

> -enable-libxavs -extra-cflags=-DPTW32_STATIC_LIB > -enable-filter=frei0r -enable-libvo-aacenc -enable-bzlib

> -enable-libopus -disable-w32threads -enable-frei0r > -enable-libopenjpeg -enable-gnutls -enable-libgsm -enable-libfreetype > -enable-librtmp -enable-libvorbis -enable-libtheora -enable-libspeex > -enable-libxvid -enable-libmp3lame -enable-version3 -enable-zlib > -pkg-config=pkg-config -enable-gpl -enable-libx264 -enable-avisynth > PATH=/home/mcebuddy/Software/ffmpeg/sandbox/mingw-w64-i686/bin:/usr/lib/lightdm/lightdm:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/games > (/home/mcebuddy/Software/ffmpeg/sandbox/win32/ffmpeg_git) as $ > The configure fails with the following error: > Am using mingw on Ubuntu to build for Win32 and Win64 targets. configure fails? building fails? linking fails? fails at On 28 January 2014 19:33, Ramit Bhalla wrote: Next message: Build ffmpeg with opencl for windows using mingw.Previous message: Build ffmpeg with opencl for windows using mingw.Build ffmpeg with opencl for windows using mingw Lukasz M lukasz.m.luki at While I'm currently using 4.2.0, I've seen posts from earlier this year that 4.3.0 is still missing this information.Build ffmpeg with opencl for windows using mingw But the wrapper in between seems to be this pothole that's been ignored. I can also build OpenCV using the provided solution files and it also runs fine. I have ffmpeg rebuilt with CUDA support using msvc and it runs fine. When I do this, I get weird compatibility errors relating to mixing binaries compiled with different compilers(g++/gcc/cl). Has this build process been shared? If not, why? I've attempted to use various instructions found on the internet but they all involve using msys/g++. Opencv_videoio_ffmpeg_64.dll (version for 64-bit Windows)." The binaries are opencv_videoio_ffmpeg.dll (version for 32-bit Windows) and Wrapped with simple, stable OpenCV-compatible API. "* On Windows OpenCV uses pre-built ffmpeg binaries, built with proper flags (without GPL components) and Does anything exist which describes this? The readme.txt in 3rdparty/ffmpeg says:
