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1 Precompiled Distributions of
2 Emacs for Windows NT and Windows 95/98/2000
3
4 Version 20.7
5
6 June 13, 2000
7
8 This directory contains source and precompiled distributions for GNU
9 Emacs on Windows NT and Windows 95/98/2000. This port is a part of
10 the standard GNU Emacs distribution from the Free Software Foundation;
11 the precompiled distributions are provided here for convenience since,
12 unlike Unix, the majority of Windows users do not have access to a
13 compiler (and, besides, do you really want to compile Emacs when you
14 don't have to?).
15
16 If you have access to the World Wide Web, I would recommend pointing
17 your favorite web browser to the following document (if you haven't
18 already):
19
20 http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/windows/ntemacs.html
21
22 The above web document is a far more complete version of this README
23 file. If you don't have access to the Web, however, then read on.
24
25
26* IMPORTANT LEGAL REMINDER
27
28 If you want to redistribute any of the precompiled distributions of
29 Emacs, be careful to check the implications of the GPL. For instance,
30 if you put the emacs-20.7-bin-i386.tar.gz file from this directory on
31 an Internet site, you must arrange to distribute the source files of
32 the SAME version (i.e. emacs-20.7-src.tar.gz).
33
34 Making a link to our copy of the source is NOT sufficient, since we
35 might upgrade to a new version while you are still distributing the
36 old binaries.
37
38
39* Distributions in .tar.gz format
40
41 Emacs is distributed primarily as a set of large gzipped tar files
42 (*.tar.gz). Because Emacs is quite large and therefore difficult to
43 download over unreliable connections, it is provided in several
44 combinations, ranging from the complete source plus executables, to
45 just the minimal amount needed to run without any source, plus a
46 couple of optional packages. Here are the combinations (i386 in the
47 name indicates a tarball contains executables compiled for
48 Intel-compatible x86 systems):
49
50 + Primary precompiled distribution, including lisp source:
51
52 emacs-20.7-fullbin-i386.tar.gz
53
54 + Minimal precompiled distribution, which excludes lisp source:
55
56 emacs-20.7-bin-i386.tar.gz
57
58 You can download emacs-20.7-lisp.tar.gz to get the lisp source, if
59 you later decide you want it - it is useful for understanding how
60 packages work, and how they can best be setup or customized.
61
62
63 NB. If you just want to run Emacs, get one of the distributions above.
64
65
66 + Bare executables, only useful if you want to get the complete source
67 release below, but can't compile Emacs yourself:
68
69 emacs-20.7-barebin-i386.tar.gz (requires emacs-20.7-src.tar.gz)
70
71 + Undumped executable, only needed for rebuilding Emacs after changing
72 certain core lisp files:
73
74 emacs-20.7-undumped-i386.tar.gz
75
76 + Optional package providing the Library of Emacs Input Methods for
77 typing non-ascii characters, notably Chinese, Japanese and Korean,
78 but also including European and other character sets:
79
80 emacs-20.7-leim.tar.gz
81
82 + The complete official source for Emacs:
83
84 emacs-20.7-src.tar.gz
85
86 + The complete official source for LEIM:
87
88 leim-20.7-src.tar.gz
89
90
91* Distributions in multi-file .zip format
92
93 A second distribution in the form of multiple small .zip files is also
94 provided, for the benefit of people who have unreliable internet
95 connections, or who need to copy the distribution onto floppy disks:
96
97 em207-b*.zip
98
99 This is equivalent to getting emacs-20.7-bin-i386.tar.gz above.
100 The lisp source is available as em207-l*.zip.
101
102
103* Distributions for non-x86 platforms
104
105 I try to make this port available for all platforms supported by
106 Windows (it should build on all supported Windows NT/9x platforms).
107 However, I do not always have access to non-x86 platforms, and so I
108 cannot guarantee to provide precompiled distributions for the other
109 platforms myself. If you find there are no binaries for your
110 platform, and you have access to a Microsoft compiler, then you can
111 download the source and compile Emacs yourself (and, if you do, please
112 consider contributing your executables; send me mail and we can make
113 arrangements for making them available on this ftp server.)
114
115
116* Unpacking distributions
117
118 Programs for handling the distribution file formats can be found in
119 the utilities directory:
120
121 ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/windows/emacs/utilities
122
123 For gzipped tar files, you will need either gunzip.exe and tar.exe
124 together, or djtarnt.exe. djtarnt.exe can also unpack .zip files. I
125 strongly urge you to use these utilities since they were the ones used
126 to create the distributions; the most common problem people have in
127 trying to get Emacs to run is due to some other utility program
128 corrupting the distribution while unpacking.
129
130 Open a command prompt (MSDOS) window. Decide on a directory in which
131 to place Emacs. Move the distribution to that directory, and then
132 unpack it as follows.
133
134 If you have the gzipped tar version, use gunzip to uncompress the tar
135 file on the fly, and pipe the output through tar with the "xvf" flags
136 to extract the files from the tar file:
137
138 % gunzip -c some.tar.gz | tar xvf -
139
140 You may see messages from tar about not being able to change the
141 modification time on directories, and from gunzip complaining about a
142 broken pipe. These messages are harmless and you can ignore them. On
143 Windows NT, unpacking tarballs this way leaves them in compressed
144 form, taking up less space on disk. Unfortunately, on Windows 95 and
145 98, a large temporary file is created, so it is better to use the
146 djtarnt.exe program, which performs the equivalent operation in one
147 step:
148
149 % djtarnt -x some.tar.gz
150
151 You may be prompted to rename or overwrite directories when using
152 djtarnt: simply type return to continue (this is harmless).
153
154 If you have the multi-file .zip distribution, use djtarnt to unpack
155 all of the .zip files:
156
157 % djtarnt -x *.zip
158
159 Once you have unpacked a precompiled distribution of Emacs, it should
160 have the following subdirectories:
161
162 bin etc info lisp lock site-lisp
163
164 If your utility failed to create the lock directory, then you can
165 simply create it by hand (it is initially empty).
166
167
168* Unpacking with other tools
169
170 If you do use other utility programs to unpack the distribution, check
171 the following to be sure the distribution was not corrupted:
172
173 + Be sure to disable the CR/LF translation or the executables will be
174 unusable. Older versions of WinZipNT would enable this translation
175 by default. If you are using WinZipNT, disable it. (I don't have
176 WinZipNT myself, and I do not know the specific commands necessary
177 to disable it.)
178
179 + Check that filenames were not truncated to 8.3. For example, there
180 should be a file lisp/abbrevlist.el; if this has been truncated to
181 abbrevli.el, your distribution has been corrupted while unpacking
182 and Emacs will not start.
183
184 + I've been told that some utilities (WinZip again?) don't create the
185 lock subdirectory. The lock subdirectory needs to be created.
186
187 + I've also had reports that the "gnu-win32" port of tar corrupts the
188 executables. Use the version of tar or djtarnt in the utilities
189 directory instead.
190
191 If you believe you have unpacked the distributions correctly and are
192 still encountering problems, see the section on Further Information
193 below.
194
195
196* Compiling from source
197
198 If you would like to compile Emacs from source, download the source
199 distribution, unpack it in the same manner as a precompiled
200 distribution, and look in the file nt/INSTALL for detailed directions.
201 Note, though, that you must have a Microsoft compiler to compile the
202 source. (Support for compiling with gcc 2.95 or later will be
203 available in a future release.)
204
205
206* Further information
207
208 There is a web page that serves as a FAQ at:
209
210 http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/windows/ntemacs.html
211
212 There is also a mailing list for discussing issues related to this
213 port of Emacs. For information about the list, send a message to
214 ntemacs-users-request@cs.washington.edu with the word "info" in the
215 *body* of the message. To subscribe to the list, send a message to
216 the same address with the word "subscribe" in the body of the message;
217 similarly, to unsubscribe from the list, send a message with the word
218 "unsubscribe" in the message body.
219
220 Another valuable source of information and help which should not be
221 overlooked is the various Usenet news groups dedicated to Emacs.
222 These are particuarly good for help with general issues which aren't
223 specific to the Windows port of Emacs. The main news groups to use
224 for seeking help are:
225
226 gnu.emacs.help
227 comp.emacs
228
229 There are also fairly regular postings and announcements of new or
230 updated Emacs packages on this group:
231
232 gnu.emacs.sources
233
234 You are also always welcome to send me mail directly. If you don't
235 hear from me immediately, however, don't worry; it sometimes takes me
236 a few days (or longer) to get to all of my mail regarding Emacs.
237
238 Enjoy!
239
240 Andrew Innes
241 (andrewi@gnu.org)