=========================== Building PySQLite on Windows ============================ On Windows, Python's distutils defaults to the Visual C++ compiler from Microsoft. If you want to use other compilers for compiling Python extensions on Windows, look into chapter 3.1 "Using non-Microsoft compilers on Windows" in the "Installing Python Modules" of your Python documentation. It's available online at http://www.python.org/doc/current/inst/non-ms-compilers.html The following are build instructions for the GNU C compiler, Borland C++ and for Microsoft's Visual C++ environment. ======================== Using the GNU C compiler ======================== As you have read the Python documentation for non-Microsoft compilers by now, you have mingw or Cygwin installed and created the required import library for the Python DLL. Fine, let's continue. From http://www.hwaci.com/sw/sqlite/download.html get the sqlite_source.zip and sqlitedll.zip files. Unpack them all in the same directory. Create an import library for the GNU linker: $ dlltool --def sqlite.def --dllname sqlite.dll --output-lib libsqlite.a Unpack the PySQLite sources and open setup.py in your editor. Search for "win32". Change the include_dirs and library_dirs variable to point the place where you've unpacked the SQLite files and where you created the import library. Build PySQLite: $ python setup.py build --compiler=mingw32 ========================== Using the Borland compiler ========================== As you have read the Python documentation for non-Microsoft compilers by now, you have installed the Borland C++ compiler and created the required import library for the Python DLL. Fine, let's continue. From http://www.hwaci.com/sw/sqlite/download.html get the sqlite_source.zip and sqlitedll.zip files. Unpack them all in the same directory. Create an import library for the Borland linker: $ implib -a sqlite.lib sqlite.dll Unpack the PySQLite sources and open setup.py in your editor. Search for "win32". Change the include_dirs and library_dirs variable to point the place where you've unpacked the SQLite files and where you created the import library. Build PySQLite: $ python setup.py build --compiler=bcpp ========================== Using Microsoft Visual C++ ========================== From http://www.hwaci.com/sw/sqlite/download.html get the sqlite_source.zip and sqlitedll.zip files. Unpack them all in the same directory. Create an import library for the Microsoft linker: $ lib /def:sqlite.def Unpack the PySQLite sources and open setup.py in your editor. Search for "win32". Change the include_dirs and library_dirs variable to point the place where you've unpacked the SQLite files and where you created the import library. Build PySQLite: $ python setup.py build ================================== What to do after building pySQLite ================================== - Make sure the sqlite.dll can be found. Either copy it into your system directory, somewhere else in your PATH or in the same directory as the .pyd file from pySQLite. - Run the included test suite with these or similar commands: $ copy ..\sqlite\sqlite.dll build\lib.win32-2.2 $ copy test\*.py build\lib.win32-2.2 $ cd build\lib.win32-2.2 $ python all_tests.py All the tests should pass. If something goes wrong, report it to the pySQLite developers using the Sourceforge bug tracker. - Install pySQLite: $ python setup.py install Again make sure the sqlite.dll can be found