libiio Windows binary snapshot - README ********************************************************************* * The latest version of this snapshot can always be downloaded at: * * https://github.com/analogdevicesinc/libiio * ********************************************************************* In this archive, you should find the following directories: o ./include : Common include files o ./MinGW32 : 32-bit binaries compiled by the MinGW toolchain o ./MinGW64 : 64-bit binaries compiled by the MinGW toolchain o ./MS32 : 32-bit binaries compiled by the MicroSoft toolchain o ./MS64 : 364bit binaries compiled by the MicroSoft toolchain o Visual Studio: - Open existing or create a new project for your application - Copy iio.h, from the include\ directory, into your project and make sure that the location where the file reside appears in the 'Additional Include Directories' section (Configuration Properties -> C/C++ -> General). - Copy the relevant .lib file from MS32\ or MS64\ and add 'libiio.lib' to your 'Additional Dependencies' (Configuration Properties -> Linker -> Input) Also make sure that the directory where libiio.lib resides is added to 'Additional Library Directories' (Configuration Properties -> Linker -> General) - If you use the static version of the libiio library, make sure that 'Runtime Library' is set to 'Multi-threaded DLL (/MD)' (Configuration Properties -> C/C++ -> Code Generation). - Compile and run your application. If you use the DLL version of libiio, remember that you need to have a copy of the DLL either in the runtime directory or in system32 o WDK/DDK: - The following is an example of a sources files that you can use to compile a libiio 1.0 based console application. In this sample ..\libiio\ is the directory where you would have copied libiio.h as well as the relevant libiio.lib TARGETNAME=your_app TARGETTYPE=PROGRAM USE_MSVCRT=1 UMTYPE=console INCLUDES=..\libiio;$(DDK_INC_PATH) TARGETLIBS=..\libiio\libiio.lib SOURCES=your_app.c o MinGW/cygwin - Copy libiio.h, from include/ to your default include directory, and copy the MinGW32/ or MinGW64/ .a files to your default library directory. Or, if you don't want to use the default locations, make sure that you feed the relevant -I and -L options to the compiler. - Add the '-liio' linker option when compiling. o Additional information: - The libiio API documentation can be accessed at: http://analogdevicesinc.github.io/libiio/ - For some libiio samples (including source), please have a look in examples/ and tests/ directories - The MinGW and MS generated DLLs are fully interchangeable, provided that you use the import libs provided or generate one from the .def also provided. - If you find any issue, please visit http://analogdevicesinc.github.io/libiio/ and check the Issues section