| Building Python using Microsoft Visual C++ |
| ------------------------------------------ |
| |
| This directory is used to build CPython for Microsoft Windows NT version |
| 5.1 or higher (Windows XP, Windows Server 2003, or later) on 32 and 64 |
| bit platforms. Using this directory requires an installation of |
| Microsoft Visual C++ 2010 (MSVC 10.0) of any edition. The specific |
| requirements are as follows: |
| |
| Visual C++ 2010 Express Edition |
| Required for building 32-bit Debug and Release configuration builds. |
| This edition does not support "solution folders", which pcbuild.sln |
| uses; this will not prevent building. |
| Visual Studio 2010 Professional Edition |
| Required for building 64-bit Debug and Release configuration builds |
| Visual Studio 2010 Premium Edition |
| Required for building Release configuration builds that make use of |
| Profile Guided Optimization (PGO), on either platform. |
| |
| The official Python releases are built with PGO using Visual Studio 2010 |
| Ultimate Edition. |
| |
| All you need to do to build is open the solution "pcbuild.sln" in Visual |
| Studio, select the desired combination of configuration and platform, |
| then build with "Build Solution" or the F7 keyboard shortcut. You can |
| also build from the command line using the "build.bat" script in this |
| directory. The solution is configured to build the projects in the |
| correct order. |
| |
| The solution currently supports two platforms. The Win32 platform is |
| used to build standard x86-compatible 32-bit binaries, output into this |
| directory. The x64 platform is used for building 64-bit AMD64 (aka |
| x86_64 or EM64T) binaries, output into the amd64 sub-directory which |
| will be created if it doesn't already exist. The Itanium (IA-64) |
| platform is no longer supported. See the "Building for AMD64" section |
| below for more information about 64-bit builds. |
| |
| Four configuration options are supported by the solution: |
| Debug |
| Used to build Python with extra debugging capabilities, equivalent |
| to using ./configure --with-pydebug on UNIX. All binaries built |
| using this configuration have "_d" added to their name: |
| python34_d.dll, python_d.exe, parser_d.pyd, and so on. Both the |
| build and rt (run test) batch files in this directory accept a -d |
| option for debug builds. If you are building Python to help with |
| development of CPython, you will most likely use this configuration. |
| PGInstrument, PGUpdate |
| Used to build Python in Release configuration using PGO, which |
| requires Professional Edition of Visual Studio. See the "Profile |
| Guided Optimization" section below for more information. Build |
| output from each of these configurations lands in its own |
| sub-directory of this directory. The official Python releases are |
| built using these configurations. |
| Release |
| Used to build Python as it is meant to be used in production |
| settings, though without PGO. |
| |
| |
| Legacy support |
| -------------- |
| |
| You can find build directories for older versions of Visual Studio and |
| Visual C++ in the PC directory. The legacy build directories are no |
| longer actively maintained and may not work out of the box. |
| |
| Currently, the only legacy build directory is PC\VS9.0, for Visual |
| Studio 2008 (9.0). |
| |
| |
| C Runtime |
| --------- |
| |
| Visual Studio 2010 uses version 10 of the C runtime (MSVCRT10). The |
| executables no longer use the "Side by Side" assemblies used in previous |
| versions of the compiler. This simplifies distribution of applications. |
| |
| The run time libraries are available under the VC/Redist folder of your |
| Visual Studio distribution. For more info, see the Readme in the |
| VC/Redist folder. |
| |
| |
| Sub-Projects |
| ------------ |
| |
| The CPython project is split up into several smaller sub-projects which |
| are managed by the pcbuild.sln solution file. Each sub-project is |
| represented by a .vcxproj and a .vcxproj.filters file starting with the |
| name of the sub-project. These sub-projects fall into a few general |
| categories: |
| |
| The following sub-projects represent the bare minimum required to build |
| a functioning CPython interpreter. If nothing else builds but these, |
| you'll have a very limited but usable python.exe: |
| pythoncore |
| .dll and .lib |
| python |
| .exe |
| kill_python |
| kill_python.exe, a small program designed to kill any instances of |
| python(_d).exe that are running and live in the build output |
| directory; this is meant to avoid build issues due to locked files |
| make_buildinfo, make_versioninfo |
| helpers to provide necessary information to the build process |
| |
| These sub-projects provide extra executables that are useful for running |
| CPython in different ways: |
| pythonw |
| pythonw.exe, a variant of python.exe that doesn't open a Command |
| Prompt window |
| pylauncher |
| py.exe, the Python Launcher for Windows, see |
| http://docs.python.org/3/using/windows.html#launcher |
| pywlauncher |
| pyw.exe, a variant of py.exe that doesn't open a Command Prompt |
| window |
| _testembed |
| _testembed.exe, a small program that embeds Python for testing |
| purposes, used by test_capi.py |
| |
| These are miscellaneous sub-projects that don't really fit the other |
| categories. By default, these projects do not build in Debug |
| configuration: |
| _freeze_importlib |
| _freeze_importlib.exe, used to regenerate Python\importlib.h after |
| changes have been made to Lib\importlib\_bootstrap.py |
| bdist_wininst |
| ..\Lib\distutils\command\wininst-10.0[-amd64].exe, the base |
| executable used by the distutils bdist_wininst command |
| python3dll |
| python3.dll, the PEP 384 Stable ABI dll |
| xxlimited |
| builds an example module that makes use of the PEP 384 Stable ABI, |
| see Modules\xxlimited.c |
| |
| The following sub-projects are for individual modules of the standard |
| library which are implemented in C; each one builds a DLL (renamed to |
| .pyd) of the same name as the project: |
| _ctypes |
| _ctypes_test |
| _decimal |
| _elementtree |
| _hashlib |
| _msi |
| _multiprocessing |
| _overlapped |
| _socket |
| _testcapi |
| _testbuffer |
| _testimportmultiple |
| pyexpat |
| select |
| unicodedata |
| winsound |
| |
| The following Python-controlled sub-projects wrap external projects. |
| Note that these external libraries are not necessary for a working |
| interpreter, but they do implement several major features. See the |
| "Getting External Sources" section below for additional information |
| about getting the source for building these libraries. The sub-projects |
| are: |
| _bz2 |
| Python wrapper for version 1.0.6 of the libbzip2 compression library |
| Homepage: |
| http://www.bzip.org/ |
| _lzma |
| Python wrapper for the liblzma compression library, using pre-built |
| binaries of XZ Utils version 5.0.5 |
| Homepage: |
| http://tukaani.org/xz/ |
| _ssl |
| Python wrapper for version 1.0.1g of the OpenSSL secure sockets |
| library, which is built by ssl.vcxproj |
| Homepage: |
| http://www.openssl.org/ |
| |
| Building OpenSSL requires nasm.exe (the Netwide Assembler), version |
| 2.10 or newer from |
| http://www.nasm.us/ |
| to be somewhere on your PATH. More recent versions of OpenSSL may |
| need a later version of NASM. If OpenSSL's self tests don't pass, |
| you should first try to update NASM and do a full rebuild of |
| OpenSSL. |
| |
| If you like to use the official sources instead of the files from |
| python.org's subversion repository, Perl is required to build the |
| necessary makefiles and assembly files. ActivePerl is available |
| from |
| http://www.activestate.com/activeperl/ |
| The svn.python.org version contains pre-built makefiles and assembly |
| files. |
| |
| The build process makes sure that no patented algorithms are |
| included. For now RC5, MDC2 and IDEA are excluded from the build. |
| You may have to manually remove $(OBJ_D)\i_*.obj from ms\nt.mak if |
| using official sources; the svn.python.org-hosted version is already |
| fixed. |
| |
| The ssl.vcxproj sub-project simply invokes PCbuild/build_ssl.py, |
| which locates and builds OpenSSL. |
| |
| 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 (e.g., |
| 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. |
| |
| The ssl sub-project does not have the ability to clean the OpenSSL |
| build; if you need to rebuild, you'll have to clean it by hand. |
| _sqlite3 |
| Wraps SQLite 3.8.3.1, which is itself built by sqlite3.vcxproj |
| Homepage: |
| http://www.sqlite.org/ |
| _tkinter |
| Wraps version 8.6.1 of the Tk windowing system. |
| Homepage: |
| http://www.tcl.tk/ |
| |
| Unlike the other external libraries listed above, Tk must be built |
| separately before the _tkinter module can be built. This means that |
| a pre-built Tcl/Tk installation is expected in ..\..\tcltk (tcltk64 |
| for 64-bit) relative to this directory. See "Getting External |
| Sources" below for the easiest method to ensure Tcl/Tk is built. |
| |
| |
| Getting External Sources |
| ------------------------ |
| |
| The last category of sub-projects listed above wrap external projects |
| Python doesn't control, and as such a little more work is required in |
| order to download the relevant source files for each project before they |
| can be built. The buildbots must ensure that all libraries are present |
| before building, so the easiest approach is to run either external.bat |
| or external-amd64.bat (depending on platform) in the ..\Tools\buildbot |
| directory from ..\, i.e.: |
| |
| C:\python\cpython\PCbuild>cd .. |
| C:\python\cpython>Tools\buildbot\external.bat |
| |
| This extracts all the external sub-projects from |
| http://svn.python.org/projects/external |
| via Subversion (so you'll need an svn.exe on your PATH) and places them |
| in ..\.. (relative to this directory). |
| |
| It is also possible to download sources from each project's homepage, |
| though you may have to change the names of some folders in order to make |
| things work. For instance, if you were to download a version 5.0.7 of |
| XZ Utils, you would need to extract the archive into ..\..\xz-5.0.5 |
| anyway, since that is where the solution is set to look for xz. The |
| same is true for all other external projects. |
| |
| The external(-amd64).bat scripts will also build a debug build of |
| Tcl/Tk, but there aren't any equivalent batch files for building release |
| versions of Tcl/Tk currently available. If you need to build a release |
| version of Tcl/Tk, just take a look at the relevant external(-amd64).bat |
| file and find the two nmake lines, then call each one without the |
| 'DEBUG=1' parameter, i.e.: |
| |
| The external-amd64.bat file contains this for tcl: |
| nmake -f makefile.vc DEBUG=1 MACHINE=AMD64 INSTALLDIR=..\..\tcltk64 clean all install |
| |
| So for a release build, you'd call it as: |
| nmake -f makefile.vc MACHINE=AMD64 INSTALLDIR=..\..\tcltk64 clean all install |
| |
| Note that the above command is called from within ..\..\tcl-8.6.1.0\win |
| (relative to this directory); don't forget to build Tk as well as Tcl! |
| |
| This will be cleaned up in the future; http://bugs.python.org/issue15968 |
| tracks adding a new tcltk.vcxproj file that will build Tcl/Tk and Tix |
| the same way the other external projects listed above are built. |
| |
| |
| Building for AMD64 |
| ------------------ |
| |
| The build process for AMD64 / x64 is very similar to standard builds, |
| you just have to set x64 as platform. In addition, the HOST_PYTHON |
| environment variable must point to a Python interpreter (at least 2.4), |
| to support cross-compilation from Win32. Note that Visual Studio |
| requires Professional Edition or better in order to build 64-bit |
| binaries. |
| |
| |
| Profile Guided Optimization |
| --------------------------- |
| |
| The solution has two configurations for PGO. The PGInstrument |
| configuration must be built first. The PGInstrument binaries are linked |
| against a profiling library and contain extra debug information. The |
| PGUpdate configuration takes the profiling data and generates optimized |
| binaries. |
| |
| The build_pgo.bat script automates the creation of optimized binaries. |
| It creates the PGI files, runs the unit test suite or PyBench with the |
| PGI python, and finally creates the optimized files. |
| |
| See |
| http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/e7k32f4k(VS.100).aspx |
| for more on this topic. |
| |
| |
| Static library |
| -------------- |
| |
| The solution has no configuration for static libraries. However it is |
| easy to build a static library instead of a DLL. You simply have to set |
| the "Configuration Type" to "Static Library (.lib)" and alter the |
| preprocessor macro "Py_ENABLE_SHARED" to "Py_NO_ENABLE_SHARED". You may |
| also have to change the "Runtime Library" from "Multi-threaded DLL |
| (/MD)" to "Multi-threaded (/MT)". |
| |
| |
| Visual Studio properties |
| ------------------------ |
| |
| The PCbuild solution makes heavy use of Visual Studio property files |
| (*.props). The properties can be viewed and altered in the Property |
| Manager (View -> Other Windows -> Property Manager). |
| |
| The property files used are (+-- = "also imports"): |
| * debug (debug macro: _DEBUG) |
| * pginstrument (PGO) |
| * pgupdate (PGO) |
| +-- pginstrument |
| * pyd (python extension, release build) |
| +-- release |
| +-- pyproject |
| * pyd_d (python extension, debug build) |
| +-- debug |
| +-- pyproject |
| * pyproject (base settings for all projects, user macros like PyDllName) |
| * release (release macro: NDEBUG) |
| * sqlite3 (used only by sqlite3.vcxproj) |
| * x64 (AMD64 / x64 platform specific settings) |
| |
| The pyproject property file defines _WIN32 and x64 defines _WIN64 and |
| _M_X64 although the macros are set by the compiler, too. The GUI doesn't |
| always know about the macros and confuse the user with false |
| information. |
| |
| |
| Your Own Extension DLLs |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| If you want to create your own extension module DLL (.pyd), there's an |
| example with easy-to-follow instructions in ..\PC\example\; read the |
| file readme.txt there first. |