Below are some notes on how to build Raptoreum Core for Windows.
The options known to work for building Raptoreum Core on Windows are:
- On Linux, using the Mingw-w64 cross compiler tool chain. and is the platform used to build the Raptoreum Core Windows release binaries.
- On Windows, using Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) and the Mingw-w64 cross compiler tool chain.
Other options which may work, but which have not been extensively tested are (please contribute instructions):
- Follow the upstream installation instructions, available here.
The steps below can be performed on Ubuntu or WSL. The depends system will also work on other Linux distributions, however the commands for installing the toolchain will be different.
First, install the general dependencies:
sudo apt update
sudo apt upgrade
sudo apt install build-essential libtool autotools-dev automake pkg-config bsdmainutils curl git
A host toolchain (build-essential
) is necessary because some dependency
packages need to build host utilities that are used in the build process.
See dependencies.md for a complete overview.
If you want to build the windows installer with make deploy
you need NSIS:
sudo apt install nsis
Acquire the source in the usual way:
git clone https://github.com/raptor3um/raptoreum.git
cd raptoreum
The first step is to oinstall the mingw-w64 cross-compilation tool chain:
- on modern systems (Ubuntu 21.04 Hirsute Hippo or newer, Debian 11 Bullseye or newer):
sudo apt install g++-mingw-w64-x86-64-posix
- on older systems:
sudo apt install g++-mingw-w64-x86-64
Once the toolchain is installed the build steps are common:
Note that for WSL the Raptoreum Core source path MUST be somewhere in the default mount file system, for example /usr/src/raptoreum, AND not under /mnt/d/. If this is not the case the dependency autoconf scripts will fail. This means you cannot use a directory that is located directly on the host Windows file system to perform the build.
Additional WSL Note:
WSL support for launching Win32 applications
results in Autoconf
configure scripts being able to execute Windows Portable Executable files. This can cause
unexpected behaviour during the build, such as Win32 error dialogs for missing libraries. The recommended approach
is to temporarily disable WSL support for Win32 applications.
Build using:
PATH=$(echo "$PATH" | sed -e 's/:\/mnt.*//g') # strip out problematic Windows %PATH% imported var
sudo bash -c "echo 0 > /proc/sys/fs/binfmt_misc/status" # Disable WSL support for Win32 applications.
cd depends
make HOST=x86_64-w64-mingw32
cd ..
./autogen.sh
CONFIG_SITE=$PWD/depends/x86_64-w64-mingw32/share/config.site ./configure --prefix=/
make # use "-j N" for N parallel jobs
sudo bash -c "echo 1 > /proc/sys/fs/binfmt_misc/status" # Enable WSL support for Win32 applications.
For further documentation on the depends system see README.md in the depends directory.
After building using the Windows subsystem it can be useful to copy the compiled
executables to a directory on the Windows drive in the same directory structure
as they appear in the release .zip
archive. This can be done in the following
way. This will install to c:\workspace\raptoreum
, for example:
make install DESTDIR=/mnt/c/workspace/raptoreum
You can also create an installer using:
make deploy