| This directory contains project files for compiling Protocol Buffers using |
| MSVC. This is not the recommended way to do Protocol Buffer development -- |
| we prefer to develop under a Unix-like environment -- but it may be more |
| accessible to those who primarily work with MSVC. |
| |
| Compiling and Installing |
| ======================== |
| |
| 1) Open protobuf.sln in Microsoft Visual Studio. |
| 2) Choose "Debug" or "Release" configuration as desired.* |
| 3) From the Build menu, choose "Build Solution". Wait for compiling to finish. |
| 4) From a command shell, run tests.exe and lite-test.exe and check that all |
| tests pass. |
| 5) Run extract_includes.bat to copy all the public headers into a separate |
| "include" directory (under the top-level package directory). |
| 6) Copy the contents of the include directory to wherever you want to put |
| headers. |
| 7) Copy protoc.exe wherever you put build tools (probably somewhere in your |
| PATH). |
| 8) Copy libprotobuf.lib, libprotobuf-lite.lib, and libprotoc.lib wherever you |
| put libraries. |
| |
| * To avoid conflicts between the MSVC debug and release runtime libraries, when |
| compiling a debug build of your application, you may need to link against a |
| debug build of libprotobuf.lib. Similarly, release builds should link against |
| release libs. |
| |
| DLLs vs. static linking |
| ======================= |
| |
| Static linking is now the default for the Protocol Buffer libraries. Due to |
| issues with Win32's use of a separate heap for each DLL, as well as binary |
| compatibility issues between different versions of MSVC's STL library, it is |
| recommended that you use static linkage only. However, it is possible to |
| build libprotobuf and libprotoc as DLLs if you really want. To do this, |
| do the following: |
| |
| 1) Open protobuf.sln in MSVC. |
| 2) For each of the projects libprotobuf, libprotobuf-lite, and libprotoc, do |
| the following: |
| 2a) Right-click the project and choose "properties". |
| 2b) From the side bar, choose "General", under "Configuration Properties". |
| 2c) Change the "Configuration Type" to "Dynamic Library (.dll)". |
| 2d) From the side bar, choose "Preprocessor", under "C/C++". |
| 2e) Add PROTOBUF_USE_DLLS to the list of preprocessor defines. |
| 3) When compiling your project, make sure to #define PROTOBUF_USE_DLLS. |
| |
| When distributing your software to end users, we strongly recommend that you |
| do NOT install libprotobuf.dll or libprotoc.dll to any shared location. |
| Instead, keep these libraries next to your binaries, in your application's |
| own install directory. C++ makes it very difficult to maintain binary |
| compatibility between releases, so it is likely that future versions of these |
| libraries will *not* be usable as drop-in replacements. |
| |
| If your project is itself a DLL intended for use by third-party software, we |
| recommend that you do NOT expose protocol buffer objects in your library's |
| public interface, and that you statically link protocol buffers into your |
| library. |
| |
| ZLib support |
| ============ |
| |
| If you want to include GzipInputStream and GzipOutputStream |
| (google/protobuf/io/gzip_stream.h) in libprotoc, you will need to do a few |
| additional steps: |
| |
| 1) Obtain a copy of the zlib library. The pre-compiled DLL at zlib.net works. |
| 2) Make sure zlib's two headers are in your include path and that the .lib file |
| is in your library path. You could place all three files directly into the |
| vsproject directory to compile libprotobuf, but they need to be visible to |
| your own project as well, so you should probably just put them into the |
| VC shared icnlude and library directories. |
| 3) Right-click on the "tests" project and choose "properties". Navigate the |
| sidebar to "Configuration Properties" -> "Linker" -> "Input". |
| 4) Under "Additional Dependencies", add the name of the zlib .lib file (e.g. |
| zdll.lib). Make sure to update both the Debug and Release configurations. |
| 5) If you are compiling libprotobuf and libprotoc as DLLs (see previous |
| section), repeat steps 2 and 3 for the libprotobuf and libprotoc projects. |
| If you are compiling them as static libraries, then you will need to link |
| against the zlib library directly from your own app. |
| 6) Edit config.h (in the vsprojects directory) and un-comment the line that |
| #defines HAVE_ZLIB. (Or, alternatively, define this macro via the project |
| settings.) |
| |
| Notes on Compiler Warnings |
| ========================== |
| |
| The following warnings have been disabled while building the protobuf libraries |
| and compiler. You may have to disable some of them in your own project as |
| well, or live with them. |
| |
| C4018 - 'expression' : signed/unsigned mismatch |
| C4146 - unary minus operator applied to unsigned type, result still unsigned |
| C4244 - Conversion from 'type1' to 'type2', possible loss of data. |
| C4251 - 'identifier' : class 'type' needs to have dll-interface to be used by |
| clients of class 'type2' |
| C4267 - Conversion from 'size_t' to 'type', possible loss of data. |
| C4305 - 'identifier' : truncation from 'type1' to 'type2' |
| C4355 - 'this' : used in base member initializer list |
| C4800 - 'type' : forcing value to bool 'true' or 'false' (performance warning) |
| C4996 - 'function': was declared deprecated |
| |
| C4251 is of particular note, if you are compiling the Protocol Buffer library |
| as a DLL (see previous section). The protocol buffer library uses templates in |
| its public interfaces. MSVC does not provide any reasonable way to export |
| template classes from a DLL. However, in practice, it appears that exporting |
| templates is not necessary anyway. Since the complete definition of any |
| template is available in the header files, anyone importing the DLL will just |
| end up compiling instances of the templates into their own binary. The |
| Protocol Buffer implementation does not rely on static template members being |
| unique, so there should be no problem with this, but MSVC prints warning |
| nevertheless. So, we disable it. Unfortunately, this warning will also be |
| produced when compiling code which merely uses protocol buffers, meaning you |
| may have to disable it in your code too. |