Apertium on Windows
We are in the process of porting Apertium to Windows. Lttoolbox has already been compiled successfully, but has not been tested extensively. We are now working on porting Apertium.
Getting the code
The Windows branch is currently in the unofficial GIT repository under the "windows" branch. To contribute, first follow the steps on Using the Apertium GIT repository. Now, we'll create a branch called "windows", which will track the "windows" branch in the remote repository:
git branch --track windows origin/windows
To switch to the "windows" branch, issue:
git checkout windows
Dependencies
You will need to get Windows versions of the following tools and libraries to compile the code under Windows:
- Microsoft's C++ compiler - the compiler is part of Visual Studio 2008 Express, which is available free of charge.
- CMake - a cross platform build tool
- libxml - the Windows binaries are at http://xmlsoft.org/sources/win32/; you will need:
- libxml2
- zlib
- libiconv
- libxslt
- libpcre - there are no Windows binaries available and you will have to build this from the source code.
- flex for Windows - it's probably easiest if you just download the Windows installer version.
Setting up the required tools and libraries
Installing Visual Studio
Be sure to start downloading Visual Studio 2008 first, since it is a fairly big download.
Installing CMake
Next, download and install the Windows version of CMake. Let the installer place CMake in your path, since it will be much easier to run CMake from the command line if you do this.
Installing the libxml libraries
The zip files of libxml2, zlib, libiconv and libxslt all have the familiar UNIX layout:
|- bin |- include |- lib |- share
Unzip each of these archives and copy the bin, include, lib and share directories in each package into a common directory (the Windows branch in the GIT repository assumes C:\Program Files\LibXML
as a default).
Building and installing libpcre
Now, unzip the libpcre archive to a temporary folder. To compile libpcre, you will need have Visual Studio AND CMake already installed on your system. Now, open the Visual Studio 8.0 Command Prompt (Start -> Visual C++ 9.0 Express Edition -> Visual Studio Tools -> Visual Studio 8.0 Command Prompt). In this command prompt, go to the directory where you unpacked libpcre. Execute:
cmakesetup .
Click the button labelled "Configure". CMake will prompt you with a dialog box where you must choose the kind of make files it will output; select NMake. Normally, after the first time you click "Configure", CMake will show you a number of build variables, all highlighted in red. Click "Configure" once more; if those variables are highlighted in gray, you can click "Ok".
To compile libpcre, run:
nmake
After the compilation has succeeded, run:
nmake install
By default, libpcre installs to C:\Program Files\PCRE
. You can change this in the cmakesetup
by modifying the build variable CMAKE_INSATLL_PREFIX
.
Installing flex
If you have downloaded the binary archive, unzip them into something like C:\Program Files\Flex. If you downloaded the Windows installer, then just follow the installation wizard :).
Building lttoolbox
Before you can build lttoolbox, you need to tell CMake where to find the libxml files (under Linux, CMake will use pkg-config to find where the packages are installed). Open lttoolbox-unicode\CMakeLists.txt and modify the lines
SET(LIBXML2_INCLUDE_DIR E:\\home\\wynand\\libxml2-2.6.30.win32\\include) SET(LIBXML2_LIBRARIES E:\\home\\wynand\\libxml2-2.6.30.win32\\lib\\libxml2.lib)
to match your installtion. If you have followed the previous instructions, you would likely change these to:
SET(LIBXML2_INCLUDE_DIR C:\\Program\ Files\\libxml2\\include) SET(LIBXML2_LIBRARIES C:\\Program\ Files\\libxml2\\lib\\libxml2.lib)
Now, in the Visual Studio command prompt change the directory to lttoolbox-unicode and execute
cmakesetup .
Click on the configure button. Then click OK. If all is well, CMake should generate NMake files. To compile, simply execute:
nmake