Qrouter-1.2 for Windows 7/8/10


Qrouter-Cygwin compile and install:

Requirements: Windows, plenty of disk space. Nothing unusual. High bandwidth internet connection is definitely a plus.

Step 1: Install Cygwin

It is absolutely necessary that at least a base version of Cygwin be installed, as well as the prereqisites mentioned in the link above, including the X server and the Tcl/tk interpreter.

Step 2, Option 1: Qrouter Quick Install

This is the easiest way to get Qrouter running, but may be significantly out of date from the latest version, depending on when I last compiled Qrouter on a Windows machine.
  1. Download (use your browser and download to the root directory of the Cygwin distribution, which by default is C:\cygwin:
    File Revision Size Date
    qrouter_1_3_16.tgz 1.3.16 (Windows 7/8/10) (309KB) October 10, 2015
  2. Bring up a Cygwin terminal on the Windows desktop.
  3. Type cd /
  4. This is where the file qrouter_1_3_16.tgz should be.
  5. Type tar xfz qrouter_1_3_16.tgz
  6. Run by typing qrouter. This should be all you need to do! In case the executable can't be found, you may need to type the full path, which is /usr/local/bin/qrouter.

Step 2, Option 2: Qrouter Compile and Install from Source

Since I don't update the Cygwin distribution very often, it can get rather outdated compared to the latest source distribution of Qrouter. However, if you follow the Cygwin installation instructions, you should have everything you need to compile Qrouter from source.
  1. I suggest creating a directory /usr/local/src with the command "mkdir /usr/local/src", then doing "cd /usr/local/src" before proceeding with the next item. However, the magic source may be downloaded into the default top directory without any problem.
  2. Use your web browser to download the latest Qrouter source distribution. If default values are chosen during install, then the Cygwin top-level directory is rooted at "C:\cygwin", and the directory above is "C:\cygwin\usr\local\src" as viewed in the Windows environment.
  3. Download the latest .tgz file from the Qrouter web page.
  4. Once the .tgz file is in the proper destination, you should be able to see the file from the Cygwin terminal prompt by typing the command "ls".
  5. At the Cygwin terminal prompt, type "tar xfz qrouter-1.3.16.tgz" (of course, substitute the filename for the actual version and revision number of the Qrouter source).
  6. Type "cd qrouter-1.3.16" (likewise, substitute the correct name).
  7. Type "./configure".
  8. Follow up with "make". Hopefully this runs without errors (although there are a handful of warnings, these may be ignored).
  9. Final step is "make install".
  10. You can test by typing "qrouter" at the Cygwin terminal prompt.
  11. Note that there is an executable of Qrouter called "/usr/local/share/qrouter/qrouterexec.exe", and may be launched from a batch file, and thereby launched directly from the Windows desktop. This is left as an exercise unless someone wants to send me a working batch file.

Last updated: August 5, 2016 at 7:21pm