| # Notes On Compiling SQLite On Windows 11 | |
| Here are step-by-step instructions on how to build SQLite from | |
| canonical source on a new Windows 11 PC, as of 2024-10-09: | |
| 1. Install Microsoft Visual Studio. The free "community edition" | |
| will work fine. Do a standard install for C++ development. | |
| SQLite only needs the | |
| "cl" compiler and the "nmake" build tool. | |
| 2. Under the "Start" menu, find "All Apps" then go to "Visual Studio 20XX" | |
| and find "x64 Native Tools Command Prompt for VS 20XX". Pin that | |
| application to your task bar, as you will use it a lot. Bring up | |
| an instance of this command prompt and do all of the subsequent steps | |
| in that "x64 Native Tools" command prompt. (Or use "x86" if you want | |
| a 32-bit build.) The subsequent steps will not work in a vanilla | |
| DOS prompt. Nor will they work in PowerShell. | |
| 3. *(Optional):* Install TCL development libraries. | |
| This note assumes that you will | |
| install the TCL development libraries in the "`c:\Tcl`" directory. | |
| Make adjustments | |
| if you want TCL installed somewhere else. SQLite needs both the | |
| "tclsh90.exe" command-line tool as part of the build process, and | |
| the "tcl90.lib" and "tclstub.lib" libraries in order to run tests. | |
| This document assumes you are working with TCL version 9.0. | |
| See versions of this document from prior to 2024-10-10 for | |
| instructions on how to build using TCL version 8.6. | |
| <ol type="a"> | |
| <li>Get the TCL source archive, perhaps from | |
| <https://www.tcl.tk/software/tcltk/download.html> | |
| or <https://sqlite.org/tmp/tcl9.0.0.tar.gz>. | |
| <li>Untar or unzip the source archive. CD into the "win/" subfolder | |
| of the source tree. | |
| <li>Run: `nmake /f makefile.vc release` | |
| <li>Run: `nmake /f makefile.vc INSTALLDIR=c:\Tcl install` | |
| <li><i>Optional:</i> CD to `c:\Tcl\bin` and make a copy of | |
| `tclsh90.exe` over into just `tclsh.exe`. | |
| <li><i>Optional:</i> | |
| Add `c:\Tcl\bin` to your %PATH%. To do this, go to Settings | |
| and search for "path". Select "edit environment variables for | |
| your account" and modify your default PATH accordingly. | |
| You will need to close and reopen your command prompts after | |
| making this change. | |
| </ol> | |
| As of 2024-10-25, TCL is not longer required for many | |
| common build targets, such as "sqlite3.c" or the "sqlite3.exe" | |
| command-line tool. So you can skip this step if that is all | |
| you want to build. TCL is still required to run "make test" | |
| and similar, or to build the TCL extension, of course. | |
| 4. Download the SQLite source tree and unpack it. CD into the | |
| toplevel directory of the source tree. | |
| 5. Run the "`Makefile.msc`" makefile with an appropriate target. | |
| Examples: | |
| <ul> | |
| <li> `nmake /f makefile.msc` | |
| <li> `nmake /f makefile.msc sqlite3.c` | |
| <li> `nmake /f makefile.msc sqlite3.exe` | |
| <li> `nmake /f makefile.msc sqldiff.exe` | |
| <li> `nmake /f makefile.msc sqlite3_rsync.exe` | |
| </ul> | |
| <p>No TCL is required for the nmake targets above. But for the ones | |
| that follow, you will need a TCL installation, as described in step 3 | |
| above. If you install TCL in some directory other than C:\\Tcl, then | |
| you will also need to add the "TCLDIR=<i><dir></i>" option on the | |
| nmake command line to tell nmake where your TCL is installed. | |
| <ul> | |
| <li> `nmake /f makefile.msc tclextension-install` | |
| <li> `nmake /f makefile.msc devtest` | |
| <li> `nmake /f makefile.msc releasetest` | |
| <li> `nmake /f makefile.msc sqlite3_analyzer.exe` | |
| </ul> | |
| It is not required that you run the "tclextension-install" target prior to | |
| running tests. However, the tests will run more smoothly if you do. | |
| The version of SQLite used for the TCL extension does *not* need to | |
| correspond to the version of SQLite under test. So you can install the | |
| SQLite TCL extension once, and then use it to test many different versions | |
| of SQLite. | |
| 7. For a debugging build of the CLI, where the ".treetrace" and ".wheretrace" | |
| commands work, add the DEBUG=3 argument to nmake. Like this: | |
| <ul> | |
| <li> `nmake /f makefile.msc DEBUG=3 clean sqlite3.exe` | |
| </ul> | |
| ## 32-bit Builds | |
| Doing a 32-bit build is just like doing a 64-bit build with the | |
| following minor changes: | |
| 1. Use the "x86 Native Tools Command Prompt" instead of | |
| "x64 Native Tools Command Prompt". "**x86**" instead of "**x64**". | |
| 2. Use a different installation directory for TCL. | |
| The recommended directory is `c:\tcl32`. Thus you end up | |
| with two TCL builds: | |
| <ul> | |
| <li> `c:\tcl` ← 64-bit (the default) | |
| <li> `c:\tcl32` ← 32-bit | |
| </ul> | |
| 3. Ensure that `c:\tcl32\bin` comes before `c:\tcl\bin` on | |
| your PATH environment variable. You can achieve this using | |
| a command like: | |
| <ul> | |
| <li> `set PATH=c:\tcl32\bin;%PATH%` | |
| </ul> | |
| ## Building a DLL | |
| The command the developers use for building the deliverable DLL on the | |
| [download page](https://sqlite.org/download.html) is as follows: | |
| > ~~~~ | |
| nmake /f Makefile.msc sqlite3.dll USE_NATIVE_LIBPATHS=1 "OPTS=-DSQLITE_ENABLE_FTS3=1 -DSQLITE_ENABLE_FTS4=1 -DSQLITE_ENABLE_FTS5=1 -DSQLITE_ENABLE_RTREE=1 -DSQLITE_ENABLE_JSON1=1 -DSQLITE_ENABLE_GEOPOLY=1 -DSQLITE_ENABLE_SESSION=1 -DSQLITE_ENABLE_PREUPDATE_HOOK=1 -DSQLITE_ENABLE_SERIALIZE=1 -DSQLITE_ENABLE_MATH_FUNCTIONS=1" | |
| ~~~~ | |
| That command generates both the sqlite3.dll and sqlite3.def files. The same | |
| command works for both 32-bit and 64-bit builds. | |
| ## Statically Linking The TCL Library | |
| Some utility programs associated with SQLite need to be linked | |
| with TCL in order to function. The [sqlite3_analyzer.exe program](https://sqlite.org/sqlanalyze.html) | |
| is an example. You can build as described above, and then | |
| enter: | |
| > ~~~~ | |
| nmake /f Makefile.msc sqlite3_analyzer.exe | |
| ~~~~ | |
| And you will end up with a working executable. However, that executable | |
| will depend on having the "tcl98.dll" library somewhere on your %PATH%. | |
| Use the following steps to build an executable that has the TCL library | |
| statically linked so that it does not depend on separate DLL: | |
| 1. Use the appropriate "Command Prompt" window - either x86 or | |
| x64, depending on whether you want a 32-bit or 64-bit executable. | |
| 2. Untar the TCL source tarball into a fresh directory. CD into | |
| the "win/" subfolder. | |
| 3. Run: `nmake /f makefile.vc OPTS=static shell` | |
| 4. CD into the "Release*" subfolder that is created (note the | |
| wildcard - the full name of the directory might vary). There | |
| you will find the "tcl90s.lib" file. Copy this file into the | |
| same directory that you put the "tcl90.lib" on your initial | |
| installation. (In this document, that directory is | |
| "`C:\Tcl32\lib`" for 32-bit builds and | |
| "`C:\Tcl\lib`" for 64-bit builds.) | |
| 5. CD into your SQLite source code directory and build the desired | |
| utility program, but add the following extra argument to the | |
| nmake command line: | |
| <blockquote><pre> | |
| STATICALLY_LINK_TCL=1 | |
| </pre></blockquote> | |
| <p>So, for example, to build a statically linked version of | |
| sqlite3_analyzer.exe, you might type: | |
| <blockquote><pre> | |
| nmake /f Makefile.msc STATICALLY_LINK_TCL=1 sqlite3_analyzer.exe | |
| </pre></blockquote> | |
| 6. After your executable is built, you can verify that it does not | |
| depend on the TCL DLL by running: | |
| <blockquote><pre> | |
| dumpbin /dependents sqlite3_analyzer.exe | |
| </pre></blockquote> | |