Building MariaDB on Windows
Contents
The Windows build process for MariaDB 5.2 and later is compatible with MySQL5.5, so you can use the instructions on the MySQL CMake Wiki. Also, detailed step-by-step instructions for Visual Studio Express users are available here. The instructions here do not assume knowledge of the above two sources.
Build Requirements
To build MariaDB you need the following:
- Visual C++: We currently support Visual Studio 2008 and 2010, including the express editions (generally we try to support the two most recent versions). Install latest service packs as well, which are (as of when this was written) SP1 for both VS2008 and VS2010.
- Bazaar: Required to build from the source tree. Use the standalone installer and choose the default install options.
- CMake 2.8: The build system.
- Bison from GnuWin32:
Bison creates parts of the SQL parser. Choose "Complete package except
sources" when downloading.
- NOTE: Do not install this into your default path with spaces
(e.g. under
C:\Program Files\GnuWin32
), the build will break due to this bison bug. Instead, install intoC:\GnuWin32
instead. - Add
C:\GnuWin32\bin
to your systemPATH
after installation.
- NOTE: Do not install this into your default path with spaces
(e.g. under
- Strawberry perl: Used to run the test suite. ActiveState Perl is another Win32 Perl distribution and should work as well (but it is not as well tested).
- Optional: If you intend to build the MSI packages, install Windows Installer XML version 3.0 or higher
Verify that bison.exe, bzr.exe, cmake.exe and perl.exe can be found in PATH
environment variable, with "where bison
", "where bzr
", and etc... from
the command line prompt.
Building Windows Binaries
The above instructions assume MariaDB 5.2 or higher. For instructions how to build 5.1, look in the section "Old Style Build".
Branch the MariaDB bzr repository, or unpack the source archive. On the command prompt, switch to your source directory, then execute:
mkdir bld cd bld cmake .. cmake --build . --config Relwithdebinfo
The above example builds a release configured for 32 bit systems in a
subdirectory named bld
. "cmake ...
" is the configuration step,
"cmake --build . --config Relwithdebinfo
" is the build step.
Build Variations:
Debug builds
Building Debug version is done with:
cmake --build . --config Debug
x64 builds
By default, cmake will create 32 bit projects. For 64 bit, you must pass CMake the "generator" parameter using -G in the configuration step, e.g.:
cmake .. -G "Visual Studio 10 Win64"
for VS2010 or
cmake .. -G "Visual Studio 9 2008 Win64"
for VS2008.
For complete list of available generators, call "cmake" without any parameters.
IDE builds
Instead of calling "cmake --build
" as above, open MySQL.sln
. When Visual Studio starts, choose Build/Compile.
NMake builds
Ensure the Visual Studio environment variable are correctly set, e.g. build from "Visual Studio 2010 Command prompt" (Start=>All Programs=>Microsoft Visual Studio 2010=>Visual Studio tools=>Visual Studio Commad Prompt (2010)). It can be convenient to create a shortcut from to "Visual Studio Command Prompt(2010) on the desktop (navigate in start menu to find it, then rightclick=>Send To=>Desktop (create shortcut)" On the command line, execute
mkdir bld cd bld cmake .. -G "NMake Makefiles" nmake
You can optionally pass -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE={Debug|RelWithDebInfo}
to cmake
to build either debug or release.
devenv builds
Ensure the Visual Studio environment variable are correctly set (see above). to build, execute
devenv mysql.sln /build relwithdebinfo
or, for debug builds
devenv mysql.sln /build debug
Optional build parameters
MySQL CMake Wiki describes how to use
optional parameters in build. Perhaps single important parameter in MariaDB is
WITH_EMBEDDED_SERVER
(build with embedded server). It is not set by default
in the build, since it effectively doubles the compilation time. Use
cmake -DWITH_EMBEDDED_SERVER=1
to enable embedded builds.
Building the ZIP package
cmake --build . --config relwithdebinfo --target package
Building the MSI package
There are slight differences between VS2010 and VS2008 (for example, the target names are different)
- VS2010:
cmake --build . --config relwithdebinfo --target win/packaging/msi
- VS2008:
cmake --build . -- config relwithdebinfo --target msi
Code signing support for MariaDB release processing
MariaDB builds optionally support authenticode code signing with an optional
parameter SIGNCODE
. Use cmake -DSIGNCODE=1
during the
configuration step to sign the binaries in the ZIP
and MSI
packages.
Important: for SIGNCODE=1
to work, the user who runs the build needs to
install a valid authenticode digital certificate into his certificate store,
otherwise the packaging step will fail.
Building packages for MariaDB releases
MySQL release packages are a mix of debug and optimized builds (they included debug versions of static libraries plus mysqld-debug.exe). MariaDB packages also can be built as a mix of release and debug builds.
The full script to create the release in an out-of-source build with Visual Studio 2010 with signed binaries might look like:
mkdir bld cd bld cmake .. -DWITH_EMBEDDED_SERVER=1 -DSIGNCODE=1 cmake --build . --config debug cmake --build . --config relwithdebinfo --target package cmake --build . --config relwithdebinfo --target win/packaging/msi
Old-style building (MariaDB 5.1)
The difference between legacy MariaDB 5.1 builds vs later versions is that
- 5.1 cannot be built out-of-source.
- 5.1 requires an additional step (win\configure-mariadb.bat) during configuration.
- 5.1 requires a prepackaged source distribution (made on Unix only) to create the ZIP package. It also requires Cygwin to create the ZIP.
- 5.1 does not feature the new MSI installer, instead NSIS is used. Building NSIS also requires the pre-packaged source distribution and cannot be made from a bzr repository. Here is how to build in 5.1
win\configure-mariadb.bat cmake . cmake . --build relwithdebinfo
ZIP packaging in 5.1
The process for producing the 5.1 binary ZIP is as follows:
- Make the source tarball. This can only be done on Unix (we use Linux) by
running
BUILD/compile-dist && make dist
. See Creating the MariaDB Source Tarball for full instructions.- In BuildBot, this is done using the hardy-amd64-makedist builder.
- Compile and package on Windows. This is done by unpacking the source tarball
on Windows and running
sh win/make_mariadb_win_dist
.- In Buildbot, this done by the win32-make-noinstall-zip builder.
NSIS installer in 5.1
If you want to create the release, you also need NSIS.
Build the server as usual. You should then build the release, not debug or any
other. When the server has been built, simply run "cpack
" in
the top directory to create the .exe package.
Miscellaneous
- In 5.2 and later, Cygwin is not required for any build step and is not supported. Don't use it, if you can.