зеркало из https://github.com/microsoft/git.git
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Let the documentation reflect that there is no vs/master anymore |
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vcpkg_install.bat |
README
The Steps to Build Git with VS2015 or VS2017 from the command line. 1. Install the "vcpkg" open source package manager and build essential third-party libraries. The steps for this have been captured in a set of convenience scripts. These can be run from a stock Command Prompt or from an SDK bash window: $ cd <repo_root> $ ./compat/vcbuild/vcpkg_install.bat x64-windows or $ ./compat/vcbuild/vcpkg_install.bat arm64-windows The vcpkg tools and all of the third-party sources will be installed in this folder: <repo_root>/compat/vcbuild/vcpkg/ A file will be created with a set of Makefile macros pointing to a unified "include", "lib", and "bin" directory (release and debug) for all of the required packages. This file will be included by the main Makefile: <repo_root>/compat/vcbuild/MSVC-DEFS-GEN 2. OPTIONALLY copy the third-party *.dll and *.pdb files into the repo root to make it easier to run and debug git.exe without having to manipulate your PATH. This is especially true for debug sessions in Visual Studio. Use ONE of the following forms which should match how you want to compile git.exe. $ ./compat/vcbuild/vcpkg_copy_dlls.bat debug $ ./compat/vcbuild/vcpkg_copy_dlls.bat release 3. Build git using MSVC from an SDK bash window using one of the following commands: $ make MSVC=1 $ make MSVC=1 DEBUG=1 ================================================================ Alternatively, just open Git's top-level directory in Visual Studio, via `File>Open>Folder...`. This will use CMake internally to generate the project definitions. It will also install the vcpkg system and build the dependencies automatically. This will take a while. You can also generate the Visual Studio solution manually by downloading and running CMake explicitly rather than letting Visual Studio doing that implicitly. Another, deprecated option is to run `make vcxproj`. This option is superseded by the CMake-based build, and will be removed at some point. ================================================================ The Steps of Build Git with VS2008 1. You need the build environment, which contains the Git dependencies to be able to compile, link and run Git with MSVC. You can either use the binary repository: WWW: http://repo.or.cz/w/msvcgit.git Git: git clone git://repo.or.cz/msvcgit.git Zip: http://repo.or.cz/w/msvcgit.git?a=snapshot;h=master;sf=zip and call the setup_32bit_env.cmd batch script before compiling Git, (see repo/package README for details), or the source repository: WWW: http://repo.or.cz/w/gitbuild.git Git: git clone git://repo.or.cz/gitbuild.git Zip: (None, as it's a project with submodules) and build the support libs as instructed in that repo/package. 2. Ensure you have the msysgit environment in your path, so you have GNU Make, bash and perl available. WWW: http://repo.or.cz/w/msysgit.git Git: git clone git://repo.or.cz/msysgit.git Zip: http://repo.or.cz/w/msysgit.git?a=snapshot;h=master;sf=zip This environment is also needed when you use the resulting executables, since Git might need to run scripts which are part of the git operations. 3. Inside Git's directory run the command: make generated-hdrs to generate the header file needed to compile git. 4. Then either build Git with the GNU Make Makefile in the Git projects root make MSVC=1 or generate Visual Studio solution/projects (.sln/.vcproj) with the command perl contrib/buildsystems/generate -g Vcproj and open and build the solution with the IDE devenv git.sln /useenv or build with the IDE build engine directly from the command line devenv git.sln /useenv /build "Release|Win32" The /useenv option is required, so Visual Studio picks up the environment variables for the support libraries required to build Git, which you set up in step 1. Done!