Hi,
I have no experience in crosscompiling. It would be a nice feature for
me, but if it is not available it is not a real problem (for me). I
don't feel confident that I can provide any helpful support on that matter.
My question was only to get some information if the crosscompiling
linux->w
Hi,
On Mon, Jan 15, 2024 at 02:08:11PM +0100, drei97 wrote:
> is it planned to bring this on the agenda again? The mingw support was
> dropped quite 7 years ago, maybe there is some progress.
>
> On the other hand, it will come with huge amount of work, I know!
One constructive approach here is
Hi,
Am 15.01.24 um 08:45 schrieb Miklos Vajna:
Hi Joachim,
For building on Linux for Windows: we tried that in the past (mingw) and
it didn't really work out, see core.git commit
8646ab97dc37c0606b19057686bf3d610f9c15ee (Remove MinGW support,
2017-02-10) for more details.
BTW: As far as I un
is it planned to bring this on the agenda again? The mingw support was
dropped quite 7 years ago, maybe there is some progress.
On the other hand, it will come with huge amount of work, I know!
Am 15.01.24 um 08:45 schrieb Miklos Vajna:
For building on Linux for Windows: we tried that in the
It is not really straight forward to start Linux to run Windows in a VM
to work in a cygwin environment.
This is the way!
Am 15.01.24 um 08:45 schrieb Miklos Vajna:
Hi Joachim,
On Sun, Jan 14, 2024 at 05:51:20PM +0100, drei97 wrote:
Nevertheless, I am wondering if there is documentation a
Hi Joachim,
On Sun, Jan 14, 2024 at 05:51:20PM +0100, drei97 wrote:
> Nevertheless, I am wondering if there is documentation about
> crosscompiling. My main system is Ubuntu and I probably need a LO build
> for windows. That's why I am running a VM.
README.cross has some documentation on cross-c
Hi,
may be some of you have already noticed that I am actually playing
around compiling LO as a first step.
Buildung on linux is easy, on windows more complicated. The compiler is
still running and I have no hint when it will be finished. It is
running in a VM, ...
Nevertheless, I am wonde