Compile (Windows)
You can download and compile the Rigs of Rods sources completely with tools that are available for free.
Download and install all required software first:
- Visual Studio 2015
- CMake
- Latest RoR dependencies: https://sourceforge.net/projects/rigs-of-rods/files/Developer/dependencies.7z/download (Download the zip, we will unpack it later on). (Note: 64 bit prepackaged dependencies are not available at the moment)
- Latest RoR sources: https://github.com/RigsOfRods/rigs-of-rods/archive/master.zip (alternatively you can clone them with git from https://github.com/RigsOfRods/rigs-of-rods.git)
(restart your computer after installing all above tools)
Since 0.39.2 it is possible to build Rigs of Rods under Windows with precompiled dependencies for 32 bit and 64 bit. Depending on what you compile, some steps might slightly differ. Also, you can only build x64 (64 bit version) on a real 64 bit platform. However, you can still build x86 (32 bit) on a 64 bit platform due to backwards compatibility.
- Create an empty directory anywhere where you have enough free disk space (~3 GB) for example, we chose this now:
C:\dev\
- unpack the file master.zip into that directory. It will create a new directory called
master
- rename unpacked
master
torigsofrods-source
- unpack dependencies.7z into
C:\dev\rigsofrods-source
as directorydependencies
so that it is beside thebin
andsource
directories.
- Start cmake from the Windows start menu: START->Programs->CMake->cmake-gui
-
Where is the source code:
C:\dev\rigsofrods-source\
-
Where to build the binaries:
C:\dev\rigsofrods-source\build\
-
- Click the
Configure
button.- for a
32 bit
build chooseVisual Studio 2010
andUse default native compilers
(first option). - for a
64 bit
build chooseVisual Studio 2010 Win64
andUse default native compilers
(first option).
- for a
- Click the
- Say
yes
if it asked if the directory should be created. - Click
Configure
twice until all entries are white
- Click
Generate
and close CMake
- Navigate in Windows explorer to the folder
C:\dev\rigsofrods-source\build\_x86
(or build_x64 for 64 bit) and open the file RoR.sln. Visual Studio should open. (if you are asked, open with Visual Studio for C++)
- In Visual Studio, do the following: from the menu: Build -> build Solution (this can take some time, around 15 minutes on an average dualcore/ i7-2600K : 9min)
- The compilation is done when you can read something like the following in the bottom text output window:
========== Build: succeeded ==========
Done! After building you will find RoR ready to use in the bin\Release directory. You can navigate with the Windows explorer to C:\dev\rigsofrods-source\bin\Release\
and use it the same way as game directory if it was installed there.
Note: the only difference is that the resources will reside one directory higher, but RoR should figure that out itself.
- If the compile step is ok but you don't see any executable or the log writes some missing libs, it may be something wrong with the linking step. Some common issues are the DirectX libraries. To include them manually to the project, right-click on RoR
folder
(the folder on the left in Visual Studio, where the project is) and click Properties. A popup window should appear, then go to Configuration properties and then to VC++ directories. Please add toLibraries directory
this path (note: use;
to separate the various paths):C:\Program Files\Microsoft DirectX SDK (<your version>)\Lib\x86
. You have to change your version with the version that's installed on your machine. The simplest way to do it is to browse the program file folder.Don't remove or add anything else
- If you are unable to compile RoR at all or strange errors comes up (like RPC errors), you missed to update to latest version both Boost or DirectX SDK. This is an important step before continue.
- If you are unable to compile RoR, ensure your build is set to Release mode, not debug mode
- It may happen that RoR wont start in the bin directory. Simply put the new executable into main release folder and try launch from there. If it doesn't, you simply missed something.
- If you receive an error such as "fatal error C1083: Cannot open include file: 'stdint.h': No such file or directory " Your dependencies folder may be 'read only'. To fix, right click the dependencies folder, un-tick read only, and apply to all files and sub-directories.
- If you try to run the compiled RoR Configurator it will tell you that you are missing some .dll files. You then know that you chose the wrong compilation options when compiling wxidgets. We normally link statically against the libs.
- These compile steps and hints are valid
only
under Visual C++ 2010 and Windows, although they may be similar for other configurations.