the code |
| supporting that module unless they import the module. |
| |
| pythoncore |
| .dll and .lib |
| python |
| .exe |
| pythonw |
| pythonw.exe, a variant of python.exe that doesn't pop up a DOS box |
| _csv |
| C support for the comma-separated values module |
| _socket |
| socketmodule.c |
| _sre |
| Unicode-aware regular expression engine |
| _symtable |
| the _symtable module, symtablemodule.c |
| _testcapi |
| tests of the Python C API, run via Lib/test/test_capi.py, and |
| implemented by module Modules/_testcapimodule.c |
| datetime |
| datetimemodule.c |
| mmap |
| mmapmodule.c |
| parser |
| the parser module |
| pyexpat |
| Python wrapper for accelerated XML parsing, which incorporates stable |
| code from the Expat project: http://sourceforge.net/projects/expat/ |
| select |
| selectmodule.c |
| unicodedata |
| large tables of Unicode data |
| winreg |
| Windows registry API |
| winsound |
| play sounds (typically .wav files) under Windows |
| |
| The following subprojects will generally NOT build out of the box. They |
| wrap code Python doesn't control, and you'll need to download the base |
| packages first and unpack them into siblings of PCbuilds's parent |
| directory; for example, if your PCbuild is .......\dist\src\PCbuild\, |
| unpack into new subdirectories of dist\. |
| |
| _tkinter |
| Python wrapper for the Tk windowing system. Requires building |
| Tcl/Tk first. Following are instructions for Tcl/Tk 8.4.3: |
| |
| Get source |
| ---------- |
| Go to |
| http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/tcl/ |
| and download |
| tcl843-src.zip |
| tk843-src.zip |
| Unzip into |
| dist\tcl8.4.3\ |
| dist\tk8.4.3\ |
| respectively. |
| |
| Build Tcl first (done here w/ MSVC 6 on Win98SE) |
| --------------- |
| cd dist\tcl8.4.3\win |
| run vcvars32.bat [necessary even on Win2K] |
| nmake -f makefile.vc |
| nmake -f makefile.vc INSTALLDIR=..\..\tcl84 install |
| |
| XXX Should we compile with OPTS=threads? |
| |
| XXX Some tests failed in "nmake -f makefile.vc test". |
| XXX all.tcl: Total 10480 Passed 9743 Skipped 719 Failed 18 |
| XXX |
| XXX That was on Win98SE. On Win2K: |
| XXX all.tcl Total 10480 Passed 9781 Skipped 698 Failed 1 |
| |
| Build Tk |
| -------- |
| cd dist\tk8.4.3\win |
| nmake -f makefile.vc TCLDIR=..\..\tcl8.4.3 |
| nmake -f makefile.vc TCLDIR=..\..\tcl8.4.3 INSTALLDIR=..\..\tcl84 install |
| |
| XXX Should we compile with OPTS=threads? |
| |
| XXX I have no idea whether "nmake -f makefile.vc test" passed or |
| XXX failed. It popped up tons of little windows, and did lots of |
| XXX stuff, and nothing blew up. |
| |
| XXX Our installer copies a lot of stuff out of the Tcl/Tk install |
| XXX directory. Is all of that really needed for Python use of Tcl/Tk? |
| |
| Make sure the installer matches |
| ------------------------------- |
| Ensure that the Wise compiler vrbl _TCLDIR_ is set to the name of |
| the common Tcl/Tk installation directory (tcl84 for the instructions |
| above). This is needed so the installer can copy various Tcl/Tk |
| files into the Python distribution. |
| |
| |
| zlib |
| Python wrapper for the zlib compression library. Get the source code |
| for version 1.1.4 from a convenient mirror at: |
| http://www.gzip.org/zlib/ |
| Unpack into dist\zlib-1.1.4. |
| A custom pre-link step in the zlib project settings should manage to |
| build zlib-1.1.4\zlib.lib by magic before zlib.pyd (or zlib_d.pyd) is |
| linked in PCbuild\. |
| However, the zlib project is not smart enough to remove anything under |
| zlib-1.1.4\ when you do a clean, so if you want to rebuild zlib.lib |
| you need to clean up zlib-1.1.4\ by hand. |
| |
| bz2 |
| Python wrapper for the libbz2 compression library. Homepage |
| http://sources.redhat.com/bzip2/ |
| Download the source tarball, bzip2-1.0.2.tar.gz. |
| Unpack into dist\bzip2-1.0.2. WARNING: If you're using WinZip, you |
| must disable its "TAR file smart CR/LF conversion" feature (under |
| Options -> Configuration -> Miscellaneous -> Other) for the duration. |
| |
| Don't bother trying to use libbz2.dsp with MSVC. After 10 minutes |
| of fiddling, I couldn't get it to work. Perhaps it works with |
| MSVC 5 (I used MSVC 6). It's better to run the by-hand makefile |
| anyway, because it runs a helpful test step at the end. |
| |
| cd into dist\bzip2-1.0.2, and run |
| nmake -f makefile.msc |
| [Note that if you're running Win9X, you'll need to run vcvars32.bat |
| before running nmake (this batch file is in your MSVC installation). |
| TODO: make this work like zlib (in particular, MSVC runs the prelink |
| step in an enviroment that already has the correct envars set up). |
| ] |
| The make step shouldn't yield any warnings or errors, and should end |
| by displaying 6 blocks each terminated with |
| FC: no differences encountered |
| If FC finds differences, see the warning abou WinZip above (when I |
| first tried it, sample3.ref failed due to CRLF conversion). |
| |
| All of this managed to build bzip2-1.0.2\libbz2.lib, which the Python |
| project links in. |
| |
| |
| _bsddb |
| Go to Sleepycat's download page: |
| http://www.sleepycat.com/download/ |
| |
| and download version 4.1.25. The file name is db-4.1.25.NC.zip. |
| XXX with or without strong cryptography? I picked "without". |
| |
| Unpack into |
| dist\db-4.1.25 |
| |
| [If using WinZip to unpack the db-4.1.25.NC distro, that requires |
| renaming the directory (to remove ".NC") after unpacking. |
| ] |
| |
| Open |
| dist\db-4.1.25\docs\index.html |
| |
| and follow the Windows instructions for building the Sleepycat |
| software. Note that Berkeley_DB.dsw is in the build_win32 subdirectory. |
| Build the Release version ("build_all -- Win32 Release"). |
| |
| XXX We're actually linking against Release_static\libdb41s.lib. |
| XXX This yields the following warnings: |
| """ |
| Compiling... |
| _bsddb.c |
| Linking... |
| Creating library ./_bsddb.lib and object ./_bsddb.exp |
| LINK : warning LNK4049: locally defined symbol "_malloc" imported |
| LINK : warning LNK4049: locally defined symbol "_free" imported |
| LINK : warning LNK4049: locally defined symbol "_fclose" imported |
| LINK : warning LNK4049: locally defined symbol "_fopen" imported |
| _bsddb.pyd - 0 error(s), 4 warning(s) |
| """ |
| XXX This isn't encouraging, but I don't know what to do about it. |
| |
| To run extensive tests, pass "-u bsddb" to regrtest.py. test_bsddb3.py |
| is then enabled. Running in verbose mode may be helpful. |
| |
| XXX The test_bsddb3 tests don't always pass, on Windows (according to |
| XXX me) or on Linux (according to Barry). I had much better luck |
| XXX on Win2K than on Win98SE. The common failure mode across platforms |
| XXX is |
| XXX DBAgainError: (11, 'Resource temporarily unavailable -- unable |
| XXX to join the environment') |
| XXX |
| XXX and it appears timing-dependent. On Win2K I also saw this once: |
| XXX |
| XXX test02_SimpleLocks (bsddb.test.test_thread.HashSimpleThreaded) ... |
| XXX Exception in thread reader 1: |
| XXX Traceback (most recent call last): |
| XXX File "C:\Code\python\lib\threading.py", line 411, in __bootstrap |
| XXX self.run() |
| XXX File "C:\Code\python\lib\threading.py", line 399, in run |
| XXX apply(self.__target, self.__args, self.__kwargs) |
| XXX File "C:\Code\python\lib\bsddb\test\test_thread.py", line 268, in |
| XXX readerThread |
| XXX rec = c.next() |
| XXX DBLockDeadlockError: (-30996, 'DB_LOCK_DEADLOCK: Locker killed |
| XXX to resolve a deadlock') |
| XXX |
| XXX I'm told that DBLockDeadlockError is expected at times. It |
| XXX doesn't cause a test to fail when it happens (exceptions in |
| XXX threads are invisible to unittest). |
| |
| |
| _ssl |
| Python wrapper for the secure sockets library. |
| |
| Get the latest source code for OpenSSL from |
| http://www.openssl.org |
| |
| You (probably) don't want the "engine" code. For example, get |
| openssl-0.9.6g.tar.gz |
| not |
| openssl-engine-0.9.6g.tar.gz |
| |
| Unpack into the "dist" directory, retaining the folder name from |
| the archive - for example, the latest stable OpenSSL will install as |
| dist/openssl-0.9.6g |
| |
| You can (theoretically) use any version of OpenSSL you like - the |
| build process will automatically select the latest version. |
| |
| You must also install ActivePerl from |
| http://www.activestate.com/Products/ActivePerl/ |
| as this is used by the OpenSSL build process. Complain to them <wink>. |
| |
| The MSVC project simply invokes PCBuild/build_ssl.py to perform |
| the build. This Python script locates and builds your OpenSSL |
| installation, then invokes a simple makefile to build the final .pyd. |
| |
| Win9x users: see "Win9x note" below. |
| |
| build_ssl.py attempts to catch the most common errors (such as not |
| being able to find OpenSSL sources, or not being able to find a Perl |
| that works with OpenSSL) and give a reasonable error message. |
| If you have a problem that doesn't seem to be handled correctly |
| (eg, you know you have ActivePerl but we can't find it), please take |
| a peek at build_ssl.py and suggest patches. Note that build_ssl.py |
| should be able to be run directly from the command-line. |
| |
| build_ssl.py/MSVC isn't clever enough to clean OpenSSL - you must do |
| this by hand. |
| |
| Win9x note: If, near the start of the build process, you see |
| something like |
| |
| C:\Code\openssl-0.9.6g>set OPTS=no-asm |
| Out of environment space |
| |
| then you're in trouble, and will probably also see these errors near |
| the end of the process: |
| |
| NMAKE : fatal error U1073: don't know how to make |
| 'crypto\md5\asm\m5_win32.asm' |
| Stop. |
| NMAKE : fatal error U1073: don't know how to make |
| 'C:\Code\openssl-0.9.6g/out32/libeay32.lib' |
| Stop. |
| |
| You need more environment space. Win9x only has room for 256 bytes |
| by default, and especially after installing ActivePerl (which fiddles |
| the PATH envar), you're likely to run out. KB Q230205 |
| |
| http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=KB;en-us;q230205 |
| |
| explains how to edit CONFIG.SYS to cure this. |
| |
| |
| YOUR OWN EXTENSION DLLs |
| ----------------------- |
| If you want to create your own extension module DLL, there's an example |
| with easy-to-follow instructions in ../PC/example/; read the file |
| readme.txt there first. |