Git for Windows 1.x was retired on August 18th, 2015, superseded by Git for Windows 2.x. The development environment of Git for Windows 2.x is no longer maintained in a monolithic Git repository but rather as the Git SDK, a friendly fork of MSys2 pre-configured to ease the development of Git for Windows.
This is the build environment -- also known as msysGit -- for Git for Windows.
The easiest way is to install it via the net installer. This installer will clone our two repositories, including all the necessary components to build Git for Windows, and perform an initial build.
msysGit brings a few components that are required to build Git:
- Bash, a Unix-type command-line shell. Quite a few components of Git itself are still shell scripts. Therefore, Bash is required to execute Git commands (see the output of
cd /git && git ls-files \*.sh
for a full list). - the GNU C Compiler. Since we try to rely only on free software (apart from the Operating System, of course), we think it makes more sense to rely on GCC than on Visual Studio express. Also, it makes the maintenance burden lighter, as upstream Git also targets mainly GCC.
- GNU Make.
- Perl. Still required for a couple of Git components (see the output of
cd /git && git ls-files \*.perl
), most notablygit svn
. - Tcl/Tk, a scripting language making it easy to implement cross-platform graphical user interfaces. We need this for
gitk
andgit gui
. - cURL, a library implementing HTTP and FTP transport.
- many more libraries.
- some Unix programs required by the shell scripts in Git.
Git for Windows is the software package that installs a minimal environment to run Git on Windows. It comes with a Bash (a Unix-type shell), with a Perl interpreter and with the Git executable and its dependencies.
On the other hand, msysGit is the software package installing the build environment that can build Git for Windows. The easiest way is to install it via the net installer.
The MinGW project's goal is to provide a way to compile native Windows binaries with no POSIX layer using the GNU C Compiler.
However, at least the Bash needs a POSIX layer (most notably due to the absence of the fork()
call on Windows). Therefore, MSys (the minimal system) is thrown in, offering the minimal system necessary to offer Bash (and Perl) functionality on Windows.
Consequently, MSys ships with a POSIX layer (based on an old version of Cygwin) that is only used by the Bash and Perl, but not by anything compiled within that environment.
For more information and documentation, please have a look and enhance our Wiki.
For code contributions and discussions, please see our mailing list.