Instructions for compiling cpuminer-opt for Windows. Thwaw intructions nay be out of date. Please consult the wiki for the latest: https://github.com/JayDDee/cpuminer-opt/wiki/Compiling-from-source Windows compilation using Visual Studio is not supported. Mingw64 is used on a Linux system (bare metal or virtual machine) to cross-compile cpuminer-opt executable binaries for Windows. These instructions were written for Debian and Ubuntu compatible distributions but should work on other major distributions as well. However some of the package names or file paths may be different. It is assumed a Linux system is already available and running. And the user has enough Linux knowledge to find and install packages and follow these instructions. First it is a good idea to create new user specifically for cross compiling. It keeps all mingw stuff contained and isolated from the rest of the system. Step by step... 1. Install necessary packages from the distribution's repositories. Refer to Linux compile instructions and install required packages. Additionally, install mingw-w64. sudo apt-get install mingw-w64 libz-mingw-w64-dev 2. Create a local library directory for packages to be compiled in the next step. Suggested location is $HOME/usr/lib/ $ mkdir $HOME/usr/lib 3. Download and build other packages for mingw that don't have a mingw64 version available in the repositories. Download the following source code packages from their respective and respected download locations, copy them to ~/usr/lib/ and uncompress them. openssl: https://github.com/openssl/openssl/releases curl: https://github.com/curl/curl/releases gmp: https://gmplib.org/download/gmp/ In most cases the latest version is ok but it's safest to download the same major and minor version as included in your distribution. The following uses versions from Ubuntu 20.04. Change version numbers as required. Run the following commands or follow the supplied instructions. Do not run "make install" unless you are using /usr/lib, which isn't recommended. Some instructions insist on running "make check". If make check fails it may still work, YMMV. You can speed up "make" by using all CPU cores available with "-j n" where n is the number of CPU threads you want to use. openssl: $ ./Configure mingw64 shared --cross-compile-prefix=x86_64-w64-mingw32- $ make Make may fail with an ld error, just ensure libcrypto-1_1-x64.dll is created. curl: $ ./configure --with-winssl --with-winidn --host=x86_64-w64-mingw32 $ make gmp: $ ./configure --host=x86_64-w64-mingw32 $ make 4. Tweak the environment. This step is required everytime you login or the commands can be added to .bashrc. Define some local variables to point to local library. $ export LOCAL_LIB="$HOME/usr/lib" $ export LDFLAGS="-L$LOCAL_LIB/curl/lib/.libs -L$LOCAL_LIB/gmp/.libs -L$LOCAL_LIB/openssl" $ export CONFIGURE_ARGS="--with-curl=$LOCAL_LIB/curl --with-crypto=$LOCAL_LIB/openssl --host=x86_64-w64-mingw32" Adjust for gcc version: $ export GCC_MINGW_LIB="/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-w64-mingw32/9.3-win32" Create a release directory and copy some dll files previously built. This can be done outside of cpuminer-opt and only needs to be done once. If the release directory is in cpuminer-opt directory it needs to be recreated every time a source package is decompressed. $ mkdir release $ cp /usr/x86_64-w64-mingw32/lib/zlib1.dll release/ $ cp /usr/x86_64-w64-mingw32/lib/libwinpthread-1.dll release/ $ cp $GCC_MINGW_LIB/libstdc++-6.dll release/ $ cp $GCC_MINGW_LIB/libgcc_s_seh-1.dll release/ $ cp $LOCAL_LIB/openssl/libcrypto-1_1-x64.dll release/ $ cp $LOCAL_LIB/curl/lib/.libs/libcurl-4.dll release/ The following steps need to be done every time a new source package is opened. 5. Download cpuminer-opt Download the latest source code package of cpumuner-opt to your desired location. .zip or .tar.gz, your choice. https://github.com/JayDDee/cpuminer-opt/releases Decompress and change to the cpuminer-opt directory. 6. compile Create a link to the locally compiled version of gmp.h $ ln -s $LOCAL_LIB/gmp-version/gmp.h ./gmp.h $ ./autogen.sh Configure the compiler for the CPU architecture of the host machine: CFLAGS="-O3 -march=native -Wall" ./configure $CONFIGURE_ARGS or cross compile for a specific CPU architecture: CFLAGS="-O3 -march=znver1 -Wall" ./configure $CONFIGURE_ARGS This will compile for AMD Ryzen. You can compile more generically for a set of specific CPU features if you know what features you want: CFLAGS="-O3 -maes -msse4.2 -Wall" ./configure $CONFIGURE_ARGS This will compile for an older CPU that does not have AVX. You can find several examples in README.txt If you have a CPU with more than 64 threads and Windows 7 or higher you can enable the CPU Groups feature by adding the following to CFLAGS: "-D_WIN32_WINNT=0x0601" Once you have run configure successfully run the compiler with n CPU threads: $ make -j n Copy cpuminer.exe to the release directory, compress and copy the release directory to a Windows system and run cpuminer.exe from the command line. Run cpuminer In a command windows change directories to the unzipped release folder. to get a list of all options: cpuminer.exe --help Command options are specific to where you mine. Refer to the pool's instructions on how to set them. Create a link to the locally compiled version of gmp.h $ ln -s $LOCAL_LIB/gmp-version/gmp.h ./gmp.h Edit configure.ac to fix lipthread package name. sed -i 's/"-lpthread"/"-lpthreadGC2"/g' configure.ac 7. Compile you can use the default compile if you intend to use cpuminer-opt on the same CPU and the virtual machine supports that architecture. ./build.sh Otherwise you can compile manually while setting options in CFLAGS. Some common options: To compile for a specific CPU architecture: CFLAGS="-O3 -march=znver1 -Wall" ./configure --with-curl This will compile for AMD Ryzen. You can compile more generically for a set of specific CPU features if you know what features you want: CFLAGS="-O3 -maes -msse4.2 -Wall" ./configure --with-curl This will compile for an older CPU that does not have AVX. You can find several examples in build-allarch.sh If you have a CPU with more than 64 threads and Windows 7 or higher you can enable the CPU Groups feature: -D_WIN32_WINNT==0x0601 Once you have run configure successfully run make with n CPU threads: make -j n Copy cpuminer.exe to the release directory, compress and copy the release directory to a Windows system and run cpuminer.exe from the command line. Run cpuminer In a command windows change directories to the unzipped release folder. to get a list of all options: cpuminer.exe --help Command options are specific to where you mine. Refer to the pool's instructions on how to set them.