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windows: add info on required toolchain

This commit is contained in:
Matthias Ringwald 2018-05-03 11:29:38 +02:00
parent 3cda7aede8
commit 5b53c16ecf
2 changed files with 10 additions and 11 deletions
port
windows-h4
windows-winusb

@ -6,19 +6,19 @@ Make sure to manually reset the Bluetooth Controller before starting any of the
## Toolchain
The port requires a Unix-like toolchain. We successfully used [mingw-w64](https://mingw-w64.org/doku.php) to compile and run the examples. mingw64-w64 is based on [MingW](mingw.org) which has a good summary 'MinGW provides a complete Open Source programming tool set which is suitable for the development of native MS-Windows applications, and which do not depend on any 3rd-party C-Runtime DLLs.'
The port requires a Unix-like toolchain. We successfully used [mingw-w64](https://mingw-w64.org/doku.php) to compile and run the examples. mingw64-w64 is based on [MinGW](mingw.org), which '...provides a complete Open Source programming tool set which is suitable for the development of native MS-Windows applications, and which do not depend on any 3rd-party C-Runtime DLLs.'
We've used the Msys2 package available from their [downloads page](https://mingw-w64.org/doku.php/download) on Windows 10, 64-bit and use the MSYS2 MinGW 32-bit start menu item to compile 32-bit binaries that run on both 32/64-bit systems.
We've used the Msys2 package available from the [downloads page](https://mingw-w64.org/doku.php/download) on Windows 10, 64-bit and use the MSYS2 MinGW 32-bit start menu item to compile 32-bit binaries that run on both 32/64-bit systems.
IN the MSYS2 shell, you can install git, winpty, and python with pacman:
In the MSYS2 shell, you can install git, python, and, winpty with pacman:
$ pacman -S git
$ pacman -S winpty
$ pacman -S python
$ pacman -S winpty
## Compilation
With mingw64 installed, just go to the port/windows-winusb directory and run make
With mingw64-w64 installed, just go to the port/windows-winusb directory and run make
$ cd btstack/port/windows-winusb
$ make
@ -29,4 +29,3 @@ When running the examples in the MSYS2 shell, the console input (via btstack_std
$ winpty ./spp_and_le_counter.exe

@ -17,19 +17,19 @@ It works like this:
## Toolchain
The port requires a Unix-like toolchain. We successfully used [mingw-w64](https://mingw-w64.org/doku.php) to compile and run the examples. mingw64-w64 is based on [MingW](mingw.org) which has a good summary 'MinGW provides a complete Open Source programming tool set which is suitable for the development of native MS-Windows applications, and which do not depend on any 3rd-party C-Runtime DLLs.'
The port requires a Unix-like toolchain. We successfully used [mingw-w64](https://mingw-w64.org/doku.php) to compile and run the examples. mingw64-w64 is based on [MinGW](mingw.org), which '...provides a complete Open Source programming tool set which is suitable for the development of native MS-Windows applications, and which do not depend on any 3rd-party C-Runtime DLLs.'
We've used the Msys2 package available from their [downloads page](https://mingw-w64.org/doku.php/download) on Windows 10, 64-bit and use the MSYS2 MinGW 32-bit start menu item to compile 32-bit binaries that run on both 32/64-bit systems.
We've used the Msys2 package available from the [downloads page](https://mingw-w64.org/doku.php/download) on Windows 10, 64-bit and use the MSYS2 MinGW 32-bit start menu item to compile 32-bit binaries that run on both 32/64-bit systems.
IN the MSYS2 shell, you can install git, winpty, and python with pacman:
In the MSYS2 shell, you can install git, python, and, winpty with pacman:
$ pacman -S git
$ pacman -S winpty
$ pacman -S python
$ pacman -S winpty
## Compilation
With mingw64 installed, just go to the port/windows-winusb directory and run make
With mingw64-w64 installed, just go to the port/windows-winusb directory and run make
$ cd btstack/port/windows-winusb
$ make