Installing PL/Ruby for PostgreSQL on Windows - ruby

I have a problem installing PL/Ruby for PostgreSQL 8.4 on Windows XP
PostgreSQL 8.4 is installed and working OK
Ruby-186-27 is installed and working OK
I have MinGW installed and I'm using MSYS as the command line shell
I have downloaded plruby-0.5.3 and unzipped.
My PostreSQL is in C:\Program Files\PostgreSQL\8.4
I've created a record in MSYS fstab file
c:/Progra~1/PostgreSQL/8.4 /usr/local/pgsql
I've tried calling the makefile as follows:
Running the following from the plruby-0.5.3 directory
ruby extconf.rb --with-pgsql-dir=/usr/local/pgsql
I've also tried running with
--with-pgsql-include=/usr/local/pgsql/include
--with-pgsql-include=/usr/local/pgsql/include/server
and also variations on the above i.e. using MSDOS Commands, using environment variables to pass file path, using MS DOS style directory names
The response I always get is:
have_header: checking for catalog/pg_proc.h... --------------------------- no
and then something like
"cl -nologo -E -I. -I"c:/Program Files/Ruby/lib/ruby/1.8/i386-mswin32" -I. -Ic:/Progra~1/PostgreSQL/8.4/include/server -MD -Zi -O2b2xg- -G6 conftest.c -P"
checked program was:
/* begin /
1. #include
/ end */
I'm getting pretty much the same output each time, I've checked and the pg_proc.h file is indeed in c:/Progra~1/PostgreSQL/8.4/include/server in sub-directory catalog
I've tried googling for an answer and it seems that quite a few people have had a problem with compiling Ruby shared libary on Windows in general with this type of issue, and others had issues creating PL/Ruby but I haven't found an answer anywhere on how to resolve this issue.
Thanks in advance for any help you may be able to give.

That looks like you're trying to run something based on autoconf using the MSVC compiler. Last I checked, that was not supported by autoconf. I think autoconf requires mingw and gcc, not MSVC.

Related

How to Compile Ncurses Program for Native Windows Use

I'm trying to compile a C program using Ncurses on Windows. I compiled it successfully using GCC and it works perfectly if I run it in Cygwin or MSYS2. However, if I try to run it in the Windows Command Prompt, I get this error:
Error opening terminal: xterm-256color.
Is it possible to compile it to run using the native Windows console? This is how I've been compiling it:
gcc -o PROGRAMNAME main.c -lncurses
I also have the Cygwin and Msys dlls for Ncurses copied into the directory of the compiled executable.
Update
So I figured out how to get the program to run. I deleted all the DLLs from the project folder and then added "C:\msys64\usr\bin" to my PATH environment variable. However, I would still like to know if there's a way to get this to work if I were to distribute it, since it's still relying on my installation of MSYS2.
Update 2
Gave up and just used pdcurses and it works fine.
Update 3
Nevermind, found a solution! See below.
I figured out a solution. I'll post it here in case anyone else has this same issue. Thanks to Thomas Dickey for your help!
Install the mingw-w64 toolchain and any other packages you need to compile your project (this is mostly where I messed up)
Make sure to include the /mingw64/include/ncurses directory when compiling, or else gcc won't be able to find curses.h
Include /mingw64/bin as a static directory or copy over the necessary dlls to the same folder as the directory
I ended up with this to compile:
gcc -I/mingw64/include/ncurses -o PROGRAMNAME main.c -lncurses -L/mingw64/bin -static

MinGW GCC wildcard

I'm using MinGW GCC compiler on windows how to compile all C files in a directory.
I used
gcc *.c -o Output
after I entered the required folder and I got this error
gcc: error: *.c: Invalid argument
gcc: fatal error: no input files
compilation terminated.
the used version of GCC is 4.7.1
For anyone else like me who's come across this problem:
I ran into this problem when I installed MinGW-w64 on my tablet after having run it for a few years on my desktop.
Basically, I have a ruby script that does some basic compilation stuff for me, and it was breaking at the linking stage on my tablet (developed on, and ran fine on the desktop).
The error: Invalid Argument, no input files (as in the original question).
If you check around, you'll find a few places that tell you that the issue is due to the way CMD on Windows handles passing wildcards to programs (vs UNIX shells).
Basically Windows leaves interpretation of the wildcard up to the program.
Some builds of MinGW can handle a wildcard from CMD, whereas others won't.
I'm able to use wildcards using the MinGW-W64-builds installer for MinGW-W64.
This should work with older mingw-w64 versions:
#ifdef __MINGW64_VERSION_MAJOR
int _dowildcard = -1; /* enable wildcard expansion for mingw-w64 */
#endif

gcc fails with spawn: No such file or directory

I downloaded
Ruben’s build of
Cygwin GCC.
However upon running it seems unable to compile any files
$ touch foo.c
$ gcc foo.c
gcc: error: spawn: No such file or directory
As a workaround, I found this to work
i686-w64-mingw32-gcc foo.c
I had the same problem and solved it by installing the g++ package in addition to gcc-core
I had this same problem on Cygwin64, and the solution was PATH related..kinda.
Turns out, there are copies of gcc in /usr/bin and /bin (at least, there is in my install).
Executing /bin/gcc failed with the error above -- I'm guessing due to incorrectly assumed relative paths???
Executing /usr/bin/gcc works as expected!
In my case, the "problem" was that I had inadvertently injected "/bin" into my PATH environment variable, resulting in /bin/gcc being executed, instead of /usr/bin/gcc. Removing the "/bin" from the path solved the problem.
Still unclear why there are two gcc binaries (which appear to be identical) in different places... but maybe the Cygwin gurus can answer that; or maybe my installation is just foo-barred.
Ruben's builds are not Cygwin GCC packages, rather they are cross-compilers which run on various platforms but target native Windows using the MinGW-w64 toolchain.
In any case, you shouldn't be using them on Cygwin. If you want to compile Cygwin executables, install the gcc4 packages; if you want to cross-compile for Windows, install the mingw64-i686-gcc (for Win32) or mingw64-x86_64-gcc (for Win64) packages instead.
Gcc isn't really the compiler. It's a front end program that orchestrates the execution of any necessary compiler, assembler, and linker components. Typically these others are separately compiled programs.
So, gcc is trying (kind of) to tell you that it can't find the compiler. I guess it needs to be on your PATH or in an expected location.
If you are executing this from a Windows DOS box then it definitely needs a windows PATH setting.
I like to install Cygwin, making sure to include rxvt. At that point, you can configure a purely sh(1) path and your environment is rather more civilized.
I had the same error when I tried to extract a couple of executables from cygwin installation dirctory and copied them into another location.
strace shows me the file which was not found by spawn:
/lib/gcc/x86_64-pc-cygwin/6.4.0/cc1.exe
When I copied cc1.exe into the location relative to
<dir with sh.exe and cpp.exe>/../lib/gcc/x86_64-pc-cygwin/6.4.0/cc1.exe
it works fine.
This error occurs whenever cygwin cc can't find a required file.
For those running stuff within cygwin's bin directly from a Windows shell, a gotcha to watch out for is that Windows allow you to run programs from the command line like this:
e:cyg/bin/gcc -flags
Notice that there is no slash between e: and cyg.
So this command would successfully start cygwin gcc from the Windows shell, but halfway through the run it will error out because some component(s) of gcc will utilize the first argument of the input e:cyg/bin/gcc and unlike mingw, this is not a valid path for cygwin gcc.
This can be fixed simply by changing the command to:
e:/cyg/bin/gcc -flags
Notice the slash in between e: and cyg.
A similar gotcha is due to Windows allowing paths like e:/../folder1 as an alternative to e:/folder1. Windows does not give you an error if you are at the root folder and try to go up another folder using ...
So you could start running cygwin gcc using the command:
e:/../cyg/bin/gcc -flags
..or even:
e:/../../../../../../../../../cyg/bin/gcc -flags
However, it would fail halfway with gcc: error: spawn: No such file or directory because some component(s) of cygwin gcc would attempt to run gcc using the first argument of the command input itself, and unlike mingw, e:/../cyg/bin/gcc is not recognized as a valid path by cygwin because you are going up a folder when there's no folder to go up to.
As like above, this can be fixed by keeping the path valid:
e:/cyg/bin/gcc -flags
Make sure the source file extension is in lowercase (i.e. main.c, not main.C):
$ gcc -o main main.C
$ gcc: error: spawn: No such file or directory
$ gcc -o main main.c
$ # all good
This only refers to the case of the extension as given to the gcc, the actual source file can have the extension in whatever case you want.
Explanation: This is from my experimenting with cygwin and gcc, I don't know the actual reason for this behavior.

Can I use link.h on a cygwin install?

I have installed the latest version of Cygwin, selecting the following packages during setup:
libgcc1
gcc
gcc-core
And created a file (test.c) with only this line:
#include <link.h>
Then ran the following from my Cygwin bash:
$ gcc test.c
... but got this error:
test.c:1:18: link.h: No such file or directory
Any ideas how I can fix it?
Cygwin is based on the Win32 subsystem, which means it uses Windows' executable format (COFF) and dynamic linker, i.e. it does not have an ELF dynamic linker. Hence providing the ELF-specific <link.h> would probably make little sense.

Using Boost with Cygwin on Windows

This shoud be a simple problem for users more advanced than I am. :-)
How do I use the boost library with cygwin on windows?
I am programing with g++ using cygwin on a winxp machine.
I need modified Bessel functions of the second order, so I downloaded the latest version of the boost library and installed it in
'c:\cygwin\lib\boost_ 1_ 38_0\' folder.
I am trying to run the "example.cpp" program from the "getting started" section of their website:
http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_35_0/more/getting_started/unix-variants.html
I am compiling from the directory where I created the example file using a simple Bash shell command line: 'g++ -Wall example.cpp'
I keep getting the message:
"boost/lambda/lambda.hpp: no such file or directory"
I tried every possible combination of -L, -l, -I options in the command line to include the directory, to no avail. Also tried to add the folder in the PATH line of my windows system.
How do I link to the /boost directory and ALSO to all subdirectories? The header file 'lambda.hpp' is calling other header files in subdirectories.
You're probably not that familiar with C++ yet? It seems you are confusing terms.
C++ programs are built in two steps: compiling and linking. In the first step, each source file (typically called .cpp) is handled individually. Each .cpp file usually uses multiple headers, so the compiler first inserts those - literally. That's why it's called #include.
In the second step, the linker takes all the compiled .cpp files together and builds your final program. Some of those compiled .cpp's might have been bundled together before, in which the bundle is called a library.
Boost is a collection of headers and .cpp files. So, both compiler and linker might need to find the Boost directories. From your error message, it's clear that the compiler step is the problem. The linker does not need headers anymore.
The compiler will see the #include <boost/lambda/lambda.hpp> instuction. That means it needs to know where that first-level boost directory is found. I would guess at this point that the path would be /lib/boost_ 1_ 38_0/include (there's always the find / -name lambda.hpp shotgun appraoch)
If you are not utterly wedded to cygwin, you should take a look at http://nuwen.net/mingw.html which gives you a complete MinGW C++ installation with all the libraries (such as Boost) set up for you.
Edit: I should make it clear you can use this MinGW installation in addition to Cygwin, not as a replacement. Just make sure the MinGW bin directory appears in your PATH before the Cygwin one.
I think you need -I /lib/boost_1_38_0 - although that's a pretty unusual place to put it. You'll have to let us know how you installed it, did you just unzip it in the location you said, or did you run the makefiles? I assume that since you gave a windows path you didn't install it within cygwin - which you probably should do. The instructions in the getting started guide for unix should help - although don't download a prebuilt bjam - it needs to be built with cygwin.
But if you're not very familiar with cygwin (or unix in general) I think you might find it easier to use a native windows tool - as in Neil Butterworth's answer.
Thank you all for the information, it's a nice introduction to the use of libraries with cygwin.
Daniel was right. While any variation gives an error, the following line (using caps i) does the trick:
g++ -Wall -I /cygdrive/c/cygwin/lib/boost_1_38_0/ example.cpp -o example
I will also check MinGW in the next few days.
p.s. I simply downloaded and unzipped boost in that folder, but since I am only using header files I probably won't need to compile with cygwin. [The boost version included with cygwin was 1.33, which does not seem to have Bessel functions.]
This is on win7 cygwin64 g++ 5.4, and boost-1.64.7z on 2017-7. Google doesn't show any useful result for getting started for boost on windows (is boost out of fashion?).
By experimenting, I managed to compile and run a boost graph sample program as follows:
:: g++ 5.4 in c:\cygwin64
:: 7z extract boost download in c:\tools\boost\boost164
> set BOOST_ROOT=c:\tools\boost\boost164
> setx BOOST_ROOT c:\tools\boost\boost164 -m
> cd %BOOST_ROOT%
> bootstrap.sh gcc (the bat files doesn't work)
> b2.exe
...failed updating 58 targets...
...skipped 18 targets...
...updated 1123 targets...
:: Lots of example here (not ranked highly by google)
> mklink /D eg %BOOST_ROOT%/libs/graph/example
:: Compiled and run [maxflow code using boost library][1]
:: http://vision.csd.uwo.ca/code
> unzip ; vi Makefile
CPPFLAGS = -I %BOOST_ROOT%/
LDFLAGS = -L%BOOST_ROOT%/stage/lib
> make
> set PATH=%PATH%;%BOOST_ROOT%/stage/lib
> maxflow.exe
Flow = 6

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