C++ MySQL++ Tutorial
At the request of "Karthik A" I am posting an in depth tutorial on the use of VC++ & MySQL++ development. I will take you through it step by step so that you may get your applications up and running as quickly as possible. http://johnstowncomputer.com
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<p>Lets begin with what you will need.</p> <p>Pre-requisites:</p> <ul> <li>MySQL database installed to C:\mysql</li> <li>Visual C++ .NET 2003</li> <li> MinGW 5.0 [http://sourceforge.net/forum/forum.php?forum_id=539405 ] </li> <li>MySQL ++ Source 2.0.7 tarball [http://tangentsoft.net/mysql++] <br /> </li> </ul> <p>Optional Components to assist development:</p> <ul> <li>PHP & MySQL enabled web server</li> <li>phpMyAdmin to assist database management</li> </ul> <p>Lets begin. I am going to assume that you have mysql installed and running<br /> to C:\mysql and MySQL ++ extraced to C:\mysql++.</p> <p>===================================================</p> <p>Compatibility<br /> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~<br /> MySQL++ only builds under Visual C++ 7.1 (a.k.a. Visual Studio<br /> 2003, a.k.a. cl version 13.10) or later. Earlier versions did<br /> not support a sufficiently broad set of the Standard C++ language.<br /> </p> <p>About the New Build System (makemake)<br /> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<br /> As of MySQL++ v2.0, we have changed the VC++ build system over to<br /> a command-line based system, instead of Visual Studio project<br /> files. We've done this for many reasons:</p> <p> 1. Not everyone has the IDE: Microsoft has made their<br /> command-line tools available for free at various times,<br /> and these offers usually do not include the Visual<br /> Studio IDE.</p> <p> 2. Project files tend to be tied to one version of<br /> Visual Studio. Newer versions can migrate old project<br /> files, but then old versions cannot read the new files.<br /> So, each time there's a new version of Visual Studio,<br /> there's a transition period where at least two versions<br /> of the IDE are still in common use. Makefiles,<br /> by contrast, work with all versions, without changes.</p> <p> 3. Standardization: project files types proliferated<br /> in the old system, and we would frequently forget to<br /> update all of the project files when changing the<br /> corresponding autotools files. In the new system,<br /> there are only two places where build system changes<br /> need to be made: one for systems using the autotools,<br /> and one for systems using makemake.</p> <p> So, please do not ask for the Visual Studio project files to<br /> return. They cause more problems than they solve.<br /> </p> <p>Prerequisite: GNU make<br /> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<br /> The Makefiles generated by makemake require GNU make.<br /> They used to work with Microsoft's nmake, but that held us<br /> back from adding several useful features.</p> <p> We've tested with two ports of GNU make for Windows: Cygwin and<br /> MinGW.</p> <p> To get GNU make through Cygwin, go to http://cygwin.com/ and<br /> get the Cygwin setup program. GNU make isn't part of the<br /> default installation, so you will have to add it. It's in<br /> the Devel category.</p> <p> To get the MinGW version of GNU make, go to http://mingw.org/<br /> and download it directly. You shouldn't need to download<br /> anything but the GNU make package, as it should run standalone.</p> <p> Once you have done either of these, you will need to add<br /> the bin directory containing GNU make to your PATH. If you<br /> don't know how to do this, open Windows Help and search for<br /> Environment Variables.<br /> </p> <p>Building the Library and Example Programs<br /> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<br /> First, you need to open a Windows command prompt (cmd.exe).<br /> The easiest way to do this is to go into your Visual Studio<br /> program group under the Start menu and in the Tools folder<br /> find the Command Prompt item. All it does is open a command<br /> window and run a batch file called vcvars32.bat to set<br /> up the environment variables needed to run the Visual C++<br /> command-line tools. If you have a different way to open a<br /> command prompt that you prefer, you can use that and run the<br /> vcvars32.bat file by hand.</p> <p> To create the Makefiles, say "makemake vc" in the mysql++ root<br /> directory. You only have to do this once, unless you change<br /> Makefile.base or Makefile.vc.</p> <p> Now you can run GNU make to build the library and examples.<br /> If you've installed GNU make through Cygwin, the command is<br /> "make". If you're using the MinGW version of GNU make, it's<br /> "mingw32-make"[mingw32-make is the command you will use] instead.</p> <p> The build process creates debug and release versions of the MySQL++<br /> DLL, as well as import libraries for those DLLs. It's possible to<br /> create a static library, but we don't do this in the distributed<br /> Makefiles because linking to such a library is a license violation<br /> for programs not licensed under the GPL or LGPL. Using the<br /> library in DLL form avoids this problem.</p> <p> The build process also builds the example programs. They are built<br /> in debug mode. You should run the major examples to make sure<br /> the library is built correctly; see examples/README details.</p> <p> Once the library is built and you're satisfied that it's working<br /> correctly, say "install vc" [only under w32 install is a batch file that will<br /> install your release libs and DLLs to a sub directory of mysql++ ]<br /> at the project root.</p> <p> If you didn't install MySQL in c:\mysql, you will have to change<br /> Makefile.vc in the lib and examples sub directories and re-run<br /> "makemake vc". You may also look at changing these files for<br /> various other reasons, such as if you don't like the way we name<br /> the DLL file, or want the 'install' target to put the MySQL++<br /> development files somewhere other than c:\mysql++.<br /> </p> <p>Using MySQL++ in Your Own Projects<br /> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~</p> <p> Fire up VS .NET, create a Blank Solution. Add a new project.<br /> Choose Empty Project (.NET) under Visual C++ Projects. Add a<br /> .cpp file to the solution so it _knows_ it's a C/C++ solution.<br /> Go to the solution Property Pages and make the following changes.<br /> (Where it doesn't specify Debug or Release, make the change to<br /> both configurations.)</p> <p> o Under Configuration Properties::General change "Use<br /> Managed Extensions" to "No"</p> <p> o Under C/C++::General add to "Additional Include<br /> Directories": c:\mysql++\include, c:\mysql\include</p> <p> o Under C/C++::Code Generation change "Runtime Library" to<br /> "Multi-threaded Debug DLL (/MDd)" for the Debug<br /> configuration. For the Release configuration, make it<br /> "Multi-threaded DLL (/MD)".</p> <p> o Under Linker::General add to "Additional Library<br /> Directories": "c:\mysql\lib\debug, c:\mysql++\vc\debug"<br /> for the Debug configuration. For the Release configuration,<br /> make it "c:\mysql\lib\opt, c:\mysql++\vc\release"</p> <p> o Under Linker::Input add to "Additional Dependencies":<br /> "libmysql.lib wsock32.lib mysqlpp.lib"<br /> </p> <p>If You Run into Problems...<br /> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<br /> Especially if you have linking problems, make sure your project<br /> settings match the above. Visual C++ is very picky about things<br /> like run time library settings. If you still can't get things<br /> going, try running one of the example programs. If it works,<br /> the problem is likely in your project settings, not in MySQL++.</p> <p> </p> <p><strong>Final Note: To run the application ou will need to copy the<br /> proper DLL from the mysql++ directory to your debug or <br /> release folder within your visual studio project, or you may<br /> add the location to your library path. I suggest simply copying<br /> it.</strong></p> <p><strong>Providing you installed everything to the location I have specified,<br /> the paths to the important DLLs are as follows:</strong></p> <p><strong> mysqlpp.dll for debug builds :C:\mysql++\vc\debug <br /> </strong><strong>mysqlpp.dll for release builds :C:\mysql++\vc\release</strong></p> <p><strong>libmysql.dll for debug builds: C:\mysql\lib\debug<br /> libmysql.dll for release builds: C:\mysql\lib\opt</strong></p> <p> </p> <p>Please send any questions to me anytime at [email protected] </p> <p> </p>
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