My mistake, it is WINVER, not WIN_VER. It seems defining _WIN32_WINNT 
has a consequence on WINVER definition, so we should set _WIN32_WINNT 
rather than WINVER.

Le 11/04/2016 14:29, lh_mouse a écrit :
> It is 'sdkddkver.h' that defines WIN_VER and _WIN32_WINNT as needed.
> Try opening it and searching for something like '#if !defined(_WIN32_WINNT) 
> && !defined(_CHICAGO_)'. :>
>
> ------------------                            
> Best regards,
> lh_mouse
> 2016-04-11
>
> -------------------------------------------------------------
> 发件人:[email protected]
> 发送日期:2016-04-11 20:07
> 收件人:Msys2
> 抄送:
> 主题:Re: [Msys2-users] Windows version define: why so low,
>   or what is the recommendation?
>
> This is strange, I have old programs I built with MinGW-32 who required a 
> flag such as "-DWIN_VER=0x400", but I can't find any WIN_VER in the header 
> files, was this macro droped away?
>
> ----- Mail original -----
>
> De: "lh_mouse" <[email protected]>
> À: "Msys2" <[email protected]>
> Envoyé: Lundi 11 Avril 2016 05:06:05
> Objet: Re: [Msys2-users] Windows version define: why so low, or what is the 
> recommendation?
>
> Read the following article on MSDN about _WIN32_WINNT:
> https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa383745(v=vs.85).aspx#setting_winver_or__win32_winnt
>
> A specific version of Windows SDK from Microsoft has _WIN32_WINNT defined as 
> the highest version number that that SDK supports if it is not defined by the 
> user.
> For example, if you have Windows SDK v7.1 (for Windows Server 2008) and do 
> not define _WIN32_WINNT, the headers will act as if you defined it as 0x0601.
>
> The mingw-w64 version, IIRC, has _WIN32_WINNT defined as _WIN32_WINNT_WS03 
> (that is, 0x0502) by default. But their headers do support a lot of new 
> functions since Vista.
> The reason why they chose Windows Server 2003 as the default target might be 
> that they didn't want to drop XP support.
> And according to the MSDN article above, defining _WIN32_WINNT as 0x0501 
> would drop some contents that have been added since XP SP1.
>
> The solution is simple: having your CPPFLAGS include '-D_WIN32_WINNT=0x0600' 
> would do the trick.
> Double note, it is 'CPPFLAGS' that should include C Pre-Processor options.
>
> ------------------
> Best regards,
> lh_mouse
> 2016-04-11
>
> -------------------------------------------------------------
> 发件人:Mario Emmenlauer <[email protected]>
> 发送日期:2016-04-11 05:17
> 收件人:msys2-users
> 抄送:
> 主题:[Msys2-users] Windows version define: why so low,
> or what is the recommendation?
>
>
> Dear All,
>
> I've run into an issue twice in the last days, so I wanted to kindly ask
> for your input. Two packages I want to use are gRPC (the Google cross
> platform RPC library) and boost::filesystem, and both require _WIN32_WINNT
> to be defined to at least 0x0600. boost::filesystem seems to support sym-
> links only when _WIN32_WINNT is defined to at least 0x0600. I did not delve
> deeply into this, but that was my take from the following report, and I've
> been plagued by the same issue:
> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/19471266/boostfilesystemcreate-symlink-not-supported
>
>
> Is _WIN32_WINNT defined by default? If yes, by whom (MSYS2, or MinGW64 gcc)?
> If its not defined by default, should packages set it via CFLAGS, or is there
> a good policy how I can compile for a specific Windows version (Vista / 
> newer)?
> Would it maybe make sense to set 0x0600 (Vista) as a default, in order to
> enable "modern" things like symlinks? Or are there still XP users left? :-)
>
> Cheers,
>
> Mario
>
>
>
>
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