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Henrique de Lima 702341ae6e
Making the windows build script a bit faster by verifying if the msvc environment was set up previously and only setting it up if it wasn't (#1346)
4 years ago
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README.md Review scripts name and mini_al inclusion 5 years ago
build-linux.sh Fix and update projects/scripts 5 years ago
build-osx.sh Fix and update projects/scripts 5 years ago
build-rpi.sh Fix and update projects/scripts 5 years ago
build-windows.bat Making the windows build script a bit faster by verifying if the msvc environment was set up previously and only setting it up if it wasn't (#1346) 4 years ago
core_basic_window.c Add project/scripts 6 years ago

README.md

Here are dependency-less build scripts for raylib projects.

Dependencies

The scripts, as mentioned above, do not have dependencies. There's one exception to this however, and that is Windows, because Windows doesn't have a built-in C compiler. On Windows, you'll need to install Visual Studio or the build tools. If you didn't install them in the default location, write your changes around line 101 of windows-build.bat.

Script customization

First of all, the scripts have a few variables at the very top, which are supposed to be configured for each project separately:

  • GAME_NAME variable is used for the executable name.
  • SOURCES is a list of .c source files, divided by spaces, which are going to be compiled and linked with raylib to create the final executable. You can use wildcards, so if you have all your .c files in a directory called src, you can just set SOURCES to ../../src/*.c. Note: the paths should be either absolute, or relative to builds/platform, hence ../../.
  • RAYLIB_SRC should point to the raylib/src directory. In this case, it's ../../src, but as with the SOURCES, if the path is relative, it should be relative to temp/debug, so it's actually ../../../../src.

Compilation flags

  • -Os (/O1 with MSVC, -O2 with clang*) is used for release builds, to save space. Since it's a good practice to make your games run on the slowest possible systems, only a few games would benefit from additional runtime performance on almost all systems. Other flags: -flto (/GL and /LTCG for MSVC) in release builds, -O0 -g (/Od /Zi for MSVC) in debug builds.
  • -Wall -Wextra -Wpedantic (/Wall for MSVC) are used for warnings.

* Clang 7.0.1 seems to have problems compiling with -flto and -Os enabled at the same time, so -Os is replaced with -O2 for clang.

Command line arguments

The build scripts accept some flags, which can be given either one at a time (-d -c -r) or in bunches (-dcr). Here's a description of all of the flags.

  • -h Describes all the flags, and a few example commands
  • -d Faster builds that have debug symbols, and enable warnings
  • -u Run upx* on the executable after compilation (before -r)
  • -r Run the executable after compilation
  • -c Remove the temp/(debug|release) directory, ie. full recompile
  • -q Suppress this script's informational prints
  • -qq Suppress all prints, complete silence
  • -v cl.exe normally prints out a lot of superficial information, as well as the MSVC build environment activation scripts, but these are mostly suppressed by default. If you do want to see everything, use this flag.

* This is mostly here to make building simple "shipping" versions easier, and it's a very small bit in the build scripts. The option requires that you have upx installed and on your path, of course.

Examples

What the command does Command
Build a release build, on Windows build-windows.bat
Build a release build, full recompile, on Linux ./build-linux.sh -c
Build a debug build and run, on macOS ./build-osx.sh -d -r
Build in debug, run, don't print at all, on Linux with sh sh build-linux.sh -drqq