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simh.simh/Visual Studio Projects/0ReadMe_Projects.txt

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This directory contains a set of Visual Studio 2008 build projects for the
current simh code base. When used (with Visual Studio Express 2008 or
or a later Visual Studio version) it populates a directory tree under the
BIN directory of the Simh distribution for temporary build files and
produces resulting executables in the BIN/NT/Win32-Debug or
BIN/NT/Win32-Release directories (depending on whether you target a Debug
or Release build).
These projects, when used with Visual Studio 2008, will produce Release
build binaries that will run on Windows versions from XP onward. Building
with later versions of Visual Studio will have different Windows version
compatibility.
The Visual Studio Projects expect that various dependent packages that
the simh code depends on are available in a directory parallel to the
simh directory.
For Example, the directory structure should look like:
.../simh/sim-master/VAX/vax_cpu.c
.../simh/sim-master/scp.c
.../simh/sim-master/Visual Studio Projects/simh.sln
.../simh/sim-master/Visual Studio Projects/VAX.vcproj
.../simh/sim-master/BIN/Nt/Win32-Release/vax.exe
.../simh/windows-build/pthreads/pthread.h
.../simh/windows-build/winpcap/WpdPack/Include/pcap.h
.../simh/windows-build/libSDL/SDL2-2.0.3/include/SDL.h
If you have a command line version of git installed in your environment
then the windows-build repository will be downloaded and updated
automatically. Git for windows can be downloaded from:
https://git-scm.com/download/win
If git isn't available, and you're running on a recent version of
Windows (10 or 11), then the contents of the windows-build
directory will be automatically downloaded and installed in the
appropriate location relative to the simh source.
Network devices are capable of using pthreads to enhance their performance.
To realize these benefits, you must build the desire simulator with
USE_READER_THREAD defined. The relevant simulators which have network
support are all of the VAX simulators, the PDP11 simulator and the various
PDP10 simulators.
Additionally, simulators which contain devices that use the asynchronous
APIs in sim_disk.c and sim_tape.c can also achieve greater performance by
leveraging pthreads to perform blocking I/O in separate threads. Currently
the simulators which have such devices are all of the VAX simulators and
the PDP11. To achieve these benefits the simulators must be built with
SIM_ASYNCH_IO defined.
The project files in this directory build these simulators with support for
both network and asynchronous I/O.
To build any of the supported simulators you should open the simh.sln file
in this directory.
The installer for Visual Studio 2008 SP1 is available from:
https://download.microsoft.com/download/E/8/E/E8EEB394-7F42-4963-A2D8-29559B738298/VS2008ExpressWithSP1ENUX1504728.iso
Then install Visual Studio Express Visual C++ by executing VCExpress\setup.exe
on that DVD image. No need to install "Silverlight Runtime" or
"Microsoft SQL Server 2008 Express Edition". Depending on your OS Version
you may be prompted to install an older version of .NET Framework which should
be installed. Once that install completes, you will need to run Windows-Update
(with "Recieve updates for other Microsoft products enabled") to completely
update the Visual Studio environment you've just installed.
Visual Studio Express 2008 will build executables that will run on all Windows
versions from XP onward with equivalent functionality.
Note: VS2008 can readily coexist on Windows systems that also have later
versions of Visual Studio installed.
If you are using a version of Visual Studio beyond Visual Studio 2008, then
your later version of Visual Studio will automatically convert the Visual
Studio 2008 project files. You should ignore any warnings produced by the
conversion process.
If you have a version of Visual Studio installed and want to build all the
simulators from a command prompt, the file build_vstudio.bat in the root
of the simh source tree will do that without any furthur interaction. In
fact, the best way to convert the VS2008 solution and project files is by
using build_vstudio.bat since it will create a new solution file named
Simh-2022.sln that can then be used directly by the Visual Studio IDE.
Almost all newer Visual Studio versions after VS2008 will build executables
that only run on the system that built it or one running the same OS.
If you're using Visual Studio Community 2022, and you follow these
installation instructions, you can also build simulator executables which
will run on all versions of Windows from XP onward if you install as
indicated here and you use the build_vstudio.bat file to perform the
project conversions. Once projects are converted, they can be used in
the Visual Studio 2022 IDE for further development.
- New install
- In the "Workloads" pane, check "Desktop development with C++" workload's
checkbox, if not already checked.
- Click on the tab labeled "Individual components"
- In the "Individual components" pane:
- Enter "XP" in the "Search components (Ctrl-Q)" field.
- Locate the "Compilers, build tools and runtimes" heading
- Select "C++ for Windows XP Support for VS 2017 (v141) tools [Deprecated]" checkbox.
- Continue to customize your VS 2022 installation as needed.
- Click on "Install" in the lower right hand corner
- Modifying an existing VS2022 installation
- Click on the Visual Studio 2022 `Modify` button.
- In the "Modifying --" window, click on "Individual Components"
- Click on the tab labeled "Individual components"
- In the "Individual components" pane:
- Enter "XP" in the "Search components (Ctrl-Q)" field.
- Locate the "Compilers, build tools and runtimes" heading
- Select "C++ for Windows XP Support for VS 2017 (v141) tools [Deprecated]" checkbox.
- Continue to customize your VS 2022 installation as needed.
- Click on the "Modify" button in the lower right corner of the Window.