ITK/Configuring and Building/MinGW: Difference between revisions

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==MSYS==
To build ITK using MSYS on Windows 7, follow these instructions.
Download from here:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw/files/latest/download?source=files
or if there is a later version from the time that this page was written, download it from here:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw/files/Installer/
Make sure to check "C compiler", "C++ compiler", and "MinGW Developer ToolKit".
You MUST add mingw to your path
(Add "c:/MinGW/bin" to the "PATH" variable here: Right click my computer -> Properties -> Advanced System Settings -> Advanced -> Environment variables)
You MUST add msys to your path
(Add "C:\MinGW\msys\1.0\bin" to the "PATH" variable here: Right click my computer -> Properties -> Advanced System Settings -> Advanced -> Environment variables)
* Launch the CMake GUI (from the normal shortcut in the Start Menu)
* Next to "Where is the source code:", click "Browse Source..." and navigate to where you cloned the repository with Git.
* Next to "Where to build the binaries:", select "Browse Build..." and select a place to build the ITK library. For example, you could use c:\build\ITK. This directory MUST NOT be inside the directory where you cloned the repository.
* Click "Configure", and then specify "MSYS Makefiles" (NOT (MinGW Makefiles")as the generator for this project.
* Choose your build options. I like to UNCHECK BUILD_EXAMPLES and BUILD_TESTING as they speed up the build process significantly.
* Click "Generate".
* Start a MinGW Shell (Start -> Programs -> MinGW -> MinGW Shell)
* Navigate to the Build directory you specified through CMake (e.g. cd /c/build/ITK)
* Run 'make'
==Ninja==
To build ITK using MSYS/MinGW/Ninja on Windows 7, follow these instructions.
Download from here:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw/files/latest/download?source=files
or if there is a later version from the time that this page was written, download it from here:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw/files/Installer/
Make sure to check "C compiler", "C++ compiler", and "MinGW Developer ToolKit".
Download Ninja from here:
https://github.com/martine/ninja/downloads
Unzip the the zipfile.
* Start a MinGW Shell (Start -> Programs -> MinGW -> MinGW Shell)
* Move ''ninja.exe'' to the a location in the PATH environmental variable (e.g. mv /c/Downloads/ninja.exe /mingw/bin/)
* Launch the CMake GUI from the MinGW shell (/c/Program\ Files\ \(x86\)/CMake\ 2.8/bin/cmake-gui.exe)
* Next to "Where is the source code:", click "Browse Source..." and navigate to where you cloned the repository with Git.
* Next to "Where to build the binaries:", select "Browse Build..." and select a place to build the ITK library. For example, you could use c:\build\ITK. This directory MUST NOT be inside the directory where you cloned the repository.
* Click "Configure", and then specify "Ninja" (NOT (MinGW Makefiles")as the generator for this project.
* Choose your build options. I like to UNCHECK BUILD_EXAMPLES and BUILD_TESTING as they speed up the build process significantly.
* Click "Generate".
* Navigate to the Build directory you specified through CMake (e.g. cd /c/build/ITK)
* Run 'ninja'
==MinGW==
To build ITK using MinGW on Windows 7, follow these instructions.
To build ITK using MinGW on Windows 7, follow these instructions.


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http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw/files/Installer/
http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw/files/Installer/


* Launch the CMake GUI by running 'cmake-gui'
Make sure to check "C compiler", "C++ compiler", and "MinGW Developer ToolKit".
 
You MUST add mingw to your path
(Add "c:/MinGW/bin" to the "PATH" variable here: Right click my computer -> Properties -> Advanced System Settings -> Advanced -> Environment variables)
 
You MUST NOT add msys to your PATH
 
* Launch the CMake GUI (from the normal shortcut in the Start Menu)
* Next to "Where is the source code:", click "Browse Source..." and navigate to where you cloned the repository with Git.
* Next to "Where is the source code:", click "Browse Source..." and navigate to where you cloned the repository with Git.
* Next to "Where to build the binaries:", select "Browse Build..." and select a place to build the ITK library. I like to use c:\build\ITK. This directory should NOT be inside the directory where you cloned the repository.
* Next to "Where to build the binaries:", select "Browse Build..." and select a place to build the ITK library. For example, you could use c:\build\ITK. This directory MUST NOT be inside the directory where you cloned the repository.
* Click "Configure", and then specify "Visual Studio 10" as the generator for this project.
* Click "Configure", and then specify "MinGW Makefiles"as the generator for this project.
* Choose your build options. I like to UNCHECK BUILD_EXAMPLES and BUILD_TESTING as they speed up the build process significantly.
* Choose your build options. I like to UNCHECK BUILD_EXAMPLES and BUILD_TESTING as they speed up the build process significantly.
* Click "Generate".
* Click "Generate".
* Open Visual Studio 2010
* Start a MinGW Shell (Start -> Programs -> MinGW -> MinGW Shell)
* Open Project
* Navigate to the Build directory you specified through CMake (e.g. cd /c/build/ITK)
* Navigate to the Build directory you specified through CMake
* Run 'mingw32-make' (note: 'make' does not seem to produce any errors, but it seems to not do anything (just returns immediately to the terminal)
* Open the ALL_BUILD project
* From the Build menu, choose "Build Solution" (or "Build ALL_BUILD")

Latest revision as of 01:13, 27 September 2012

MSYS

To build ITK using MSYS on Windows 7, follow these instructions.

Download from here: http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw/files/latest/download?source=files

or if there is a later version from the time that this page was written, download it from here: http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw/files/Installer/

Make sure to check "C compiler", "C++ compiler", and "MinGW Developer ToolKit".

You MUST add mingw to your path (Add "c:/MinGW/bin" to the "PATH" variable here: Right click my computer -> Properties -> Advanced System Settings -> Advanced -> Environment variables)

You MUST add msys to your path (Add "C:\MinGW\msys\1.0\bin" to the "PATH" variable here: Right click my computer -> Properties -> Advanced System Settings -> Advanced -> Environment variables)

  • Launch the CMake GUI (from the normal shortcut in the Start Menu)
  • Next to "Where is the source code:", click "Browse Source..." and navigate to where you cloned the repository with Git.
  • Next to "Where to build the binaries:", select "Browse Build..." and select a place to build the ITK library. For example, you could use c:\build\ITK. This directory MUST NOT be inside the directory where you cloned the repository.
  • Click "Configure", and then specify "MSYS Makefiles" (NOT (MinGW Makefiles")as the generator for this project.
  • Choose your build options. I like to UNCHECK BUILD_EXAMPLES and BUILD_TESTING as they speed up the build process significantly.
  • Click "Generate".
  • Start a MinGW Shell (Start -> Programs -> MinGW -> MinGW Shell)
  • Navigate to the Build directory you specified through CMake (e.g. cd /c/build/ITK)
  • Run 'make'

Ninja

To build ITK using MSYS/MinGW/Ninja on Windows 7, follow these instructions.

Download from here: http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw/files/latest/download?source=files

or if there is a later version from the time that this page was written, download it from here: http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw/files/Installer/

Make sure to check "C compiler", "C++ compiler", and "MinGW Developer ToolKit".

Download Ninja from here: https://github.com/martine/ninja/downloads Unzip the the zipfile.

  • Start a MinGW Shell (Start -> Programs -> MinGW -> MinGW Shell)
  • Move ninja.exe to the a location in the PATH environmental variable (e.g. mv /c/Downloads/ninja.exe /mingw/bin/)
  • Launch the CMake GUI from the MinGW shell (/c/Program\ Files\ \(x86\)/CMake\ 2.8/bin/cmake-gui.exe)
  • Next to "Where is the source code:", click "Browse Source..." and navigate to where you cloned the repository with Git.
  • Next to "Where to build the binaries:", select "Browse Build..." and select a place to build the ITK library. For example, you could use c:\build\ITK. This directory MUST NOT be inside the directory where you cloned the repository.
  • Click "Configure", and then specify "Ninja" (NOT (MinGW Makefiles")as the generator for this project.
  • Choose your build options. I like to UNCHECK BUILD_EXAMPLES and BUILD_TESTING as they speed up the build process significantly.
  • Click "Generate".
  • Navigate to the Build directory you specified through CMake (e.g. cd /c/build/ITK)
  • Run 'ninja'

MinGW

To build ITK using MinGW on Windows 7, follow these instructions.

Download from here: http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw/files/latest/download?source=files

or if there is a later version from the time that this page was written, download it from here: http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw/files/Installer/

Make sure to check "C compiler", "C++ compiler", and "MinGW Developer ToolKit".

You MUST add mingw to your path (Add "c:/MinGW/bin" to the "PATH" variable here: Right click my computer -> Properties -> Advanced System Settings -> Advanced -> Environment variables)

You MUST NOT add msys to your PATH

  • Launch the CMake GUI (from the normal shortcut in the Start Menu)
  • Next to "Where is the source code:", click "Browse Source..." and navigate to where you cloned the repository with Git.
  • Next to "Where to build the binaries:", select "Browse Build..." and select a place to build the ITK library. For example, you could use c:\build\ITK. This directory MUST NOT be inside the directory where you cloned the repository.
  • Click "Configure", and then specify "MinGW Makefiles"as the generator for this project.
  • Choose your build options. I like to UNCHECK BUILD_EXAMPLES and BUILD_TESTING as they speed up the build process significantly.
  • Click "Generate".
  • Start a MinGW Shell (Start -> Programs -> MinGW -> MinGW Shell)
  • Navigate to the Build directory you specified through CMake (e.g. cd /c/build/ITK)
  • Run 'mingw32-make' (note: 'make' does not seem to produce any errors, but it seems to not do anything (just returns immediately to the terminal)