Introduction

MXE (M cross environment) is a Makefile that compiles a cross compiler and cross compiles many free libraries such as SDL and Qt. Thus, it provides a nice cross compiling environment for various target platforms, which

Screenshots

Cross compiling 4tH:

4th-compile

and running it:

4th-run

Tutorial

Step 1: Requirements and Download

First, you should ensure that your system meets MXE's requirements. You will almost certainly have to install some stuff.

When everything is fine, download the current stable version:

git clone -b stable https://github.com/mxe/mxe.git

If you don't mind installing it in your home directory, just skip the following step and go straight to step 3.

Step 2: System-wide Installation (optional)

Now you should save any previous installation of the MXE. Assuming you've installed it under /opt/mxe (any other directory will do as well), you should execute the following commands:

su
mv /opt/mxe /opt/mxe.old
exit

Then you need to transfer the entire directory to its definitive location. We will assume again you use /opt/mxe, but feel free to use any other directory if you like.

su
mv mxe /opt/mxe
exit

We're almost done. Just change to your newly created directory and get going:

cd /opt/mxe

Step 3: Build MXE

Enter the directory where you've downloaded the MXE. Now it depends on what you actually want – or need.

If you choose to enter:

make

you're in for a long wait, because it compiles a lot of packages. On the other hand it doesn't require any intervention, so you're free to do whatever you like – like watch a movie or go for a night on the town. When it's done you'll find that you've installed a very capable Win32 cross compiler onto your system.

If you only need the most basic tools you can also use:

make gcc

and add any additional packages you need later on. You can also supply a host of packages on the command line, e.g.:

make gtk lua libidn

You'll always end up with a consistent cross compiling environment.

After you're done it just needs a little post-installation.

Step 4: Environment Variables

Edit your .bashrc script in order to change $PATH:

export PATH=/where MXE is installed/usr/bin:$PATH

In case you are using custom $PKG_CONFIG_PATH entries, you can add separate entries for cross builds:

export PKG_CONFIG_PATH="entries for native builds"
export PKG_CONFIG_PATH_i686_pc_mingw32="entries for MXE builds"

Remember to use i686-pc-mingw32-pkg-config instead of pkg-config for cross builds. The Autotools do that automatically for you.

Note that any other compiler related environment variables (like $CC, $LDFLAGS, etc.) may spoil your compiling pleasure, so be sure to delete or disable those.

Congratulations! You're ready to cross compile anything you like.

Step 5a: Cross compile your Project (Autotools)

If you use the Autotools, all you have to do is:

./configure --host=i686-pc-mingw32
make

If you build a library, you might also want to enforce a static build:

./configure --host=i686-pc-mingw32 --enable-static --disable-shared
make

Don't worry about a warning like this:

configure: WARNING: If you wanted to set the --build type, don't use --host.
If a cross compiler is detected then cross compile mode will be used.

Everything will be just fine.

Step 5b: Cross compile your Project (CMake)

If you have a CMake project, you can use the provided toolchain file:

cmake ... -DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=/where MXE is installed/usr/i686-pc-mingw32/share/cmake/mxe-conf.cmake

Step 5c: Cross compile your Project (Qt)

If you have a Qt application, all you have to do is:

i686-pc-mingw32-qmake
make

If you are using Qt plugins such as the svg or ico image handlers, you should also have a look at the Qt documentation about static plugins.

Note the sql drivers (-qt-sql-*) and the image handlers for jpeg, tiff, gif and mng are built-in, not plugins.

Step 5d: Cross compile your Project (Makefile)

If you have a handwritten Makefile, you probably will have to make a few adjustments to it:

CC=$(CROSS)gcc
LD=$(CROSS)ld
AR=$(CROSS)ar
PKG_CONFIG=$(CROSS)pkg-config

You may have to add a few others, depending on your project.

Then, all you have to do is:

make CROSS=i686-pc-mingw32-

That's it!

Step 5e: Cross compile your Project (OSG)

Using static OpenSceneGraph libraries requires a few changes to your source. The graphics subsystem and all plugins required by your application must be referenced explicitly. Use a code block like the following:

#ifdef OSG_LIBRARY_STATIC
USE_GRAPHICSWINDOW()
USE_OSGPLUGIN(<plugin1>)
USE_OSGPLUGIN(<plugin2>)
...
#endif

Look at examples/osgstaticviewer/osgstaticviewer.cpp in the OpenSceneGraph source distribution for an example. This example can be compiled with the following command:

i686-pc-mingw32-g++ \
    -o osgstaticviewer.exe examples/osgstaticviewer/osgstaticviewer.cpp \
    `i686-pc-mingw32-pkg-config --cflags openscenegraph-osgViewer openscenegraph-osgPlugins` \
    `i686-pc-mingw32-pkg-config --libs openscenegraph-osgViewer openscenegraph-osgPlugins`

The i686-pc-mingw32-pkg-config command from MXE will automatically add -DOSG_LIBRARY_STATIC to your compiler flags.

Further Steps

If you need further assistance, feel free to join the project mailing list where you'll get in touch with the MXE developers and other users.

Download

To obtain the current stable version, run:

git clone -b stable https://github.com/mxe/mxe.git

The development version can be obtained by:

git clone -b master https://github.com/mxe/mxe.git

N.B. when using the development version, ensure you use the local documentation (index.html) - the website reflects the stable branch.

To retrieve updates, run:

git pull

You can also browse the web repository.

In addition, feel free to join the project mailing list and to propose new packages.

For Committers

The following .git/config settings ensure that the stable branch will always be pushed to the gh-pages branch in addition to the stable branch, thus ensuring the website will always stay in sync:

[remote "origin"]
        url = git@github.com:mxe/mxe.git
        fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
        push = refs/heads/master:refs/heads/master
        push = refs/heads/stable:refs/heads/stable
        push = refs/heads/stable:refs/heads/gh-pages
[branch "master"]
        remote = origin
        merge = refs/heads/master
[branch "stable"]
        remote = origin
        merge = refs/heads/stable

Branch Concept

For the sake of simplicity, there are just two branches, "master" and "stable". Although it might seem obvious, here's an overview of the types of changes that go into each branch:

Requirements

MXE requires a recent Unix system where all components as stated in the table below are installed. Detailed instructions are available for:

Autoconf ≥ 2.64
Automake ≥ 1.10
Bash
Bison
Bzip2
CMake ≥ 2.8.0
Flex ≥ 2.5.31
GCC (gcc, g++)
Git ≥ 1.7
GNU Gettext
GNU Make ≥ 3.81
GNU Sed
Intltool ≥ 0.40
LibC for 32-bit
libffi ≥ 3.0.0
Libtool ≥ 2.2
OpenSSL-dev
Patch
Perl
Perl XML::Parser
Pkg-config ≥ 0.16
SCons ≥ 0.98
UnZip
Wget
XZ Utils
Yasm

Debian (GNU/kFreeBSD & GNU/Linux)

aptitude install -R autoconf automake bash bison bzip2 \
                    cmake flex gettext git g++ intltool \
                    libffi-dev libtool libltdl-dev openssl libssl-dev \
                    libxml-parser-perl make patch perl \
                    pkg-config scons sed unzip wget \
                    xz-utils yasm

On 64-bit Debian, install also:

aptitude install -R g++-multilib libc6-dev-i386

On Debian Squeeze, you'll need some packages from backports. Add this line:

deb http://backports.debian.org/debian-backports squeeze-backports main

to your sources.list (or add a new file with the ".list" extension to /etc/apt/sources.list.d/)

apt-get update
aptitude -t squeeze-backports install cmake yasm

Fedora

yum install autoconf automake bash bison bzip2 cmake \
            flex gcc-c++ gettext git intltool make sed \
            libffi-devel libtool openssl-devel patch perl pkgconfig \
            scons yasm unzip wget xz

On 64-bit Fedora, there are open issues with the NSIS package.

FreeBSD

pkg_add -r automake111 autoconf268 bash bison cmake \
           flex gettext git gmake gsed intltool libffi libtool \
           openssl patch perl p5-XML-Parser pkg-config \
           scons unzip wget yasm

Ensure that /usr/local/bin precedes /usr/bin in your $PATH:

For C style shells, edit .cshrc

setenv PATH /usr/local/bin:$PATH

For Bourne shells, edit .profile

export PATH = /usr/local/bin:$PATH

On 64-bit FreeBSD, there are open issues with the NSIS package.

Frugalware

pacman-g2 -S autoconf automake bash bzip2 bison cmake \
             flex gcc gettext git intltool make sed libffi libtool \
             openssl patch perl perl-xml-parser pkgconfig \
             scons unzip wget xz xz-lzma yasm

On 64-bit Frugalware, there are open issues with the NSIS package.

Gentoo

emerge sys-devel/autoconf sys-devel/automake \
       app-shells/bash sys-devel/bison app-arch/bzip2 \
       dev-util/cmake sys-devel/flex sys-devel/gcc \
       sys-devel/gettext dev-vcs/git \
       dev-util/intltool sys-devel/make sys-apps/sed \
       dev-libs/libffi sys-devel/libtool dev-libs/openssl sys-devel/patch \
       dev-lang/perl dev-perl/XML-Parser \
       dev-util/pkgconfig dev-util/scons app-arch/unzip \
       net-misc/wget app-arch/xz-utils dev-lang/yasm

Mac OS X

Install Xcode 4 and MacPorts, then run:

sudo port install autoconf automake bison cmake flex \
                  gettext git-core glib2 gsed intltool libffi \
                  libtool openssl p5-xml-parser pkgconfig scons \
                  wget xz yasm

Use the llvm based gcc:

sudo port select gcc llvm-gcc42

Mac OS X versions ≤ 10.6 are no longer supported.

openSUSE

zypper install -R autoconf automake bash bison bzip2 \
                  cmake flex gcc-c++ gettext-tools git \
                  intltool libffi-devel libtool make openssl \
                  libopenssl-devel patch perl \
                  perl-XML-Parser pkg-config scons \
                  sed unzip wget xz yasm

On 64-bit openSUSE, install also:

zypper install -R gcc-32bit glibc-devel-32bit \
                  libgcc46-32bit libgomp46-32bit \
                  libstdc++46-devel-32bit

Open Issues with NSIS

The NSIS package contains some native tools that are currently 32-bit only. In order to build these on a 64-bit system, multi-lib support must be enabled in the compiler toolchain. However, not all operating systems support this.

Since no other packages depend on it, the remainder of MXE can be successfully built by simply specifying an empty build rule:

make nsis_BUILD=

Usage

All build commands also download the packages if necessary.

In a BSD userland, substitute "make" with "gmake".

make
build all packages, non-parallel
make gcc
build a minimal useful set of packages, i.e. the cross compilers and the most basic packages, non-parallel
make foo bar
build packages "foo", "bar" and their dependencies, non-parallel
make foo bar -j 4 JOBS=2
build packages "foo", "bar" and their dependencies, where up to 4 packages are build in parallel, each with up to 2 compiler processes running in parallel
make check-requirements
check most of the requirements if necessary – executed automatically before building packages
make download
download all packages, non-parallel, such that subsequent builds work without internet access
make download-foo download-bar
download packages "foo", "bar" and their dependencies, non-parallel
make download-foo download-bar -j 4
download packages "foo", "bar" and their dependencies, where up to 4 packages are downloaded in parallel
make clean
remove all package builds – use with caution!
make clean-pkg
remove all unused package files, handy after a successful update
make update
for internal use only! – update the version numbers of all packages, download the new versions and note their checksums
make cleanup-style
for internal use only! – cleanup coding style

List of Packages

See something missing? Feel free to create a new package.

agg 2.5 Anti-Grain Geometry
apr-util 1.3.10 APR-util
apr 1.4.2 APR
armadillo 3.6.2 Armadillo C++ linear algebra library
atk 2.6.0 ATK
atkmm 2.22.6 ATKmm
aubio 0.3.2 aubio
bfd 2.23.1 Binary File Descriptor library
binutils 2.23.1 GNU Binutils
blas 1 blas
boost 1.53.0 Boost C++ Library
bzip2 1.0.6 bzip2
cairo 1.12.14 cairo
cairomm 1.10.0 cairomm
cblas 1 cblas
cgal 4.0.2 cgal
cminpack 1.3.0 cminpack
cppunit 1.12.1 CppUnit
cunit 2.1-2 cunit
curl 7.29.0 cURL
dbus 1.6.8 dbus
dcmtk 3.6.0 DCMTK
devil 1.7.8 DevIL
eigen 3.1.2 eigen
exiv2 0.23 Exiv2
expat 2.1.0 Expat XML Parser
faad2 2.7 faad2
ffmpeg 1.1.1 ffmpeg
fftw 3.3.3 fftw
file 5.12 file
flac 1.2.1 FLAC
flann 1.7.1 FLANN
fltk 1.3.2 FLTK
fontconfig 2.10.91 fontconfig
freeglut 2.8.0 freeglut
freeimage 3.15.4 FreeImage
freetds 0.91 FreeTDS
freetype 2.4.11 freetype
fribidi 0.19.5 FriBidi
ftgl 2.1.3~rc5 ftgl
gc 7.2d gc
gcc 4.7.2 GCC
gcc-gmp 5.1.0 GMP for GCC
gcc-mpc 1.0.1 MPC for GCC
gcc-mpfr 3.1.1 MPFR for GCC
gd 2.0.35 GD (without support for xpm)
gdal 1.9.2 GDAL
gdb 7.5.1 gdb
gdk-pixbuf 2.26.5 GDK-pixbuf
geos 3.3.7 GEOS
gettext 0.18.2 gettext
giflib 5.0.4 giflib
glew 1.9.0 GLEW
glib 2.34.3 GLib
glibmm 2.32.0 GLibmm
gmp 5.1.1 GMP
gnutls 3.1.8 GnuTLS
graphicsmagick 1.3.17 GraphicsMagick
gsl 1.14 GSL
gsoap 2.8.14 gSOAP
gst-plugins-base 1.0.4 gst-plugins-base
gst-plugins-good 1.0.4 gst-plugins-good
gstreamer 1.0.4 gstreamer
gta 1.0.4 gta
gtk2 2.24.13 GTK+
gtkGLArea 2.0.1 GtkGLArea
gtkglext 1.2.0 GtkGLExt
gtkglextmm 1.2.0 GtkGLExtmm
gtkmm2 2.24.0 GTKMM
gtksourceview 2.10.5 GTKSourceView
gtksourceviewmm2 2.10.3 GtkSourceViewmm
guile 1.8.7 GNU Guile
harfbuzz 0.9.12 HarfBuzz
hdf4 4.2.8 HDF4
hdf5 1.8.10 HDF5
hunspell 1.3.2 Hunspell
id3lib 3.8.3 id3lib
ilmbase 1.0.3 IlmBase
imagemagick 6.8.1-9 ImageMagick
jasper 1.900.1 JasPer
jpeg 9 jpeg
json-c 0.10 json-c
lame 3.99 lame
lapack 3.4.2 lapack
lcms 2.4 lcms
lcms1 1.19 lcms1
levmar 2.6 levmar
libarchive 3.0.3 Libarchive
libass 0.10.1 libass
libcroco 0.6.2 Libcroco
libdnet 1.11 libdnet
libevent 2.0.21 libevent
libf2c 1 libf2c
libffi 3.0.11 libffi
libftdi 0.20 LibFTDI
libgcrypt 1.5.0 libgcrypt
libgda 4.2.13 libgda
libgdamm 4.1.3 libgdamm
libgee 0.5.0 libgee
libgeotiff 1.4.0 GeoTiff
libglade 2.6.4 glade
libgnurx 2.5.1 libgnurx
libgomp 4.7.2 GCC-libgomp
libgpg_error 1.10 libgpg-error
libgsasl 1.8.0 Libgsasl
libgsf 1.14.25 libgsf
libharu 2.2.1 libharu
libiberty 2.23.1 libiberty
libical 0.48 libical
libiconv 1.14 libiconv
libidn 1.26 Libidn
libircclient 1.6 libircclient
liblo 0.26 liblo
libmad 0.15.1b libmad
libmikmod 3.2.0-beta2 libMikMod
libmng 1.0.10 libmng
libmodplug 0.8.8.4 libmodplug
libntlm 1.3 Libntlm
liboauth 1.0.0 liboauth
libodbc++ 0.2.5 libodbc++
liboil 0.3.17 liboil
libpano13 2.9.18_rc2 libpano13
libpaper 1.1.24+nmu2 libpaper
libpng 1.5.14 libpng
librsvg 2.37.0 librsvg
librtmp 2.4 librtmp
libsamplerate 0.1.8 libsamplerate
libshout 2.3.1 libshout
libsigc++ 2.3.1 libsigc++
libsndfile 1.0.25 libsndfile
libssh2 1.4.3 libssh2
libtool 2.4.2 GNU Libtool
libunistring 0.9.3 libunistring
libusb 1.2.6.0 LibUsb
libvpx 1.1.0 vpx
libxml++ 2.36.0 libxml2
libxml2 2.9.0 libxml2
libxslt 1.1.28 libxslt
libzip 0.10.1 libzip
llvm 3.2 llvm
log4cxx 0.10.0 log4cxx
lua 5.2.1 Lua
lzo 2.06 lzo
matio 1.5.0 matio
mdbtools 0.7 mdbtools
mingw-utils 0.4-1 MinGW Utilities
mingwrt 3.20-2 MinGW Runtime
mpfr 3.1.1 mpfr
muparser 2.2.3 muParser
mxml 2.7 Mini-XML
ncurses 5.9 Ncurses
netcdf 4.2.1.1 NetCDF
netpbm 10.35.87 Netpbm
nettle 2.6 nettle
nsis 2.46 NSIS
ocaml 4.00.1 ocaml
cairo-ocaml 1.2.0 cairo-ocaml
camlimages 4.0.1 camlimages
ocaml 4.00.1 ocaml
ocaml-findlib 1.3.3 findlib
ocaml-flexdll 0.30 flexdll
ocaml-lablgl 20120306 lablgl
ocaml-lablgtk2 2.16.0 lablgtk2
xml-light 2.2 xml-light
ogg 1.3.0 OGG
old 0.17 old
openal 1.15.1 openal
opencore-amr 0.1.2 opencore-amr
opencsg 1.3.2 opencsg
openexr 1.7.1 OpenEXR
openscenegraph 3.0.1 OpenSceneGraph
openssl 1.0.1e openssl
pango 1.33.7 Pango
pangomm 2.28.4 Pangomm
pcl 1.6.0 PCL (Point Cloud Library)
pcre 8.32 PCRE
pdcurses 3.4 PDcurses
plib 1.8.5-rc1 Plib
plibc 0.1.7 Plibc
pdflib_lite 7.0.5p3 PDFlib Lite
pfstools 1.8.5 pfstools
physfs 2.0.3 physfs
picomodel 0.8.20 picomodel
pixman 0.29.2 pixman
plotmm 0.1.2 PlotMM
plotutils 2.6 plotutils
poco 1.4.5 POCO C++ Libraries
poppler 0.22.1 poppler
popt 1.16 popt
portablexdr 4.0.11 PortableXDR
portaudio 19_20111121 portaudio
portmidi 217 portmidi
postgresql 9.2.3 PostgreSQL
proj 4.8.0 proj
protobuf 2.4.1 protobuf
pthreads 2-9-1 Pthreads-w32
qdbm 1.8.78 QDBM
qjson 0.8.1 QJson
qt 4.8.4 Qt
qtactiveqt 5.0.1 Qt
qtbase 5.0.1 Qt
qtdeclarative 5.0.1 Qt
qtgraphicaleffects 5.0.1 Qt
qtimageformats 5.0.1 Qt
qtjsbackend 5.0.1 Qt
qtmultimedia 5.0.1 Qt
qtquick1 5.0.1 Qt
qtscript 5.0.1 Qt
qtsvg 5.0.1 Qt
qttools 5.0.1 Qt
qttranslations 5.0.1 Qt
qtxmlpatterns 5.0.1 Qt
qwt 6.0.2 Qwt
qwtplot3d 0.2.7 QwtPlot3D
readline 6.2 Readline
sdl 1.2.15 SDL
sdl_gfx 2.0.24 SDL_gfx
sdl_image 1.2.12 SDL_image
sdl_mixer 1.2.12 SDL_mixer
sdl_net 1.2.8 SDL_net
sdl_pango 0.1.2 SDL_Pango
sdl_sound 1.0.3 SDL_sound
sdl_ttf 2.0.11 SDL_ttf
smpeg 0.4.5+cvs20030824 smpeg
sox 14.4.1 SoX
speex 1.2rc1 Speex
sqlite 3071502 SQLite
suitesparse 4.0.2 SuiteSparse
t4k_common 0.1.1 t4k_common
taglib 1.7.2 TagLib
teem 1.11.0 Teem
theora 1.1.1 Theora
tiff 4.0.3 LibTIFF
tinyxml 2.6.2 tinyxml
tre 0.8.0 TRE
vigra 1.9.0 vigra
vmime c2474f2 VMime
vorbis 1.3.3 Vorbis
vtk 5.8.0 vtk
w32api 3.17 MinGW Windows API
wget 1.14 wget
winpcap 4_1_2 WinPcap
wt 3.2.3 Wt
wxwidgets 2.9.4 wxWidgets
x264 20121211-2245 x264
xapian-core 1.2.13 Xapian-Core
xerces 3.1.1 Xerces-C++
xine-lib 1.1.21 xine-lib
xmlwrapp 0.6.3 xmlwrapp
xvidcore 1.3.2 xvidcore
xz 5.0.4 XZ
zlib 1.2.7 zlib
zziplib 0.13.59 ZZIPlib

Guidelines for Creating Packages

  1. The package should be a free software library that is really used by one of your applications.

    BTW, we're always curious about the applications people are porting. We maintain a list of projects which use MXE. No matter whether your project is free or proprietary – as long as it has its own website, we'd be happy to link to it.

    Also, feel free to link to us. :-)

  2. Grep through the src/*.mk files to find a project that is most similar to yours. (Really, grep is your friend here.)

    For instance, when adding a GNU library, you should take a package like gettext.mk or libiconv.mk as the base of your work. When using a SourceForge project, you could start with a copy of xmlwrapp.mk. And so on.

  3. Adjust the comments, fill in the $(PKG)_* fields.

    Be especially careful with the $(PKG)_DEPS section. The easiest way to get the dependencies right is to start with a minimal setup. That is, initialize MXE with make gcc only, then check whether your package builds successfully.

    Always list the dependency on gcc explicitly:

    $(PKG)_DEPS     := gcc ...
  4. Add your package to the list of packages.

    Each package gets its own table row element with table cells having IDs specifying your .mk file, package version and website:

    <tr>
        <td id="gettext-package">gettext</td>
        <td id="gettext-version">0.18.1.1</td>
        <td id="gettext-website"><a href="http://www.gnu.org/software/gettext/">gettext</a></td>
    </tr>
            
  5. Write your $(PKG)_BUILD. If your library has a ./configure script, enable/disable all dependency libraries explicitly via "--enable-*" and "--disable-*" options.

  6. You might also have to provide a patch for it. In that case, have a look at other patches such as sdl-2-fix-dinput.patch. In particular, each patch file should be named as:

    PACKAGE-PATCHNUMBER-DESCRIPTION.patch

    and should start with:

    This file is part of MXE.
    See index.html for further information.
    
    This patch has been taken from:
    https://...

    where the URL points to the bugtracker entry, mailing list entry or website you took the patch from.

    If you created the patch yourself, please offer it to the upstream project first, and point to that URL, using the same wording: "This patch has been taken from:".

    Depending on the feedback you get from the upstream project, you might want to improve your patch.

  7. If you find some time, please provide a minimal test program for it. It should be simple, stand alone and should work unmodified for many (all?) future versions of the library. Test programs are named as:

    PACKAGE-test.c
    or
    PACKAGE-test.cpp

    depending on whether it is a C or C++ library. To get a clue, please have a look at existing test programs such as sdl-test.c.

    At the very end of your *.mk file you should build the test program in a generic way, using strict compiler flags. The last few lines of sdl.mk will give you a clue.

  8. You could also try to provide a $(PKG)_UPDATE section. However, that requires some experience and "feeling" for it. So it is perfectly okay if you leave a placeholder:

    define $(PKG)_UPDATE
        echo 'TODO: write update script for $(PKG).' >&2;
        echo $($(PKG)_VERSION)
    endef
    We'll fill that in for you. It's a funny exercise.

  9. Check that you don't have "dirty stuff" in your *.mk files, such as TAB characters or trailing spaces at lines endings. Have a look at random *.mk files to get a feeling for the coding style.

    The same holds for your test program.

    However, patch files should always appear in the same coding style as the files they are patching.

    Finally, in your $(PKG)_BUILD section, please check that you use our portability variables:

    bash $(SHELL)
    install $(INSTALL)
    libtool $(LIBTOOL)
    libtoolize$(LIBTOOLIZE)
    make $(MAKE)
    patch $(PATCH)
    sed $(SED)
    wget $(WGET)
  10. Check whether everything runs fine. If you have some trouble, don't hesitate to ask on the mailing list, providing your *.mk file so far.

  11. Issue a pull request to propose your final *.mk file to us. If you have trouble with pull requests, send your file to the mailing list instead.

    Either way, don't forget to tell us if there are some pieces in your *.mk file you feel unsure about. We'll then have a specific look at those parts, which avoids trouble for you and us in the future.

(contact via the project mailing list)

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

History

2012-04-12 – Release 2.22

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The project has been renamed from mingw-cross-env (MinGW cross compiling environment) to MXE (M cross environment).

The release tarballs have been replaced with a Git checkout.

Most packages were updated to their latest version.

New packages are supported: agg, cgal, eigen, file, gta, json-c, libgnurx, libharu, libircclient, libssh2, libxml++, llvm, lzo, mpfr, nettle, opencsg, qjson, qwtplot3d, vtk, and wt.

2011-06-07 – Release 2.21

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Minor bugfixes in several packages.

Almost all packages are updated to their latest version.

Packages gtkmm and gtksourceviewmm have been renamed to gtkmm2 and gtksourceviewmm2.

New packages are supported: libass, poco, and t4k_common.

2011-04-05 – Release 2.20

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This release fixes a download error caused by the pixman project (a sudden change of their URL scheme without proper redirects). That sort of thing should never happen!

2011-03-19 – Release 2.19

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The download mechanisms are improved.

A CMake toolchain file is provided to simplify cross-compiling projects which use CMake.

Support for Debian/Lenny is dropped.

Package gtk is renamed to gtk2.

Almost all packages are updated to their latest version.

New packages are supported: dbus, graphicsmagick, libical, liboauth, physfs, and vigra.

Note for boost::filesystem users: Version 3 is a major revision and now the default in 1.46.

2010-12-15 – Release 2.18

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This release fixes a checksum error caused by the atkmm project (a sudden change of their current source tarball). That sort of thing should never happen!

2010-12-11 – Release 2.17

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This release provides some improvements of the build system such as an automatic check for most of the requirements.

All packages are updated to their latest version.

New packages are supported: bfd, blas, cblas, dcmtk, ftgl, lapack, lcms1, mingw-utils, mxml, suitesparse and tinyxml.

2010-10-27 – Release 2.16

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This release provides lots of improvements to the build system as well as the documentation.

Support for OpenSolaris is dropped.

Almost all packages are updated to their latest version.

Many new packages are supported: atkmm, cairomm, cunit, faac, faad2, ffmpeg, gdk-pixbuf, glibmm, gtkglextmm, gtkmm, gtksourceview, gtksourceviewmm, imagemagick, lame, libiberty, libsigc++, libvpx, matio, openal, opencore-amr, pangomm, pfstools, plotmm, sdl_sound and x264.

2010-06-16 – Release 2.15

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This release fixes download errors caused by the Qt project (a sudden change of their current source tarball).

Almost all packages are updated to their latest version.

2010-06-08 – Release 2.14

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This release fixes download errors caused by the MinGW project (a sudden change of their URL scheme without proper redirects). That sort of thing should never happen!

Almost all packages are updated to their latest version.

New packages are supported: libarchive, libgee and xvidcore.

2010-05-31 – Release 2.13

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This release switches back from TDM to the official GCC, thus supporting the current GCC 4.5.

The set of DirectX headers is improved and more complete.

The deadlock issues with Pthreads-w32 are fixed.

A static build of GDB is provided, i.e. a standalone "gdb.exe" that doesn't require any extra DLLs.

More packages are backed by test programs.

Many "sed hacks" are replaced by proper portability patches.

Almost all packages are updated to their latest version.

Many new packages are supported: fribidi, gc, gdb, gmp, gsl, gst-plugins-base, gst-plugins-good, gstreamer, gtkglext, guile, libcroco, libffi, liboil, libpaper, libshout, libunistring and xine-lib.

2010-02-21 – Release 2.12

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This release fixes some minor build issues, and contains a first small set of test programs to check the package builds.

The build rules are simplified by calling generators like Autotools and Flex, instead of patching the generated files.

Almost all packages are updated to their latest version.

Many new packages are supported: aubio, devil, directx, exiv2, fftw, freeimage, gsoap, id3lib, liblo, libpano13, librsvg, libsamplerate, muparser, openscenegraph, portaudio and sdl_pango.

2010-02-20 – Release 2.11

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This release contains a packaging bug. Please use release 2.12 instead.

2009-12-23 – Release 2.10

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This release adds support for many new packages: flac, libmad, libsndfile, sdl_net, speex, postgresql, freetds, openssl, plotutils, taglib, lcms, freeglut, xerces and zziplib.

Almost all packages are updated to their latest version.

In addition to the libraries some command line tools such as psql.exe are built, too.

The placements of logfiles, as well as many other build details, have been improved.

2009-10-24 – Release 2.9

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This release adds support for Qt, VMime and libmng.

The target triplet is updated to i686-pc-mingw32.

OpenMP support is enabled in GCC.

Almost all packages are updated to their latest version.

2009-09-11 – Release 2.8

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This release comes with a better look & feel by providing a highlevel overview of the build process.

The detailed build messages are stored into separate log files for each package, so parallel builds don't intermix them anymore.

The download URLs of SourceForge packages are adjusted to ensure that the selected SourceForge mirror is really used and not circumvalented via HTTP redirects to other mirrors.

Almost all packages are updated to their latest version.

The whole mingw-cross-env project has moved to Savannah. So all URIs have changed, but the old URIs redirect to the new locations seamlessly.

Everyone is invited to join the freshly created project mailing list.

2009-08-11 – Release 2.7

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This release provides an improved version recognition for SourceForge packages. SourceForge changed their page layout in a way that makes it much harder to identify the current version of a package.

Additionally, almost all packages are updated to their latest version.

2009-06-19 – Release 2.6

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This release contains some portability fixes which allow it to run on a wider range of systems such as Frugalware.

The documentation and website are completely revised.

New packages such as CppUnit, libUsb, NSIS, Popt, SQLite and Theora are supported.

Almost all packages are updated to their latest version.

A new command "make download" is implemented.

2009-04-06 – Release 2.5

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This release fixes a download error caused by the MinGW project. They suddenly changed the names of their source tarballs. That sort of thing should never happen!

This release also contains some bugfixes which allow it to run on a wider range of systems.

All downloaded files are now verified by their SHA-1 checksums.

New versions of various packages are supported.

2009-03-08 – Release 2.4

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This release provides many new libraries such as wxWidgets, GTK+ and OpenEXR.

In addition, new versions of various packages are supported.

2009-02-09 – Release 2.3

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This release fixes some serious build problems on FreeBSD and MacOS-X.

The Makefile has a new target "clean-pkg" and allows to be called from a separate build directory via "make -f .../Makefile".

Some new versions of the packages are supported, especially GCC-4.3 by switching from MinGW GCC to TDM-GCC.

2009-01-31 – Release 2.2

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This release fixes some minor build problems.

It also supports some new packages and some newer versions of the already supported packages.

Parallelization is now disabled by default.

2008-12-13 – Release 2.1

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This release fixes a download error caused by the GDAL project. They suddenly changed their download URLs. That sort of thing should never happen!

In addition, some newer versions of various packages are supported.

There is also a small compatibility fix for OS X.

2008-11-10 – Release 2.0

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The shell script has been rewritten as Makefile and supports partial builds and parallel builds.

As usual, this release also supports some new packages and some newer versions of the already supported packages.

2008-01-11 – Release 1.4

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This release now includes a tutorial by Hans Bezemer and has improved compile options of FLTK. As usual, it supports some newer versions of the libraries.

At the request of its author, libowfat is no longer supported from this release on.

The script now uses a specific SourceForge mirror instead of randomly chosen ones, because the download phase often stumbled on some very slow mirrors.

2007-12-23 – Release 1.3

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A sudden change in the download URLs of GEOS made the automatic download fail. Such changes should never happen! But it happened, and this quick release is an attempt to limit the damage.

This release also supports some newer versions of the libraries including support for fontconfig-2.5.0.

2007-12-13 – Release 1.2

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This release is a switch from gcc-3 to gcc-4. It also supports a new library and some newer versions of the already supported libraries.

2007-07-24 – Release 1.1

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This release is the result of the public attention the release 1.0 got. It contains many improvements suggested by its first users, and adds support for many new libraries.

Thanks to Rocco Rutte who contributed many code snippets.

2007-06-19 – Release 1.0

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This first release has been created in a 7-day-sprint.

2007-06-12 – Project start

See also

This project

Related projects

Related articles

Projects which use MXE