Chapter 4. Programming with Cygwin

Table of Contents
Using GCC with Cygwin
Debugging Cygwin Programs
Building and Using DLLs
Defining Windows Resources

Using GCC with Cygwin

Console Mode Applications

Use gcc to compile, just like under UNIX. Refer to the GCC User's Guide for information on standard usage and options. Here's a simple example:

Example 4-1. Building Hello World with GCC

C:\cygnus\> gcc hello.c -o hello.exe
C:\cygnus\> hello.exe
Hello, World

C:\cygnus\>

GUI Mode Applications

Cygwin allows you to build programs with full access to the standard Windows 32-bit API, including the GUI functions as defined in any Microsoft or off-the-shelf publication. However, the process of building those applications is slightly different, as you'll be using the GNU tools instead of the Microsoft tools.

For the most part, your sources won't need to change at all. However, you should remove all __export attributes from functions and replace them like this:

int foo (int) __attribute__ ((__dllexport__));

int
foo (int i)

For most cases, you can just remove the __export and leave it at that. For convenience sake, you might want to include the following code snippet when compiling GUI programs. If you don't, you will want to add "-e _mainCRTStartup" to your link line in your Makefile.

#ifdef __CYGWIN__
WinMainCRTStartup() { mainCRTStartup(); }
#endif

The Makefile is similar to any other UNIX-like Makefile, and like any other Cygwin makefile. The only difference is that you use gcc -mwindows to link your program into a GUI application instead of a command-line application. Here's an example:

myapp.exe : myapp.o myapp.res
	gcc -mwindows myapp.o myapp.res -o $@

myapp.res : myapp.rc resource.h
	windres $< -O coff -o $@

Note the use of windres to compile the Windows resources into a COFF-format .res file. That will include all the bitmaps, icons, and other resources you need, into one handy object file. Normally, if you omitted the "-O coff" it would create a Windows .res format file, but we can only link COFF objects. So, we tell windres to produce a COFF object, but for compatibility with the many examples that assume your linker can handle Windows resource files directly, we maintain the .res naming convention. For more information on windres, consult the Binutils manual.