Displaying 20 results from an estimated 1000 matches similar to: "Windows Pathnames with spaces in Puppet file directive"
2014 Jun 04
2
opus_multistream_encode_float not working in libopus 1.1
> Have you tried compiling it yourself?
I just installed git for the first time and downloaded all of the
latest source code packages directly from the site. I'm getting the
following every time I try to (re)build any of the projects:
1>------ Build started: Project: opus, Configuration: Release Win32 ------
1> fatal: Not a git repository: 'C:\My
2014 Jun 03
3
opus_multistream_encode_float not working in libopus 1.1
I just recently found that opus_multistream_encode_float is returning
-1 (OPUS_BAD_ARG) with the libopus 1.1 build but works just fine with
the libopus 1.0.1 and libopus 1.1-beta builds. I tried using
opus_multistream_encoder_create and
opus_multistream_surround_encoder_create. Tried with coupled and
uncoupled quadraphonic and uncoupled stereo encodes. I'm dynamically
loading the libopus
2014 Jun 04
3
opus_multistream_encode_float not working in libopus 1.1
>
> This is as expected. The build system is trying to get a git revision
> string out of the source tree to compile in for reference. If you're
> building from a downloaded source .zip, there won't be any git
> information available and it will fall back to the hard-coded release
> string. That's why the error isn't fatal to the build.
Ok, this seems
2014 Jun 04
0
opus_multistream_encode_float not working in libopus 1.1
On 2014-06-04 12:47 PM, Alpha Thinktink wrote:
> 1>------ Build started: Project: opus, Configuration: Release Win32 ------
> 1> fatal: Not a git repository: 'C:\My Documents\Opus\win32\..\.git'
> 1> The syntax of the command is incorrect.
> 1> The system cannot find the path specified.
> 1>C:\Program
2018 Sep 21
2
can't build/run after adding lib to Fibonacci example, even reverting the complete llvm tree does not help
my build environment:
Win7 x64
VStudio 2017 Community Edition 15.8.4 (latest)
CMake 3.12.1 (x86)
git 2.19.0 (latest, x64)
Python 2.7.2 (x86)
x64 Native Tools Command Prompt for VS 2017
directory structure:
test
llvm <-- git clone https://github.com/llvm-mirror/llvm, git checkout
release_70
tools
clang <-- git clone https://github.com/llvm-mirror/clang, git
checkout
2018 May 17
1
Windows build strangeness
It looks like building ZERO_CHECK first to reconstruct the project files as needed, then running msbuild a second time to do the actual build, has solved the problem. At least, last night's run didn't take the usual two tries. Running msbuild twice is a little bit simpler than running cmake explicitly, the way I have my scripts set up, but I'm sure that would work as well.
Thanks
2018 May 17
0
Windows build strangeness
>From my own experience this is what I think happens when building the whole
solution through Visual Studio's UI. This also happens for building
individual projects. I assume something similar happens when building via
the command-line, but I rarely do that, so I can't be certain.
1) Visual Studio/MSBuild (I don't know which, but probably MSBuild)
determines the dependency graph of
2015 Feb 01
2
[LLVMdev] Building LLVM with static linking on Windows
I'm trying to build LLVM 3.5.1 on Windows, almost successfully; the
remaining stumbling block is getting static linking for release builds. The
problem is that the .vcxproj is interpreted by msbuild to compile with the
/MD option instead of /MT, as detailed in:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/28262372/getting-msbuild-to-use-mt-staticrelease
Haven't got any answers on that question,
2018 May 16
2
Windows build strangeness
I think MSBuild isn't capable of re-running cmake and then reloading the
project files when CMakeLists.txt changes. It re-runs cmake, but then
continues the build with the stale projects. That probably explains the
"PipSqueek.cxx doesn't exist" errors. As for the link error, it could also
be caused by things like a file rename not getting picked up by MSBuild.
The fix is
2018 May 16
0
Windows build strangeness
msbuild is is able to re-run cmake if a CMakeLists.txt changes. CMake
adds a special project "ZERO_CHECK" that does this. However, I am not
sure it runs when invoking on the individual projects instead of the
solution.
Try the cmake --build command, which should output the following:
> cmake --build . --target opt
CMake is re-running because
2018 May 16
2
Windows build strangeness
I have the git monorepo, and Visual Studio 2015. I am finding that
running a build from the command line with msbuild (as a nightly job)
invariably fails on the first try, and succeeds on a retry.
The first msbuild command looks like this:
msbuild ALL_BUILD.vcxproj /p:Configuration="RelWithDebInfo" /m:6 /t:Rebuild
This appears to compile everything okay, but invariably fails with
2018 May 16
2
Windows build strangeness
With VS2013 I found that editing a CMakeLists.txt file caused CMake to be re-run successfully and the build to also continue successfully, but since I switched to VS2015 the CMake re-run occurs - apparently successfully, but more often than not the build failed afterwards from either the IDE and from MSBuild. Since I seldom change the CMakeLists.txt files, I simply do a clean CMake configuration
2018 May 16
1
Windows build strangeness
What kind of missing symbols are you getting?
I had to work around dependencies for a Mingw32 build. See
https://reviews.llvm.org/D44650
On Wed, May 16, 2018, 13:13 via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:
> I have the git monorepo, and Visual Studio 2015. I am finding that
> running a build from the command line with msbuild (as a nightly job)
> invariably fails on the
2018 May 16
0
Windows build strangeness
Here are a couple of representative errors. C:\Dev\upstream\gitmono is where I keep my clone.
"C:\Dev\upstream\gitmono\wbuild\ALL_BUILD.vcxproj" (Rebuild target) (1) ->
"C:\Dev\upstream\gitmono\wbuild\unittests\Support\DynamicLibrary\SecondLib.vcxproj" (default target) (170:2) ->
c1xx : fatal error C1083: Cannot open source file:
2015 Jun 08
3
[LLVMdev] msbuild and clang
I'm trying to compile some large programs with clang on Windows (with a
view to compiling to bit code and then running some whole program
optimisations on the bit code).
Take for example the Python 2.7 interpreter:
As is typically the case, the usual build procedure involves running
msbuild which invokes the Microsoft compiler.
The most obvious procedure would then be to substitute
2014 Sep 29
2
[LLVMdev] Windows Installer
Your install dir has a whitespace. Have you tried quoting? e.g.
<LLVMInstallDir>"C:\Program
Files (x86)\LLVM"</LLVMInstallDir>
Best regards,
Rafael Auler
On Mon, Sep 29, 2014 at 7:38 PM, Eric Mader <emader at gmx.us> wrote:
> I changed tooset-vs2013.props to this:
>
> <Project xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/developer/msbuild/2003"
>
2014 Sep 30
2
[LLVMdev] size_t?
I'm getting compile errors because size_t is getting redefined. My
"forced include file" starts with:
#if BUILDING_FOR_WINDOWS
#define NOMINMAX
/* deal with the fact that windef.h also defines BOOL */
#define BOOL WINBOOL
#include <windows.h>
#include <intrin.h>
#undef BOOL
#endif
Looking at the preprocessor expansion of a typical .cpp file, I see that
crtdefs.h
2014 Sep 30
2
[LLVMdev] Windows Installer
I replaced all instances of "$(Platform)" with "x64" for the x64 .props
file and it still fails, so it looks like that guess was wrong as well.
Regards,
Eric
On 9/29/14, 2:11 PM, Eric Mader wrote:
> Quoting doesn't seem to make a difference. Strangely, the Win32
> toolset seems to work. (Where "work" means that clang runs and
> produces a bunch of
2015 Jun 09
2
[LLVMdev] msbuild and clang
Okay, so trying a straight compile of the Python interpreter with clang-cl,
I used the following commands:
cd \python-2.7.10\pcbuild
copy C:\llvm\build\Release\bin\clang-cl.exe cl.exe
rd /q /s amd64
rd /q /s win32-temp-debug
rd /q /s win32-temp-release
rd /q /s x64-temp-debug
rd /q /s x64-temp-release
msbuild /p:Configuration=Release /v:diag /fileLogger pcbuild.sln
(The second line is the one
2014 Sep 30
2
[LLVMdev] size_t?
Hi Reid,
I copied the x64 toolsets by hand; they got installed to C:\Program
Files (x86)\LLVM\tools\msbuild\x64; they just didn't get moved correctly
by install.bat.
I just verified that the LLVM-vs2013 toolset.props is correct.
If it is a bitness problem, perhaps I'm failing to define something
correctly?
Regards,
Eric
On 9/30/14, 11:29 AM, Reid Kleckner wrote:
> This looks