Difference between revisions of "Building on Windows"

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(Problems, issues, comments: Copied from Windows, reducing verbosity a little (removed link that no longer exists and comments on that link))
(Running a build: Note about WebKitGtk)
 
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This page will collect useful information to develop GnuCash on Windows. If you were looking for tips regarding '''using''' GnuCash on Windows, you should read the [[Windows|Windows page]] instead.
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Development on Microsoft Windows isn't really encouraged. The build environment isn't really conducive to development and many of the unit tests don't work. However, if you must...
  
= A bit of history =
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= GnuCash 3.0 and Later =
This page used to collect random notes from the time when we manually tried to install each and every part of the requirements. They have been moved to [[Windows/Old Notes]].
 
  
= Instructions for an (almost) automated build =
+
The build system for GnuCash 2.7 and later supports Windows 7 and later. The procedure is a bit simpler than for GnuCash 2.6 and earlier and provides a somewhat easier to use development environment. That doesn't mean that we ''recommend'' that you use Windows for development: GnuCash is very much a Unix program and development is much easier in a Unix environment like Linux, BSD, or MacOS.
  
These instructions explain how you can compile and run GnuCash on MS Windows by yourself. This is achieved by using the mingw32/gcc compiler environment. (If you want to use the Visual Studio compiler, see the sub-project [[Cutecash]], but the instructions below must be followed first as well.)
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== PowerShell ==
  
We've created a shell script that will download, compile, and install
+
The build system relies heavily on Windows PowerShell.
all requirements of GnuCash on Windows and eventually GnuCash itself. Running this script will probably download ~200MB of data (but all downloaded data will be cached) and will take anything
 
between 0.5 through 5 hours of time. That shell script is located in
 
packaging/win32/install.sh of the gnucash [[SVN]] sources.
 
  
;Warning : Windows XP or more recent is required for building Gnucash using install.sh (see below). Windows 2000 support was dropped starting from GnuCash 2.3.10, older versions of Windows are not supported.
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:'''Windows 7:''' The PowerShell version that ships with Windows 7 by default is too old. To build GnuCash on that platform a more recent version of [https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/powershell/scripting/install/installing-windows-powershell?view=powershell-6#upgrading-existing-windows-powershell PowerShell] should be installed. PowerShell version 5.1 is known to work well.
  
'''Some notes upfront'''
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Depending on your security settings you may need to enable running scripts on your computer. For this open a powershell with Administrator privilages and run: <syntaxhighlight lang="powershell">set-executionpolicy unrestricted</syntaxhighlight>
:*GnuCash is currently in a transition from svn to git as the master repository. Currently either version control system can be used still, but git will be the preferred one in the future. These instructions will explain what is required for both systems. Git specific actions will be marked with '''git''', subversion specific actions will be marked with '''svn'''.
 
:*In the following discussion, the ''c:\soft'' root folder should be replaced by whatever base folder you wish to work in. Avoid pathnames with spaces in them (so ''c:\Program Files'' is not good). Some parts of the build system don't cope well with that. If you choose a path other than ''c:\soft'', be sure to set the '''GLOBAL_DIR''' parameter to this path in custom.sh later on (see below).
 
:*When installing packages in the script, it is strongly recommended that the expected locations are specified.  Example: msys in ''c:\soft\msys''.
 
  
Before you can execute this shell script (which will do everything else automatically), you have to complete these steps manually:
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== Bootstrap the build environment ==
  
* '''git''' Download and install [http://git-scm.com/downloads git for Windows]. The preferred location to install it is $GLOBAL_DIR\git-1.7.10. If you install in another location, you will have to set GIT_DIR in custom.sh later on. The installer will add some git related items in the Windows Explorer context menus (you can access them via right-click in any directory)
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First download and run [https://github.com/Gnucash/gnucash-on-windows/blob/master/setup-mingw64.ps1 setup-mingw64.ps1]. Depending on where you want to put the development tree you may need to run PowerShell as an administrator.  Once you've downloaded the script start PowerShell. You can review the script's parameters with <syntaxhighlight lang="powershell">help \path\to\setup-mingw64.ps1</syntaxhighlight> For convenience they're
 +
* target_dir: The root directory where the build environment will be installed. The default is c:\gcdev64, but you can put it anywhere you have write privilege.
 +
* download_dir: Defaults to target_dir\downloads. There's no requirement to have it in target_dir.
 +
* x86_64: Set this to $true if you want to build 64-bit binaries. The default is $false, and the developers do not often try to build 64-bit binaries so doing so isn't guaranteed to work nor are the developers much inclined to prioritize fixing it if it doesn't.
  
* '''svn''' Download and unpack [http://subversion.tigris.org/files/documents/15/47914/svn-win32-1.6.6.zip subversion for Windows] on your system. The preferred location to unpack this file into is $GLOBAL_DIR\svn. If you install in another location, you will have to set SVN_DIR in custom.sh later on.
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:'''Note:''' The help command above will only work if the security settings of your system allow this script to be run. In addition to the ''set-executionpolicy'' command above you may have to run <syntaxhighlight lang="powershell">unblock-file \path\to\setup-mingw64.ps1</syntaxhighlight> before help will work.
  
* Choose a spot where you want to store a copy of the GnuCash repository. The default path is $GLOBAL_DIR\gnucash\repos.
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Once setup-mingw64.ps1 is complete you will have an [http://www.msys2.org/ MSYS2] environment with all of the GnuCash dependencies that don't need to be built from source installed in it.
  
* Create all directories in the path except the last one. For the example, make sure $GLOBAL_DIR\gnucash exists
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== Running a build ==
 
 
* '''git''' Open a Windows explorer and go to $GLOBAL_DIR\gnucash (or your chosen location)
 
  
* '''git''' Right-click. In the popup select '''git bash'''. This will open a command prompt.
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Next open the Start menu and navigate to MSYS2 64Bit or MSYS2 32Bit; which you want will depend upon the bitness of your Windows version. If you specified x86_64 $true to setup-mingw64.ps1 you'll want to start the mingw64 shell, otherwise the mingw32 shell.
 +
;Note: Currently [2024-07] WebKitGtk is only [{{URL:SF}}projects/gnucash/files/Dependencies/ availabe] in 32-bit and won't link with a 64-bit GnuCash.
 +
In that shell window navigate to the gnucash-on-windows.git directory in the target directory to specified to setup-mingw64.ps1. We'll use the default for the following examples.
 +
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
 +
  cd /c/gcdev64/src/gnucash-on-windows.git
 +
  TARGET=gnucash-unstable jhbuild -f jhbuildrc build
 +
</syntaxhighlight>
 +
One of the things setup-mingw64.ps1 did was checkout the rest of the gnucash-on-windows repository in target_dir/src/gnucash-on-windows.git. That contains a customization (python) script and a [https://developer.gnome.org/jhbuild/stable/ jhbuild] moduleset. The customization script selects one of the three GnuCash branches to build based on the value of $TARGET; the possibilities are <tt>gnucash-stable</tt> (the default), <tt>gnucash-unstable</tt> (the unstable release git branch) and <tt>gnucash-releases</tt>, which builds GnuCash from the tarball specified in gnucash.modules instead of from a git branch.The first time <tt>jhbuild build</tt> command will build GnuCash, GnuCash Docs, and all of the dependencies that Mingw-w64 doesn't provide. After that it only builds modules that need rebuilding unless you tell it otherwise; see the [https://developer.gnome.org/jhbuild/stable/ jhbuild manual] for details on controlling jhbuild.
  
* '''git''' Enter: <code>git clone git://github.com/Gnucash/gnucash.git repos</code> The last part should be what you chose the call the directory to store the copy of the GnuCash repository.
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You can start a subshell with the paths to hand-compile or run GnuCash from the command line with <syntaxhighlight lang="bash">TARGET=gnucash-unstable jhbuild -f jhbuildrc shell</syntaxhighlight> This is convenient for development as one can navigate to the gnucash build directory and re-run CMake and make as necessary while developing. '''''N.B.''''' Be sure to use a programming editor that preserves line ending style; git can get really unhappy if you put the wrong kind of line endings into a file.
  
* '''svn''' Open a Windows command prompt (cmd) and enter the following command
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To build a package for installation there's a PowerShell script called <tt>gnucash-on-windows.git\bundle-gnucash.ps1</tt> and an automation script, <tt>gnucash-on-windows.git\buildserver\build_package.ps1</tt> suitable for use with the Task Scheduler for periodic builds. Each includes documentation accessible with PowerShell's <tt>help</tt> command, e.g. <syntaxhighlight lang="powershell">help bundle-gnucash.ps1</syntaxhighlight>
  c:\soft\svn\bin\svn checkout http://svn.gnucash.org/repo/gnucash/trunk c:\soft\gnucash\repos
 
:Replace ''c:\soft\gnucash\repos'' with whatever you chose as the location for your GnuCash repository, and c:\soft\svn with whatever path you chose to install svn in.
 
  
* Go into the directory c:\soft\gnucash\packaging\win32.
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Note that <tt>build_package.ps1</tt> also takes care of updating the gnucash-on-windows repository and that <tt>jhbuild build</tt> will update the gnucash repository; you can do so manually with git from within the Mingw shell. SSH works, just set up your ~/.ssh directory with the necessary keys and config file.
  
* Take a look at the comments at the top of <tt>defaults.sh</tt> and optionally create a file <tt>custom.sh</tt> to specify directories according to your preferences; the defaults would install everything in subdirectories below c:\soft. (Note that due to shell syntax, every windows-style backslash has to be specified as two backslashes.) Do not modify defaults.sh; make a custom.sh.
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You may find the [https://github.com/msys2/msys2/wiki MSys2 Wiki] and [https://mingw-w64.org/doku.php/documentation Mingw-w64 Documentation] helpful.
:* In here you may also specify GLOBAL_DIR, REPOS_DIR, SVN_DIR, GIT_DIR,... if you installed any of these in a non-standard directory.
 
:* If you chose to use svn as version control system, also add <code>REPOS_TYPE="svn"</code> in custom.sh.
 
  
* Download the "MSYS" package from https://sourceforge.net/downloads/mingw -> MSYS -> Base -> msys-core -> msys-1.0.11 -> MSYS-1.0.11.exe [http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw/files/MSYS/Base/msys-core/msys-1.0.11/MSYS-1.0.11.exe/download Direct Download link]
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== Debugging a build ==
 +
GDB can be used on windows without too much effortUsually it's better to attach to an already running process instead of trying to launch directly under GDB. Ctrl+C does not work as well under GDB, however this site has a workaround: [http://www.mingw.org/wiki/Workaround_for_GDB_Ctrl_C_Interrupt Workaround for GDB Ctrl C Interrupt]
  
* Execute this downloaded package to install it into the chosen directory, say, C:\soft\msys (which is the $MSYS_DIR variable in <tt>defaults.sh</tt>, and is strongly recommended; be sure to override $MSYS_DIR in <tt>custom.sh</tt> if you put it somewhere else.) '''NB: That's ''not'' C:\soft\msys\1.0, just C: \soft\msys!'''
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Microsoft's Visual Studio Code is a possibility to integrate with gnucash and gdb for debugging.  The following launch.json file can be used to debug with gdb under vscode:
 +
<syntaxhighlight lang="json">
 +
{
 +
    "version": "0.2.0",
 +
    "configurations": [
 +
        {
 +
            "name": "(gdb) launch",
 +
            "type": "cppdbg",
 +
            "request": "launch",
 +
            "program": "C:\\gcdev64\\gnucash\\maint\\inst\\bin\\gnucash.exe",
 +
            "args": [],
 +
            "stopAtEntry": true,
 +
            "cwd": "${workspaceFolder}",
 +
            "environment": [],
 +
            "externalConsole": true,
 +
            "MIMode": "gdb",
 +
            "miDebuggerPath": "C:\\gcdev64\\msys2\\mingw32\\bin\\gdb.exe",
 +
            "setupCommands": [
 +
                {
 +
                    "description": "Enable pretty-printing for gdb",
 +
                    "text": "-enable-pretty-printing",
 +
                    "ignoreFailures": true
 +
                }
 +
            ]
 +
        }
 +
    ]
 +
}
 +
</syntaxhighlight>
  
* Download the "wget" package from https://sourceforge.net/downloads/mingw  -> MSYS -> Extension -> wget -> wget-1.12-1 -> wget-1.12-1-msys-1.0.13-bin.tar.lzma [http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw/files/MSYS/Extension/wget/wget-1.12-1/wget-1.12-1-msys-1.0.13-bin.tar.lzma/download Direct download link] and place the downloaded file in the $DOWNLOAD_DIR in <tt>defaults.sh</tt>
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= GnuCash 2.6 and Earlier =
  
* Start the MSYS commandline shell by double-clicking the "MSYS" icon on the desktop which should have been created when you installed the MSYS package.
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'''GnuCash 2.6 is no longer being developed. This procedure is archival. Don't use it without good reason.'''
  
* Let the automated build begin by typing:
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First read the README for the [https://github.com/Gnucash/gnucash-on-windows Windows Build Environment]. You'll need to download and run [https://github.com/Gnucash/gnucash-on-windows/blob/master/bootstrap_win_dev.vbs bootstrap_win_dev.vbs], then adjust <code>gnucash-on-windows.git/custom.sh</code> to build what you want the way you want, and run
 +
  gnucash-on-windows.sh/install.sh
 +
to build the program.
  
  $INSTALLER_DIR/install.sh  (the complete path to the install.sh)
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You'll find a shell file, <code>devrc.sh</code> in <code>gnucash-on-windows.git</code>. '''Sourcing''', not running, this file
  (e.g. /c/soft/packaging/win32/install.sh, or to save the log,
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  . gnucash-on-windows.git/devrc.sh
  /c/soft/packaging/win32/install.sh 2>&1 | tee /c/soft/Build.txt)
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will set the necessary environment variables so that you can re-run the build script as usual in <code>gnucash/build</code> and run GnuCash from <code>gnucash/inst/bin</code>
 
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[[Category:Building]]
* If you get an error about the "tools" directory not existing, just make it (i.e. $GLOBAL_DIR\tools)
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[[Category:Development]]
 
 
* If you get an error about unzip not found, re-run install.sh.  This is also usually the case about packages not found, after they have been installed.
 
 
 
* Some of the downloaded packages are installed through graphical installer dialogs where you can choose an installation directory. In those cases, the install.sh script will tell you in the MSYS window the installation directory that you should choose, according to your settings in <tt>defaults.sh/custom.sh</tt>. Please enter only those installation directory in the installer dialog because otherwise the install.sh script cannot find the newly installed software.
 
 
 
* If there haven't been any errors, you should be able (after several hours of compiling and installing) to start gnucash from the MSYS command line by typing
 
 
 
  c:/soft/gnucash/inst/bin/gnucash
 
 
 
or even without MSYS directly by "Start"-> "Run"-> "c:\soft\gnucash\inst\bin\gnucash.bat"
 
 
 
On Windows Vista Home Premium, open a windows command prompt, "cd \soft\gnucash\inst\bin" and then type
 
"gnucash-launcher.cmd" 
 
 
 
* If you want to make a distribution executable, execute the following commands in MSYS, after executing install.sh described above.
 
 
 
  rm -rf /c/soft/gnucash/dist
 
  /c/soft/packaging/dist.sh
 
 
 
* To start fresh with new package installs and cleaned out environment variables, after messing up the package installs, execute in MSYS, as for install.sh above, then restart your computer to eliminate environment variable problems such as with ACLOCAL:
 
 
 
  c:/soft/packaging/win32/reset.sh
 
 
 
* To make modifications to your own source (svn will attempt to merge your changes with the source on the server during the install.sh build), that is in
 
 
 
  c:/soft/gnucash/repos/src
 
 
 
* If there HAVE been errors, then please report them in the Section [[#Problems, issues, comments|Problems, issues, comments]].
 
 
 
* When compiled from source, GnuCash will display in the default GTK Raleigh theme.  The GnuCash binary installer defaults to the GTK-Wimp theme, which defers rendering of widgets to Windows for a native look-and-feel.  Copy gtkrc from C:\soft\gnome\share\themes\MS-Windows\gtk-2.0 to C:\soft\gnome\etc\gtk-2.0 to change themes.
 
 
 
 
 
Please spread the word and report back any problems you encounter. It is probably not too difficult anymore to create a full self-contained
 
package of GnuCash on Windows as well! Some more information is also
 
collected here on this wiki page.
 
 
 
= Working on Gnucash =
 
Once you've successfully built Gnucash and all of its dependencies, it's a bit of a pain to re-run install.sh after every edit. To use <tt>make</tt> from the command prompt as usual, you need to set the following environment:
 
export OLDPATH=$PATH
 
 
PATH=/c/soft/svn/bin:$PATH
 
PATH=/c/soft/autotools/bin:$PATH
 
PATH=/c/soft/swig:$PATH
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/active-perl/ActivePerl/perl/bin
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/aqbanking/bin
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/gwenhywfar/bin
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/autotools/bin
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/enchant/bin
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/gmp/bin
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/gnome/bin
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/gnutls/bin
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/goffice/bin
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/guile/bin
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/libdbi/bin
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/libgsf/bin
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/libofx/bin
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/libsoup/bin
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/libxslt/bin
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/mysql/bin
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/mysql/lib
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/opensp/bin
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/pcre/bin
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/pgsql/bin
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/pgsql/lib
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/regex/bin
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/sqlite3/bin
 
PATH=$PATH:/c/soft/webkit/bin
 
 
export PATH
 
 
export LTDL_LIBRARY_PATH=/c/soft/gnucash/inst/lib
 
export GNOME2_PATH=/c/soft/gnome
 
export INTLTOOL_PERL=/c/soft/active-perl/ActivePerl/perl/bin/perl
 
export GIT_CMD=/c/soft/git/git
 
export ACLOCAL_FLAGS="-I/c/soft/guile/share/aclocal -I/c/soft/gwenhywfar/share/aclocal -I/c/soft/aqbanking/share/aclocal -I/c/soft/autotools/share/aclocal -I/c/soft/gnome/share/aclocal -I/c/soft/gnutls/share/aclocal"
 
 
 
I put all of those commands into a file called <tt>devrc</tt> and then source it into my shell:
 
. devrc
 
<tt>$OLDPATH</tt> is there so that you can reset the path easily:
 
export PATH=$OLDPATH
 
 
 
The other piece of the puzzle is that you need to specify some environment to configure. Paste the following into a file (in your top-level source directory) -- I call mine <tt>.configure</tt>:
 
./configure \
 
    --prefix=/c/soft/gnucash-inst \
 
    --enable-aqbanking \
 
    --enable-ofx \
 
    --enable-debug \
 
    --enable-schemas-install=no \
 
    --enable-dbi \
 
    --with-dbi-dbd-dir=/c/soft/libdbi-drivers/lib/dbd \
 
    --enable-binreloc \
 
    --enable-locale-specific-tax \
 
    CPPFLAGS="$CPPFLAGS -I/c/soft/autotools/include -I/c/soft/regex/include -I/c/soft/gnome/include -I/c/soft/guile/include -I/c/soft/libdbi/include -I/c/soft/gmp/include -I/c/soft/gwenhywfar/include -I/c/soft/libsoup/include -D_WIN32 -ggdb3 -Wall -Werror -fno-builtin-dgettext -fno-builtin-towupper -fno-builtin-iswlower" \
 
    LDFLAGS="$LDFLAGS -L/c/soft/autotools/lib -L/c/soft/regex/lib -L/c/soft/gnome/lib -L/c/soft/guile/lib -L/c/soft/libdbi/lib -L/c/soft/gmp/lib -L/c/soft/gwenhywfar/lib -L/c/soft/libsoup/lib -L/c/soft/enchant/lib -L/c/soft/libxslt/lib -L/c/soft/sqlite3/lib" \
 
      PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/c/soft/autotools/lib/pkgconfig:/c/soft/regex/lib/pkgconfig:/c/soft/gnome/lib/pkgconfig:/c/soft/guile/lib/pkgconfig:/c/soft/libdbi/lib/pkgconfig:/c/soft/gmp/lib/pkgconfig:/c/soft/gwenhywfar/lib/pkgconfig:/c/soft/libsoup/lib/pkgconfig:/c/soft/aqbanking/lib/pkgconfig:/c/soft/libofx/lib/pkgconfig:/c/soft/isocodes/lib/pkgconfig:/c/soft/libonoboui/lib/pkgconfig:/c/soft/libgsf/lib/pkgconfig:/c/soft/libxslt/lib/pkgconfig:/c/soft/webkit/lib/pkgconfig:/c/soft/enchant/lib/pkgconfig:/c/soft/gnutls/lib/pkgconfig:/c/soft/goffice/lib/pkgconfig
 
 
 
Then you call <tt>.configure</tt> instead of <tt>configure</tt> before you run <tt>make</tt>
 
 
 
= Alternative way to develop on a Windows machine =
 
 
 
You may also prefer to work on GnuCash in its native environment. An alternative approach to developing GnuCash on Windows could be to
 
 
 
* download a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux_distribution Linux Distribution] of your choice and
 
* use [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multi_boot Multi Boot] to switch between Windows and Linux or
 
* run Linux in a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_machine Virtual Machine] and
 
* develop under Linux.
 
 
 
= Notes =
 
== Error messages, Trace file ==
 
When running into problems when running GnuCash, the trace file is usually your first stop to look for errors. You will find more details on this file [[Windows#Error messages, Trace file|here (Windows specific)]] and [[Tracefile|here (More generic)]].
 
 
 
== Debugging with gdb ==
 
In addition to [[Stack Trace]], here are a few instructions on how to run gnucash under gdb on Windows:
 
* Install "gdb" from mingw.org [http://downloads.sourceforge.net/mingw/gdb-6.3-1.exe]
 
* '''GnuCash 2.2.9 and older'''
 
:* Modify the installed "bin\gnucash.cmd" script by inserting one and changing one line.  It should end like
 
    set PATH=C:\Program Files\gdb\bin;%PATH%
 
    start gdb --args gnucash-bin %*
 
::Be careful to use the actual paths in which you have installed gdb.exe
 
:* Then start gnucash as usual
 
*'''GnuCash 2.4.0 and more recent'''
 
:* Open a Windows command prompt and type:
 
    set PATH=C:\Program Files\gdb\bin;%PATH%
 
    gdb "C:\Program Files\gnucash\bin\gnucash"
 
::Be careful to use the actual paths in which you have installed gdb and gnucash respectively.
 
*'''For all versions''': this will open a gdb prompt
 
* Type <tt>run</tt> at the gdb prompt.  
 
* Then provoke the crash and type <tt>backtrace</tt> or shorthand <tt>bt</tt> at the gdb prompt to obtain the backtrace, as explained on [[Stack Trace]] as well.
 
 
 
('''2.2.9 and older only''')If you are working in a MinGW shell, you may want to change and call the bin\gnucash script instead and use <tt>exec start gdb --args gnucash-bin "$@"</tt> to make <tt>Ctrl-C</tt> actually work.
 
 
 
If you build gnucash with the help of install.sh, make sure you export <tt>DISABLE_OPTIMIZATIONS=yes</tt> in <tt>packaging/win32/custom.sh</tt> to include debugging symbols and avoid optimizations that complicate debugging.
 
 
 
You can provide even better stack traces if you tell gdb where in memory dynamically loaded modules got mapped to, because otherwise function calls into those are only written as '??'. See [http://lists.gnucash.org/pipermail/gnucash-devel/2006-November/019042.html here] and [http://lists.gnucash.org/pipermail/gnucash-devel/2006-November/019048.html here] for a way to do this.
 
 
 
To enter <tt>[</tt> and <tt>]</tt>, use <tt>set editing off</tt>.
 
 
 
== install.sh ==
 
* To debug install.sh, change <tt>set -e</tt> to <tt>set -ex</tt> at the top of it.
 
* Once you have installed Subversion, you might want to freqently checkout and update packaging/win32 as described in [[SVN]].
 
svn checkout <nowiki>http://svn.gnucash.org/repo/gnucash/trunk/packaging/win32</nowiki> packaging
 
 
 
== Console output and exetype ==
 
All executables and DLLs on Windows operate in one of a few different subsystems, most of them either in <tt>Console</tt> or <tt>GUI</tt> (also called <tt>Windows</tt>).  Basically, executables in Console always start up in a new console window and print output for stdout und stderr to it, whereas ones in GUI do not open windows and are pretty quiet, even in console windows.  If you want to change that subsystem type, because you want to see debugging output or hide unnecessary console windows, [http://lists.gnucash.org/pipermail/gnucash-user/2007-April/020151.html] lists a few possible ways.
 
 
 
The easiest option if you don't have any further build tools available is probably the third one from that mail: Install the MSYS program (needed for building GnuCash) from the pointer at the top section of this page, fetch http://svn.gnucash.org/trac/browser/gnucash/trunk/packaging/win32/exetype.pl
 
and type
 
exetype.pl gnucash-bin.exe console
 
 
 
If you are building gnucash with install.sh, you might want to automate this step. To do so, just add the following lines to the function make_install in your local install.sh (after "make install"):
 
    qpushd $_INSTALL_UDIR/bin
 
    exetype gnucash-bin.exe console
 
    qpopd
 
 
 
= Problems, issues, comments =
 
==DLL install error==
 
I get an error like that:
 
 
 
'libgncmodule.la' 'c:/soft/gnucash/lib/libgncmodule.la'
 
/bin/install -c .libs/libgncmodule.dll.a
 
c:/soft/gnucash/lib/libgncmodule.dll.a
 
base_file=`basename ${file}`
 
  dlpath=`/bin/sh 2>&1 -c '. .libs/'${base_file}'i;echo $dlname'`
 
make[5]: *** [install-libLTLIBRARIES] Error 1
 
make[5]: Leaving directory `/c/soft/repos/src/gnc-module'
 
make[4]: *** [install-am] Error 2
 
 
 
This seems to be only an installation problem. Fine compiling it seems.
 
:I saw this at "make install" when I stopped and restarted the preceding compiling several times. So to me this looks like an artifact of DLLs that somehow "don't fit" to each other. The solution was always to run "make clean" in the source directory so that all DLLs are being deleted, and then starting the compiling again. --[[User:Cstim|Cstim]] 05:55, 4 December 2006 (EST)
 
 
 
I still see this error frequently, even when I completely remove the build/ directory and let it be created from scratch. (?!?) As an alternative, I've now tried a newer libtool version by installing the cvs snapshot libtool-1.5.23a from http://www.gnu.org/software/libtool/ . Maybe the newer version has this bug fixed. --[[User:Cstim|Cstim]] 10:27, 22 January 2007 (EST)
 
:Seems like using libtool-1.5.23a didn't change a thing. I've written a script that should track down potential errors:
 
 
 
<pre>
 
#!/bin/sh
 
ALL_LIBDIR=` find . -name '*.la' | grep '\.libs' `
 
RM_THESE=""
 
 
 
for LIB in $ALL_LIBDIR ; do
 
    DIR=`dirname ${LIB}`
 
    FNAME=`basename ${LIB}`
 
    LIBBASE=`basename ${LIB} .la`
 
    if test ! -f "${LIB}i" -a -f "${DIR}/${LIBBASE}.dll.a" ; then
 
echo "File ${LIB}i missing"
 
PDIR=`dirname ${DIR}`
 
#echo "Do this: rm ${PDIR}/${FNAME}"
 
RM_THESE="${RM_THESE} ${PDIR}/${FNAME}"
 
    fi
 
done
 
 
 
if test "x${RM_THESE}" != "x"; then
 
    echo "Do this:"
 
    echo "rm ${RM_THESE}"
 
fi
 
</pre>
 
 
 
So how is someone supposed to use the above script? It says it is supposed to track down potential errors, since it is doing some erasing (rm) does that mean it is fixing the problems as well? Or at least fixing it such that running install.sh again should work?
 
 
 
I have now run <tt>make clean && make all install</tt> in a particular directory 3 times but still get the same error.
 
 
 
= Older information, mainly for reference =
 
== Guile 1.8 ==
 
The following is obsolete: The build scripts for 2.4 and trunk correctly build Guile 1.8. The notes are retained for historical interest.
 
 
 
GnuCash/Windows currently uses guile 1.6.x. Guile's development continues and the use of this old, no longer supported version of guile is blocking some improvements. Recent examples of this were:
 
* Guile 1.8.7 removed some deprecated functions. However, the replacement functions were not available in 1.6.x. Because of this, GnuCash has to carry a compatibility header. We were lucky to get away with that.
 
* Andy Wingo provided patches to make GnuCash work with the upcoming guile 2.0 and to remove our dependency on slib. These patches are incompatible with guile 1.6.x (and likely will always be), so they couldn't all be applied.
 
 
 
I have been attempting for some time to build a more recent version of guile but this turns out to be rather difficult. At the time of this writing, I have a working guile, save it won't load slib. There were many small things I had to do to get to this point. In order not to forget them, I've chosen to document them here.
 
 
 
=== Getting it to build ===
 
The 1.8.7 tarball you can download from guile's homepage won't build in our GnuCash mingw/MSYS environment.
 
 
 
* First error is that our version of automake is too old. Guile requires 1.11, GnuCash still builds with 1.10 at the time of this writing. Luckily, this can easily be fixed by updating the version in defaults.sh and rebuilding the autotools/libtool packages.
 
* Guile 1.8.7 no longer contains its own libltdl implementation. This is provided with libtool though. All it required to fix this was to add the proper paths to CPPFLAGS and LDFLAGS.
 
* Also new is that guile now requires gmp. Another addition to CPPFLAGS and LDFLAGS solves this.
 
* Next is libintl. GnuCash builds this as part of the Gnome packages. However, we pull in the gnome libraries '''after''' we build guile. This doesn't work. So the build script has to be modified to first do the gnome install and then build guile.
 
* Guile 1.8.7 still recognizes the configure time option --disable-networking, yet it won't build on Windows if this option is set. So this option should be '''removed''' from the build script.
 
* Next, all kinds of unresolved symbol errors pop up. To fix most of them, I looked at the source package of MSYS-guile-1.8.7. They apparently managed to build guile, so it provided a good starting point. I can't use their patches verbatim, because that would result in a guile package that depends on the MSYS environment. Their patch for config.in was very useful though. To build build with this patch, the configure script has to be rebuilt, using autoreconf. This in itself was a bit of a quest. It wouldn't work unless I redefined ACLOCAL and passed autoreconf a number of library paths.
 
* I also learned from the MSYS-guile project that guile should be built with "-Wl,enable-auto-import" to avoid a number of linker warnings (which are treated as errors in our build process).
 
 
 
That was about all to get the library and executable to build. But then it really gets ugly. The next part of the guile build process uses the freshly compiled executable to setup other required bits. This fails miserably with a rather cryptic error <pre>ERROR: In procedure scm_i_lreadparen: #<unknown port>:1:7: end of file</pre>.
 
 
 
It took me quite a while to grasp this one. I found several threads on different mailing lists about the error, which where more or less helpful:
 
* http://www.mail-archive.com/bug-guile@gnu.org/msg04711.html, which at some point links to http://lists-archives.org/mingw-users/14268-problem-with-argc-argv-under-msys.html, which in turn refers to http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.mingw.msys/3719. The solution mentioned here, didn't apply in my case, but I got to understand the problem a little better.
 
* Then I was lucky enough to stumble upon two thread in the mingw-devel list: [http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guile-devel/2009-03/msg00098.html Again on windows support] and [http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guile-devel/2009-06/msg00193.html Again on windows support (2)]. These are two long threads on building guile on windows and the issues in it. I learned here that the build process uses a wrapper program around the guile executable. Confusingly, this wrapper is called guile.exe as well, yet it has issues on windows, that the actual guile.exe doesn't have. So I wrote a small patch to use that actual guile.exe instead of the wrapper during the build process.
 
 
 
'''Result''': the guile build process completes, and the guile binary works - provided it can find all of its library dependencies of course.
 
<pre>guile -c '(use-modules (srfi srfi-39))'</pre> runs with no problems.
 
 
 
=== slib ===
 
 
 
This is still problematic at this point.
 
<pre>guile -c "(use-modules (ice-9 slib)) (require 'printf)"</pre> results in this error:
 
ERROR: In procedure open-file:
 
ERROR: No such file or directory: "C:/GCDevel/guile/share/guile/1.8/slib/C:/GCDevel/guile/share/guile/1.8/slib/require"
 
ABORT: (system error)</pre>
 
 
 
Obviously there's something wrong with the path guile uses to find the file require.scm.
 
 
 
I'm still investigating what happens here.
 

Latest revision as of 23:58, 5 July 2024

Development on Microsoft Windows isn't really encouraged. The build environment isn't really conducive to development and many of the unit tests don't work. However, if you must...

GnuCash 3.0 and Later

The build system for GnuCash 2.7 and later supports Windows 7 and later. The procedure is a bit simpler than for GnuCash 2.6 and earlier and provides a somewhat easier to use development environment. That doesn't mean that we recommend that you use Windows for development: GnuCash is very much a Unix program and development is much easier in a Unix environment like Linux, BSD, or MacOS.

PowerShell

The build system relies heavily on Windows PowerShell.

Windows 7: The PowerShell version that ships with Windows 7 by default is too old. To build GnuCash on that platform a more recent version of PowerShell should be installed. PowerShell version 5.1 is known to work well.
Depending on your security settings you may need to enable running scripts on your computer. For this open a powershell with Administrator privilages and run:
set-executionpolicy unrestricted

Bootstrap the build environment

First download and run setup-mingw64.ps1. Depending on where you want to put the development tree you may need to run PowerShell as an administrator. Once you've downloaded the script start PowerShell. You can review the script's parameters with
help \path\to\setup-mingw64.ps1
For convenience they're
  • target_dir: The root directory where the build environment will be installed. The default is c:\gcdev64, but you can put it anywhere you have write privilege.
  • download_dir: Defaults to target_dir\downloads. There's no requirement to have it in target_dir.
  • x86_64: Set this to $true if you want to build 64-bit binaries. The default is $false, and the developers do not often try to build 64-bit binaries so doing so isn't guaranteed to work nor are the developers much inclined to prioritize fixing it if it doesn't.
Note: The help command above will only work if the security settings of your system allow this script to be run. In addition to the set-executionpolicy command above you may have to run
unblock-file \path\to\setup-mingw64.ps1
before help will work.

Once setup-mingw64.ps1 is complete you will have an MSYS2 environment with all of the GnuCash dependencies that don't need to be built from source installed in it.

Running a build

Next open the Start menu and navigate to MSYS2 64Bit or MSYS2 32Bit; which you want will depend upon the bitness of your Windows version. If you specified x86_64 $true to setup-mingw64.ps1 you'll want to start the mingw64 shell, otherwise the mingw32 shell.

Note
Currently [2024-07] WebKitGtk is only availabe in 32-bit and won't link with a 64-bit GnuCash.

In that shell window navigate to the gnucash-on-windows.git directory in the target directory to specified to setup-mingw64.ps1. We'll use the default for the following examples.

  cd /c/gcdev64/src/gnucash-on-windows.git
  TARGET=gnucash-unstable jhbuild -f jhbuildrc build

One of the things setup-mingw64.ps1 did was checkout the rest of the gnucash-on-windows repository in target_dir/src/gnucash-on-windows.git. That contains a customization (python) script and a jhbuild moduleset. The customization script selects one of the three GnuCash branches to build based on the value of $TARGET; the possibilities are gnucash-stable (the default), gnucash-unstable (the unstable release git branch) and gnucash-releases, which builds GnuCash from the tarball specified in gnucash.modules instead of from a git branch.The first time jhbuild build command will build GnuCash, GnuCash Docs, and all of the dependencies that Mingw-w64 doesn't provide. After that it only builds modules that need rebuilding unless you tell it otherwise; see the jhbuild manual for details on controlling jhbuild.

You can start a subshell with the paths to hand-compile or run GnuCash from the command line with
TARGET=gnucash-unstable jhbuild -f jhbuildrc shell
This is convenient for development as one can navigate to the gnucash build directory and re-run CMake and make as necessary while developing. N.B. Be sure to use a programming editor that preserves line ending style; git can get really unhappy if you put the wrong kind of line endings into a file. To build a package for installation there's a PowerShell script called gnucash-on-windows.git\bundle-gnucash.ps1 and an automation script, gnucash-on-windows.git\buildserver\build_package.ps1 suitable for use with the Task Scheduler for periodic builds. Each includes documentation accessible with PowerShell's help command, e.g.
help bundle-gnucash.ps1

Note that build_package.ps1 also takes care of updating the gnucash-on-windows repository and that jhbuild build will update the gnucash repository; you can do so manually with git from within the Mingw shell. SSH works, just set up your ~/.ssh directory with the necessary keys and config file.

You may find the MSys2 Wiki and Mingw-w64 Documentation helpful.

Debugging a build

GDB can be used on windows without too much effort. Usually it's better to attach to an already running process instead of trying to launch directly under GDB. Ctrl+C does not work as well under GDB, however this site has a workaround: Workaround for GDB Ctrl C Interrupt

Microsoft's Visual Studio Code is a possibility to integrate with gnucash and gdb for debugging. The following launch.json file can be used to debug with gdb under vscode:

{
    "version": "0.2.0",
    "configurations": [
        {
            "name": "(gdb) launch",
            "type": "cppdbg",
            "request": "launch",
            "program": "C:\\gcdev64\\gnucash\\maint\\inst\\bin\\gnucash.exe",
            "args": [],
            "stopAtEntry": true,
            "cwd": "${workspaceFolder}",
            "environment": [],
            "externalConsole": true,
            "MIMode": "gdb",
            "miDebuggerPath": "C:\\gcdev64\\msys2\\mingw32\\bin\\gdb.exe",
            "setupCommands": [
                {
                    "description": "Enable pretty-printing for gdb",
                    "text": "-enable-pretty-printing",
                    "ignoreFailures": true
                }
            ]
        }
    ]
}

GnuCash 2.6 and Earlier

GnuCash 2.6 is no longer being developed. This procedure is archival. Don't use it without good reason.

First read the README for the Windows Build Environment. You'll need to download and run bootstrap_win_dev.vbs, then adjust gnucash-on-windows.git/custom.sh to build what you want the way you want, and run

 gnucash-on-windows.sh/install.sh

to build the program.

You'll find a shell file, devrc.sh in gnucash-on-windows.git. Sourcing, not running, this file

 . gnucash-on-windows.git/devrc.sh

will set the necessary environment variables so that you can re-run the build script as usual in gnucash/build and run GnuCash from gnucash/inst/bin