Haibo Chen c5e067fb0b Upgrade libsrt to v1.5.3. v5.0.183 v6.0.81 (#3808) | 1 năm trước cách đây | |
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.gitignore | 1 năm trước cách đây | |
README.md | 1 năm trước cách đây | |
build-win-installer.ps1 | 1 năm trước cách đây | |
install-libsrt.ps1 | 1 năm trước cách đây | |
install-nsis.ps1 | 1 năm trước cách đây | |
install-openssl.ps1 | 1 năm trước cách đây | |
libsrt.nsi | 1 năm trước cách đây | |
libsrt.props | 1 năm trước cách đây |
This directory contains scripts to build a binary installer for libsrt on Windows systems for Visual Studio applications using SRT.
These first two steps need to be executed once only.
Prerequisite 1: Install OpenSSL for Windows, both 64 and 32 bits.
This can be done automatically by running the PowerShell script install-openssl.ps1
.
Prerequisite 2: Install NSIS, the NullSoft Installation Scripting system.
This can be done automatically by running the PowerShell script install-nsis.ps1
.
To build the libsrt installer, simply run the PowerShell script build-win-installer.ps1
.
Running it without parameters, for instance launching it from the Windows Explorer, is
sufficient to build the installer.
Optional parameters:
-Version name
:
Use the specified string as version number for libsrt. By default, if the
current commit has a tag, use that tag (initial "v" removed, for instance
1.4.3
). Otherwise, the defaut version is a detailed version number (most
recent version, number of commits since then, short commit SHA, for instance
1.4.3-32-g22cc924
). Use that option if necessary to specify some other
non-standard form of version string.
-NoPause
:
Do not wait for the user to press <enter>
at end of execution. By default,
execute a pause
instruction at the end of execution, which is useful
when the script was launched from Windows Explorer. Use that option when the
script is invoked from another PowerShell script.
The installer is then available in the directory installers
.
The name of the installer is libsrt-VERS.exe
where VERS
is the SRT version number
(see the -Version
option).
The installer shall then be published as a release asset in the srt
repository
on GitHub, either as libsrt-VERS.exe
or libsrt-VERS-win-installer.zip
.
In the latter case, the archive shall contain libsrt-VERS.exe
.
To install the SRT libraries, simply run the libsrt-VERS.exe
installer which is
available in the SRT release area.
After installing the libsrt binaries, an environment variable named LIBSRT
is
defined with the installation root (typically C:\Program Files (x86)\libsrt
).
If there is a need for automation, in a CI/CD pipeline for instance, the download
of the latest libsrt-VERS.exe
and its installation can be automated using the
sample PowerShell script install-libsrt.ps1
which is available in this directory.
This script may be freely copied in the user's build environment.
When run without parameters (for instance from the Windows explorer), this script downloads and installs the latest version of libsrt.
Optional parameters:
-Destination path
:
Specify a local directory where the libsrt package will be downloaded.
By default, use the tmp
subdirectory from this script's directory.
-ForceDownload
:
Force a download even if the package is already downloaded in the
destination path. Note that the latest version is always checked.
If a older package is already present but a newer one is available
online, the newer one is always downloaded, even without this option.
-GitHubActions
:
When used in a GitHub Actions workflow, make sure that the LIBSRT
environment variable is propagated to subsequent jobs. In your GitHub
workflow, in the initial setup phase, use
script-dir\install-libsrt.ps1 -GitHubActions -NoPause
.
-NoInstall
:
Do not install the package, only download it. By default, libsrt is installed.
-NoPause
:
Do not wait for the user to press <enter>
at end of execution. By default,
execute a pause
instruction at the end of execution, which is useful
when the script was launched from Windows Explorer. Use that option when the
script is invoked from another PowerShell script.
In the SRT installation root directory (specified in environment variable LIBSRT
),
there is a Visual Studio property file named libsrt.props
. Simply reference this
property file in your Visual Studio project to use libsrt.
You can also do that manually by editing the application project file (the XML
file named with a .vcxproj
extension). Add the following line just before
the end of the file:
<Import Project="$(LIBSRT)\libsrt.props"/>
With this setup, just compile your application normally, either using the Visual Studio IDE or the MSBuild command line tool.
This directory contains the following files:
File name | Usage |
---|---|
build-win-installer.ps1 | PowerShell script to build the libsrt installer. |
install-libsrt.ps1 | Sample PowerShell script to automatically install libsrt (for user's projects). |
install-openssl.ps1 | PowerShell script to install OpenSSL (prerequisite to build the installer). |
install-nsis.ps1 | PowerShell script to install NSIS (prerequisite to build the installer). |
libsrt.nsi | NSIS installation script (used to build the installer). |
libsrt.props | Visual Studio property files to use libsrt (embedded in the installer). |
README.md | This text file. |