| INSTALLpc.txt - Installation of Vim on PC |
| |
| This file contains instructions for compiling Vim. If you already have an |
| executable version of Vim, you don't need this. |
| |
| You can find the latest here: https://github.com/vim/vim-win32-installer |
| This page also has links to install support for interfaces such as Perl, |
| Python, Lua, etc. |
| |
| The file "feature.h" can be edited to match your preferences. You can skip |
| this, then you will get the default behavior as is documented, which should |
| be fine for most people. |
| |
| This document assumes that you are building Vim for Win32 or later (Windows |
| 7/8/10/11). There are also instructions for pre-Vista and pre-XP systems, but |
| they might no longer work. |
| |
| The recommended way is to build a 32 bit Vim, also on 64 bit systems. You can |
| build a 64 bit Vim if you like, the executable will be bigger and Vim won't be |
| any faster, but you can edit files larger than 2 Gbyte. |
| |
| |
| Contents: |
| 1. Microsoft Visual C++ |
| 2. Using MSYS2 with MinGW |
| 3. Using MinGW |
| 4. Cygwin |
| 5. Cross compiling for Win32 from a Linux machine |
| 6. Building with Python support |
| 7. Building with Python3 support |
| 8. Building with Racket or MzScheme support |
| 9. Building with Lua support |
| 10. Building with Perl support |
| 11. Building with Ruby support |
| 12. Building with Tcl support |
| 13. Building with DirectX (DirectWrite) support |
| 14. Building with libsodium support |
| 15. Windows 3.1 |
| 16. MS-DOS |
| |
| 17. Installing after building from sources |
| |
| |
| The currently recommended way (that means it has been verified to work) is |
| using the "Visual Studio Community 2015" installation. This doesn't include |
| the SDK for older Windows versions (95, 98), see "OLDER VERSIONS" below for |
| that. |
| |
| |
| 1. Microsoft Visual C++ |
| ======================= |
| |
| We do not provide download links, since Microsoft keeps changing them. You |
| can search for "Visual Studio Community 2015", for example. You will need to |
| create a Microsoft account (it's free). You need to download the "DVD", and |
| execute the installer from it. |
| |
| When installing "Visual Studio Community 2015 with Update 3" or "Visual C++ |
| Build Tools for Visual Studio 2015 with Update 3" make sure to |
| select "custom" and check all checkboxes under "Universal Windows App |
| Development Tools". Or whatever they are called now. |
| (If you still want to target Windows XP, check also "Windows XP Support for |
| C++". Note that this is no longer supported.) |
| |
| |
| Visual Studio |
| ------------- |
| |
| Building with Visual Studio (VS2010, VS2012, VS2013, VS2015, VS2017, VS2019 |
| and VS2022) is straightforward. |
| |
| To build Vim from the command line with MSVC, use Make_mvc.mak. |
| Visual Studio installed a batch file called vcvars32.bat, which you must |
| run to set up paths for nmake and MSVC. |
| |
| nmake -f Make_mvc.mak console Win32 SDK or Microsoft Visual C++ |
| nmake -f Make_mvc.mak GUI=yes GUI Microsoft Visual C++ |
| nmake -f Make_mvc.mak OLE=yes OLE Microsoft Visual C++ |
| nmake -f Make_mvc.mak PERL=C:\Perl PYTHON=C:\Python etc. |
| Perl, Python, etc. |
| |
| Make_mvc.mak allows a Vim to be built with various different features and |
| debug support. |
| |
| For compiling gVim with IME support on far-east Windows, add IME=yes |
| to the parameters you pass to Make_mvc.mak. |
| |
| See the specific files for comments and options. |
| |
| These files have been supplied by George V. Reilly, Ben Singer, Ken Scott and |
| Ron Aaron; they have been tested. |
| |
| |
| Visual C++ 2010 Express Edition *msvc-2010-express* |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| Visual C++ 2010 Express Edition can be downloaded for free from: |
| http://www.microsoft.com/express/vc/Default.aspx |
| This includes the IDE and the debugger. |
| |
| To set the environment execute the msvc2010.bat script. You can then build |
| Vim with Make_mvc.mak. |
| |
| |
| Targeting Windows XP with MSVC 2012 and later *new-msvc-windows-xp* |
| --------------------------------------------- |
| |
| (The support for pre-Vista was removed in patch 9.0.0xxx. If you want to |
| target Windows XP, use the source code before that.) |
| |
| Beginning with Visual C++ 2012, Microsoft changed the behavior of LINK.EXE |
| so that it targets Windows 6.0 (Vista) by default. In order to override |
| this, the target Windows version number needs to be passed to LINK like |
| follows: |
| LINK ... /subsystem:console,5.01 |
| |
| Make_mvc.mak now supports a macro SUBSYSTEM_VER to pass the Windows version. |
| Use lines like follows to target Windows XP x86 (assuming using Visual C++ |
| 2012 under 64-bit Windows): |
| set WinSdk71=%ProgramFiles(x86)%\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v7.1A |
| set INCLUDE=%WinSdk71%\Include;%INCLUDE% |
| set LIB=%WinSdk71%\Lib;%LIB% |
| set CL=/D_USING_V110_SDK71_ |
| nmake -f Make_mvc.mak ... WINVER=0x0501 SUBSYSTEM_VER=5.01 |
| |
| To target Windows XP x64 instead of x86, you need to change the settings of |
| LIB and SUBSYSTEM_VER: |
| ... |
| set LIB=%WinSdk71%\Lib\x64;%LIB% |
| ... |
| nmake -f Make_mvc.mak ... WINVER=0x0501 SUBSYSTEM_VER=5.02 |
| |
| If you use Visual C++ 2015 (either Express or Community Edition), executing |
| msvc2015.bat will set them automatically. For x86 builds run this without |
| options: |
| msvc2015 |
| For x64 builds run this with the "x86_amd64" option: |
| msvc2015 x86_amd64 |
| This enables x86_x64 cross compiler. This works on any editions including |
| Express edition. |
| If you use Community (or Professional) edition, you can enable the x64 native |
| compiler by using the "x64" option: |
| msvc2015 x64 |
| |
| The following Visual C++ team blog can serve as a reference page: |
| http://blogs.msdn.com/b/vcblog/archive/2012/10/08/windows-xp-targeting-with-c-in-visual-studio-2012.aspx |
| |
| |
| Cross compile support for Windows on ARM64 |
| ------------------------------------------ |
| |
| This depends on VS2017 with the optional ARM64 compiler and SDK |
| installed. Use "vcvarsall.bat x64_arm64" as the build environment. |
| |
| The ARM64 support was provided by Leendert van Doorn. |
| |
| |
| OLDER VERSIONS |
| |
| The minimal supported version is Windows 7. Building with older compilers |
| might still work, but these instructions might be outdated. |
| |
| If you need the executable to run on Windows 98 or ME, use the 2005 one |
| |msvc-2005-express|, and use the source code before 8.0.0029. |
| |
| |
| Visual C++ 2005 Express Edition *msvc-2005-express* |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| NOTE: this most likely does not work |
| |
| Visual C++ 2005 Express Edition can be downloaded for free from: |
| http://msdn.microsoft.com/vstudio/express/visualC/default.aspx |
| This includes the IDE and the debugger. You will also need |
| |ms-platform-sdk|. You can build Vim with Make_mvc.mak. |
| |
| Instructions for integrating the Platform SDK into VC Express: |
| http://msdn.microsoft.com/vstudio/express/visualc/usingpsdk/default.aspx |
| |
| |
| Visual C++ 2008 Express Edition *msvc-2008-express* |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| NOTE: this most likely does not work |
| |
| Visual C++ 2008 Express Edition can be downloaded for free from: |
| http://www.microsoft.com/express/downloads/ |
| This includes the IDE and the debugger. |
| |
| To set the environment execute the msvc2008.bat script. You can then build |
| Vim with Make_mvc.mak. |
| |
| For building 64 bit binaries you also need to install the SDK: |
| "Microsoft Windows SDK for Windows 7 and .NET Framework 3.5 SP1" |
| You don't need the examples and documentation. |
| |
| |
| 2. MSYS2 with MinGW |
| =================== |
| |
| 2.1. Setup the basic msys2 environment |
| |
| Go to the official page of MSYS2: https://www.msys2.org |
| Download an installer: |
| |
| * msys2-x86_64-YYYYMMDD.exe for 64-bit Windows |
| (Even if you want to build 32-bit Vim) |
| * msys2-i686-YYYYMMDD.exe for 32-bit Windows |
| |
| Execute the installer and follow the instructions to update basic packages. |
| At the end keep the checkbox checked to run msys2 now. If needed, you can |
| open the window from the start menu, MSYS2 64 bit / MSYS2 MSYS. |
| |
| Execute: |
| $ pacman -Syu |
| |
| And restart MSYS2 console (select "MSYS2 MSYS 32-Bit" icon from the Start |
| Menu for building 32 bit Vim, otherwise select "MSYS2 MinGW 64-Bit"). |
| Then execute: |
| $ pacman -Su |
| |
| If pacman complains that `catgets` and `libcatgets` conflict with another |
| package, select `y` to remove them. |
| |
| |
| 2.2. Install additional packages for building Vim |
| |
| The following package groups are required for building Vim: |
| |
| * base-devel |
| * mingw-w64-i686-toolchain (for building 32-bit Vim) |
| * mingw-w64-x86_64-toolchain (for building 64-bit Vim) |
| |
| (These groups also include some useful packages which are not used by Vim.) |
| Use the following command to install them: |
| |
| $ pacman -S base-devel mingw-w64-i686-toolchain mingw-w64-x86_64-toolchain |
| |
| Or you can use the `pacboy` command to avoid long package names: |
| |
| $ pacboy -S base-devel: toolchain:m |
| |
| The suffix ":" means that it disables the package name translation. |
| The suffix ":m" means both i686 and x86_64. You can also use the ":i" suffix |
| to install only i686, and the ":x" suffix to install only x86_64. |
| (See `pacboy help` for the help.) |
| |
| See also the pacman page in ArchWiki for the general usage of pacman: |
| https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/pacman |
| |
| MSYS2 has its own git package, and you can also install it via pacman: |
| |
| $ pacman -S git |
| |
| |
| 2.3. Keep the build environment up-to-date |
| |
| After you have installed the build environment, you may want to keep it |
| up-to-date (E.g. always use the latest GCC). |
| In that case, you just need to execute the command: |
| $ pacman -Syu |
| |
| |
| 2.4. Build Vim |
| |
| Select one of the following icon from the Start Menu: |
| |
| * MSYS2 MinGW 32-bit (To build 32-bit versions of Vim) |
| * MSYS2 MinGW 64-bit (To build 64-bit versions of Vim) |
| |
| Go to the source directory of Vim, then execute the make command. E.g.: |
| |
| make -f Make_ming.mak |
| make -f Make_ming.mak GUI=no |
| make -f Make_ming.mak GUI=no DEBUG=yes |
| |
| NOTE: you can't execute vim.exe in the MSYS2 console, open a normal Windows |
| console for that. You need to set $PATH to be able to build there, e.g.: |
| |
| set PATH=c:\msys64\mingw32\bin;c:\msys64\usr\bin;%PATH% |
| |
| This command is in msys32.bat. Or for the 64 bit compiler use msys64.bat: |
| |
| set PATH=c:\msys64\mingw64\bin;c:\msys64\usr\bin;%PATH% |
| |
| If you have msys64 in another location you will need to adjust the paths for |
| that. |
| |
| 2.5. Build Vim with Clang |
| |
| The following package group is required for building Vim with Clang: |
| |
| * mingw-w64-clang-x86_64-clang |
| |
| Use the following command to install it: |
| |
| $ pacman -S mingw-w64-clang-x86_64-clang |
| |
| Go to the source directory of Vim, then execute the make command. E.g.: |
| |
| CC=clang |
| CXX=clang++ |
| # To build Vim without the GUI support |
| make -f Make_ming.mak GUI=no |
| # To build Vim with the GUI support |
| make -f Make_ming.mak GUI=yes XPM=no |
| |
| To build Vim with the address sanitizer (ASAN), execute the following command: |
| |
| CC=clang |
| CXX=clang++ |
| make -f Make_ming.mak DEBUG=yes ASAN=yes |
| |
| 3. MinGW |
| ======== |
| |
| (written by Ron Aaron: <ronaharon@yahoo.com>, updated by Ken Takata, et al.) |
| |
| This is about how to produce a Win32 binary of gvim with MinGW from the normal |
| Command Prompt window. (To use MSYS2 console, see above.) |
| |
| First, you need to get the 'MinGW-w64' compiler, which is free for the |
| download at: |
| |
| http://mingw-w64.sourceforge.net/ |
| |
| Or a compiler provided on msys2: |
| |
| https://www.msys2.org/ |
| |
| The original 'mingw32' compiler is outdated, and may no longer work: |
| |
| http://www.mingw.org/ |
| |
| Once you have downloaded the compiler binaries, unpack them on your hard disk |
| somewhere, and put them on your PATH. Go to the Control Panel, (Performance |
| and Maintenance), System, Advanced, and edit the environment from there. If |
| you use the standalone MinGW-w64 compiler, the path may depend on your |
| installation. If you use msys2 compilers, set your installed paths (normally |
| one of the following): |
| |
| C:\msys32\mingw32\bin (32-bit msys2, targeting 32-bit builds) |
| C:\msys64\mingw32\bin (64-bit msys2, targeting 32-bit builds) |
| C:\msys64\mingw64\bin (64-bit msys2, targeting 64-bit builds) |
| |
| Test if gcc is on your path. From a Command Prompt window: |
| |
| C:\> gcc --version |
| gcc (GCC) 4.8.1 |
| |
| C:\> mingw32-make --version |
| GNU Make 3.82.90 (...etc...) |
| |
| Now you are ready to rock 'n' roll. Unpack the vim sources (look on |
| www.vim.org for exactly which version of the vim files you need). |
| |
| Change directory to 'vim\src': |
| |
| C:\> cd vim\src |
| C:\VIM\SRC> |
| |
| and you type: |
| |
| mingw32-make -f Make_ming.mak gvim.exe |
| |
| After churning for a while, you will end up with 'gvim.exe' in the 'vim\src' |
| directory. |
| |
| You should not need to do *any* editing of any files to get vim compiled this |
| way. If, for some reason, you want the console-mode-only version of vim (this |
| is NOT recommended on Win32, especially on '95/'98!!!), you can use: |
| |
| mingw32-make -f Make_ming.mak GUI=no vim.exe |
| |
| If you are dismayed by how big the EXE is, I strongly recommend you get 'UPX' |
| (also free!) and compress the file (typical compression is 50%). UPX can be |
| found at |
| http://www.upx.org/ |
| |
| As of 2011, UPX still does not support compressing 64-bit EXE's; if you have |
| built a 64-bit vim then an alternative to UPX is 'MPRESS'. MPRESS can be found |
| at: |
| http://www.matcode.com/mpress.htm |
| |
| |
| ADDITION: NLS support with MinGW |
| |
| (by Eduardo F. Amatria <eferna1@platea.pntic.mec.es>) |
| |
| If you want National Language Support, read the file src/po/README_mingw.txt. |
| You need to uncomment lines in Make_ming.mak to have NLS defined. |
| |
| |
| 4. Cygwin |
| ========= |
| |
| Use Make_cyg.mak with Cygwin's GCC. See |
| http://users.skynet.be/antoine.mechelynck/vim/compile.htm |
| |
| With Cygnus gcc you should use the Unix Makefile instead (you need to get the |
| Unix archive then). Then you get a Cygwin application (feels like Vim is |
| running on Unix), while with Make_cyg.mak you get a Windows application (like |
| with the other makefiles). |
| |
| |
| 5. Cross compiling for Win32 from a Linux machine |
| ================================================= |
| |
| [Update of 1) needs to be verified] |
| |
| If you like, you can compile the 'mingw' Win32 version from the comfort of |
| your Linux (or other unix) box. To do this, you need to follow a few steps: |
| 1) Install the mingw32 cross-compiler. See |
| http://www.mingw.org/wiki/LinuxCrossMinGW |
| http://www.libsdl.org/extras/win32/cross/README.txt |
| 2) Get and unpack both the Unix sources and the extra archive |
| 3) in 'Make_cyg_ming.mak', set 'CROSS' to 'yes' instead of 'no'. |
| Make further changes to 'Make_cyg_ming.mak' and 'Make_ming.mak' as you |
| wish. If your cross-compiler prefix differs from the predefined value, |
| set 'CROSS_COMPILE' corresponding. |
| 4) make -f Make_ming.mak gvim.exe |
| |
| Now you have created the Windows binary from your Linux box! Have fun... |
| |
| |
| 6. Building with Python support |
| =============================== |
| |
| For building with MSVC the "Windows Installer" from www.python.org works fine. |
| |
| When building, you need to set the following variables at least: |
| |
| PYTHON: Where Python is installed. E.g. C:\Python27 |
| DYNAMIC_PYTHON: Whether dynamic linking is used. Usually, set to yes. |
| PYTHON_VER: Python version. E.g. 27 for Python 2.7.X. |
| |
| E.g. When using MSVC (as one line): |
| |
| nmake -f Make_mvc.mak |
| PYTHON=C:\Python27 DYNAMIC_PYTHON=yes PYTHON_VER=27 |
| |
| When using MinGW and link with the official Python (as one line): |
| |
| mingw32-make -f Make_ming.mak |
| PYTHON=C:/Python27 DYNAMIC_PYTHON=yes PYTHON_VER=27 |
| |
| When using msys2 and link with Python2 bundled with msys2 (as one line): |
| |
| mingw32-make -f Make_ming.mak PYTHON=c:/msys64/mingw64 |
| PYTHON_HOME=c:/msys64/mingw64 |
| PYTHONINC=-Ic:/msys64/mingw64/include/python2.7 |
| DYNAMIC_PYTHON=yes |
| PYTHON_VER=27 |
| DYNAMIC_PYTHON_DLL=libpython2.7.dll |
| STATIC_STDCPLUS=yes |
| |
| (This is for 64-bit builds. For 32-bit builds, replace mingw64 with mingw32.) |
| (STATIC_STDCPLUS is optional. Set to yes if you don't want to require |
| libstdc++-6.dll.) |
| |
| |
| (rest written by Ron Aaron: <ronaharon@yahoo.com>) |
| |
| Building with the mingw32 compiler, and the ActiveState ActivePython: |
| http://www.ActiveState.com/Products/ActivePython/ |
| |
| After installing the ActivePython, you will have to create a 'mingw32' |
| 'libpython20.a' to link with: |
| cd $PYTHON/libs |
| pexports python20.dll > python20.def |
| dlltool -d python20.def -l libpython20.a |
| |
| Once that is done, edit the 'Make_ming.mak' so the PYTHON variable points to |
| the root of the Python installation (C:\Python20, for example). If you are |
| cross-compiling on Linux with the mingw32 setup, you need to also convert all |
| the 'Include' files to *unix* line-endings. This bash command will do it |
| easily: |
| for fil in *.h ; do vim -e -c 'set ff=unix|w|q' $fil |
| |
| Now just do: |
| make -f Make_ming.mak gvim.exe |
| |
| You will end up with a Python-enabled, Win32 version. Enjoy! |
| |
| |
| 7. Building with Python3 support |
| ================================ |
| |
| For building with MSVC the "Windows Installer" from www.python.org works fine. |
| Python 3.6 is recommended. |
| |
| When building, you need to set the following variables at least: |
| |
| PYTHON3: Where Python3 is installed. E.g. C:\Python36 |
| DYNAMIC_PYTHON3: Whether dynamic linking is used. Usually, set to yes. |
| PYTHON3_VER: Python3 version. E.g. 36 for Python 3.6.X. |
| |
| E.g. When using MSVC (as one line): |
| |
| nmake -f Make_mvc.mak |
| PYTHON3=C:\Python36 DYNAMIC_PYTHON3=yes PYTHON3_VER=36 |
| |
| When using MinGW and link with the official Python3 (as one line): |
| |
| mingw32-make -f Make_ming.mak |
| PYTHON3=C:/Python36 DYNAMIC_PYTHON3=yes PYTHON3_VER=36 |
| |
| When using msys2 and link with Python3 bundled with msys2 (as one line): |
| |
| mingw32-make -f Make_ming.mak PYTHON3=c:/msys64/mingw64 |
| PYTHON3_HOME=c:/msys64/mingw64 |
| PYTHON3INC=-Ic:/msys64/mingw64/include/python3.6m |
| DYNAMIC_PYTHON3=yes |
| PYTHON3_VER=36 |
| DYNAMIC_PYTHON3_DLL=libpython3.6m.dll |
| STATIC_STDCPLUS=yes |
| |
| (This is for 64-bit builds. For 32-bit builds, replace mingw64 with mingw32.) |
| (STATIC_STDCPLUS is optional. Set to yes if you don't want to require |
| libstdc++-6.dll.) |
| |
| |
| 8. Building with Racket or MzScheme support |
| =========================================== |
| |
| 1) Building with Racket support (newest) |
| |
| MzScheme and PLT Scheme names have been rebranded as Racket. Vim with Racket |
| support can be built with either MSVC or MinGW (or Cygwin). |
| Get it from https://download.racket-lang.org/ |
| |
| Copy lib/libracket{version}.dll to your Windows system directory. The system |
| directory depends on your Windows bitness and Vim bitness: |
| 32-bit Vim on 32-bit Windows: C:\Windows\System32 |
| 32-bit Vim on 64-bit Windows: C:\Windows\SysWOW64 |
| 64-bit Vim on 64-bit Windows: C:\Windows\System32 |
| |
| For building you need to set the following variables: |
| |
| MZSCHEME: Where Racket is installed. |
| E.g. C:\Program Files (x86)\Racket |
| DYNAMIC_MZSCHEME: Whether dynamic linking is used. Usually, set to yes. |
| MZSCHEME_VER: Racket DLL version which is used for the file name. |
| See below for a list of MZSCHEME_VER. |
| The DLL can be found under the lib directory. E.g. |
| C:\Program Files (x86)\Racket\lib\libracket3m_XXXXXX.dll |
| MZSCHEME_COLLECTS: (Optional) Path of the collects directory used at |
| runtime. Default: $(MZSCHEME)\collects |
| User can override this with the PLTCOLLECTS environment |
| variable. |
| |
| List of MZSCHEME_VER (incomplete): |
| |
| Racket ver. | MZSCHEME_VER |
| ========================== |
| 6.3 | 3m_9z0ds0 |
| 6.6 | 3m_a0solc |
| 6.8 | 3m_a1zjsw |
| 6.10 | 3m_a36fs8 |
| |
| |
| E.g. When using MSVC (as one line): |
| |
| nmake -f Make_mvc.mak |
| MZSCHEME="C:\Program Files (x86)\Racket" DYNAMIC_MZSCHEME=yes |
| MZSCHEME_VER=3m_9z0ds0 |
| |
| Or when using MinGW (as one line): |
| |
| mingw32-make -f Make_ming.mak |
| MZSCHEME='C:/Program\ Files\ (x86)/Racket' DYNAMIC_MZSCHEME=yes |
| MZSCHEME_VER=3m_9z0ds0 |
| |
| Spaces should be escaped with '\'. |
| |
| |
| 2) Building with MzScheme support (older) |
| |
| (written by Sergey Khorev <sergey.khorev@gmail.com>) |
| |
| Vim with MzScheme (http://www.plt-scheme.org/software/mzscheme) support can |
| be built with either MSVC, or MinGW, or Cygwin. Supported versions are 205 and |
| above (including 299 and 30x series). |
| |
| The MSVC build is quite straightforward. Simply invoke (in one line) |
| nmake -fMake_mvc.mak MZSCHEME=<Path-to-MzScheme> |
| [MZSCHEME_VER=<MzScheme-version>] [DYNAMIC_MZSCHEME=<yes or no>] |
| where <MzScheme-version> is the last seven characters from MzScheme dll name |
| (libmzschXXXXXXX.dll). |
| If DYNAMIC_MZSCHEME=yes, resulting executable will not depend on MzScheme |
| DLL's, but will load them in runtime on demand. |
| |
| Building dynamic MzScheme support on MinGW and Cygwin is similar. Take into |
| account that <Path-to-MzScheme> should contain slashes rather than backslashes |
| (e.g. d:/Develop/MzScheme) |
| |
| "Static" MzScheme support (Vim executable will depend on MzScheme DLLs |
| explicitly) on MinGW and Cygwin requires additional step. |
| |
| libmzschXXXXXXX.dll and libmzgcXXXXXXX.dll should be copied from |
| %WINDOWS%\System32 to other location (either build directory, some temporary |
| dir or even MzScheme home). |
| |
| Pass that path as MZSCHEME_DLLS parameter for Make. E.g., |
| make -f Make_cyg.mak MZSCHEME=d:/Develop/MzScheme MZSCHEME_VER=209_000 |
| MZSCHEME_DLLS=c:/Temp DYNAMIC_MZSCHEME=no |
| |
| After a successful build, these dlls can be freely removed, leaving them in |
| %WINDOWS%\System32 only. |
| |
| |
| |
| 9. Building with Lua support |
| ============================ |
| |
| Vim with Lua support can be built with either MSVC or MinGW (or maybe Cygwin). |
| You can use binaries from LuaBinaries: http://luabinaries.sourceforge.net/ |
| This also applies to when you get a Vim executable and don't build yourself, |
| do the part up to "Build". |
| |
| 1) Download and install LuaBinaries |
| |
| Go to the Download page of LuaBinaries: |
| http://luabinaries.sourceforge.net/download.html |
| |
| Download lua-X.Y.Z_Win32_dllw4_lib.zip for x86 or |
| lua-X.Y.Z_Win64_dllw4_lib.zip for x64. You can use them both for MSVC and |
| MinGW. |
| |
| Unpack it to a working directory. E.g. C:\projects\lua53. |
| Lua's header files will be installed under the include directory. |
| |
| Copy luaXY.dll to your Windows system directory. The system directory depends |
| on your Windows bitness and Vim bitness: |
| 32-bit Vim on 32-bit Windows: C:\Windows\System32 |
| 32-bit Vim on 64-bit Windows: C:\Windows\SysWOW64 |
| 64-bit Vim on 64-bit Windows: C:\Windows\System32 |
| |
| Or another option is copying luaXY.dll to the directory where gvim.exe |
| (or vim.exe) is. |
| |
| |
| 2) Build |
| |
| You need to set LUA, DYNAMIC_LUA and LUA_VER. |
| |
| LUA: Where Lua's header files are installed. E.g. C:\projects\lua53. |
| DYNAMIC_LUA: Whether dynamic linking is used. Set to yes. |
| LUA_VER: Lua version. E.g. 53 for Lua 5.3.X. |
| |
| E.g. When using MSVC (as one line): |
| |
| nmake -f Make_mvc.mak |
| LUA=C:\projects\lua53 DYNAMIC_LUA=yes LUA_VER=53 |
| |
| Or when using MinGW (as one line): |
| |
| mingw32-make -f Make_ming.mak |
| LUA=C:/projects/lua53 DYNAMIC_LUA=yes LUA_VER=53 |
| |
| |
| Or when using Cygwin (as one line) (untested): |
| |
| make -f Make_cyg.mak |
| LUA=/cygdrive/c/projects/lua53 DYNAMIC_LUA=yes LUA_VER=53 |
| |
| |
| 10. Building with Perl support |
| ============================== |
| |
| Vim with Perl support can be built with either MSVC or MinGW (or Cygwin). |
| You can use binaries from ActiveState (ActivePerl) or Strawberry Perl. |
| |
| http://www.activestate.com/activeperl |
| http://strawberryperl.com/ |
| |
| When building, you need to set the following variables: |
| |
| PERL: Where perl is installed. E.g. C:\Perl, C:\Strawberry\perl |
| DYNAMIC_PERL: Whether dynamic linking is used. Usually, set to yes. |
| PERL_VER: Perl version. E.g. 522 for Perl 5.22.X. |
| |
| E.g. When using MSVC (as one line): |
| |
| nmake -f Make_mvc.mak |
| PERL=C:\Perl DYNAMIC_PERL=yes PERL_VER=522 |
| |
| Or when using MinGW (as one line): |
| |
| mingw32-make -f Make_ming.mak |
| PERL=C:/Perl DYNAMIC_PERL=yes PERL_VER=522 |
| |
| |
| 11. Building with Ruby support |
| ============================== |
| |
| Vim with Ruby support can be built with either MSVC or MinGW (or Cygwin). |
| Ruby doesn't provide the official Windows binaries. The most widely used |
| Windows binaries might be RubyInstaller. Currently Ruby 2.4 is recommended. |
| |
| http://rubyinstaller.org/ |
| |
| If you use MinGW you can easily build with RubyInstaller, but if you use MSVC |
| you need some tricks described below. |
| (Another binary distribution is ActiveScriptRuby: |
| http://www.artonx.org/data/asr/) |
| |
| When building, you need to set the following variables at least: |
| |
| RUBY: Where ruby is installed. E.g. C:\Ruby24 |
| DYNAMIC_RUBY: Whether dynamic linking is used. Usually, set to yes. |
| RUBY_VER: Ruby version. E.g. 24 for Ruby 2.4.X. |
| RUBY_API_VER_LONG: Ruby API version in a long format. |
| E.g. 2.4.0 for Ruby 2.4.X. |
| |
| Ruby version vs. Ruby API version: |
| |
| Ruby ver. | Ruby API ver. |
| ========================= |
| 1.8.X | 1.8 |
| 1.9.[1-3] | 1.9.1 |
| 2.0.0 | 2.0.0 |
| 2.X.Y | 2.X.0 |
| |
| (Ruby 1.9.0 is excluded from the table because it is an unstable version.) |
| |
| |
| A) Using MSVC |
| |
| If you want to link with ruby, normally you must use the same compiler as |
| which was used to build the ruby binary. RubyInstaller is built with MinGW, |
| so normally you cannot use MSVC for building Vim if you want to link with |
| RubyInstaller. If you use a different compiler, there are mainly two problems: |
| config.h and Ruby's DLL name. Here are the steps for working around them: |
| |
| 1) Download and Install RubyInstaller. |
| You can install RubyInstaller with the default options and directory. |
| E.g.: |
| C:\Ruby24 (32-bit) or C:\Ruby24-x64 (64-bit) |
| |
| Ruby 2.4.X is used in this example. |
| |
| 2) Download Ruby 2.4.X's source code and generate config.h: |
| |
| cd C:\projects |
| git clone https://github.com/ruby/ruby.git -b ruby_2_4 |
| cd ruby |
| win32\configure.bat |
| nmake .config.h.time |
| |
| Note that ruby_2_4 is the branch name for Ruby 2.4.X's source code. |
| There is no need to build whole Ruby, just config.h is needed. |
| If you use 32-bit MSVC 2015, the config.h is generated in the |
| .ext\include\i386-mswin32_140 directory. |
| If you use 64-bit MSVC 2015, the config.h is generated in the |
| .ext\include\x64-mswin64_140 directory. |
| |
| 3) Install the generated config.h. |
| |
| For 32-bit version: |
| |
| xcopy /s .ext\include C:\Ruby24\include\ruby-2.4.0 |
| |
| For 64-bit version: |
| |
| xcopy /s .ext\include C:\Ruby24-x64\include\ruby-2.4.0 |
| |
| Note that 2.4.0 is Ruby API version of Ruby 2.4.X. |
| You may need to close the console and reopen it to pick up the new $PATH. |
| |
| 4) Build Vim. Note that you need to adjust some variables (as one line): |
| |
| For 32-bit version: |
| |
| nmake -f Make_mvc.mak |
| RUBY=C:\Ruby24 DYNAMIC_RUBY=yes RUBY_VER=24 RUBY_API_VER_LONG=2.4.0 |
| RUBY_MSVCRT_NAME=msvcrt |
| WINVER=0x601 |
| |
| For 64-bit version, replace RUBY=C:\Ruby24 with RUBY=C:\Ruby24-x64. |
| |
| If you set WINVER explicitly, it must be set to >=0x500, when building |
| with Ruby 2.1 or later. (Default is 0x601.) |
| When using this trick, you also need to set RUBY_MSVCRT_NAME to msvcrt |
| which is used for the Ruby's DLL name. |
| |
| B) Using MinGW |
| |
| Using MinGW is easier than using MSVC when linking with RubyInstaller. |
| After you install RubyInstaller, just type this (as one line): |
| |
| mingw32-make -f Make_ming.mak |
| RUBY=C:/Ruby24 DYNAMIC_RUBY=yes RUBY_VER=24 RUBY_API_VER_LONG=2.4.0 |
| WINVER=0x601 |
| |
| For 64-bit version, replace RUBY=C:/Ruby24 with RUBY=C:/Ruby24-x64. |
| If you set WINVER explicitly, it must be set to >=0x500, when building with |
| Ruby 2.1 or later. (Default is 0x601.) |
| |
| |
| |
| 12. Building with Tcl support |
| ============================= |
| |
| Vim with Tcl support can be built with either MSVC or MinGW (or Cygwin). |
| You can use binaries from ActiveState (ActiveTcl). |
| |
| http://www.activestate.com/activetcl |
| |
| Alternatively, you can use the binaries provided by IronTcl from |
| |
| https://www.irontcl.com/ |
| |
| They might lack behind the latest version a bit, but should provide 64bit |
| and 32bit versions even if ActiveTcl does not provide them anymore. |
| |
| For building with MSVC 2015 use version 8.6.6 or later. |
| When building, you need to set the following variables: |
| |
| TCL: Where tcl is installed. E.g. C:\Tcl86 |
| DYNAMIC_TCL: Whether dynamic linking is used. Usually, set to yes. |
| TCL_VER: Tcl version in a short format. E.g. 86 for Tcl 8.6.X. |
| TCL_VER_LONG: Tcl version in a long format. E.g. 8.6 for Tcl 8.6.X. |
| |
| Sometimes the Tcl dll name changes. E.g. ActiveTcl 8.6.4 comes with tcl86.dll, |
| but ActiveTcl 8.6.6 comes with tcl86t.dll. You can set the dll name by setting |
| the TCL_DLL variable: |
| TCL_DLL=tcl86t.dll |
| |
| E.g. When using MSVC (as one line): |
| |
| nmake -f Make_mvc.mak |
| TCL=C:\Tcl86 DYNAMIC_TCL=yes TCL_VER=86 TCL_VER_LONG=8.6 |
| |
| Or when using MinGW (as one line): |
| |
| mingw32-make -f Make_ming.mak |
| TCL=C:/Tcl86 DYNAMIC_TCL=yes TCL_VER=86 TCL_VER_LONG=8.6 |
| |
| |
| 13. Building with DirectX (DirectWrite) support |
| =============================================== |
| |
| Vim with DirectX (DirectWrite) support can be built with either MSVC or MinGW. |
| This requires dwrite_2.h and some other header files which come with Windows |
| SDK 8.1 or later (or MinGW-w64), if you want to enable color emoji support. |
| This also requires MBYTE=yes which is enabled by default. |
| |
| A) Using MSVC |
| |
| If you use MSVC 2013 or later, Windows SDK 8.1 or later is used by default. |
| You just need to specify DIRECTX=yes: |
| |
| nmake -f Make_mvc.mak DIRECTX=yes |
| |
| If you use MSVC 2012 or earlier, the required header files are not available |
| by default. However, you can use the header files from newer SDKs with older |
| compilers. E.g.: |
| |
| set "INCLUDE=%INCLUDE%;C:\Program Files (x86)\Windows Kits\8.1\Include\um" |
| nmake -f Make_mvc.mak DIRECTX=yes |
| |
| If you don't need color emoji support, only dwrite.h is required. You can use |
| older compilers (e.g. VC2010) without Windows SDK 8.1. E.g.: |
| |
| nmake -f Make_mvc.mak DIRECTX=yes COLOR_EMOJI=no |
| |
| B) Using MinGW-w64 |
| |
| Just set DIRECTX to yes: |
| |
| mingw32-make -f Make_ming.mak DIRECTX=yes |
| |
| |
| 14. Building with libsodium support |
| =================================== |
| |
| For better encryption support, you can build Vim with libsodium. |
| |
| A) Using MSVC |
| |
| You can download the latest libsodium library from here: |
| https://download.libsodium.org/libsodium/releases/ |
| |
| At this moment, libsodium-1.0.18-stable-msvc.zip is the latest package. |
| Unpack it to anywhere you like, and specify the path to the SODIUM option: |
| |
| nmake -f Make_mvc.mak SODIUM=C:/path/to/libsodium |
| (libsodium.dll will be used as the libsodium DLL name.) |
| |
| B) Using MinGW |
| |
| If you use msys2, you can install the libsodium package by pacman (or pacboy): |
| |
| $ pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-libsodium # for 64-bit Vim |
| $ pacman -S mingw-w64-i686-libsodium # for 32-bit Vim |
| $ pacboy -S libsodium:m # for both 32-bit and 64-bit Vim |
| |
| Then set SODIUM to yes: |
| |
| mingw32-make -f Make_ming.mak SODIUM=yes |
| (libsodium-23.dll will be used as the libsodium DLL name.) |
| |
| Or you can set the path to libsodium explicitly: |
| |
| mingw32-make -f Make_ming.mak SODIUM=C:/path/to/libsodium |
| (libsodium.dll will be used as the libsodium DLL name.) |
| |
| |
| 15. Windows 3.1x |
| ================ |
| |
| The Windows 3.1x support was removed in patch 7.4.1364. |
| |
| |
| 16. MS-DOS |
| ========== |
| |
| The MS-DOS support was removed in patch 7.4.1399. Only very old Vim versions |
| work on MS-DOS because of the limited amount of memory available. |
| |
| |
| 17. Installing after building from sources |
| ========================================== |
| |
| [provided by Michael Soyka, updated by Ken Takata] |
| |
| After you've built the Vim binaries as described above, you're ready to |
| install Vim on your system. However, if you've obtained the Vim sources |
| using Git, Mercurial or by downloading them as a unix tar file, you must |
| first create a "vim82" directory. If you instead downloaded the sources as |
| zip files, you can skip this setup as the zip archives already have the |
| correct directory structure. |
| |
| A. Create a Vim "runtime" subdirectory named "vim82" |
| ----------------------------------------------------- |
| If you obtained your Vim sources as zip files, you can skip this step. |
| Otherwise, continue reading. |
| |
| Go to the directory that contains the Vim "src" and "runtime" |
| directories and create a new subdirectory named "vim82". |
| |
| Copy the "runtime" files into "vim82": |
| copy runtime\* vim82 |
| xcopy /s runtime\* vim82 |
| |
| B. Copy the new binaries into the "vim82" directory |
| ---------------------------------------------------- |
| Regardless of how you installed the Vim sources, you need to copy the |
| new binaries you created above into "vim82": |
| |
| copy src\*.exe vim82 |
| copy src\tee\tee.exe vim82 |
| copy src\xxd\xxd.exe vim82 |
| |
| To install the "Edit with Vim" popup menu, you need both 32-bit and 64-bit |
| versions of gvimext.dll. They should be copied to "vim82\GvimExt32" and |
| "vim82\GvimExt64" respectively. |
| First, build the 32-bit version, then: |
| |
| mkdir vim82\GvimExt32 |
| copy src\GvimExt\gvimext.dll vim82\GvimExt32 |
| |
| Next, clean the 32-bit version and build the 64-bit version, then: |
| |
| mkdir vim82\GvimExt64 |
| copy src\GvimExt\gvimext.dll vim82\GvimExt64 |
| |
| C. Copy gettext and iconv DLLs into the "vim82" directory |
| ---------------------------------------------------------- |
| Get gettext and iconv DLLs from the following site: |
| https://github.com/mlocati/gettext-iconv-windows/releases |
| Both 64- and 32-bit versions are needed. |
| Download the files gettextX.X.X.X-iconvX.XX-shared-{32,64}.zip, extract |
| DLLs and place them as follows: |
| |
| vim82\ |
| | libintl-8.dll |
| | libiconv-2.dll |
| | libgcc_s_sjlj-1.dll (only for 32-bit) |
| | |
| + GvimExt32\ |
| | libintl-8.dll |
| | libiconv-2.dll |
| | libgcc_s_sjlj-1.dll |
| | |
| ` GvimExt64\ |
| libintl-8.dll |
| libiconv-2.dll |
| |
| The DLLs in the "vim82" should be the same bitness with the (g)vim.exe. |
| |
| D. Move the "vim82" directory into the Vim installation subdirectory |
| --------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| Move the "vim82" subdirectory into the subdirectory where you want Vim |
| to be installed. Typically, this subdirectory will be named "vim". |
| If you already have a "vim82" subdirectory in "vim", delete it first |
| by running its uninstall.exe program. |
| |
| E. Install Vim |
| --------------- |
| "cd" to your Vim installation subdirectory "vim\vim82" and run the |
| "install.exe" program. It will ask you a number of questions about |
| how you would like to have your Vim setup. Among these are: |
| - You can tell it to write a "_vimrc" file with your preferences in the |
| parent directory. |
| - It can also install an "Edit with Vim" entry in the Windows Explorer |
| popup menu. |
| - You can have it create batch files, so that you can run Vim from the |
| console or in a shell. You can select one of the directories in your |
| PATH or add the directory to PATH using the Windows Control Panel. |
| - Create entries for Vim on the desktop and in the Start menu. |
| |
| Happy Vimming! |