zstd/build/VS_scripts/README.md

65 lines
2.1 KiB
Markdown

Command line scripts for Visual Studio compilation without IDE
==============================================================
Here are a few command lines for reference :
### Build with Visual Studio 2013 for msvcr120.dll
Running the following command will build both the `Release Win32` and `Release x64` versions:
```batch
build.VS2013.cmd
```
The result of each build will be in the corresponding `bin\Release\{ARCH}\` folder.
If you want to only need one architecture:
- Win32: `build.generic.cmd VS2013 Win32 Release v120`
- x64: `build.generic.cmd VS2013 x64 Release v120`
If you want a Debug build:
- Win32: `build.generic.cmd VS2013 Win32 Debug v120`
- x64: `build.generic.cmd VS2013 x64 Debug v120`
### Build with Visual Studio 2015 for msvcr140.dll
Running the following command will build both the `Release Win32` and `Release x64` versions:
```batch
build.VS2015.cmd
```
The result of each build will be in the corresponding `bin\Release\{ARCH}\` folder.
If you want to only need one architecture:
- Win32: `build.generic.cmd VS2015 Win32 Release v140`
- x64: `build.generic.cmd VS2015 x64 Release v140`
If you want a Debug build:
- Win32: `build.generic.cmd VS2015 Win32 Debug v140`
- x64: `build.generic.cmd VS2015 x64 Debug v140`
### Build with Visual Studio 2015 for msvcr120.dll
This capability is offered through `build.generic.cmd` using proper arguments:
**For Win32**
```batch
build.generic.cmd VS2015 Win32 Release v120
```
The result of the build will be in the `bin\Release\Win32\` folder.
**For x64**
```batch
build.generic.cmd VS2015 x64 Release v120
```
The result of the build will be in the `bin\Release\x64\` folder.
If you want Debug builds, replace `Release` with `Debug`.
### Build with Visual Studio 2017
`build.VS2017.cmd`, contributed by [@HaydnTrigg](https://github.com/HaydnTrigg),
will build both the `Release Win32` and `Release x64` versions
of the first VS2017 variant it finds, in this priority order :
Enterprise > Professional > Community
Alternatively, it's possible to target a specific version,
using appropriate script, such as `build.VS2017Enterprise.cmd` for example.