From a15cf65c44d5c224169c32ef5495b68c758134b7 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?UTF-8?q?J=C3=B6rg=20Frings-F=C3=BCrst?= Date: Sun, 18 May 2014 16:08:14 +0200 Subject: Imported Upstream version 3.3.0.2 --- xsd/dist/README-WINDOWS | 212 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 212 insertions(+) create mode 100644 xsd/dist/README-WINDOWS (limited to 'xsd/dist/README-WINDOWS') diff --git a/xsd/dist/README-WINDOWS b/xsd/dist/README-WINDOWS new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d2e3925 --- /dev/null +++ b/xsd/dist/README-WINDOWS @@ -0,0 +1,212 @@ +This package contains precompiled binaries of CodeSynthesis XSD, a +W3C XML Schema to C++ Data Binding compiler, built for Microsoft +Windows. For more information about XSD visit + +http://www.codesynthesis.com/products/xsd/ + +This README file describes how to start using XSD in the Microsoft +Windows environment with Visual Studio .NET 2003 (7.1), Visual Studio +2005 (8.0), Visual Studio 2008 (9.0), and Visual Studio 2010 (10.0). + + +Prerequisites +------------- + +The XSD runtime library and the generated code depend on the Xerces-C++ +XML parser which you can obtain from http://xerces.apache.org/xerces-c/. +You can also download precompiled Xerces-C++ libraries for Windows from +http://xerces.apache.org/xerces-c/download.cgi + + +Environment +----------- + +Before you can start building examples or your applications that use XSD +you need to set include, library and executable search paths in the Visual +Studio IDE and the System Environment. + +1. Setting up Xerces-C++ + + First you need to set up Xerces-C++ include and library search paths. + If you already have Xerces-C++ set up in your development environment, + you can skip to the next step. Here we assume that your Xerces-C++ path + is C:\projects\xerces-c-x.y.z. If you have Xerces-C++ in a different + place, you will need to adjust the paths below accordingly. + + + a) For Visual Studio .NET 2003 (7.1): + + In the Visual Studio IDE, select "Tools"/"Options"/"Projects"/"VC++ + Directories". + + Then, in the "Show directories for" field, select "Include files" and + create a new entry with the value "C:\projects\xerces-c-x.y.z\include". + + After that, in the "Show directories for" field, select "Library files" + and create a new entry with the value "C:\projects\xerces-c-x.y.z\lib". + + After that, in the "Show directories for" field, select "Executable files" + and create a new entry with the value "C:\projects\xerces-c-x.y.z\bin". + + For Visual Studio 2005 (8.0) and Visual Studio 2008 (9.0): + + In the Visual Studio IDE, select "Tools"/"Options"/"Projects and + Solution"/"VC++ Directories". + + Then, in the "Show directories for" field, select "Include files" and + create a new entry with the value "C:\projects\xerces-c-x.y.z\include". + + After that, in the "Show directories for" field, select "Library files" + and create a new entry with the value "C:\projects\xerces-c-x.y.z\lib". + + After that, in the "Show directories for" field, select "Executable files" + and create a new entry with the value "C:\projects\xerces-c-x.y.z\bin". + + If you are building the 64-bit version of your application, repeat the + above steps for the 64-bit version of Xerces-C++ while selecting x64 + in the "Platform" drop-down list in the VC++ Directories dialog (Visual + Studio keeps a separate set of paths for each platform). + + For Visual Studio 2010 (10.0): + + 1. Open an existing or create a new C++ project (you can open one of + the example solutions) + + 2. Open the Property Manager view by selecting "View"->"Property + Manager" (or "View"->"Other Windows"->"Property Manager") menu + action + + 3. Expand the property hierarchy for the project and find the + Microsoft.Cpp.Win32.user property sheet + + 4. Right click on Microsoft.Cpp.Win32.user and select the "Properties" + menu action + + 5. Select the VC++ Directories tab + + 6. Add the "C:\projects\xerces-c-x.y.z\include" path to the "Include + Directories" field (the paths are separated by a semicolon) + + 7. Add the "C:\projects\xerces-c-x.y.z\lib" path to the "Library + Directories" field + + 8. Add the "C:\projects\xerces-c-x.y.z\bin" path to the "Executable + Directories" field + + 9. Click Ok to close the dialog and then click the Save button at the + top of the Property Manager view to save Microsoft.Cpp.Win32.user + + If you are building the 64-bit version of your application, repeat + the above steps for the 64-bit version of Xerces-C++ but using the + Microsoft.Cpp.x64.user property sheet (Visual Studio keeps a separate + set of paths for each platform). + + + b) In the Control Panel, choose "System" and select the "Advanced" tab. + Click on the "Environment Variables" button. In the "System Variables" + list, select "Path" and add (via "Edit" button) the + ";C:\projects\xerces-c-x.y.z\bin" path at the end. + + +2. Setting up XSD + + Now you need to set up XSD executable and include search paths. Here we + assume that your XSD path is C:\projects\xsd-x.y.z. If you have XSD in + a different place, you will need to adjust the paths below accordingly. + + For Visual Studio .NET 2003 (7.1): + + In the Visual Studio IDE, select "Tools"/"Options"/"Projects"/"VC++ + Directories". + + Then, in the "Show directories for" field, select "Include files" and + create a new entry with the value "C:\projects\xsd-x.y.z\libxsd". + + After that, in the "Show directories for" field, select "Executable + files" and create a new entry with the value "C:\projects\xsd-x.y.z\bin". + Make sure it is the first line in the list of directories (use the + "Up" button to move the new entry up, if necessary). + + For Visual Studio 2005 (8.0) and Visual Studio 2008 (9.0): + + In the Visual Studio IDE, select "Tools"/"Options"/"Projects and + Solution"/"VC++ Directories". + + Then, in the "Show directories for" field, select "Include files" and + create a new entry with the value "C:\projects\xsd-x.y.z\libxsd". + + After that, in the "Show directories for" field, select "Executable + files" and create a new entry with the value "C:\projects\xsd-x.y.z\bin". + Make sure it is the first line in the list of directories (use the + "Up" button to move the new entry up, if necessary). + + If you are building the 64-bit version of your application, repeat the + above steps using the same paths while selecting x64 in the "Platform" + drop-down list in the VC++ Directories dialog (Visual Studio keeps a + separate set of paths for each platform). + + For Visual Studio 2010 (10.0): + + 1. Open an existing or create a new C++ project (you can open one of + the example solutions) + + 2. Open the Property Manager view by selecting "View"->"Property + Manager" (or "View"->"Other Windows"->"Property Manager") menu + action + + 3. Expand the property hierarchy for the project and find the + Microsoft.Cpp.Win32.user property sheet + + 4. Right click on Microsoft.Cpp.Win32.user and select the "Properties" + menu action + + 5. Select the VC++ Directories tab + + 6. Add the "C:\projects\xsd-x.y.z\libxsd" path to the "Include + Directories" field (the paths are separated by a semicolon) + + 7. Add the "C:\projects\xsd-x.y.z\bin" path to the "Executable + Directories" field and make sure it is the first path in the + the list of directories + + 8. Click Ok to close the dialog and then click the Save button at the + top of the Property Manager view to save Microsoft.Cpp.Win32.user + + If you are building the 64-bit version of your application, repeat the + above steps using the same paths but using the Microsoft.Cpp.x64.user + property sheet (Visual Studio keeps a separate set of paths for each + platform). + + +3. Restart the Visual Studio IDE. + + +Building Examples +----------------- + +Now you are ready to build examples. Simply open the solution file +found in the examples\cxx\tree and examples\cxx\parser directories. + +Some of the examples depend on additional third-party libraries or +show a specific feature of XSD and are not included in the solutions +above. They come with their individual solution files: + +examples/cxx/tree/embedded - example of schema embedding +examples/cxx/tree/custom - examples of type customization +examples/cxx/tree/custom/calendar - depends on the Boost date_time library +examples/cxx/tree/compression - depends on the zlib library +examples/cxx/tree/binary/boost - depends on the Boost serialization library +examples/cxx/tree/binary/cdr - depends on the ACE library +examples/cxx/tree/binary/xdr - requires a third-party XDR library +examples/cxx/tree/xpath - depends on the XQilla library (XPath 2) +examples/cxx/tree/dbxml - depends on the Berkeley DB XML library + + +Using XSD in Your Projects +-------------------------- + +For various ways to integrate the XSD compiler with the Visual Studio IDE +as well as other Visual Studio-specific topics, refer to the Using XSD with +Microsoft Visual Studio Wiki page: + +http://wiki.codesynthesis.com/Using_XSD_with_Microsoft_Visual_Studio -- cgit v1.2.3