I am opening a project in Visual Studio Code and it can't find npm, in spite of NPM being in my system path.
If I open a command prompt or a powershell prompt, and I type env I See it in my path. If I open a terminal in VS:Code and type env it omits both: /d/nodejs and /c/Program Files/Azure Data Studio/bin from the list of items in my path.
I have tried rearranging all of my paths in my Windows Environment Variable editor dialog, and no matter the order, only these two items are missing. So, I have validated that it is not other paths that could be causing issues in some sort of path parsing code.
Why would Visual Studio Code alter my path environment variable, removing node and its own path from the environment variable list?
If I move these items from my system path to my user path, it is able to find them but there are some other subtle issues with things not being found I haven't been able to figure out yet.
Note: These are the ONLY two items being removed. And they are ONLY removed in VS:Code.
Even though there is other weirdness with moving the path to my user path from my system path, that was able to be worked around. So, my answer is: Move your nodejs path from your system path in Windows to your user path in Windows.
So, I've downloaded the .zip 1.32.11 Windows x64 release from the Dart-Sass's Github repo and extracted it to the Program Files folder. Using the steps provided, I found Path under System variables in Step 4. There was no PATH there, the closest thing was PATHTEXT and Path. My first question: Can I use Path or I have to create a new System variable called PATH. Thinking Path was sufficient, I decided to edit the System variable and then press Browse to search for the Dart-Sass folder. After this was done, I went to Command Prompt and typed sass -version. The result was that Sass was not recognized. Did I do anything wrong? If so, what can I do to fix it?
I'm noticing two things about your problem. The first is your path variable... did you make sure to change Me to your username in the PATH variable?. The second encompasses your installation. Can you find the dart *.exe file? If not, try uninstalling and reinstalling, making sure each step is completed word for word.
I recently installed vs15 - preview (Stripped down version of visual studio 2015).
I am able to compile C/C++ sources from inside the IDE, but I am not able to compile with the command line interface cl.exe. It can't find the c stdlib headers. I tried to use vcvars32.bat to set the proper reg values but seemingly it cant find the "Common Tools Folder".
"ERROR: Cannot determine the location of the VS Common Tools folder."
The script uses the env. variable "%VS150COMNTOOLS%".
If I try to run "cd %VS150COMNTOOLS%" from the cmd line, it can't find the path, so this seems to be the main problem.
How can manually set %VS150COMNTOOLS% to the right path? how can I set the cmd linker settings manually (Without telling the cl.exe every time I call it)?
Okay, I solved it by adding the path to the include directories and lib directories to the env. variables as "INCLUDE", "LIB". It works now, whyever the script was not able to set those values properly. I am not fluent in reading .bat let away writing in, I assume the directory structure, which is different for the vs15 preview when compared to the full version, had not been adapted yet.
I have 2 questions regarding NGINX:
Is there any one who had already compile NGINX with Visual Studio? I want create a VS9 Project for compiling NGINX.
It's my veritable need, is there any way to compile NGINX as Lib or DLL?
I just finished building a Visual Studio 2010 project for nginx. The process wasn't entirely straight-forward, so I will attempt to detail everything I've learned. This is a several-hour to several day process, depending on your experience.
Step 1: You must first follow the Guide for building nginx on windows. This not only builds nginx, but also creates .c and .h files that you will use when creating your Visual Studio project. It won't work without these files. (For more information, see here.)
If you are less experienced with Unix like me, the guide above leaves some unanswered questions. So I'll first flesh out that guide with tips of my own, and then later, tell you more about creating a project for Visual Studio.
Part I: Compiling nginx for windows using MSYS
First, follow all the steps given above. Install MSYS, Strawberry Perl, Mercurial, and download the PCRE, zlib, and OpenSSL libraries. Then follow these steps:
1) Open a command prompt As Administrator. Then run your Visual Studio vc\vcvarsall.bat file to set
your environment variables to use VC as the compiler. Your paths will be different, but the command I used was:
"C:\Program Files\Microsoft Visual Studio 10.0\VC\vcvarsall.bat"
I found that even though the Strawberry Perl added 3 paths (which you can verify by examining your PATH variable), it still was using the wrong Perl.
2) Launch MSys by running msys.bat. For me, MSys was installed inside of the MinGW directory, so my path was:
C:\MinGW\msys\1.0\msys.bat
If successful, you should see something like this in green:
JensenV#AVWMA047LB ~
(except with your username#networkaddress instead) in a window called something like MINGW32:~
You might be wondering where your 'home folder is. It's under msys\1.0\home. So on my system, it's here:
C:\MinGW\msys\1.0\home\JensenV
If you do "ls" or "dir" this is the directory you're in initially.
3) Assuming you installed Mercurial as instructed above, you should now be able to check out ngynx source:
hg clone http://hg.nginx.org/nginx
This will go into the directory mentioned above.
4) You need to make sure the version of perl being used is strawberry perl, NOT the version that comes with msys. Type:
which perl
If you get something like "/bin/perl.exe" that's the wrong perl and you need to fixing your paths. You can either mess with this (as I did, unsuccessfully) OR you can just disable the version of perl that comes with msys. I just renamed
perl.exe to perl_UNUSED.exe in my msys install:
C:\MinGW\msys\1.0\bin
Whatever you do, make sure "which perl" shows the path to Strawberry Perl before proceeding.
5) Also renamed "link.exe" in my msys\1.0\bin directory:
C:\MinGW\msys\1.0\bin
so that it's unused. (i.e. rename it to "link_UNUSED.exe")
I believe this is because, in Step 1 above, your "vcvarsall.bat" set everything to use Microsoft C's compiler/linker, but then in Step 2, the linker was changed to use the Msys one instead. You need to use the Microsoft one.
To verify renaming as "link_UNUSED.exe" was successful, type:
which link
and ensure it points to your Visual Studio 10 link, not the link.exe that came with msys.
6) First "cd nginx" then create an objs/lib folder tree inside of the nginx folder. Untar/unzip pcre, zlib, and openssl in here as mentioned in the guide.
7) While your current directory is still nginx, run nginx's autoconfigure script, but first modify the command below to change the paths for
sopenssl, pcre, and zlib to be correct for what you installed in objs/lib (your version numbers may be different). The command I used was:
auto/configure --with-cc=cl --builddir=objs --prefix= \
--conf-path=conf/nginx.conf --pid-path=logs/nginx.pid \
--http-log-path=logs/access.log --error-log-path=logs/error.log \
--sbin-path=nginx.exe --http-client-body-temp-path=temp/client_body_temp \
--http-proxy-temp-path=temp/proxy_temp \
--http-fastcgi-temp-path=temp/fastcgi_temp \
--with-cc-opt=-DFD_SETSIZE=1024 \
--with-pcre=objs/lib/pcre-8.33 \
--with-zlib=objs/lib/zlib-1.2.8 \
--with-openssl=objs/lib/openssl-1.0.1f \
--with-select_module --with-http_ssl_module --with-ipv6
If you want to change any configuration options, NOW IS THE TIME. These options affect the generated .c and .h files that you will use later in creating your Visual Studio project, and trust me, you don't want to have to redo that later when you realize you need different options.
7) Make it.
nmake -f objs/Makefile
If successful, your freshly compiled nginx.exe should be inside your home\YourUsername\nginx\objs folder. i.e. something like:
C:\MinGW\msys\1.0\home\JensenV\nginx\objs
In addition, these files will now be in the same folder as nginx.exe:
ngx_auto_config.h
ngx_auto_headers.h
ngx_modules.c
ngx_pch.c
You will use these in creating your Visual Studio project.
8) Have a beer.
**
Part II: Creating the Visual Studio nginx Project
**
Create an empty Visual Studio project for Command Line application. Save the project inside your nginx folder (root level). Note that before this step you can move your nginx folder outside of msys to wherever you want to keep it.
1) Go to Properties -> VC++ Directories and add these Include Directories:
$(MSBuildProjectDirectory)\src\core
$(MSBuildProjectDirectory)\src\event
$(MSBuildProjectDirectory)\src\event\modules
$(MSBuildProjectDirectory)\src\http
$(MSBuildProjectDirectory)\src\http\modules
$(MSBuildProjectDirectory)\src\http\modules\perl
$(MSBuildProjectDirectory)\src\mail
$(MSBuildProjectDirectory)\src\misc
$(MSBuildProjectDirectory)\src\mysql
$(MSBuildProjectDirectory)\src\os
$(MSBuildProjectDirectory)\objs
$(MSBuildProjectDirectory)\src\os\win32
$(MSBuildProjectDirectory)\objs\lib\openssl\ssl\include
$(MSBuildProjectDirectory)\objs\lib\zlib
$(MSBuildProjectDirectory)\objs\lib\pcre
NOTE: Before this step I went into objs/lib and removed the version numbers from the zlib, pcre, and ssl folders. Either you should do this to, OR you should modify the paths above to match your installed versions. I removed the version numbers so that I can update to newer versions of these libraries in the future without breaking my project.
Click on the "Macros >>" button and verify that the MSBuildProjectDirectory path is a path to your nginx folder.
2) Likewise add these paths to your Library Directories:
$(MSBuildProjectDirectory)\objs\lib\openssl\ssl\lib\
$(MSBuildProjectDirectory)\objs\lib\pcre\
$(MSBuildProjectDirectory)\objs\lib\zlib\
Again, modify these paths to include version numbers if your objs/lib folder's contents still have version numbers.
3) Change these Project Properties as follows:
C/C++
General: Set "Treat warnings as errors" to No (WX-)
Preprocessor: Add these Preprocessor Definitions:
WIN32
NGX_WIN32
NGX_MAIL_SSL
NO_SYS_TYPES_H
FD_SETSIZE=1024
Linker:
Input: Add the following to Additional Dependencies:
ws2_32.lib
pcre.lib
ssleay32.lib
libeay32.lib
crypt32.lib
zlib.lib
4) Close your Visual Studio solution. Open up the project file (ends in .vcxproj) with a good text editor, such as Notepad++. (Make a backup copy of it first, in case anything goes wrong.) Also open up nginx\objs\makefile with a text editor.
In the makefile, not too far from the top, you'll see a section that starts something like this:
objs/nginx.exe: objs/src/core/nginx.obj \
objs/src/core/ngx_log.obj \
objs/src/core/ngx_palloc.obj \
objs/src/core/ngx_array.obj \
....
objs/ngx_modules.obj \
objs/nginx.res \
objs/lib/pcre-8.33/pcre.lib \
objs/lib/zlib-1.2.8/zlib.lib
$(LINK) #<<
Likewise, in the Visual Studio file, if you've added any source code (add any files you want prior to this step, so you can see what I'm talking about) you'll see something like this:
Create a new document containing just the .obj files from the makefile. Use Search & Replace in a text editor to modify them to match the format of the Visual Studio project file instead (so ending in .c /> instead of with .obj \, and starting with
Also don't forget to change the forward slashes to backslashes. Don't include the zlib.lib or pcre.lib lines. I forget if you should include nginx.res. (Probably not.)
Once you're sure the format is right, save your Visual Studio project and try opening it. If all the files from the makefile show up in your project, you did it correctly.
5) Remember those special .c and .h files that nginx created when you built the exe? You want to add them to your project now, too. Add these guys:
ngx_modules.c
ngx_pch.c
6) Now you're ready to compile!
I've honestly probably forgotten something along the way, so you might still have some linker or compile errors to fix, but this should give you a good start!
NOTE: If you want to change which options are included in nginx, you'll have to do a new auto/configure in Part I above, a new nmake, and then include additional source code in you Visual Studio project, and use the newly generated ngx_modules.c and ngx_pch.c files in your Visual Studio project.
I'm having some trouble figuring out how to add another directory for a single project. On a regular C/C++ project I'm allowed the option of navigating to the directory, but here I have to enter the directory myself, but this is a CUDA c/C++ project. My question is how would I add lets just say: C:\Users\USERNAME\Documents\Visual Studio 2010\Projects\CUDA Programs\common as an include directory.
You should just be able to paste the path into the include directories list. You can separate paths with a semicolon.
c:\foo\baa;c:\program files\blah\blah;c:\whatever
In earlier versions of the build rules, the include directory did not seem to be added correctly if it ended in a backslash, or if it was wrapped in quotes, so try and avoid either of those.
Does this answer you question VS10 "Additional Include Directories" Point to VS9 Includes