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mxe | seer | |
---|---|---|
9 | 60 | |
1,158 | 1,991 | |
1.4% | - | |
9.2 | 9.1 | |
7 days ago | 19 days ago | |
Makefile | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
mxe
- MXE (M Cross Environment)
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Using pybind11 with minGW to cross compile pyhton module for Windows
Cross compiler 64bit minGW along with MXE environment
- Getting “QT with MinGW support”?
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Because cross-compiling binaries for Windows is easier than building natively
I used to use MXE [1] to compile fully static Windows binaries on Linux VMs hosted with Travis. It needed to crane in everything though, so it was a source of bottlenecks from time to time. I was also uncertain about the provenance of a lot of the dependencies in that toolchain. So when Travis died I took the opportunity to move Windows builds back to gnu with msys2, all over GH Actions. These are actually comparatively snappy and I’m reasonably satisfied with it.
[1] https://mxe.cc/
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Linux-to-Windows cross-compilation using MSYS2 packages
MXE readily supports GCC 12 as a plugin (just a configuration line): https://github.com/mxe/mxe/tree/master/plugins/gcc12
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Seer - a new gui frontend to gdb/mi (Updated v1.3)
Also, if you don't have any other significant dependencies, getting the development tools on Windows is not that hard with the Qt installer. Alternatively, there is MXE.
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Writing code in Linux, but creating a program in windows.
MXE (https://mxe.cc/) is a great cross compiler environment (on linux) that uses mingw.
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Cross-compilation on a mac
You can install Docker to build on any Linux distro, and if one of those is Ubuntu then you can use https://github.com/mxe/mxe to further build for Windows. Or VirtualBox + Ubuntu + MXE.
seer
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Beej's Quick Guide to GDB (2009)
CLion uses lldb.
I wrote https://github.com/daym/idea-native2-debugger as a stop-gap. It uses gdb and works in IntelliJ IDEA Community edition. Setting it up the first time is kinda weird since you need to add a new run/debug configuration "Native2Debugger". I could not figure out how to hook this directly into the existing run configuration that you use to run your program to begin with. Otherwise, I like how it turned out.
If you want a standalone frontend, https://github.com/epasveer/seer is extremely good.
And emacs has gdb integration. By now I tried it, and... I guess it's better than nothing.
- Invariants: A Better Debugger?
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Debugging
(Shameless plug for my frontend to gdb --> https://github.com/epasveer/seer )
- Seer - a new gui frontend to gdb/mi (Updated v2.0)
- Recommendations for a visual debugger on Linux?
- github action for MacOS
- Seergdb - a gui frontend to gdb for Linux
What are some alternatives?
llvm-mingw - An LLVM/Clang/LLD based mingw-w64 toolchain
muzero-cpp - A C++ pytorch implementation of MuZero
quasi-msys2 - Cross-compile C/C++ from Linux to Windows using MSYS2 packages
Tasker - A commitment tracker desktop app that tracks the progress of your tasks with mouse, keyboard and audio hooks.
displaylink-rpm - RPM sources for the DisplayLink USB display adapters
ROCm-OpenCL-Runtime - ROCm OpenOpenCL Runtime
manylinux - Python wheels that work on any linux (almost)
avendish - declarative polyamorous cross-system intermedia objects
ded - Dramatic EDitor
AppImageKit - Package desktop applications as AppImages that run on common Linux-based operating systems, such as RHEL, CentOS, openSUSE, SLED, Ubuntu, Fedora, debian and derivatives. Join #AppImage on irc.libera.chat
glibc_version_header - Build portable Linux binaries without using an ancient distro
libriscv - C++20 RISC-V RV32/64/128 userspace emulator library