[Ctk-developers] getting things to work in windows

Sascha Zelzer s.zelzer at dkfz-heidelberg.de
Tue Jan 18 09:44:14 UTC 2011


Hi,

looking at your command line, I see that you invoke configure from a Qt 
SDK installation directory. This SDK is MinGW based. If you want to 
build Qt yourself, get the raw sources 
(http://get.qt.nokia.com/qt/source/qt-everywhere-opensource-src-4.7.1.zip), 
unpack them in a folder (without spaces in the name) and configure from 
inside there.

Why do you want to build Qt yourself in the first place? This should 
only be necessary if you want 64bit binaries or a Visual Studio 2010 
compiled Qt.

Best,
Sascha

On 01/18/2011 06:52 AM, Mark Roden wrote:
> Running in administrator mode (which should have the same effect as
> turning off the UAC) does not solve the problem, but produces a new
> bug:
>
>
> mt.exe : general error c101008d: Failed to write the updated manifest
> to the resource of file "..\..\..\bin\idc.exe". Access is denied.
>
> NMAKE : fatal error U1077: '"C:\Program Files\Microsoft
> SDKs\Windows\v6.0A\bin\mt.exe"' : return code '0x1f'
> Stop.
> NMAKE : fatal error U1077: '"C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual
> Studio 9.0\VC\BIN\nmake.exe"' : return code '0x2'
> Stop.
> NMAKE : fatal error U1077: 'cd' : return code '0x2'
> Stop.
>
> with the command line:
> D:\Qt\2010.05\qt>configure -release -platform win32-msvc2008 -no-dsp -no-vcproj
>
> I find it very hard to believe that I have a completely broken Qt
> installation, or that I'm the only one with this problem, yet there it
> is.
>
> I'll try again from scratch, maybe that will solve the issue.
>




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