- Intro
- Prerequisites
- Integrating hidapi directly into your source tree
- Building the manual way on Unix platforms
- Building on Windows
For various reasons you may need to build HIDAPI on your own.
It can be done in several different ways:
- using CMake;
- using Autotools (deprecated);
- using manual makefiles.
Autotools build system is historically first mature build system for
HIDAPI. Most common usage of it is in its separate README: BUILD.autotools.md.
NOTE: for all intentions and purposes the Autotools build scripts for HIDAPI are deprecated and going to be obsolete in the future.
HIDAPI Team recommends using CMake build for HIDAPI.
CMake build system is de facto an industry standard for many open-source and proprietary projects and solutions. HIDAPI is one of the projects which uses the power of CMake for its advantage. More documentation is available in its separate README: BUILD.cmake.md.
If you don't know where to start to build HIDAPI, we recommend starting with CMake build.
Regardless of what build system system you choose to use, there are specific dependencies for each platform/backend.
Depending on which backend you're going to build, you'll need to install
additional development packages. For linux/hidraw
backend you need
development package for libudev
. For libusb
backend, naturally, you need
libusb
development package.
On Debian/Ubuntu systems these can be installed by running:
# required only by hidraw backend
sudo apt install libudev-dev
# required only by libusb backend
sudo apt install libusb-1.0-0-dev
On FreeBSD you will need to install libiconv. This is done by running the following:
pkg_add -r libiconv
On Mac make sure you have XCode installed and its Command Line Tools.
On Windows you just need a compiler. You may use Visual Studio or Cygwin/MinGW, depending on which environment is best for your needs.
Instead of using one of the provided build systems, you may want to integrate HIDAPI directly into your source tree. Generally it is not encouraged to do so, but if you must, all you need to do:
- add a single source file
hid.c
(for a specific backend); - setup include directory to
<HIDAPI repo root>/hidapi
; - add link libraries, that are specific for each backend.
Check the manual makefiles for a simple example/reference of what are the dependencies of each specific backend.
NOTE: if your have a CMake-based project, you're likely be able to use HIDAPI directly as a subdirectory. Check BUILD.cmake.md for details.
Manual Makefiles are provided mostly to give the user an idea what it takes to build a program which embeds HIDAPI directly inside of it. These should really be used as examples only. If you want to build a system-wide shared library, use one of the build systems mentioned above.
To build HIDAPI using the manual Makefiles, change to the directory of your platform and run make. For example, on Linux run:
cd linux/
make -f Makefile-manual
To build the HIDAPI DLL on Windows using Visual Studio, build the .sln
file
in the windows/
directory.
To build HIDAPI using MinGW or Cygwin using Autotools, use a general Autotools instruction.
Any windows builds (MSVC or MinGW/Cygwin) are also supported by CMake.
If you are looking for information regarding DDK build of HIDAPI
- the build has been broken for a while and now the support files are obsolete.