X-Git-Url: https://wimlib.net/git/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=README.WINDOWS;h=c54a773bedab3cbaed3fca4a2003fd86da885582;hb=refs%2Fheads%2Fmaster;hp=ca5195a9b1a7dac6a6959d9b40bdf21292ea4cca;hpb=e47e683cd0dd4b0b1ee29ad33fae63f8212235f3;p=wimlib diff --git a/README.WINDOWS b/README.WINDOWS deleted file mode 100644 index ca5195a9..00000000 --- a/README.WINDOWS +++ /dev/null @@ -1,63 +0,0 @@ - INTRODUCTION - -wimlib 1.3.0 has added experimental support for Windows builds. The Windows -build consists of both the "wimlib" library (which can be built as a DLL) and -the "imagex" executable. - -The Windows build of wimlib uses native Win32 calls when appropriate to handle -alternate data streams, security descriptors, and reparse points. - -Mounting WIM files is not supported on Windows. Also please note that wimlib's -"imagex" is NOT intended to be command-line compatible with Microsoft's -"imagex", and wimlib is NOT intended to be API compatible with Microsoft's -WIMGAPI. They are similar, though. - - NOTES ABOUT IMAGEX - -"imagex capture", "imagex append", and "imagex apply" will work on Windows and -have the added advantage of saving and restoring alternate data streams, -security descriptors, and reparse points. - -"imagex delete", "imagex dir", "imagex export", "imagex info", "imagex join", -"imagex optimize", and "imagex split" are all portable and should work the same -way on Windows as on UNIX. - -"imagex mount", "imagex mountrw", and "imagex unmount" will NOT work on Windows. - - -So on Windows, why would you want to use wimlib's ImageX instead of Microsoft's? -Well, here are a few reasons: - -- wimlib offers fast multithreaded compression, so making WIM images can be much - faster. - -- wimlib can correctly save and restore alternate data streams, which - Microsoft's ImageX sometimes captures incorrectly due to a bug. - -- wimlib is free software, so you can modify and/or audit the source code. - -See the man page for 'imagex' for more information. - - BUILDING ON WINDOWS - -Actually doing the Windows build is a bit tricky, and I'd recommend you download -precompiled binaries from http://sourceforge.net/projects/wimlib/files/ instead. -I did it using MinGW-w64 on a Linux host, with the following configuration -command: - -$ ./configure --host=i686-w64-mingw32 - -after having installed the required libraries: - -* mingw-w64-gettext -* mingw-w64-libiconv -* mingw-w64-libxml2 -* mingw-w64-winpthreads -* mingw-w64-zlib - -Note: zlib and gettext are only necessary when required by the build of libxml2. - -Building wimlib using Cygwin is not supported. I was trying this for a while, -but I ran into some issues with mixing native Win32 functions and -Cygwin-provided functions, so I just made it possible to do a native Win32 build -instead.