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I recently downloaded MinGW-w64 from Sourceforge onto my external hard drive, where all the files reside in:

E:\mingw-w64\x86_64-4.9.2-posix-seh-rt_v3-rev1\mingw64\bin

When I try compiling my first "Hello World" program using gcc on Windows 8.1, I get a cc1.exe System Error, that tells me

The program can't start because libwinpthread-1.dll is missing. Try reinstalling the program to fix the problem.

And yet, libwinpthread-1.dll (all 54,784 bytes of it) is sitting right there in the very same directory as gcc.exe. Do I really need to reinstall everything, or is something else going wrong here?

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  • 2
    Welcome to Stack Overflow. You will get better answers if you ask one concrete question at a time, and give more details. Mar 7, 2015 at 5:38
  • Try adding "E:\mingw-w64\x86_64-4.9.2-posix-seh-rt_v3-rev1\mingw64\bin" to your PATH Jul 21, 2015 at 18:15
  • Alternative is to CD to the bin directory where g++.exe is
    – AlecZ
    Aug 14, 2020 at 22:25

6 Answers 6

27

I know this post is over two years old but I recently had the same problem when using CMake.

I fixed it by adding MinGW to the "Path" Envionment Variable: I am using Windows 10 Home.

  1. "Windows Key"+ Pause/Break
  2. On the left there is "Advanced System settings"
  3. On the bottom of this window there is a button called "Environment Variables"
  4. Click on the name "Path"
  5. Click on "edit" under System Variables
  6. Add your MinGW directory there. For me that was C:\MinGW\bin

I Hope I could help. If not you, maybe someone else.

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  • 1
    To clarify, the "Path" you click on should also be under "System variables" (not under "User variables for ___"). May 31, 2019 at 2:09
6

I consider it best to statically link the libraries needed. This means that the executable can be run anywhere, without having to look for them. To do this, use the -static flag in the linker.

For example:

g++.exe -o ......\bin\connect.exe obj\Release\src\connect.o -static

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    How exactly does this help? Isn't the problem here that gcc itself has not been built with static libwinpthread? Are you suggesting all he needs to do is recompile gcc from scratch, statically linking gcc to libwinpthread before recompiling his own code using the new gcc he built?
    – crobar
    Jan 20, 2020 at 16:20
  • 2
    @crobar This has fixed it for me, since I'm the developer of my code. Adding -static allowed me to ship my tool with all dependencies included.
    – thethiny
    Jun 14, 2020 at 13:23
3

You can follow this.

In codeblocks go to settings > compiler and mark these i have shown in picture

solution

Hope it will work.

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    I notice that checking Static linking [-static] without explicitly doing so for libgcc and libstdc++ still worked. Also, I had read that C++ 17 ISO standard is currently a widely accepted standard. Your screenshot was a good reminder for me to enable that option, thanks. Oct 2, 2021 at 10:12
2

If you're missing libwinpthread-1.dll it means you're missing the entire MinGW toolchain and you'll have many more problems with other DLLs. Instead of adding this single DLL, install the entire MinGW toolchain to avoid further issues.

  1. Install MSYS2 x64
  2. Open MSYS2 MinGW x64 command prompt
  3. Run pacman -S base-devel mingw-w64-x86_64-toolchain to install the GCC toolchain (all components)
  4. Add c:\msys64\mingw64\bin to the System PATH
1

I've used following to fix:

pacman -Fsy "libwinpthread-1.dll"
pacman -S mingw64/mingw-w64-x86_64-libwinpthread-git
-1

the dll files are already in the application file but what you need to do is copy the dll files and paste it in windows system32

1
  • Please never do something like this, leave the operating system folders alone, unless you really know what you are doing.
    – frog.ca
    Dec 5, 2023 at 16:07

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