create a .dll using cygwin and a .lib


 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting create a .dll using cygwin and a .lib
# 1  
Old 04-08-2007
create a .dll using cygwin and a .lib

Hi,

I inherited a .lib file that I need to use to make a .dll file from a c++ file. I am able to do this in visual studio but I can not do this using cygwin. I would like to build the dll using the commandline in order to create a make file. Can someone help me. I would really appreciate it.

Thanks
Login or Register to Ask a Question

Previous Thread | Next Thread

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

How to Create User in Cygwin??

Hi , In Unix we have the command , "useradd" command ==> To create New user and "groupadd" ==> To add New group & Updates to /etc/group and /etc/passwd files will happen automatically. How will i do the same in UNIX like environment in Windows (In Cygwin Bash promt).... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rubi
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Regarding DLL's

hello Forum members, what is internal mechanism of DLL's in Unix kernal.what is the major advantage over static libraries. Thanks & Regards Siva Ranganath (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: workforsiva
2 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

opening new instance of cygwin from withing cygwin

I'm using cygwin on win7, What I would like to do is something like this: cygstart cygwin tail -f /foo/test.log | perl -pe 's/error/\e I know I can start a new instance using either of these: mintty -e ... cygstart tail ... But neither of those open in ANSI mode, so I can't do... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Validatorian
0 Replies

4. Homework & Coursework Questions

How to create a dictionary using cygwin

1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data: Create a dictionary using cygwin. Display the following menu at the start of execution 1-add a word in the dictionary # specify the meaning 2-search a word # if word exists, show the meaning of the word 2-delete a word... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: kpopfreakghecky
2 Replies

5. Programming

Can I create a shared object by using an static lib?

for example, I have a static lib name liba.a it offers some interface such a1();a2(); but i do not have the source code of liba.a; If i would like to create a shared object, and offer the similar interface of a1 and a2; Is there a way to fulfill such requirement? thanks. (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: flost
7 Replies

6. Red Hat

ls: /lib/libattr.so.1: no version information available (required by /lib/libacl.so.1)

Hello, I'm experimenting a problem on my rh server. Red Hat Enterprise Linux AS release 3 (Taroon Update 8) 2.4.21-47.ELsmp #1 SMP i686 i686 i386 GNU/Linux It started with a segmentation fault on #id root To resolve it, I've installed coreutils-4.5.3-28.4.i386.rpm But, I... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: gogol_bordello
6 Replies

7. Programming

Create a lib from a c program

I have a function in a c program that I want to to share with other programs. How do I create a lib using the cc compiler ? (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: npires
9 Replies

8. Programming

How to link lib or Dll using gcc

I had this lib which I don't have access to the source code and is created by micosoft Visual C++ compiler ...... Right now I want to reuse this lib as part of my new project which only has gcc as the only compiler... I had the problem that the lib won't link to my other c code... my... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: yuwang
2 Replies

9. Programming

How to create .SO file (DLL)

HI, i want to create shared object file (that is .SO file it is similar to DLL in windows)...... Sarwan (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sarwan
3 Replies

10. Programming

Dll

Hello all is there any concept of DLL in UNIX if so mention the name of the library linking dynamically Bye Raj (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rajashekaran
1 Replies
Login or Register to Ask a Question
Mono(Mono 1.0)															    Mono(Mono 1.0)

NAME
mono-config - Mono runtime file format configuration DESCRIPTION
The Mono runtime will load configuration data from the installation prefix /etc/mono/config file, the ~/.mono/config or from the file pointed by the MONO_CONFIG environment variable. For each assembly loaded a config file with the name: /path/to/the/assembly.exe.config is loaded as well as the ~/.mono/assemblies/ASSEM- BLY/ASSEMBLY.EXT.config file. This file controls the behavior of the runtime. The file contains an XML-like file with various sections, all of them contained inside a section (It actually uses GMarkup to parse the file). This page describes the Unix-specific and Mono-specific extensions to the configuration file; For complete details, see the http://www.mono-project.com/Config web page. <dllmap> directive You use the dllmap directive to map shared libraries referenced by P/Invoke in your assemblies to a different shared library. This is typically used to map Windows libraries to Unix library names. The dllmap element takes two attributes: dll This should be the same string used in the DllImport attribute, optionally prefixed with "i:" to indicate that the string must be matched in a case-insensitive way target This should be the name of the library where the function can be found: this name should be suitable for use with the platform native shared library loading routines (dlopen etc.), so you may want to check the manpages for that, too. <dllentry> directive This directive can be used to map a specific dll/function pair to a different library and also a different function name. It should appear inside a dllmap element with only the dll attribute specified. The dllentry element takes 3 attributes: dll This is the target library, where the function can be found. name This is the name of the function as it appears in the metadata: it is the name of the P/Invoke method. target This is the name of the function to lookup instead of the name specified in the P/Invoke method. Mapping based on operating system and cpu Both the dllmap and the dllentry elements allow the following two attributes which make it easy to use a single configuration file and sup- port multiple operating systems and architectures with different mapping requirements: os This is the name of the operating system for which the mapping should be applied. Allowed values are: linux, osx, solaris, freebsd, openbsd, netbsd, windows, aix, hpux. cpu This is the name of the architecture for which the mapping should be applied. Allowed values are: x86, x86-64, sparc, ppc, s390, s390x, arm, mips, alpha, hppa, ia64. wordsize This is the size of registers on the target architecture, it can be either 32 or 64. The attribute value for both attributes can be a comma-separated list of the allowed values. Additionally, the first character may be a '!' to reverse the meaning. An attribute value of "!windows,osx", for example, would mean that the entry is considered on all operating sys- tems, except on Windows and OS X. No spaces are allowed in any part of the value. Note that later entries will override the entries defined earlier in the file. EXAMPLES
The following example maps references to the `cygwin1.dll' shared library to the `libc.so.6' file. <configuration> <dllmap dll="i:cygwin1.dll" target="libc.so.6"/> </configuration> The library name in the DllImport attribute is allowed to be in any case variant, like the following examples: [DllImport ("cygwin1.dll")] [DllImport ("Cygwin1.dll")] [DllImport ("cygwiN1.Dll")] This one maps the following C# method: [DllImport ("libc")] static extern void somefunction (); to differentfunction in libdifferent.so , but to the same function in the library libanother.so when running under the Solaris and FreeBSD operating systems. <configuration> <dllmap dll="libc"> <dllentry dll="libdifferent.so" name="somefunction" target="differentfunction" /> <dllentry os="solaris,freebsd" dll="libanother.so" name="somefunction" target="differentfunction" /> </dllmap> </configuration> SEE ALSO
mono(1),monodis(1),mint(1) Mono(Mono 1.0)