The latest version of this documentation is available on GitHub.
Vcpkg helps you manage C and C++ libraries on Windows, Linux and MacOS. This tool and ecosystem are constantly evolving; your involvement is vital to its success!
- Installing and Using Packages Example: sqlite
- Packaging Zipfiles Example: zlib
- Packaging GitHub Repositories Example: libogg
- Patching Example: Patching libpng to work for x64-uwp
- Getting Started with Versioning
- Manifest Mode: CMake Example
- Pin old Boost Versions
- Using Overlay Triplets
- Common Options
- Commands
- Buildsystem Integration
- Triplet files
- Configuration and Environment
- Authentication
- Manifest Mode
- Binary Caching
- Asset Caching
- Versioning
- Usage with Android
- Usage with Mingw-w64
- Host Dependencies
- Using Registries
- Manifest Files - vcpkg.json
- Control Files
- Portfile Functions
- Authoring Script Ports
- Common CMake Definitions
- Maintainer Guidelines
- Creating Registries
- CMake Guidelines
Vcpkg-Tool Maintainer Help
- vcpkg.info - Package index + search
- vcpkgx - Package index + search
- vcpkg index - Package index + search
- Vcpkg Host Dependencies for Cross-Compilation
- Registries: Bring your own libraries to vcpkg
- Vcpkg: Accelerate your team development environment with binary caching and manifests
- Vcpkg: 2019.06 Update (overlay ports, overlay triplets,
vcpkg_check_features
) - Announcing a single C++ library manager for Linux, macOS and Windows: Vcpkg
- Vcpkg: Using multiple enlistments to handle multiple versions of a library
- Vcpkg: introducing the export command
- Binary Compatibility and Pain-free Upgrade Why Moving to Visual Studio 2017 is almost "too easy"
- Vcpkg recent enhancements
- Vcpkg 3 Months Anniversary, Survey
- Vcpkg updates: Static linking is now available
- Vcpkg: a tool to acquire and build C++ open source libraries on Windows