As previously discussed with some of the vendors, static builds on Windows haven't been working for some time. There's a lengthy disclaimer on why one wouldn't want to do this, but DLL handling is tedious enough that in controlled/development environments one may get away with it.
Some of the changes around ICD loading on Windows (summoning @jenatali) neatly reorganized things to headers/sources, but without the overhead of creating export headers and decorating functions when building a static library, one symbol ends up missing and the loader will not link. (Symbol export happens on a case-by-case basis based on usage. With multiple TUs, the compiler may not see the use of a symbol rendering it absent from the object file of the TU.)
Once the CI/CD changes make it into the repo, #226, I'd propose adding this commit on top as a hotfix. It turns the Windows-specific parts of the loader into header-only, bringing function definitions closer to the location of use. This allows omission of generating an export header.
As previously discussed with some of the vendors, static builds on Windows haven't been working for some time. There's a lengthy disclaimer on why one wouldn't want to do this, but DLL handling is tedious enough that in controlled/development environments one may get away with it.
Some of the changes around ICD loading on Windows (summoning @jenatali) neatly reorganized things to headers/sources, but without the overhead of creating export headers and decorating functions when building a static library, one symbol ends up missing and the loader will not link. (Symbol export happens on a case-by-case basis based on usage. With multiple TUs, the compiler may not see the use of a symbol rendering it absent from the object file of the TU.)
Once the CI/CD changes make it into the repo, #226, I'd propose adding this commit on top as a hotfix. It turns the Windows-specific parts of the loader into header-only, bringing function definitions closer to the location of use. This allows omission of generating an export header.