Sets construction variables for Microsoft Visual Studio.
MSVSPROJECTCOM
MSVSSOLUTIONCOM
MSVSSCONSCRIPT
MSVSSCONS
MSVSSCONSFLAGS
MSVSSCONSCOM
MSVSBUILDCOM
MSVSREBUILDCOM
MSVSCLEANCOM
MSVSENCODING
Builds a Microsoft Visual Studio project file,
and by default builds a solution file as well.
This builds a Visual Studio project file, based on the version of
Visual Studio that is configured (either the latest installed version,
or the version specified by
&cv-link-MSVS_VERSION;
in the Environment constructor).
For Visual Studio 6, it will generate a
.dsp
file.
For Visual Studio 7 (.NET) and later versions, it will generate a
.vcproj
file.
By default,
this also generates a solution file
for the specified project,
a
.dsw
file for Visual Studio 6
or a
.sln
file for Visual Studio 7 (.NET).
This behavior may be disabled by specifying
auto_build_solution=0
when you call
&b-MSVSProject;,
in which case you presumably want to
build the solution file(s)
by calling the
&b-MSVSSolution;
Builder (see below).
The &b-MSVSProject; builder
takes several lists of filenames
to be placed into the project file.
These are currently limited to
srcs,
incs,
localincs,
resources,
and
misc.
These are pretty self-explanatory, but it should be noted that these
lists are added to the &cv-link-SOURCES; construction variable as strings,
NOT as SCons File Nodes. This is because they represent file
names to be added to the project file, not the source files used to
build the project file.
The above filename lists are all optional,
although at least one must be specified
for the resulting project file to be non-empty.
In addition to the above lists of values,
the following values may be specified:
target:
The name of the target
.dsp
or
.vcproj
file.
The correct
suffix for the version of Visual Studio must be used,
but the
&cv-link-MSVSPROJECTSUFFIX;
construction variable
will be defined to the correct value (see example below).
variant:
The name of this particular variant.
For Visual Studio 7 projects,
this can also be a list of variant names.
These are typically things like "Debug" or "Release", but really
can be anything you want.
For Visual Studio 7 projects,
they may also specify a target platform
separated from the variant name by a
|
(vertical pipe)
character:
Debug|Xbox.
The default target platform is Win32.
Multiple calls to
&b-MSVSProject;
with different variants are allowed;
all variants will be added to the project file with their appropriate
build targets and sources.
buildtarget:
An optional string, node, or list of strings or nodes
(one per build variant), to tell the Visual Studio debugger
what output target to use in what build variant.
The number of
buildtarget
entries must match the number of
variant
entries.
runfile:
The name of the file that Visual Studio 7 and later
will run and debug.
This appears as the value of the
Output
field in the resutling Visual Studio project file.
If this is not specified,
the default is the same as the specified
buildtarget
value.
Note that because &SCons; always executes its build commands
from the directory in which the &SConstruct; file is located,
if you generate a project file in a different directory
than the &SConstruct; directory,
users will not be able to double-click
on the file name in compilation error messages
displayed in the Visual Studio console output window.
This can be remedied by adding the
Visual C/C++
/FC
compiler option to the &cv-link-CCFLAGS; variable
so that the compiler will print
the full path name of any
files that cause compilation errors.
Example usage:
barsrcs = ['bar.cpp'],
barincs = ['bar.h'],
barlocalincs = ['StdAfx.h']
barresources = ['bar.rc','resource.h']
barmisc = ['bar_readme.txt']
dll = env.SharedLibrary(target = 'bar.dll',
source = barsrcs)
env.MSVSProject(target = 'Bar' + env['MSVSPROJECTSUFFIX'],
srcs = barsrcs,
incs = barincs,
localincs = barlocalincs,
resources = barresources,
misc = barmisc,
buildtarget = dll,
variant = 'Release')
Builds a Microsoft Visual Studio solution file.
This builds a Visual Studio solution file,
based on the version of Visual Studio that is configured
(either the latest installed version,
or the version specified by
&cv-link-MSVS_VERSION;
in the construction environment).
For Visual Studio 6, it will generate a
.dsw
file.
For Visual Studio 7 (.NET), it will
generate a
.sln
file.
The following values must be specified:
target:
The name of the target .dsw or .sln file. The correct
suffix for the version of Visual Studio must be used, but the value
&cv-link-MSVSSOLUTIONSUFFIX;
will be defined to the correct value (see example below).
variant:
The name of this particular variant, or a list of variant
names (the latter is only supported for MSVS 7 solutions). These are
typically things like "Debug" or "Release", but really can be anything
you want. For MSVS 7 they may also specify target platform, like this
"Debug|Xbox". Default platform is Win32.
projects:
A list of project file names, or Project nodes returned by calls to the
&b-MSVSProject;
Builder,
to be placed into the solution file.
It should be noted that these file names are NOT added to the $SOURCES
environment variable in form of files, but rather as strings. This
is because they represent file names to be added to the solution file,
not the source files used to build the solution file.
Example Usage:
env.MSVSSolution(target = 'Bar' + env['MSVSSOLUTIONSUFFIX'],
projects = ['bar' + env['MSVSPROJECTSUFFIX']],
variant = 'Release')
When the Microsoft Visual Studio tools are initialized, they set up
this dictionary with the following keys:
VERSION:
the version of MSVS being used (can be set via
&cv-link-MSVS_VERSION;)
VERSIONS:
the available versions of MSVS installed
VCINSTALLDIR:
installed directory of Visual C++
VSINSTALLDIR:
installed directory of Visual Studio
FRAMEWORKDIR:
installed directory of the .NET framework
FRAMEWORKVERSIONS:
list of installed versions of the .NET framework, sorted latest to oldest.
FRAMEWORKVERSION:
latest installed version of the .NET framework
FRAMEWORKSDKDIR:
installed location of the .NET SDK.
PLATFORMSDKDIR:
installed location of the Platform SDK.
PLATFORMSDK_MODULES:
dictionary of installed Platform SDK modules,
where the dictionary keys are keywords for the various modules, and
the values are 2-tuples where the first is the release date, and the
second is the version number.
If a value isn't set, it wasn't available in the registry.
Sets the architecture for which the generated project(s) should build.
The default value is x86.
amd64 is also supported
by &SCons; for some Visual Studio versions.
Trying to set &cv-MSVS_ARCH; to an architecture that's not
supported for a given Visual Studio version
will generate an error.
The string
placed in a generated Microsoft Visual Studio project file
as the value of the
ProjectGUID
attribute.
There is no default value. If not defined, a new GUID is generated.
The path name
placed in a generated Microsoft Visual Studio project file
as the value of the
SccAuxPath
attribute
if the
MSVS_SCC_PROVIDER
construction variable is also set.
There is no default value.
The root path of projects in your SCC workspace, i.e the path under which
all project and solution files will be generated. It is used as a
reference path from which the relative paths of the generated
Microsoft Visual Studio project and solution files are computed.
The relative project file path is placed as the value of the
SccLocalPath
attribute
of the project file
and as the values of the
SccProjectFilePathRelativizedFromConnection[i]
(where [i] ranges from 0 to the number of projects in the solution)
attributes of the
GlobalSection(SourceCodeControl)
section of the Microsoft Visual Studio solution file.
Similarly the relative solution file path is placed as the values of the
SccLocalPath[i]
(where [i] ranges from 0 to the number of projects in the solution)
attributes of the
GlobalSection(SourceCodeControl)
section of the Microsoft Visual Studio solution file.
This is used only
if the
MSVS_SCC_PROVIDER
construction variable is also set.
The default value is the current working directory.
The project name
placed in a generated Microsoft Visual Studio project file
as the value of the
SccProjectName
attribute
if the
MSVS_SCC_PROVIDER
construction variable is also set.
In this case the string is also placed in the
SccProjectName0
attribute of the
GlobalSection(SourceCodeControl)
section of the Microsoft Visual Studio solution file.
There is no default value.
The string
placed in a generated Microsoft Visual Studio project file
as the value of the
SccProvider
attribute.
The string is also placed in the
SccProvider0
attribute of the
GlobalSection(SourceCodeControl)
section of the Microsoft Visual Studio solution file.
There is no default value.
Sets the preferred version of Microsoft Visual Studio to use.
If &cv-MSVS_VERSION; is not set,
&SCons; will (by default) select the latest version
of Visual Studio installed on your system.
So, if you have version 6 and version 7 (MSVS .NET) installed,
it will prefer version 7.
You can override this by
specifying the
MSVS_VERSION
variable in the Environment initialization, setting it to the
appropriate version ('6.0' or '7.0', for example).
If the specified version isn't installed,
tool initialization will fail.
This is obsolete: use &cv-MSVC_VERSION; instead. If &cv-MSVS_VERSION; is set and
&cv-MSVC_VERSION; is not, &cv-MSVC_VERSION; will be set automatically to &cv-MSVS_VERSION;.
If both are set to different values, scons will raise an error.
The build command line placed in
a generated Microsoft Visual Studio project file.
The default is to have Visual Studio invoke SCons with any specified
build targets.
The clean command line placed in
a generated Microsoft Visual Studio project file.
The default is to have Visual Studio invoke SCons with the -c option
to remove any specified targets.
The encoding string placed in
a generated Microsoft Visual Studio project file.
The default is encoding
Windows-1252.
The action used to generate Microsoft Visual Studio project files.
The suffix used for Microsoft Visual Studio project (DSP) files.
The default value is
.vcproj
when using Visual Studio version 7.x (.NET)
or later version,
and
.dsp
when using earlier versions of Visual Studio.
The rebuild command line placed in
a generated Microsoft Visual Studio project file.
The default is to have Visual Studio invoke SCons with any specified
rebuild targets.
The SCons used in generated Microsoft Visual Studio project files.
The default is the version of SCons being
used to generate the project file.
The SCons flags used in generated Microsoft Visual Studio
project files.
The default SCons command used in generated Microsoft Visual Studio
project files.
The sconscript file
(that is,
&SConstruct;
or
&SConscript;
file)
that will be invoked by Visual Studio
project files
(through the
&cv-link-MSVSSCONSCOM;
variable).
The default is the same sconscript file
that contains the call to
&b-MSVSProject;
to build the project file.
The action used to generate Microsoft Visual Studio solution files.
The suffix used for Microsoft Visual Studio solution (DSW) files.
The default value is
.sln
when using Visual Studio version 7.x (.NET),
and
.dsw
when using earlier versions of Visual Studio.
The (optional) path to the SCons library directory,
initialized from the external environment.
If set, this is used to construct a shorter and more
efficient search path in the
&cv-link-MSVSSCONS;
command line executed
from Microsoft Visual Studio project files.