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ruby--ruby/win32
normal 6a65f2b1e4 io + socket: make pipes and sockets nonblocking by default
All normal Ruby IO methods (IO#read, IO#gets, IO#write, ...) are
all capable of appearing to be "blocking" when presented with a
file description with the O_NONBLOCK flag set; so there is
little risk of incompatibility within Ruby-using programs.

The biggest compatibility risk is when spawning external
programs.  As a result, stdin, stdout, and stderr are now always
made blocking before exec-family calls.

This change will make an event-oriented MJIT usable if it is
waiting on pipes on POSIX_like platforms.

It is ALSO necessary to take advantage of (proposed lightweight
concurrency (aka "auto-Fiber") or any similar proposal for
network concurrency: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/13618

Named-pipe (FIFO) are NOT yet non-blocking by default since
they are rarely-used and may introduce compatibility problems
and extra syscall overhead for a common path.

Please revert this commit if there are problems and if I am afk
since I am afk a lot, lately.

[ruby-core:89950] [Bug #14968]

git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@65922 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2018-11-22 08:46:51 +00:00
..
.document
configure.bat
dir.h
enc-setup.mak
file.c
file.h
ifchange.bat
makedirs.bat
Makefile.sub configure.ac: add --disable-fiber-coroutine option 2018-11-21 03:26:59 +00:00
mkexports.rb
README.win32
resource.rb
rm.bat
rmdirs.bat
rtname.cmd
setup.mak win32/setup.mak: Substitute slashes in MJIT_CC 2018-11-11 23:22:54 +00:00
win32.c io + socket: make pipes and sockets nonblocking by default 2018-11-22 08:46:51 +00:00
winmain.c

=begin

= How to build ruby using Visual C++

== Requirement

(1) Windows XP or later.

(2) Visual C++ 6.0 or later. (strongly recommended VC++ 10 or later)

    Note: if you want to build x64 or ia64 version, use native compiler for
          x64/ia64.

(3) Please set environment variable (({INCLUDE})), (({LIB})), (({PATH}))
    to run required commands properly from the command line.

    Note: building ruby requires following commands.
     * nmake
     * cl
     * lib
     * dumpbin

(4) If you want to build from SVN source, following commands are required.
     * bison
     * patch
     * sed
     * ruby 1.8 or later

(5) Enable Command Extension of your command line.  It's the default behavior
    of cmd.exe.  If you want to enable it explicitly, run cmd.exe with /E:ON
    option.

== How to compile and install

(1) Execute win32\configure.bat on your build directory.
    You can specify the target platform as an argument.
    For example, run `((%configure --target=i686-mswin32%))'
    You can also specify the install directory.
    For example, run `((%configure --prefix=<install_directory>%))'
    Default of the install directory is /usr .
    The default ((|<PLATFORM>|)) is `(({i386-mswin32}))'.

(2) Change ((|RUBY_INSTALL_NAME|)) and ((|RUBY_SO_NAME|)) in (({Makefile}))
    if you want to change the name of the executable files.
    And add ((|RUBYW_INSTALL_NAME|)) to change the name of the
    executable without console window if also you want.

(3) Run `((%nmake up%))' if you are building from SVN source.

(4) Run `((%nmake%))'

(5) Run `((%nmake exam%))'

(6) Run `((%nmake install%))'

== Icons

Any icon files(*.ico) in the build directory, directories specified with
((|icondirs|)) make variable and (({win32})) directory under the ruby
source directory will be included in DLL or executable files, according
to their base names.
    $(RUBY_INSTALL_NAME).ico or ruby.ico   --> $(RUBY_INSTALL_NAME).exe
    $(RUBYW_INSTALL_NAME).ico or rubyw.ico --> $(RUBYW_INSTALL_NAME).exe
    the others                             --> $(RUBY_SO_NAME).dll

Although no icons are distributed with the ruby source or in the official
site, you can use anything you like. For example, followings are written
in Japanese, but you can download at least.

* ((<URL:http://homepage1.nifty.com/a_nakata/ruby/>)) or
  ((<icon itself|URL:http://homepage1.nifty.com/a_nakata/ruby/RubyIcon.ico>))

== Build examples

* Build on the ruby source directory.

  ex.)
    ruby source directory:  C:\ruby
    build directory:        C:\ruby
    install directory:      C:\usr\local

    C:
    cd \ruby
    win32\configure --prefix=/usr/local
    nmake
    nmake test
    nmake install

* Build on the relative directory from the ruby source directory.

  ex.)
    ruby source directory:  C:\ruby
    build directory:        C:\ruby\mswin32
    install directory:      C:\usr\local

    C:
    cd \ruby
    mkdir mswin32
    cd mswin32
    ..\win32\configure --prefix=/usr/local
    nmake
    nmake test
    nmake install

* Build on the different drive.

  ex.)
    ruby source directory:  C:\src\ruby
    build directory:        D:\build\ruby
    install directory:      C:\usr\local

    D:
    cd D:\build\ruby
    C:\src\ruby\win32\configure --prefix=/usr/local
    nmake
    nmake test
    nmake install DESTDIR=C:

* Build x64 version (requires native x64 VC++ compiler)

  ex.)
    ruby source directory:  C:\ruby
    build directory:        C:\ruby
    install directory:      C:\usr\local

    C:
    cd \ruby
    win32\configure --prefix=/usr/local --target=x64-mswin64
    nmake
    nmake test
    nmake install

== Bugs

You can ((*NOT*)) use a path name that contains any white space characters as
the ruby source directory, this restriction comes from the behavior of
(({!INCLUDE})) directives of (({NMAKE})).
((- you may call it a bug. -))

You can build ruby in any directory including the source directory,
except (({win32})) directory in the source directory.
This is restriction originating in the path search method of (({NMAKE})).

=end