mirror of
https://github.com/fadden/ciderpress.git
synced 2024-11-29 05:49:17 +00:00
Update README to note loss of WinXP support
This commit is contained in:
parent
4235b47748
commit
e782a9df6e
33
README.md
33
README.md
@ -71,16 +71,9 @@ is not acceptable, you can remove HFS disk image support from CiderPress
|
||||
Building the Sources
|
||||
--------------------
|
||||
|
||||
The current version of CiderPress is targeted for Visual Studio 2013,
|
||||
using the WinXP compatibility Platform Toolset to allow installation on
|
||||
Windows XP systems. You should be able to select Debug or Release and
|
||||
just build the entire thing. The project files have been updated so
|
||||
that VS2015 Community Edition will accept them, but the new "universal CRT"
|
||||
causes problems with WinXP, so the build files still require the older
|
||||
set of tools.
|
||||
|
||||
If you want to use the static analyzer, you will need to change the
|
||||
Platform Toolset to straight Visual Studio 2013.
|
||||
The current version of CiderPress is targeted for Visual Studio 2019
|
||||
Community Edition (i.e. the free version). You should be able to select
|
||||
Debug or Release and just build the entire thing.
|
||||
|
||||
A pre-compiled .CHM file, with the help text and pop-up messages,
|
||||
is provided. The source files are all included, but generation of the
|
||||
@ -179,7 +172,7 @@ Files used when making a distribution, notably:
|
||||
|
||||
- the DeployMaster configuration file
|
||||
- the license and README files that are included in the installer
|
||||
- redistributable Windows runtime libraries (only needed on WinXP?)
|
||||
- redistributable Windows runtime libraries
|
||||
- NiftyList data file
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@ -221,20 +214,16 @@ are expected to build on Linux, so converting them is a bit of a pain. At
|
||||
some point it may be necessary to support Unicode fully. v4.0 did a lot of
|
||||
code reorganization to make this easier, as did NufxLib v3.0.
|
||||
|
||||
4. Windows XP support. The default Visual Studio 2013 configuration creates
|
||||
executables that do not work in Windows XP. CiderPress uses a compatibility
|
||||
toolset and packs about 5MB of additional DLLs (mfc120u.dll, msvcr120.dll) in
|
||||
the install package to keep things working. Visual Studio 2015 shipped with a
|
||||
new "Universal CRT" that requires more effort and disk space. At some point
|
||||
it may not be possible to support WinXP, or building for WinXP will prevent
|
||||
something from working. The good news is that, for the current round of
|
||||
tools, it's possible to build a single binary that works fully on WinXP and
|
||||
later systems.
|
||||
|
||||
5. Installer magic. Security improvements and changes like the Win8 "Metro"
|
||||
4. Installer magic. Security improvements and changes like the Win8 "Metro"
|
||||
launcher affect the way apps are installed and launched. So far the only
|
||||
impact on CiderPress was to the file association handling (the stuff that
|
||||
allows you to double-click a file and have CiderPress open it), but it's
|
||||
likely that future OS changes will require matching app changes. The use
|
||||
of DeployMaster is helpful here, as it has been kept up-to-date with changes
|
||||
in Windows.
|
||||
|
||||
[ENDED] Windows XP support. Starting with the Visual Studio 2013 tools,
|
||||
building an app that would work under WinXP required jumping through some
|
||||
hoops. Microsoft's support for WinXP officially ended in April 2014.
|
||||
CiderPress continued to support WinXP for several years, but support has been
|
||||
dropped due to the added testing and maintenance burdens.
|
||||
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user