Hey
Nuget was designed to Managed code and don’t really satisfy all C++ constraints/specificities.
Nuget is about prebuilt binaries, and in this new approach we try to give a solution to rebuild from source.
eric
From: Boost-users [mailto:boost-users-bounces@lists.boost.org]
On Behalf Of Ernest Zaslavsky
Sent: Tuesday, July 5, 2016 8:44 PM
To: boost-users@lists.boost.org
Subject: Re: [Boost-users] Acquiring and rebuilding C++ libraries on Windows
Hi,
And what happened to the native NuGet packages idea? It is quite convenient way to get, use and update third parties.
From: Boost-users [mailto:boost-users-bounces@lists.boost.org]
On Behalf Of Eric Mittelette
Sent: Wednesday, July 06, 2016 2:49 AM
To: boost-users@lists.boost.org
Subject: [Boost-users] Acquiring and rebuilding C++ libraries on Windows
Hello
I’m Program Manager at Microsoft, working on VC++ Libraries team (VC runtime, STL…)
We are working on the spec of a tool to acquire 3rd party libraries on Windows.
We are targeting mainly OSS libraries, our tool will help dev to rebuild locally from the source code on Windows.
Today we have a proto, based on a port tree approach. (having a repo with the build script and the associated patch file)
I wanted to have a discussion with the Boost community about this project, and how dev could acquire Boost this way.
Feel free to contact me to initiate this discussion, we’ll be happy to share our idea and prototype with you and collect feedback and suggestions.
Best,
Eric Mittelette
Senior Program Manager – Visual C++ (VCLib)
Microsoft Corp.