a5aa03acaf
This builds upon the changes made in 2195046365c. Using signal() does not produce reliable results so SetConsoleCtrlHandler is used, and the handler is installed only once during initialization instead of removing it in mp_hal_set_interrupt_char when it is not strictly needed anymore, since removing it might lead to Ctrl-C events being missed because they are fired on a seperate thread which might only become alive after the handler was removed.
This is experimental, community-supported Windows port of MicroPython. It is based on Unix port, and expected to remain so. The port requires additional testing, debugging, and patches. Please consider to contribute. To cross-compile under Debian/Ubuntu Linux system: sudo apt-get install gcc-mingw-w64 make CROSS_COMPILE=i686-w64-mingw32- If for some reason the mingw-w64 crosscompiler is not available, you can try mingw32 instead, but it comes with a really old gcc which may produce some spurious errors (you may need to disable -Werror): sudo apt-get install mingw32 mingw32-binutils mingw32-runtime make CROSS_COMPILE=i586-mingw32msvc- To compile under Cygwin: Install following packages using cygwin's setup.exe: mingw64-i686-gcc-core, mingw64-x86_64-gcc-core, make Build using: make CROSS_COMPILE=i686-w64-mingw32- or for 64bit: make CROSS_COMPILE=x86_64-w64-mingw32- To compile using Visual Studio 2013 (or higher): Open micropython.vcxproj and build To compile using Visual Studio 2013 (or higher) commandline: msbuild micropython.vcxproj To run on Linux using Wine: The default build (MICROPY_USE_READLINE=1) uses extended Windows console functions and thus should be run using "wineconsole" tool. Depending on the Wine build configuration, you may also want to select the curses backend which has the look&feel of a standard Unix console: wineconsole --backend=curses ./micropython.exe For more info, see https://www.winehq.org/docs/wineusr-guide/cui-programs If built without line editing and history capabilities (MICROPY_USE_READLINE=0), the resulting binary can be built using standard "wine" tool.