1

I'm testing the feasibility of using MSBuild to perform an ARM build of an existing C++ project for Windows Phone and Windows Store. On Windows 7 with VS2012, I opened a Visual Studio 2012 ARM Developer Command Prompt. Then I tried it to see what would happen:

C:\cryptopp>msbuild /t:Build /p:Configuration=Debug;Platform=ARM cryptlib.vcxproj
Microsoft (R) Build Engine version 4.6.1055.0

Build started 10/6/2016 1:11:47 PM.
The target "Midl" listed in a BeforeTargets attribute at "C:\Program Files (x86
)\MSBuild\Microsoft.Cpp\v4.0\V110\BuildCustomizations\masm.targets (28,5)" does
 not exist in the project, and will be ignored.
The target "CustomBuild" listed in an AfterTargets attribute at "C:\Program Fil
es (x86)\MSBuild\Microsoft.Cpp\v4.0\V110\BuildCustomizations\masm.targets (29,5
)" does not exist in the project, and will be ignored.
Project "C:\cryptopp\cryptlib.vcxproj" on node 1 (Build target(s)).
C:\cryptopp\cryptlib.vcxproj : error MSB4057: The target "Build" does not exist 
in the project.
Done Building Project "C:\cryptopp\cryptlib.vcxproj" (Build target(s)) -- FAILE
D.

Build FAILED.

"C:\cryptopp\cryptlib.vcxproj" (Build target) (1)
->
  C:\cryptopp\cryptlib.vcxproj : error MSB4057: The target "Build" does not exi
st in the project.

    0 Warning(s)
    1 Error(s)

I also tired adding the following to cryptlib.vcxproj, but it resulted in the same error.

<ProjectConfiguration Include="Debug|ARM">
  <Configuration>Debug</Configuration>
  <Platform>ARM</Platform>
</ProjectConfiguration>
<ProjectConfiguration Include="Release|ARM">
  <Configuration>Release</Configuration>
  <Platform>ARM</Platform>
</ProjectConfiguration>

Based on the errors above, I'm not sure if MSBuild supports ARM or if something else is wrong. I get similar results when testing on Windows 8 with VS2013. The similar result is another failure with a different error message.

Does the error message The target "Build" does not exist in the project mean MSBuild does not support ARM? Can MSBuild be used to build a C++ project under ARM?

14
  • I created a windows store app via VS 2012, then run msbuild command as yours through VS2012 ARM Cross Tools Command Prompt, it works fine. There isn't Visual Studio 2012 ARM Developer Command Prompt, what's the result if you run MSbuild command through VS2012 ARM Cross Tools Command Prompt? Oct 7, 2016 at 6:20
  • @starain - Sorry for the confusion. The results are from the "VS2012 ARM Cross Tools Command Prompt". As far as I know, there are no native ARM command prompts (corrections, please).
    – jww
    Oct 7, 2016 at 6:41
  • What project template you used? Provide the detail steps to create project. My steps: Open VS 2012=>File=>New project=>Select Windows Store in Visual C++ section=>Select Blank App (XAML) Oct 7, 2016 at 6:44
  • @starain - No templates; the *.proj files were effectively re-written by hand. We started with old Visual Studio project files up-converted with VCUgrade. We then streamlined them from 100KB+ down to about 10KB. They are very terse now, and they only include the minimum required to achieve goals.
    – jww
    Oct 7, 2016 at 6:49
  • @starain - The detailed steps to reproduce are quite easy: git clone https://github.com/weidai11/cryptopp.git. Open cryptlib.vcxproj and add the two ProjectConfiguration beneath the existing X86 and X64 ones. Then try to build from the ARM developer command prompt.
    – jww
    Oct 7, 2016 at 6:51

1 Answer 1

2

Yes, this is absolutely possible.

The build system for libvpx generates vcxproj/sln files, including support for the ARM platform, and these can be built both with msbuild.exe or opened in Visual Studio.

The script that generates the project files can be found at https://chromium.googlesource.com/webm/libvpx/+/8b5eddf709b/build/make/gen_msvs_vcxproj.sh. If you want to try it out for yourself (to look at the actual generated project files), clone libvpx, and generate the visual studio project files (targeting Visual Studio 2012) like this (within an MSYS shell, in a directory outside of the libvpx directory):

../libvpx/configure --target=armv7-win32-vs11
make

(It might also work if you just run this within the libvpx directory with ./configure, but I only verified it in a separate directory.)

The make step will also invoke msbuild.exe if found in the path. If not, open a separate shell where you've got msbuild.exe in the path, and build it like this:

msbuild vpx.sln -m -t:Build -p:Configuration=Release -p:Platform=ARM
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  • Thanks @mstorsjo. I'll need a few days to test it. I'll get back with an accept. Please forgive my ignorance.. strictly speaking, does make need to be run? It seems like configure is where the build artifacts drop out. If I do need to run make, then do I open an ARM Developer Command Prompt? Or does a regular command prompt work?
    – jww
    Oct 8, 2016 at 19:26
  • Yes, that's the way it'd work in many build systems. But the libvpx build system works a bit differently; configure just creates a few makefiles, that describe how to generate the visual studio project files. You don't need to open the ARM Developer Command Prompt for this, you need to run the configure and make steps in an MSYS (or equivalent, I think cygwin also works) shell. If msbuild is available here, it'll be invoked automatically, otherwise you need to run the last step manually in an ARM Developer Command Prompt.
    – mstorsjo
    Oct 8, 2016 at 20:20

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