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Building the Boost libraries on Windows
(using MinGW / MSYS)
Boost jam
This utility is used to compile the Boost libraries.
Get the source tarball from http://downloads.sourceforge.net/project/boost/boost-jam/3.1.17/boost-jam-3.1.17.tgz; once you have it, it's a simple matter of running the build script (which will automatically detect MinGW) and installing the resulting executable:
$ tar zxf boost-jam-3.1.17.tgz $ cd boost-jam-3.1.17 $ sh ./build.sh $ mkdir -p /usr/local/bin $ cp bin.ntx86/bjam.exe /usr/local/bin $ which bjam /usr/local/bin/bjam.exe $ bjam -v Boost.Jam Version 3.1.17. OS=NT. Copyright 1993-2002 Christopher Seiwald and Perforce Software, Inc. Copyright 2001 David Turner. Copyright 2001-2004 David Abrahams. Copyright 2002-2008 Rene Rivera. Copyright 2003-2008 Vladimir Prus.
Main libraries
Download the main Boost libraries from http://downloads.sourceforge.net/project/boost/boost/1.40.0/boost_1_40_0.tar.gz and extract them somewhere convenient:
$ tar zxvf boost/boost_1_40_0.tar.gz
Let's see what we've got:
$ bjam --show-libraries The following libraries require building: - date_time - filesystem - graph - graph_parallel - iostreams - math - mpi - program_options - python - regex - serialization - signals - system - test - thread - wave
Jam will detect that you're running Windows and (rather then check what's available) assume that you want to use the MSVC toolchain; you have to force it to use gcc instead. You should also use a separate build directory; it will make it easier to clean up if you make a mistake and need to start over.
$ mkdir obj $ bjam toolset=gcc --prefix=/usr/local --build-dir=obj
You will get a number of warnings about Boost.Python, Boost.Regex, Boost.Graph and Boost.MPI; you can safely ignore them, as metlibs doesn't use any of them. If it bothers you, you can disable the offending components:
$ bjam toolset=gcc --prefix=/usr/local --build-dir=obj --without-python \ --without-regex --without-graph --without-graph_parallel --without-mpi
If all goes well, you will find the libraries in the stage/lib
subdirectory (under the source tree, not under obj
; this is IMHO a mistake on bjam's part). You can copy them to wherever you need them to be, most likely /mingw/lib
.