This command fails after about an hour, and git svn clone https://svn.code.sf.net/p/nsis/code/ times out after getting r960. Not sure why these folks aren’t on GitHub.
D:\dev\repos> python -m pip install --user scons
Collecting scons
Downloading SCons-4.4.0-py3-none-any.whl (4.2 MB)
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 4.2/4.2 MB 11.7 MB/s eta 0:00:00
Requirement already satisfied: setuptools in c:\python310\lib\site-packages (from scons) (58.1.0)
Installing collected packages: scons
WARNING: The scripts scons-configure-cache.exe, scons.exe and sconsign.exe are installed in '%APPDATA%\Python\Python310\Scripts' which is not on PATH.
Consider adding this directory to PATH or, if you prefer to suppress this warning, use --no-warn-script-location.
Successfully installed scons-4.4.0
[notice] A new release of pip available: 22.2 -> 22.2.2
[notice] To update, run: python.exe -m pip install --upgrade pip
D:\dev\repos> python -m pip uninstall scons
Found existing installation: SCons 4.4.0
Uninstalling SCons-4.4.0:
Would remove:
%APPDATA%\python\python310\scripts\scons-configure-cache.exe
%APPDATA%\python\python310\scripts\scons.exe
%APPDATA%\python\python310\scripts\sconsign.exe
%APPDATA%\python\python310\site-packages\scons-4.4.0.dist-info\*
%APPDATA%\python\python310\site-packages\scons\*
%APPDATA%\python\scons-time.1
%APPDATA%\python\scons.1
%APPDATA%\python\sconsign.1
Proceed (Y/n)? y
Successfully uninstalled SCons-4.4.0
D:\dev\repos> python -m pip install scons
Collecting scons
Using cached SCons-4.4.0-py3-none-any.whl (4.2 MB)
Requirement already satisfied: setuptools in c:\python310\lib\site-packages (from scons) (58.1.0)
Installing collected packages: scons
Successfully installed scons-4.4.0
D:\dev\repos> where scons
C:\Python310\Scripts\scons.exe
The next prerequisite is zlib. Instead of downloading binaries from the unsecured site linked to, I decided to build the zlib sources myself. I only built the 64-bit version but turns out they are serious about setting ZLIB_W32:
D:\dev\repos\nsis\nsis-3.08-src> scons UNICODE=yes
scons: Reading SConscript files ...
Mkdir("build\urelease\config")
WARNING: VER_PACKED not set, defaulting to 0x03007666!
Delete("nsis-29-Sep-2022.cvs")
Delete(".instdist")
Delete(".test")
Using Microsoft tools configuration (14.3)
Checking for memset requirement... yes
Checking for memcpy requirement... no
Checking for C library gdi32... yes
Checking for C library user32... yes
Checking for C library pthread... no
Checking for C library iconv... no
Checking for C library shlwapi... yes
Checking for C library oleaut32... yes
Checking for C library version... yes
Checking for C library shell32... yes
Checking for C library version... yes
Please specify folder of zlib for Win32 via ZLIB_W32
Copying the DLL is not sufficient. To see why the error below occurs, consult config.log.
...
Checking for C library zdll... no
Checking for C library z... no
zlib (win32) is missing!
For example, config.log ends with C:\dev\software\zlib\win32\zlib.h(34): fatal error C1083: Cannot open include file: 'zconf.h': No such file or directory because I copied only zlib.h. I notice in config.log that it’s trying to also link using zdll.lib. Fix this by running:
cd /d D:\dev\repos\zlib
copy zlib.h C:\dev\software\zlib\win32\
copy zconf.h C:\dev\software\zlib\win32\
copy contrib\vstudio\vc14\x86\ZlibDllRelease\zlibwapi.lib C:\dev\software\zlib\win32\zdll.lib
set ZLIB_W32=C:\dev\software\zlib\win32\
Compilation now fails due to unresolved external symbols:
link /nologo /nocoffgrpinfo /map /subsystem:console,5.01 /STACK:2097152 /OUT:build\urelease\makensis\makensis.exe /LIBPATH:C:\dev\software\zlib\win32 gdi32.lib user32.lib shlwapi.lib oleaut32.lib version.lib shell32.lib version.lib zdll.lib build\urelease\makensis\build.obj build\urelease\makensis\clzma.obj build\urelease\makensis\crc32.obj build\urelease\makensis\DialogTemplate.obj build\urelease\makensis\dirreader.obj build\urelease\makensis\fileform.obj build\urelease\makensis\growbuf.obj build\urelease\makensis\icon.obj build\urelease\makensis\lang.obj build\urelease\makensis\lineparse.obj build\urelease\makensis\makenssi.obj build\urelease\makensis\manifest.obj build\urelease\makensis\mmap.obj build\urelease\makensis\Plugins.obj build\urelease\makensis\ResourceEditor.obj build\urelease\makensis\ResourceVersionInfo.obj build\urelease\makensis\BinInterop.obj build\urelease\makensis\script.obj build\urelease\makensis\scriptpp.obj build\urelease\makensis\ShConstants.obj build\urelease\makensis\strlist.obj build\urelease\makensis\tokens.obj build\urelease\makensis\tstring.obj build\urelease\makensis\utf.obj build\urelease\makensis\util.obj build\urelease\makensis\winchar.obj build\urelease\makensis\writer.obj build\urelease\makensis\bzip2\blocksort.obj build\urelease\makensis\bzip2\bzlib.obj build\urelease\makensis\bzip2\compress.obj build\urelease\makensis\bzip2\huffman.obj build\urelease\makensis\7zip\7zGuids.obj build\urelease\makensis\7zip\7zip\Common\OutBuffer.obj build\urelease\makensis\7zip\7zip\Common\StreamUtils.obj build\urelease\makensis\7zip\7zip\Compress\LZ\LZInWindow.obj build\urelease\makensis\7zip\7zip\Compress\LZMA\LZMAEncoder.obj build\urelease\makensis\7zip\7zip\Compress\RangeCoder\RangeCoderBit.obj build\urelease\makensis\7zip\Common\Alloc.obj build\urelease\makensis\7zip\Common\CRC.obj
build.obj : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol _deflate referenced in function "public: virtual int __thiscall CZlib::Compress(bool)" (?Compress@CZlib@@UAEH_N@Z)
build.obj : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol _deflateEnd referenced in function "public: virtual int __thiscall CZlib::End(void)" (?End@CZlib@@UAEHXZ)
build.obj : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol _deflateInit2_ referenced in function "public: virtual int __thiscall CZlib::Init(int,unsigned int)" (?Init@CZlib@@UAEHHI@Z)
build\urelease\makensis\makensis.exe : fatal error LNK1120: 3 unresolved externals
scons: *** [build\urelease\makensis\makensis.exe] Error 1120
scons: building terminated because of errors.
Run dumpbin /headers zlibwapi.lib to examine the symbols in the lib file. Each of these does appear in a slightly different decorated form. For the declaration ZEXTERN int ZEXPORT deflateEnd OF((z_streamp strm)); in zlib.h we see the Name mangling below. This looks like __stdcall, coming from the expansion of ZEXPORT in zconf.h.
Version : 0
Machine : 14C (x86)
TimeDateStamp: 6336126F Thu Sep 29 15:47:27 2022
SizeOfData : 0000001B
DLL name : zlibwapi.dll
Symbol name : _deflateEnd@4
Type : code
Name type : ordinal
Ordinal : 6
Just by chance, I CTRL+click on the deflateEnd method on the line int ret = deflateEnd(stream); in nsis-3.08-src/Source/czlib.h and it opens ZLIB.H in nsis-3.08-src/Source/zlib/. This file has been here the whole time, with the other header file I manually copied (and others that I might have needed to)! This header is directly included by Source\exehead\fileform.c, for example, so the build will fail if this folder is removed. (is this a bug though?)
In the NSIS sources, ZEXPORT is defined without a value. The link error is therefore caused by the use of _cdecl in the NSIS sources and __stdcall in the zlib source code I built. I end up changing the latter and rebuilding since the change in the former doesn’t seem to fix the build error and I don’t have time to investigate that. More specifically, I change line 355 of zconf.h to define ZEXPORT _cdecl. Now the build succeeds and this command create an installation:
I can run D:\dev\repos\nsis\local-install\makensisw.exe once but it is then blocked by Windows Defender. I guess I’ll have to review Troubleshoot problems with attack surface reduction rules. To create a debug build, use this command line:
hsdis is a plugin for disassembling code dynamically generated by the Java Virtual Machine. On Linux & MacOS, it uses GNU binutils. Support for the LLVM disassembly backend was recently added to hsdis in https://github.com/openjdk/jdk/pull/7531. This was motivated by the fact that GNU binutils is not distributed with the JDK (due to licensing reasons mentioned at https://github.com/openjdk/jdk/pull/5920#issuecomment-942398786) and the LLVM disassembly may be preferrable in certain circumstances. Unfortunately, the official Windows LLVM distribution does not have the header files necessary to build the hotspot disassembler. This prevents Windows developers from easily using the LLVM disassembler backend because they now have to build LLVM themselves as well – see hsdis LLVM backend for Windows ARM64 and Building LLVM for Windows ARM64, for example. In this post, we investigate why the LLVM Windows build does not have the necessary header files. The llvm-c directory in Windows build contains these 2 files only:
C:\Program Files\LLVM\include\llvm-c>dir
Volume in drive C is OSDisk
Volume Serial Number is c070-2ac0
Directory of C:\Program Files\LLVM\include\llvm-c
01/08/2022 11:54 AM <DIR> .
01/08/2022 11:54 AM <DIR> ..
09/24/2021 10:18 AM 29,760 lto.h
09/24/2021 10:18 AM 9,632 Remarks.h
2 File(s) 39,392 bytes
2 Dir(s) 62,273,200,128 bytes free
I created a local LLVM build (see Building LLVM with CMake) and confirmed that it has all the header files.
C:\dev\repos\llvm-project\build_llvm\install_local\include\llvm-c>dir /w
Volume in drive C is OSDisk
Volume Serial Number is 0087-4c48
Directory of C:\dev\repos\llvm-project\build_llvm\install_local\include\llvm-c
[.] [..] Analysis.h
BitReader.h BitWriter.h blake3.h
Comdat.h Core.h DataTypes.h
DebugInfo.h Deprecated.h Disassembler.h
DisassemblerTypes.h Error.h ErrorHandling.h
ExecutionEngine.h ExternC.h Initialization.h
IRReader.h Linker.h LLJIT.h
lto.h Object.h Orc.h
OrcEE.h Remarks.h Support.h
Target.h TargetMachine.h [Transforms]
Types.h
28 File(s) 382,361 bytes
3 Dir(s) 59,158,138,880 bytes free
Does this problem still exist in the latest Windows LLVM release? I went to Releases · llvm/llvm-project (github.com) to find the latest LLVM installer for Windows but couldn’t find it. Turns out it’s because the 15.0.1 release is only 14 hours old so some of the assets probably haven’t been uploaded. Notice that 15.0.0 has 47 assets. I can successfully download and install LLVM-15.0.0-win64.exe and see that the header files are still missing.
Interestingly, trying to install LLVM-15.0.0-win32.exe before uninstalling LLVM-15.0.0-win64.exe gives this dialog and clicking Yes uninstalls before the actual installation of the 32-bit build starts!
I assumed that would happen at this stage:
All the same, these dialogs have strings that can lead us to the sources that create the installer! The installer looks very similar to the one from Building the Elmer Install Folder so searching the llvm codebase for “ncis ” gives only a handful of hits leading to the key discovery of build_llvm_release.bat! (later learn that this needs to be executed in a (2019) developer command prompt so that the ninja command can be found). That script requires 7zip though. The script fails on my machine because it can’t find 7zip. Failure seems to be coming from the for-statement (see for | Microsoft Learn for usage). The for command uses the escape character (^) as explained at set | Microsoft Learn.
C:\dev\repos\llvm-project\llvm\utils\release> build_llvm_release.bat 15.0.0
Check 7-zip version and/or administrator permissions.
'7z.exe' is not recognized as an internal or external command,
operable program or batch file.
You need to modify the paths below:
Revision: llvmorg-15.0.0
Package version: 15.0.0
Build dir: C:\dev\repos\llvm-project\llvm\utils\release\llvm_package_15.0.0
Press any key to continue . . .
-- Looking for CrashReporterClient.h
-- Looking for CrashReporterClient.h - not found
-- Looking for pfm_initialize in pfm
-- Looking for pfm_initialize in pfm - not found
-- Could NOT find ZLIB (missing: ZLIB_LIBRARY ZLIB_INCLUDE_DIR)
CMake Error at C:/Program Files/Microsoft Visual Studio/2022/Preview/Common7/IDE/CommonExtensions/Microsoft/CMake/CMake/share/cmake-3.24/Modules/FindPackageHandleStandardArgs.cmake:230 (message):
Could NOT find LibXml2 (missing: LIBXML2_INCLUDE_DIR)
Call Stack (most recent call first):
C:/Program Files/Microsoft Visual Studio/2022/Preview/Common7/IDE/CommonExtensions/Microsoft/CMake/CMake/share/cmake-3.24/Modules/FindPackageHandleStandardArgs.cmake:594 (_FPHSA_FAILURE_MESSAGE)
C:/Program Files/Microsoft Visual Studio/2022/Preview/Common7/IDE/CommonExtensions/Microsoft/CMake/CMake/share/cmake-3.24/Modules/FindLibXml2.cmake:108 (FIND_PACKAGE_HANDLE_STANDARD_ARGS)
cmake/config-ix.cmake:156 (find_package)
CMakeLists.txt:774 (include)
-- Configuring incomplete, errors occurred!
See also "C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/llvm/utils/release/llvm_package_15.0.0/build32_stage0/CMakeFiles/CMakeOutput.log".
See also "C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/llvm/utils/release/llvm_package_15.0.0/build32_stage0/CMakeFiles/CMakeError.log".
Looking through FindPackageHandleStandardArgs.cmake leads me to the simple realization that the wrong define is being used on the command line. Could this be because I’m using a newer CMake? I’ve been using the VS 2022 Preview Developer Command Prompt thus far. My VS 2019 (16.11.19) installation uses CMake 3.20. Both FindLibXml2.cmake in 3.20 and FindLibXml2.cmake in 3.24 require the LIBXML2_INCLUDE_DIR variable. However, they also claim (at the top) to set these variables.
in my build folder (build_llvm), there is a CPackConfig.cmake file that sets variables like CPACK_PACKAGE_FILE_NAME and CPACK_NSIS_DISPLAY_NAME. Since it is NSIS Wiki (sourceforge.io) in use, I wonder about running the package target myself in a manner similar to that used to create my local build. I switch back to a previous build directory (created without the build_llvm_release.bat) and run:
cmake --build . --config Release --target package
The resulting failure below indicates that NSIS is required.
MSBuild version 17.4.0-preview-22466-03+48ab5664b for .NET Framework
PipSqueak.vcxproj -> C:\dev\repos\llvm-project\build_llvm\unittests\Support\DynamicLibrary\Release\PipSqueak.dll
SecondLib.vcxproj -> C:\dev\repos\llvm-project\build_llvm\unittests\Support\DynamicLibrary\Release\SecondLib.dll
obj.llvm-tblgen.vcxproj -> C:\dev\repos\llvm-project\build_llvm\utils\TableGen\obj.llvm-tblgen.dir\Release\obj.llvm-tblgen.lib
LLVMDemangle.vcxproj -> C:\dev\repos\llvm-project\build_llvm\Release\lib\LLVMDemangle.lib
...
verify-uselistorder.vcxproj -> C:\dev\repos\llvm-project\build_llvm\Release\bin\verify-uselistorder.exe
yaml-bench.vcxproj -> C:\dev\repos\llvm-project\build_llvm\Release\bin\yaml-bench.exe
yaml2obj.vcxproj -> C:\dev\repos\llvm-project\build_llvm\Release\bin\yaml2obj.exe
EXEC : CPack error : Cannot find NSIS compiler makensis: likely it is not installed, or not in your PATH [C:\dev\repos\llvm-project\build_llvm\package.vcxproj]
EXEC : CPack error : Could not read NSIS registry value. This is usually caused by NSIS not being installed. Please install NSIS from http://nsis.sourceforge.net [C:\dev\repos\llvm-proje
ct\build_llvm\package.vcxproj]
EXEC : CPack error : Cannot initialize the generator NSIS [C:\dev\repos\llvm-project\build_llvm\package.vcxproj]
After installing NSIS, the previous command successfully creates an LLVM for Windows installer.
...
verify-uselistorder.vcxproj -> C:\dev\repos\llvm-project\build_llvm\Release\bin\verify-uselistorder.exe
yaml-bench.vcxproj -> C:\dev\repos\llvm-project\build_llvm\Release\bin\yaml-bench.exe
yaml2obj.vcxproj -> C:\dev\repos\llvm-project\build_llvm\Release\bin\yaml2obj.exe
CPack: Create package using NSIS
CPack: Install projects
CPack: - Install project: LLVM [Release]
CMake Warning (dev) at C:/Program Files/Microsoft Visual Studio/2022/Preview/Common7/IDE/CommonExtensions/Microsoft/CMake/CMake/share/cmake-3.24/Modules/GNUInstallDirs.cmake:243 (messa
ge):
Unable to determine default CMAKE_INSTALL_LIBDIR directory because no
target architecture is known. Please enable at least one language before
including GNUInstallDirs.
Call Stack (most recent call first):
C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/llvm/cmake/modules/LLVMInstallSymlink.cmake:5 (include)
C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/build_llvm/tools/llvm-ar/cmake_install.cmake:48 (include)
C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/build_llvm/tools/cmake_install.cmake:39 (include)
C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/build_llvm/cmake_install.cmake:71 (include)
This warning is for project developers. Use -Wno-dev to suppress it.
CPack: Create package
CPack: - package: C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/build_llvm/LLVM-16.0.0git-win64.exe generated.
This installer generates the LLVM includes on disk as expected. The issue must therefore be confined to the installer generated by the script.
Reviewing Ninja NSIS Packaging
At this point, I ran build_llvm_release.bat to create an installer. Once packaging is complete, the install_manifest.txt file can be used to determine which files are in the installer. The batch file also runs lots of tests and this was annoying when trying to generate installers. Once the tests failed on the build I was creating and I had CTRL+C’d a couple of times, I ran ninja package myself (taken from the batch file)
C:\dev\repos\llvm-project\llvm\utils\release\llvm_package_15.0.0\build32_stage0>ninja package
[0/1] Run CPack packaging tool...CPack: Create package using NSIS
CPack: Install projects
CPack: - Install project: LLVM []
CMake Warning (dev) at C:/Program Files/Microsoft Visual Studio/2022/Preview/Common7/IDE/CommonExtensions/Microsoft/CMake/CMake/share/cmake-3.24/Modules/GNUInstallDirs.cmake:243 (message):
Unable to determine default CMAKE_INSTALL_LIBDIR directory because no
target architecture is known. Please enable at least one language before
including GNUInstallDirs.
Call Stack (most recent call first):
C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/llvm/utils/release/llvm_package_15.0.0/llvm-project/llvm/cmake/modules/LLVMInstallSymlink.cmake:5 (include)
C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/llvm/utils/release/llvm_package_15.0.0/build32_stage0/tools/llvm-ar/cmake_install.cmake:40 (include)
C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/llvm/utils/release/llvm_package_15.0.0/build32_stage0/tools/cmake_install.cmake:39 (include)
C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/llvm/utils/release/llvm_package_15.0.0/build32_stage0/cmake_install.cmake:114 (include)
This warning is for project developers. Use -Wno-dev to suppress it.
CPack: Create package
CPack: - package: C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/llvm/utils/release/llvm_package_15.0.0/build32_stage0/LLVM-15.0.0-win32.exe generated.
I then try to find a package target in build.ninja. Search for CMakeFiles\package.util.+ include since we’re interested in include files. There are some interesting differences in the include directories of the build created manually from the local install and the one created by the script, e.g.
Try searching in build.ninja for the 2 header files the installer creates in the (broken) shipping LLVM for Windows build. Nothing there but searching the file system for remarks.h gives interesting results, e.g. the existence of an NSIS project file: project.nsi. Looks like there are some tutorials showing how to create .nsi files at Invoking NSIS run-time commands on compile-time – NSIS (sourceforge.io). The way NSIS is used with CPack when building is documented at Packaging With CPack — Mastering CMake
… but I completely missed the fact that the 2nd didn’t have these lines from the first.
if(CMAKE_INSTALL_COMPONENT STREQUAL "llvm-headers" OR NOT CMAKE_INSTALL_COMPONENT)
file(INSTALL DESTINATION "${CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX}/include" TYPE DIRECTORY FILES
"C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm"
"C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm-c"
FILES_MATCHING REGEX "/[^/]*\\.def$" REGEX "/[^/]*\\.h$" REGEX "/[^/]*\\.td$" REGEX "/[^/]*\\.inc$" REGEX "/license\\.txt$")
endif()
if(CMAKE_INSTALL_COMPONENT STREQUAL "llvm-headers" OR NOT CMAKE_INSTALL_COMPONENT)
file(INSTALL DESTINATION "${CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX}/include" TYPE DIRECTORY FILES
"C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/build_llvm/include/llvm"
"C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/build_llvm/include/llvm-c"
FILES_MATCHING REGEX "/[^/]*\\.def$" REGEX "/[^/]*\\.h$" REGEX "/[^/]*\\.gen$" REGEX "/[^/]*\\.inc$" REGEX "/cmakefiles$" EXCLUDE REGEX "/config\\.h$" EXCLUDE)
endif()
Search the codebase for “llvm-headers” and find the llvm-header component definition. That whole code block is gated by the LLVM_INSTALL_TOOLCHAIN_ONLY variable! This is explicitly turned off in build_llvm_release.bat! I rerun the batch file and see tests failing after the build succeeds. CTRL+C to kill the processes so that I can get to the root issue: does turning off that flag fix the includes? makensis fails, probably because I killed the build and some things might still have been in use?
C:\dev\repos\llvm-project\llvm\utils\release\llvm_package_15.0.0\build32_stage0>ninja package
[0/1] Run CPack packaging tool...CPack: Create package using NSIS
CPack: Install projects
CPack: - Install project: LLVM []
CMake Warning (dev) at C:/Program Files/Microsoft Visual Studio/2022/Preview/Common7/IDE/CommonExtensions/Microsoft/CMake/CMake/share/cmake-3.24/Modules/GNUInstallDirs.cmake:243 (message):
Unable to determine default CMAKE_INSTALL_LIBDIR directory because no
target architecture is known. Please enable at least one language before
including GNUInstallDirs.
Call Stack (most recent call first):
C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/llvm/utils/release/llvm_package_15.0.0/llvm-project/llvm/cmake/modules/LLVMInstallSymlink.cmake:5 (include)
C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/llvm/utils/release/llvm_package_15.0.0/build32_stage0/tools/llvm-ar/cmake_install.cmake:40 (include)
C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/llvm/utils/release/llvm_package_15.0.0/build32_stage0/tools/cmake_install.cmake:39 (include)
C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/llvm/utils/release/llvm_package_15.0.0/build32_stage0/cmake_install.cmake:128 (include)
This warning is for project developers. Use -Wno-dev to suppress it.
CPack: Create package
CPack Error: Problem running NSIS command: "C:/Program Files (x86)/NSIS/makensis.exe" "C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/llvm/utils/release/llvm_package_15.0.0/build32_stage0/_CPack_Packages/win32/NSIS/project.nsi"
Please check C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/llvm/utils/release/llvm_package_15.0.0/build32_stage0/_CPack_Packages/win32/NSIS/NSISOutput.log for errors
CPack Error: Problem compressing the directory
CPack Error: Error when generating package: LLVM
FAILED: CMakeFiles/package.util
cmd.exe /C "cd /D C:\dev\repos\llvm-project\llvm\utils\release\llvm_package_15.0.0\build32_stage0 && "C:\Program Files\Microsoft Visual Studio\2022\Preview\Common7\IDE\CommonExtensions\Microsoft\CMake\CMake\bin\cpack.exe" --config ./CPackConfig.cmake"
ninja: build stopped: subcommand failed.
NSISOutput.log failed due to an “Internal compiler error #12345: error mmapping datablock to 17235001.” However, the include files are now present in the source directory being packaged by NSIS.
Turning Off Tests
There are many tests that the build script runs and some of them are failing. Testing is not on my critical path since all I need is to generate installers so I modify the scripts to enable me to package the build without running all the tests. I then start my build without tests and go to bed only to wake up the next morning to find that I need to rerun it because there are no running programs when I log in. Event Viewer doesn’t show any reboot-related events and sure enough, Task Manager shows over 9 days of uptime still. Turns out the Desktop Window Manager crashed (C:\WINDOWS\system32\dwm.exe)! Curse you dwmcore.dll. Well, time to install those updates I’ve been putting off and reboot before jumping back in. Now on the new Windows 10.0.22621.521. The build still fails:
-- LLVM host triple: i686-pc-windows-msvc
-- LLVM default target triple: i686-pc-windows-msvc
-- Using Release VC++ CRT: MD
-- Looking for os_signpost_interval_begin
-- Looking for os_signpost_interval_begin - not found
CMake Error at C:/Program Files (x86)/Microsoft Visual Studio/2019/Enterprise/Common7/IDE/CommonExtensions/Microsoft/CMake/CMake/share/cmake-3.20/Modules/FindPackageHandleStandardArgs.cmake:230 (message):
Could NOT find Python3 (missing: Python3_EXECUTABLE Interpreter) (Required
is at least version "3.6")
Reason given by package:
Interpreter: Cannot use the interpreter "C:/Python310/python.exe"
Call Stack (most recent call first):
C:/Program Files (x86)/Microsoft Visual Studio/2019/Enterprise/Common7/IDE/CommonExtensions/Microsoft/CMake/CMake/share/cmake-3.20/Modules/FindPackageHandleStandardArgs.cmake:594 (_FPHSA_FAILURE_MESSAGE)
C:/Program Files (x86)/Microsoft Visual Studio/2019/Enterprise/Common7/IDE/CommonExtensions/Microsoft/CMake/CMake/share/cmake-3.20/Modules/FindPython/Support.cmake:3165 (find_package_handle_standard_args)
C:/Program Files (x86)/Microsoft Visual Studio/2019/Enterprise/Common7/IDE/CommonExtensions/Microsoft/CMake/CMake/share/cmake-3.20/Modules/FindPython3.cmake:485 (include)
CMakeLists.txt:817 (find_package)
-- Configuring incomplete, errors occurred!
See also "C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/llvm/utils/release/llvm_package_15.0.0/build32_stage0/CMakeFiles/CMakeOutput.log".
See also "C:/dev/repos/llvm-project/llvm/utils/release/llvm_package_15.0.0/build32_stage0/CMakeFiles/CMakeError.log".
When I interrupted the tests before modifying the batch file to skip them, I noticed that they were being run by %LOCALAPPDATA%\Microsoft\WindowsApps\python3.9.exe. This is still present on my machine. Ah, turns out I’m now using the 2019 developer command prompt (and therefore an older CMake). The only difference between CMake 3.20 FindPython3.cmake and CMake 3.24 FindPython3.cmake is a comment about static libraries, so this failure is a mystery.
Diagnosing Build Failures
Since this issue also bit me when I moved to my Surface Book, it is worth understanding why it happens.
Missing CMake in Visual Studio 17.3.4 Developer Command Prompt
Here is the VS 2022 Preview vs VS 2022 Enterprise path to CMake:
C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\Installer> where cmake
C:\Program Files\Microsoft Visual Studio\2022\Preview\Common7\IDE\CommonExtensions\Microsoft\CMake\CMake\bin\cmake.exe
C:\dev\repos\llvm-project\llvm\utils\release> where cmake
INFO: Could not find files for the given pattern(s).
The View Logs link opens the Documents folder under This PC – not particularly useful. Interestingly though, clicking on the Modify button shows a Total space required 1.63 GB. How is there space required before I’ve selected anything? Something similar happens with 16.11.19 though. Without making any individual component selections, I start the install process. CMake gets (re-?)installed as shown below. This fixes the setup warnings as well and cmake is now usable in the VS2022 command prompt.
Missing Python3 in VS 17.3.4 Developer Command Prompt
This is the error I got when trying to build LLVM on my Surface Book 2 in the VS 2022 developer command prompt:
CMake Error at C:/Program Files/CMake/share/cmake-3.17/Modules/FindPackageHandleStandardArgs.cmake:164 (message):
Could NOT find Python3 (missing: Python3_EXECUTABLE Interpreter) (Required
is at least version "3.6")
Reason given by package:
Interpreter: Cannot use the interpreter "C:/Python310/python.exe"
Call Stack (most recent call first):
C:/Program Files/CMake/share/cmake-3.17/Modules/FindPackageHandleStandardArgs.cmake:445 (_FPHSA_FAILURE_MESSAGE)
C:/Program Files/CMake/share/cmake-3.17/Modules/FindPython/Support.cmake:2437 (find_package_handle_standard_args)
C:/Program Files/CMake/share/cmake-3.17/Modules/FindPython3.cmake:309 (include)
CMakeLists.txt:817 (find_package)
Uninstalling CMake enables the command line to pick up the CMake distributed with Visual Studio. Python3 is now found successfully in the path below (I’ve shortened it using %LOCALAPPDATA%).
-- Found Python3: %LOCALAPPDATA%/Microsoft/WindowsApps/python3.8.exe (found suitable version "3.8.10", minimum required is "3.6") found components: Interpreter
Missing Python3 in VS 16.11.19 Developer Command Prompt
Interestingly, I still get the same error in VS 2019 despite uninstalling CMake 3.17. My earlier hypothesis is therefore invalid.
CMake Error at C:/Program Files (x86)/Microsoft Visual Studio/2019/Enterprise/Common7/IDE/CommonExtensions/Microsoft/CMake/CMake/share/cmake-3.20/Modules/FindPackageHandleStandardArgs.cmake:230 (message):
Could NOT find Python3 (missing: Python3_EXECUTABLE Interpreter) (Required
is at least version "3.6")
Reason given by package:
Interpreter: Cannot use the interpreter "C:/Python310/python.exe"
Call Stack (most recent call first):
C:/Program Files (x86)/Microsoft Visual Studio/2019/Enterprise/Common7/IDE/CommonExtensions/Microsoft/CMake/CMake/share/cmake-3.20/Modules/FindPackageHandleStandardArgs.cmake:594 (_FPHSA_FAILURE_MESSAGE)
C:/Program Files (x86)/Microsoft Visual Studio/2019/Enterprise/Common7/IDE/CommonExtensions/Microsoft/CMake/CMake/share/cmake-3.20/Modules/FindPython/Support.cmake:3165 (find_package_handle_standard_args)
C:/Program Files (x86)/Microsoft Visual Studio/2019/Enterprise/Common7/IDE/CommonExtensions/Microsoft/CMake/CMake/share/cmake-3.20/Modules/FindPython3.cmake:485 (include)
CMakeLists.txt:817 (find_package)
C:/Python310/python.exe -c "import sys; sys.stdout.write('.'.join([str(x) for x in sys.version_info[:3]]))"
I comment out the ERROR_QUIET line to reveal the stdout and stderr output from python since the return code from the python process is causing the CMake error to be raised. Running with --trace-expand --trace-redirect=cmake_trace.txt now reveals the root cause (paths below cleaned up using %LOCALAPPDATA%):
Python path configuration:
PYTHONHOME = '%LOCALAPPDATA%\Programs\Python\Python310-32'
PYTHONPATH = (not set)
program name = 'C:/Python310/python.exe'
isolated = 0
environment = 1
user site = 1
import site = 1
sys._base_executable = 'C:\\Python310\\python.exe'
sys.base_prefix = '%LOCALAPPDATA%\\Programs\\Python\\Python310-32'
sys.base_exec_prefix = '%LOCALAPPDATA%\\Programs\\Python\\Python310-32'
sys.platlibdir = 'lib'
sys.executable = 'C:\\Python310\\python.exe'
sys.prefix = '%LOCALAPPDATA%\\Programs\\Python\\Python310-32'
sys.exec_prefix = '%LOCALAPPDATA%\\Programs\\Python\\Python310-32'
sys.path = [
'C:\\Python310\\python310.zip',
'%LOCALAPPDATA%\\Programs\\Python\\Python310-32\\DLLs',
'%LOCALAPPDATA%\\Programs\\Python\\Python310-32\\lib',
'C:\\Python310',
]
Fatal Python error: init_fs_encoding: failed to get the Python codec of the filesystem encoding
Python runtime state: core initialized
ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'encodings'
Current thread 0x00003174 (most recent call first):
<no Python frame>
django – init_fs_encoding: failed to get the Python codec of the filesystem encoding – Stack Overflow is a hint that the PYTHONHOME is wrong. Sure enough, I didn’t change it in build_llvm_release.bat so the paths in the configuration above do not exist! This now raises another question: how on earth does this work in VS 2022? I notice on my desktop that python.exe does not even appear in the CMake tracing output! The difference in behavior stems from the fact that the find_program command in Modules/FindPython/Support.cmake · v3.20.0 finds python 3.10 first in the VS 2019 environment. This path is then assigned to _Python3_EXECUTABLE, preventing the 3.8 path from being used. One important difference between CMake 3.20 and 3.23 that I notice is FindPython: fix typo error (fff8d5b2) · Commits · CMake / CMake · GitLab (kitware.com). Since the fix for the build_llvm_release.bat script is straightforward and it is clear that there are some CMake implementation differences at work, we no longer need to dig into why this behavior could be happening.
Python Hangs
One of my build attempts successfully completes stage0 but hangs when CMake tries to detect the python version. Manually running the same command (copied from Process Explorer) also hangs. Even %LOCALAPPDATA%/Microsoft/WindowsApps/python3.9.exe --version hangs. Inspecting the full dump created by Task Manager reveals that python3.9.exe made a call to get (what looks like) the Package.InstalledLocation Property (Windows.ApplicationModel) – Windows UWP applications | Microsoft Learn
...
-- Looking for os_signpost_interval_begin
-- Looking for os_signpost_interval_begin - not found
Windows becomes pretty unusable as I investigate this behavior (mouse doesn’t work, changes program in focus but can’t click on anything). A reboot fixes these issues (e.g. version now works). Can’t believe we have to deal with this in 2022???
7z x clang+llvm-15.0.1-aarch64-linux-gnu.tar.xz
7z x clang+llvm-15.0.1-arm64-apple-darwin21.0.tar.xz
7z x clang+llvm-15.0.1-x86_64-apple-darwin.tar.xz
tar xf clang+llvm-15.0.1-aarch64-linux-gnu.tar
tar xf clang+llvm-15.0.1-arm64-apple-darwin21.0.tar
tar xf clang+llvm-15.0.1-x86_64-apple-darwin.tar
Here are the directories in the include folder before the installer is created. There are also 28 include files in the include/llvm-c/ directory as desired.
Directory of llvm\utils\release\llvm_package_15.0.0\build32_stage0\_CPack_Packages\win64\NSIS\LLVM-15.0.0-win64\include
clang
clang-c
clang-tidy
lld
lldb
llvm
llvm-c
Outstanding Questions
Why does the NSIS project fail to build? Why are there test failures and build errors?
Why does the Linux build have ompt-multiplex.h and the aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu directory?
How is the Windows ARM64 installer generated?
Why doesn’t the Windows build have c++, flang, mlir, mlir-c, and polly?
How do we get symbols to the Python app in the Microsoft Store?