- Get Boost from its <ulink url="&url.boost;">home page</ulink>.
- You also need Boost Jam (an alternative to make).
- That's also available from the Boost home page.
- The files to be downloaded are called something like:
- <filename>boost_1_33-1.exe</filename>
- and
- <filename>boost-jam-3.1.12-1-ntx86.zip</filename>.
- Unpack Boost Jam first. Put <filename>bjam.exe</filename>
- in your system path. Make a command prompt and ensure
- it can be found automatically. If not check the PATH.
- The Boost .exe is a self-extracting exe with
- complete source for Boost. Compile that source with
- Boost Jam (An alternative to Make).
- The compilation takes a while.
- For Visual Studio 2003, use
- <screen>
- bjam "-sTOOLS=vc-7_1"
- </screen>
- Here <literal>vc-7_1</literal> refers to a "Toolset" (compiler system).
- For Visual Studio 2005, use
- <screen>
- bjam "-sTOOLS=vc-8_0"
- </screen>
- To install the libraries in a common place, use
- <screen>
- bjam "-sTOOLS=vc-7_1" install
- </screen>
- (or vc-8_0 for VS 2005).
- </para>
- <para>
- By default, the Boost build process installs the resulting
- libraries + header files in
- <literal>\boost\lib</literal>, <literal>\boost\include</literal>.
+ For Windows, it's easiest to get the precompiled Boost
+ package from <ulink url="&url.boost.windows.download;">here</ulink>.
+ Several versions of the Boost libraries may be selected when
+ installing Boost for windows. Please choose at least the
+ <emphasis>multithreaded</emphasis> (non-DLL) version because
+ the Metaproxy makefile uses that.