GSoC - Windows Support

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Revision as of 14:48, 21 December 2021 by Hzwakenberg (talk | contribs) (Windows installer on Google Drive no longer available.)
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Liberty Eiffel meets Windows




Final Goal

   Bootstrap the Liberty-Eiffel programming language (compiler,classes, functions etc.)
   from the UNIX/LINUX environment to the WINDOWS environment and wrap it into a nice installer.

Progress

I've created a working installer application that replicates all the facilities, but one, that Liberty Eiffel offers in POSIX systems, in Windows Environment. The only facility that I didn't reproduce, net cluster, caused the eiffeltest_server tool to be inoperable.




The other tools (se, clean, ace_check, eiffeltest, mock, eiffeltest_ng, pretty, short, class_check, finder, eiffeldoc, extract_internals) work just fine together will all the other plugins and all functionalities.




What I coded:

  • install.bat, which creates the "T stages" and compiles *almost* all the tools, creates the configuration file and the binaries from the tools.
  • set_path.cmd, simple utility used to create the Liberty Eiffel configuration file, called by installer.nsi .
  • installer.nsi, a nicely wrapped NSIS installer + uninstaller, that follows the best practices : required executionlevel, write/delete registers, function to create/delete environment variable for the binaries created from the compiled Liberty Eiffel tools, has a function that reads the product version of the Liberty Eiffel install application and downloads from it's official website documentation regarding that patch( at the moment the site's structure does not allow that, but the function will be used in the near future, the installers now is only downloading from a plain link), an option for downloading mingw-w64, custom images etc.


  • A part of liberty/se_make.bat(inspired from /work/se_make.sh), no longer needed for this patch, therefore I did not completed all of it.




General

The original main goal was to create two versions of an installer application: one that assumes that the end-user already has mingw-w64 installed, and one that installs mingw-w64 for the user.

The reason was flexibility: the installer with mingw attached would be bigger with around 300mb. After searching, I found out that there are not offline installers for mingw available, but online versions of only around 200kb. Therefore I only created one version of Liberty Eiffel installer that offers the user the ability to download mingw via calling mingw's online installer.




The "T stages" refers to compiling Liberty Eiffel's base code (currently 136 C-files created by the Liberty Eiffel compiler) and create a binary from these, and with that binary the same 136 C-files (that represent the core of smarteiffel) get compiled again, and so on for three times. After three such processes, if the resulting applications are binary indentical to the previous compile, the installer proceeds further to the [tools compilation].



The NSIS installer does just as mentioned [above] and has incorporated an uninstaller that uninstalls exactly what the installer created.

Repository structure

Please note that I did not want to create a very long post about all the details of installer.nsi, but you can check some of those here.




From this repository only the files mentioned [above], 'What I coded' paragraph were made by me, plus the images. The other files are duplicates from Liberty Eiffel's core structure(only the most relevant files) to create an ease of use of the installer script for testing purposes.