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<!-- __COPYRIGHT__ -->
<tool name="msvs">
<summary>
XXX
</summary>
</tool>
<builder name ="MSVSProject">
<summary>
Builds Microsoft Visual Studio project files.
This builds a Visual Studio project file, based on the version of
Visual Studio that is configured (either the latest installed version,
or the version set by
&cv-MSVS_VERSION;
in the Environment constructor).
For VS 6, it will generate
<filename>.dsp</filename>
and
<filename>.dsw</filename>
files, for VS 7, it will
generate
<filename>.vcproj</filename>
and
<filename>.sln</filename>
files.
It takes several lists of filenames to be placed into the project
file, currently these are limited to
<literal>srcs</literal>,
<literal>incs</literal>,
<literal>localincs</literal>,
<literal>resources</literal>,
and
<literal>misc</literal>.
These are pretty self explanatory, but it
should be noted that the <literal>srcs</literal> list
is NOT added to the &cv-SOURCES;
construction variable. This is because it represents a list of files
to be added to the project file, not the source used to build the
project file (in this case, the "source" is the &SConscript; file used
to call MSVSProject).
In addition to these values (which are all optional, although not
specifying any of them results in an empty project file), the
following values must be specified:
target: The name of the target
<filename>.dsp</filename>
or
<filename>.vcproj</filename>
file. The correct
suffix for the version of Visual Studio must be used, but the
&cv-MSVSPROJECTSUFFIX;
construction value
will be defined to the correct value (see example below).
variant: The name of this particular variant. These are typically
things like "Debug" or "Release", but really can be anything you want.
Multiple calls to MSVSProject with different variants are allowed: all
variants will be added to the project file with their appropriate
build targets and sources.
buildtarget: A list of SCons.Node.FS objects which is returned from
the command which builds the target. This is used to tell SCons what
to build when the 'build' button is pressed inside of the IDE.
Example usage:
<example>
barsrcs = ['bar.cpp'],
barincs = ['bar.h'],
barlocalincs = ['StdAfx.h']
barresources = ['bar.rc','resource.h']
barmisc = ['bar_readme.txt']
dll = local.SharedLibrary(target = 'bar.dll',
source = barsrcs)
local.MSVSProject(target = 'Bar' + env['MSVSPROJECTSUFFIX'],
srcs = barsrcs,
incs = barincs,
localincs = barlocalincs,
resources = barresources,
misc = barmisc,
buildtarget = dll,
variant = 'Release')
</example>
</summary>
</builder>
<cvar name="MSVS">
<summary>
When the Microsoft Visual Studio tools are initialized, they set up
this dictionary with the following keys:
<envar>VERSION</envar>
the version of MSVS being used (can be set via
MSVS_VERSION)
<envar>VERSIONS</envar>
the available versions of MSVS installed
<envar>VCINSTALLDIR</envar>
installed directory of Visual C++
<envar>VSINSTALLDIR</envar>
installed directory of Visual Studio
<envar>FRAMEWORKDIR</envar>
installed directory of the .NET framework
<envar>FRAMEWORKVERSIONS</envar>
list of installed versions of the .NET framework, sorted latest to oldest.
<envar>FRAMEWORKVERSION</envar>
latest installed version of the .NET framework
<envar>FRAMEWORKSDKDIR</envar>
installed location of the .NET SDK.
<envar>PLATFORMSDKDIR</envar>
installed location of the Platform SDK.
<envar>PLATFORMSDK_MODULES</envar>
dictionary of installed Platform SDK modules,
where the dictionary keys are keywords for the various modules, and
the values are 2-tuples where the first is the release date, and the
second is the version number.
If a value isn't set, it wasn't available in the registry.
</summary>
</cvar>
<cvar name="MSVS_IGNORE_IDE_PATHS">
<summary>
Tells the MS Visual Studio tools to use minimal INCLUDE, LIB, and PATH settings,
instead of the settings from the IDE.
For Visual Studio, SCons will (by default) automatically determine
where MSVS is installed, and use the LIB, INCLUDE, and PATH variables
set by the IDE. You can override this behavior by setting these
variables after Environment initialization, or by setting
<envar>MSVS_IGNORE_IDE_PATHS = 1</envar>
in the Environment initialization.
Specifying this will not leave these unset, but will set them to a
minimal set of paths needed to run the tools successfully.
For VS6, the mininimal set is:
<example>
INCLUDE:'VSDir\VC98\ATL\include;VSDir\VC98\MFC\include;VSDir\VC98\include'
LIB:'VSDir\VC98\MFC\lib;VSDir\VC98\lib'
PATH:'VSDir\Common\MSDev98\bin;VSDir\VC98\bin'
</example>
For VS7, it is:
<example>
INCLUDE:'VSDir\Vc7\atlmfc\include;VSDir\Vc7\include'
LIB:'VSDir\Vc7\atlmfc\lib;VSDir\Vc7\lib'
PATH:'VSDir\Common7\Tools\bin;VSDir\Common7\Tools;VSDir\Vc7\bin'
</example>
Where 'VSDir' is the installed location of Visual Studio.
</summary>
</cvar>
<cvar name="MSVS_USE_MFC_DIRS">
<summary>
Tells the MS Visual Studio tool(s) to use
the MFC directories in its default paths
for compiling and linking.
Under MSVS version 6,
setting
<envar>MSVS_USE_MFC_DIRS</envar>
to a non-zero value
adds the
<filename>ATL\include</filename>
and
<filename>MFC\include</filename>
directories to
the default
<envar>INCLUDE</envar>
external environment variable,
and adds the
<envar>MFC\lib</envar>
directory to
the default
<envar>LIB</envar>
external environment variable.
Under MSVS version 7,
setting
<envar>MSVS_USE_MFC_DIRS</envar>
to a non-zero value
adds the
<envar>atlmfc\include</envar>
directory to the default
<envar>INCLUDE</envar>
external environment variable,
and adds the
<envar>atlmfc\lib</envar>
directory to the default
<envar>LIB</envar>
external environment variable.
The current default value is
<literal>1</literal>
which means these directories
are added to the paths by default.
This default value is likely to change
in a future release,
so users who want the ATL and MFC
values included in their paths
are encouraged to enable the
<envar>MSVS_USE_MFC_DIRS</envar>
value explicitly
to avoid future incompatibility.
This variable has no effect if the
<envar>INCLUDE</envar>
or
<envar>LIB</envar>
environment variables are set explictly.
</summary>
</cvar>
<cvar name="MSVS_VERSION">
<summary>
Sets the preferred version of MSVS to use.
SCons will (by default) select the latest version of MSVS
installed on your machine. So, if you have version 6 and version 7
(MSVS .NET) installed, it will prefer version 7. You can override this by
specifying the
<envar>MSVS_VERSION</envar>
variable in the Environment initialization, setting it to the
appropriate version ('6.0' or '7.0', for example).
If the given version isn't installed, tool initialization will fail.
</summary>
</cvar>
<cvar name="MSVSPROJECTCOM">
<summary>
The action used to generate Microsoft Visual Studio
project and solution files.
</summary>
</cvar>
<cvar name="MSVSPROJECTSUFFIX">
<summary>
The suffix used for Microsoft Visual Studio project (DSP) files.
The default value is
<filename>.vcproj</filename>
when using Visual Studio version 7.x (.NET),
and
<filename>.dsp</filename>
when using earlier versions of Visual Studio.
</summary>
</cvar>
<cvar name="MSVSSOLUTIONSUFFIX">
<summary>
The suffix used for Microsoft Visual Studio solution (DSW) files.
The default value is
<filename>.sln</filename>
when using Visual Studio version 7.x (.NET),
and
<filename>.dsw</filename>
when using earlier versions of Visual Studio.
</summary>
</cvar>
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