.. _sdk_install_windows_src: Windows Source Installation ================================ .. only:: html +-----------------+ | Windows 10 | +=================+ | |build_passing| | +-----------------+ .. |build_passing| image:: https://img.shields.io/badge/build-passing-brightgreen.svg?style=flat .. only:: latex +-----------------+ | Windows 10 | +=================+ | ✓ | +-----------------+ .. tip:: Windows does not provide Visual Studio ``*.sln`` file directly and requires CMake to build. Firstly, CMake can be used across multiple platforms, it is easy to configure and can be maintained in a sustainable way. Secondly, the third-party codes (Glog, OpenCV) are built using CMake. .. tip:: There is currently no binary installer available, which requires you to compile from source. It is also the process of configuring the development environment. Prerequisites ------------- CMake (provide build) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * `CMake `_,used to build and compile (necessary). * `Git `_, used to get code (optional). * `Doxygen `_, used to generate documents (optional). After you install the above tools, confirm that you can run this command in CMD (Command Prompt): .. code-block:: bat >cmake --version cmake version 3.10.1 >git --version git version 2.11.1.windows.1 >doxygen --version 1.8.13 Visual Studio (provide compilation) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * `Visual Studio `_ * `Visual Studio 2017 `_ * `Visual Studio 2015 `_ * `Windows 10 SDK `_ After installing Visual Studio, confirm that the following command can run in the Visual Studio Command Prompt: .. code-block:: bat >cl Microsoft (R) C/C++ Optimizing Compiler Version 19.14.26429.4 for x86 >msbuild Microsoft (R) 生成引擎版本 15.7.179.6572 .. tip:: Visual Studio Command Prompt can be opened from the Start menu, .. image:: ../../images/sdk/vs_cmd_menu.png :width: 30% You can also open it from the Visual Studio Tools menu. .. image:: ../../images/sdk/vs_cmd.png :width: 40% However, if you do not have the Visual Studio 2015 Tools menu, you can add one yourself. Open Tools's External Tools... and Add the following: ================= ======================================================================================= Field Value ================= ======================================================================================= Title Visual Studio Command Prompt Command ``C:\Windows\System32\cmd.exe`` Arguments ``/k "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 14.0\Common7\Tools\VsDevCmd.bat"`` Initial Directory ``$(SolutionDir)`` ================= ======================================================================================= In Visual Studio command Prompt, you can use the compile command ``cl`` ``link`` ``lib`` ``msbuild``, etc.(need finish ``MSYS2``and ``Getting Source Code`` steps first) .. image:: ../../images/sdk/vs_cmd_test.png MSYS2 (provide Linux command) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * `MSYS2 `_ * `mirror `_ * `pacman `_ After installation, verify that the following path has been added to the system environment variable PATH: .. code-block:: none C:\msys64\usr\bin Then, open MSYS2 MSYS, perform the update and install ``make``: .. code-block:: bash $ pacman -Syu $ pacman -S make Finally, the CMD (Command Prompt) can run the following command: .. code-block:: bat >make --version GNU Make 4.2.1 Getting Source Code -------------------- .. code-block:: bat git clone https://github.com/slightech/MYNT-EYE-S-SDK.git Required Packages ----------------- .. code-block:: bat >cd >make init Make init Init deps Install cmd: pacman -S Install deps: git clang-format pacman -S clang-format (not exists) error: target not found: clang-format pip install --upgrade autopep8 cpplint pylint requests ... Init git hooks ERROR: clang-format-diff is not installed! Expect cmake version >= 3.0 cmake version 3.10.1 * `OpenCV `_ .. tip:: The official OpenCV provides the ``exe`` for installation. If you want to compile from the source code, see the Official document `Installation in Windows `_ . or refer to the following command: .. code-block:: bat >git clone https://github.com/opencv/opencv.git >cd opencv >git checkout tags/3.4.1 >cd opencv >mkdir _build >cd _build >cmake ^ -D CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RELEASE ^ -D CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=C:/opencv ^ -D WITH_CUDA=OFF ^ -D BUILD_DOCS=OFF ^ -D BUILD_EXAMPLES=OFF ^ -D BUILD_TESTS=OFF ^ -D BUILD_PERF_TESTS=OFF ^ -G "Visual Studio 15 2017 Win64" ^ .. >msbuild ALL_BUILD.vcxproj /property:Configuration=Release >msbuild INSTALL.vcxproj /property:Configuration=Release Building Code -------------- .. tip:: If OpenCV is installed in a custom directory or wants to specify a version, you can set the path as follows before compiling: .. code-block:: bat # OpenCV_DIR is hte path where OpenCVConfig.cmake in set OpenCV_DIR=C:\opencv Otherwise, CMake will prompt that OpenCV could not be found. If you don't want to rely on OpenCV, read :ref:`sdk_without_opencv` . Build and install: .. code-block:: bat cd make install Finally, the SDK will install in ``/_install`` by default. Building samples ---------------- .. code-block:: bat cd make samples Run samples: .. code-block:: bat .\samples\_output\bin\api\camera_a.bat For tutorial samples, please read :ref:`data` and :ref:`ctrl` . .. tip:: All compiled sample programs ``exe`` will have a corresponding ``bat``. ``bat`` will temporarily set system environment variables and then run ``exe``. So it is recommended to run ``bat``. If you run``exe`` directly, it may prompt that cannot find ``dll``. Then you should add ``\\_install\\bin`` ``%OPENCV_DIR%\\bin`` to ``PATH`` in system environment variable. How to set the environment variable for OpenCV, refer to the official document `Set the OpenCV environment variable and add it to the systems path `_ . Building tools --------------- .. code-block:: bat cd make tools The usage of tools and scripts will be introduced later. .. tip:: The script is based on Python. You need to install Python and its package management tool pip first, and then install the dependencies as follows: .. code-block:: bat cd \tools pip install -r requirements.txt Note: Python is also in MSYS2, but fail install Matplotlib in test. Conclusion ----------- If your project will use SDK, you can refer to the settings in ``samples/CMakeLists.txt`` for CMake. Or just import the head file and dynamic library in the installation directory.