The AWS SDK for C++ provides a modern C++ (version C++ 11 or later) interface for Amazon Web Services (AWS). It is meant to be performant and fully functioning with low- and high-level SDKs, while minimizing dependencies and providing platform portability (Windows, OSX, Linux, and mobile).
AWS SDK for C++ is in now in General Availability and recommended for production use. We invite our customers to join the development efforts by submitting pull requests and sending us feedback and ideas via GitHub Issues.
- Visual Studio 2015 or later
- OR GNU Compiler Collection (GCC) 4.9 or later
- OR Clang 3.3 or later
- 4GB of RAM (This is required to build some of the larger clients. The SDK build may fail on EC2 instance types t2.micro, t2.small and other small instance types due to insufficient memory)
- Supported platforms
- Amazon Linux
- Windows
- Mac
-
Install CMake and the relevant build tools for your platform. Ensure these are available in your executable path.
-
Clone this repository with submodules
git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/aws/aws-sdk-cpp
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Create your build directory. Replace <BUILD_DIR> with your build directory name:
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Build the project:
cd <BUILD_DIR> cmake <path-to-root-of-this-source-code> \ -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug \ -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=<path-to-install> \ -DBUILD_ONLY="s3" cmake --build . --config=Debug cmake --install . --config=Debug
NOTE: BUILD_ONLY is an optional flag used to list only the services you are using. Building the whole sdk can take a long time. Also check out the list of CMake parameters
To compile in Linux, you must have the header files for libcurl, libopenssl. The packages are typically available in your package manager.
Debian based Linux distributions example:
sudo apt-get install libcurl-dev
RPM based Linux distributions example:
sudo [yum|dnf|zypper] install libcurl-devel
To build for Android, add -DTARGET_ARCH=ANDROID
to your cmake command line. Currently we support Android APIs from 19 to 28 with Android NDK 19c and we are using build-in cmake toolchain file supplied by Android NDK, assuming you have the appropriate environment variables (ANDROID_NDK) set.
Building for Android on Windows requires some additional setup. In particular, you will need to run cmake from a Visual Studio developer command prompt (2015 or higher). Additionally, you will need 'git' and 'patch' in your path. If you have git installed on a Windows system, then patch is likely found in a sibling directory (.../Git/usr/bin/). Once you've verified these requirements, your cmake command line will change slightly to use nmake:
cmake -G "NMake Makefiles" `-DTARGET_ARCH=ANDROID` <other options> ..
Nmake builds targets in a serial fashion. To make things quicker, we recommend installing JOM as an alternative to nmake and then changing the cmake invocation to:
cmake -G "NMake Makefiles JOM" `-DTARGET_ARCH=ANDROID` <other options> ..
You can download and install aws-sdk-cpp using the vcpkg dependency manager:
git clone https://github.com/Microsoft/vcpkg.git
cd vcpkg
./bootstrap-vcpkg.sh
./vcpkg integrate install
./vcpkg install aws-sdk-cpp
The aws-sdk-cpp port in vcpkg is kept up to date by Microsoft team members and community contributors. If the version is out of date, please create an issue or pull request on the vcpkg repository.
For information about maintenance and support for SDK major versions and our underlying dependencies, see the following in the AWS SDKs and Tools Shared Configuration and Credentials Reference Guide
The best way to interact with our team is through GitHub. You can open a discussion for guidance questions or an issue for bug reports or feature requests.
You may also find help on community resources such as StackOverFlow with the tag #aws-sdk-cpp. If you have a support plan with AWS Support, you can also create a new support case.
Please make sure to check out our resources too before opening an issue:
- Developer Guide and API reference
- Changelog for recent breaking changes.
- Contribution guide.
- samples repo.
- Other docs for how to build the sdk
- CMake Parameters
- Add as CMake external project
- Builing for Docker (To build for Docker, ensure your container meets the minimum requirements)
- Building on an EC2 instance
- SDK usage
- Coding Standards
- License
- Code of Conduct