Mercurial > vim
view nsis/README.txt @ 34130:2ead2e7321c8 v9.1.0028
patch 9.1.0028: win32: Ctrl-D cannot be used to close a pipe
Commit: https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/1f13fcc9342e66842bf9847d01e585ea2c2b6b30
Author: GuyBrush <miguel.barro@live.com>
Date: Sun Jan 14 20:08:40 2024 +0100
patch 9.1.0028: win32: Ctrl-D cannot be used to close a pipe
Problem: win32: Ctrl-D cannot be used to close a pipe
Solution: Properly detect Ctrl-D when reading from a pipe
(GuyBrush)
Enabling Ctrl-D for gvim pipeline input
and apply defensive programming on account of PR #12752
so that once PR 12752 is merged, CTRL-D will keep on working
closes: #13849
Signed-off-by: GuyBrush <miguel.barro@live.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
author | Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 14 Jan 2024 20:15:02 +0100 |
parents | 238f424acc6c |
children | d91ac228d7df |
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This builds a one-click install for Vim for Win32 using the Nullsoft Installation System (NSIS), available at http://nsis.sourceforge.net/ To build the installable .exe: 1. Unpack three archives: PC sources PC runtime PC language files You can generate these from the Unix sources and runtime plus the extra archive (see the Makefile in the top directory). 2. Go to the src directory and build: gvim.exe (the OLE version), vimrun.exe, install.exe, uninstall.exe, tee/tee.exe, xxd/xxd.exe, Then execute tools/rename.bat to rename the executables. (mv command is required.) 3. Go to the GvimExt directory and build gvimext.dll (or get it from a binary archive). Both 64- and 32-bit versions are needed and should be placed as follows: 64-bit: src/GvimExt/gvimext64.dll 32-bit: src/GvimExt/gvimext.dll 4. Get a "diff.exe" program. If you skip this the built-in diff will always be used (which is fine for most users). If you do have your own "diff.exe" put it in the "../.." directory (above the "vim90" directory, it's the same for all Vim versions). You can find one in previous Vim versions or in this archive: http://www.mossbayeng.com/~ron/vim/diffutils.tar.gz 5 Also put winpty32.dll and winpty-agent.exe in "../.." (above the "vim90" directory). This is required for the terminal window. 6. Do "make uganda.nsis.txt" in runtime/doc. This requires sed, you may have to do this on Unix. Make sure the file is in DOS file format! 7. Get gettext and iconv DLLs from the following site: https://github.com/mlocati/gettext-iconv-windows/releases Both 64- and 32-bit versions are needed. Download the files gettextX.X.X.X-iconvX.XX-shared-{32,64}.zip, extract DLLs and place them as follows: <GETTEXT directory> | + gettext32/ | libintl-8.dll | libiconv-2.dll | libgcc_s_sjlj-1.dll | ` gettext64/ libintl-8.dll libiconv-2.dll The default <GETTEXT directory> is "..", however, you can change it by passing /DGETTEXT=... option to the makensis command. Install NSIS if you didn't do that already. Also install UPX, if you want a compressed file. Download and include the ShellExecAsUser.dll Unicode version which can be sourced from: https://nsis.sourceforge.io/ShellExecAsUser_plug-in Unpack the images: cd nsis unzip icons.zip Then build gvim.exe: cd nsis makensis gvim.nsi