Guide to Building HandBrake 20160130110114-6a00e46-master (2016013001) on MinGW-W64
***********************************************************************************

1 Introduction
2 Prerequisites
3 QuickStart
4 Overview
5 Building via Terminal
5.1 Checkout Sources
5.2 Configure
5.3 Build
5.4 Make Targets
  5.4.1 Global
  5.4.2 General Modules
  5.4.3 Contrib Modules
  5.4.4 Contrib Touch and Untouch
  5.4.5 Contrib Aggregates
5.5 Customizing Make
6 Troubleshooting
Appendix A Project Repository Details

1 Introduction
**************

This guide documents the recommended process to build HandBrake on
MinGW-W64 hosts from the official source-code repository.  Building from
any other source is not supported.

2 Prerequisites
***************

The following are the recommended specifications for building on
MinGW-W64; but is not necessarily the only configuration that is
possible:

   * Intel 64-bit hardware
   * MinGW-W64 on Fedora 20+, Ubuntu 14+ or Debian 7+ using gcc 4.7+
   * Official MinGW-w64 builds are recommended over those provided by
     distributions.
   * yasm 1.3 or newer
   * Please be aware libfftw3-dev can cause build failures. You currently need to remove this package if installed for HandBrake to build.

     Note: We use MinGW-w64 from
     http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw-w64/files/?source=navbar

     Please see "Toolchains targetting Win64" -> "Automated Builds" and
     choose the latest version.

     At the time of writing,
     "mingw-w64-bin_x86_64-linux_20131228.tar.bz2" is used.

     Note2: You must set the -cross flag with configure to cross compile
     with windows.  See the Example below.  Note that the cross compiler
     name varies between distributions.

     The following is an example:

     ../configure --cross=x86_64-w64-mingw32 --launch

The following general tools are used on various platforms and it is
recommended you use these versions or similar:

   * git - 2.4.3
   * python - Python 2.7.1
   * curl - curl 7.21.4 (or wget)
   * m4 - GNU M4 1.4.6
   * make - GNU Make 3.81
   * patch - Patch 2.5.8
   * tar - GNU tar 1.26
   * wget - GNU Wget 1.13.4 (or curl)

3 QuickStart
************

This chapter is for building from a terminal/shell environment in as few
commands as possible.  Upon completion of the following commands you
should have a fresh build of HandBrake.  Further instructions are
available beginning with *note overview:: which describes procedures
suitable for repeating builds.  This chapter should be skipped by those
seeking more than a minimalist build.

     git clone https://github.com/HandBrake/HandBrake.git hb-master
     cd hb-master
     ./configure --launch

The special option '--launch' selects launch mode and performs the
following steps:

   * assert scratch directory 'build/' does not exist
   * create scratch directory 'build/'
   * change to directory 'build/'
   * launch 'make'
   * capture build output to 'build/log/build.txt'
   * echo build output
   * print elapsed time
   * indicate if build ultimately succeeded or failed

4 Overview
**********

MinGW-W64 builds are performed from a terminal.  There is no support for
building from any IDEs.

5 Building via Terminal
***********************

5.1 Checkout Sources
====================

Checkout HandBrake from the official source-code repository.

     git clone https://github.com/HandBrake/HandBrake.git hb-master
     cd hb-master

Sources are checked out from the 'master' branch.  This document was
generated from that very branch, and for example purposes, we will use
exactly the same branch.

If you have write-access to the repository, then you may add the
appropriate login/password information as needed.

5.2 Configure
=============

Configure the build system.

     ./configure

Configure will automatically create a scratch build directory 'build'
unless you use GNU-style build procedures and first 'cd' to a directory
other than top-level source.  Additionally you may use '--build' to
specify the directory.  The name of the directory is arbitrary but it is
recommended to use something which indicates transient files which are
not checked into the repository.

The 'configure' utility accepts many options.  It is recommended that
you specify '--help' for the complete list of options.  The following
options are also documented here:

'--help'
     List available options.

'--src=DIR'
     Specify top-level source directory for HandBrake sources.

'--build=DIR'
     Specify destination directory for final product install.  The
     default is to use either 'build' if in the top-level source
     directory, otherwise '.'

'--prefix=DIR'
     Specify destination directory for final product install.  This
     defaults to a reasonable platform-specific value.

'--launch'
     All-in-one option which launches the build and logs output
     automatically.  Useful for novices and quick-start procedures.

'--disable-gtk'
     Disable building the GTK GUI on applicable platforms such as Linux.

'--debug=MODE'
     Select debug mode.  Must be one of 'none', 'min', 'std', 'max'.
     This generally maps to gcc options '-g0', '-g1', '-g2', '-g3'.

'--optimize=MODE'
     Select optimize mode.  Must be one of 'none', 'speed', 'size'.
     This generally maps to gcc options '-g0', '-O0', '-O3', '-Os'.

'--arch=MODE'
     Select build architecture.  The available architectures vary by
     platform.  Most platforms support exactly one architecture except
     Mac OS X which has support for various universal binary
     architectures.  The available choices are hard-coded per platform
     and no sanity checks for the required tools are performed.

'--disable-xcode'
     Disable shunting the build through 'xcodebuild'.  If this option is
     applied, 'HandBrakeCLI' will be produced in a similar fashion as it
     is on other platforms; sans Xcode and the Cocoa application will
     not be produced.  Mac OS X only.

'--xcconfig=MODE'
     Select Xcode project configuration file.  The available modes are
     the basenames of files located in 'macosx/xcconfig/*.xcconfig'
     which direct Xcode to build using various architecture and Mac OS X
     deployment options.  Mac OS X only.

Clean-room procedures dictate that when certain factors change, old
builds should be scrapped and new builds configured.  This is the main
reason for requiring a scratch directory; to promote consistent,
reliable and clean software builds.  The following is a short list of
some of the reasons why someone may choose to scrap an existing build:

   * configure with different options
   * git working dir is updated and you want configure to re-evaluate
     working dir metadata.
   * build corruption is suspected

There are generally two methods for scrapping a build.  The 'build'
directory can be recursively removed which has the effect of loosing
your existing configuration but does guarantee no residuals are left
behind.  The other method is to ask the build system to perform an 'make
xclean'.  This is known to work well but will leave empty directories
behind.  However, the configuration is left intact.

5.3 Build
=========

Build main product.  All necessary dependencies are also built if
required.

     make

Parallel builds may optionally be enabled.  Be aware that while a
parallel build may save time on systems with additional cores, the
output is often mixed, overlapped and sometimes even corrupted with
binary characters.  Thus if you experience a build issue, you should
clean and redo the build in default serial mode to produce a readable
log.  The following command allows for up to 4 concurrent jobs via make:

     make -j4

5.4 Make Targets
================

The build system supports passing many kinds of targets some of which
become very useful in normal development cycles.  The targets by
convention are lower-case words passed to 'make'.  Global targets are
one-word targets.  Scoped targets are usually two-words separated by a
period.

5.4.1 Global
------------

'make'
     Alias for 'make build'.

'make build'
     Build main product.  All necessary dependencies are also built if
     required.

'make clean'
     Clean all build output excluding contrib modules.  Configuration is
     retained.

'make install'
     Perform final product(s) install.  This will install build products
     to a standard directory or one specified via 'configure --prefix'
     option.

'make uninstall'
     Perform final product(s) uninstall.  This will uninstall any
     products which may have been previously installed.

'make xclean'
     Clean all build output including contrib modules.  Configuration is
     retained.

'make doc'
     Build auto-generated project documentation.  Various articles are
     produced and may be found in 'build/doc/articles'.

'make doc.post'
     Build auto-generated project documentation and post produced
     articles directly to source tree.

'make report.help'
     Print list of available makefile vars report targets.  These
     reports detail var definitions and expanded values used by the
     build system.  For experts only.

'make report.all'
     Convenience target which aggregates all reports.  For experts only.

5.4.2 General Modules
---------------------

General modules such as 'libhb', 'test' and 'gtk' have the following
scoped targets:

'make MODULE.build'
     Build MODULE.

'make MODULE.clean'
     Clean build output for MODULE.

5.4.3 Contrib Modules
---------------------

Contrib modules such as 'bzip2', 'ffmpeg', 'fontconfig', 'freetype',
'fribidi', 'lame', 'libass', 'libbluray', 'libdvdnav', 'libdvdread',
'libiconv', 'libogg', 'libsamplerate', 'libtheora', 'libvorbis',
'libxml2', 'x264', 'yasm' and 'zlib' have the following scoped targets:

'make MODULE.fetch'
     Download source tarball from the Internet and save to
     'TOP/downloads' directory.  No check-summing is performed.

'make MODULE.extract'
     Extract source tarball into 'build' tree.

'make MODULE.patch'
     Apply appropriate patches (if any) to module sources.

'make MODULE.configure'
     Configure module sources.  This usually invokes autotool configure.

'make MODULE.build'
     Build module.  This usually invokes autotool build.

'make MODULE.install'
     Install module products such as headers and libraries into 'build'
     tree.  This usually invokes autotool install.

'make MODULE.uninstall'
     Uninstall module products; generally the reverse of install.  This
     usually invokes autotool uninstall.

'make MODULE.clean'
     Clean module; generally the reverse of build.  This usually invokes
     autotool clean.

'make MODULE.xclean'
     Extra clean module; first invokes uninstall then recursively
     removes the module build directory.

5.4.4 Contrib Touch and Untouch
-------------------------------

Also available are some very granular targets which help force builds
from specific cycle points.  The following targets are available to
touch and untouch the respective module target; this will force the
build system to treat the target as satisfied after a touch or
unsatisfied after an untouch:

   * make MODULE.extract.touch
   * make MODULE.extract.untouch
   * make MODULE.patch.touch
   * make MODULE.patch.untouch
   * make MODULE.configure.touch
   * make MODULE.configure.untouch
   * make MODULE.build.touch
   * make MODULE.build.untouch
   * make MODULE.install.touch
   * make MODULE.install.untouch

5.4.5 Contrib Aggregates
------------------------

For convenience, the following targets aggregate the all contrib
modules' respective targets together:

   * make contrib.fetch
   * make contrib.extract
   * make contrib.patch
   * make contrib.configure
   * make contrib.build
   * make contrib.install
   * make contrib.uninstall
   * make contrib.clean
   * make contrib.xclean

5.5 Customizing Make
====================

If the need arises to override settings in the build system (essentially
gnu-make variables) the recommended method is to create optional include
files which are automatically included if present and follow this naming
convention; Do not check these files into the repository:

'_SRC_/custom.defs'
     Custom makevar definitions outside 'build'.  Suitable for settings
     which apply across all builds for a particular checkout; or which
     survives manual removal of 'build'.

'_SRC_/custom.rules'
     Custom make rules outside 'build'.  Suitable for rules which apply
     across all builds for a particular checkout; or which survives
     manual removal of 'build'.

'_BUILD_/GNUmakefile.custom.defs'
     Custom makevar definitions specific to a 'build' directory.

'_BUILD_/GNUmakefile.custom.rules'
     Custom makevar rules specific to a 'build' directory.

The purpose is to allow a place to store local build settings for
testing, tweaking, and experimenting with build configuration without
losing your settings if 'configure' is invoked; ie: 'configure' would
overwrite 'GNUmakefile' and any customizations contained therein would
be lost.  Here is a short example of what the contents of
'_SRC_/custom.defs' might contain:

     ## bump to gcc-4.6 in current path
     GCC.gcc = /usr/bin/gcc-4.6

     ## replace optimize for 'speed' with more aggressive settings
     GCC.args.O.speed = -O3 -fomit-frame-pointer -msse4.2

See also 'make report.help' which displays a set of reports used to dump
makefile vars.

6 Troubleshooting
*****************

When troubleshooting build issues, the following files relative to the
'build/' directory may be especially useful:

'GNUmakefile'
     Top-level makefile which contains build settings generated via
     configure.

'log/config.info.txt'
     Record of output from configure.

'log/config.verbose.txt'
     Record of verbose output from configure.

'log/build.txt'
     Record of output from 'configure --launch'.  Similar output may be
     recorded using 'make' depending on which shell is in use, eg: 'make
     >& log/build.txt' or 'make > log/build.txt 2>&1'.

'log/xcodemake.env.txt'
     Environment (variables) dump as seen when Xcode forks 'make'.  Mac
     OS X only.

Appendix A Project Repository Details
*************************************

     url:    https://github.com/HandBrake/HandBrake.git
     branch: master
     tag:
     rev:    6989
     hash:   6a00e46d7888cd49b6a8671784788129d8139835
     date:   2016-01-30 11:01:14
     type:   developer