aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/backends
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'backends')
-rw-r--r--backends/platform/sdl/win32/win32-main.cpp7
-rw-r--r--backends/taskbar/win32/win32-taskbar.cpp16
2 files changed, 21 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/backends/platform/sdl/win32/win32-main.cpp b/backends/platform/sdl/win32/win32-main.cpp
index c6339f0c8c..4864347d81 100644
--- a/backends/platform/sdl/win32/win32-main.cpp
+++ b/backends/platform/sdl/win32/win32-main.cpp
@@ -44,7 +44,12 @@ int __stdcall WinMain(HINSTANCE /*hInst*/, HINSTANCE /*hPrevInst*/, LPSTR /*lpC
SDL_SetModuleHandle(GetModuleHandle(NULL));
#endif
// HACK: __argc, __argv are broken and return zero when using mingwrt 4.0+ on MinGW
-#if defined(__GNUC__) && defined(__MINGW32__) && !defined(__MINGW64__)
+// HACK: MinGW-w64 based toolchains neither feature _argc nor _argv. The 32 bit
+// incarnation only defines __MINGW32__. This leads to build breakage due to
+// missing declarations. Luckily MinGW-w64 based toolchains define
+// __MINGW64_VERSION_foo macros inside _mingw.h, which is included from all
+// system headers. Thus we abuse that to detect them.
+#if defined(__GNUC__) && defined(__MINGW32__) && !defined(__MINGW64_VERSION_MAJOR)
return main(_argc, _argv);
#else
return main(__argc, __argv);
diff --git a/backends/taskbar/win32/win32-taskbar.cpp b/backends/taskbar/win32/win32-taskbar.cpp
index 0192b1dc03..f3339fb917 100644
--- a/backends/taskbar/win32/win32-taskbar.cpp
+++ b/backends/taskbar/win32/win32-taskbar.cpp
@@ -28,8 +28,22 @@
#if defined(WIN32) && defined(USE_TASKBAR)
+// HACK: To get __MINGW64_VERSION_foo defines we need to manually include
+// _mingw.h in this file because we do not include any system headers at this
+// point on purpose. The defines are required to detect whether this is a
+// classic MinGW toolchain or a MinGW-w64 based one.
+#if defined(__MINGW32__)
+#include <_mingw.h>
+#endif
+
// Needed for taskbar functions
-#if defined(__GNUC__) && defined(__MINGW32__) && !defined(__MINGW64__)
+// HACK: MinGW-w64 based toolchains include the symbols we require in their
+// headers. The 32 bit incarnation only defines __MINGW32__. This leads to
+// build breakage due to clashes with our compat header. Luckily MinGW-w64
+// based toolchains define __MINGW64_VERSION_foo macros inside _mingw.h,
+// which is included from all system headers. Thus we abuse that to detect
+// them.
+#if defined(__GNUC__) && defined(__MINGW32__) && !defined(__MINGW64_VERSION_MAJOR)
#include "backends/taskbar/win32/mingw-compat.h"
#else
// We use functionality introduced with Win7 in this file.