On 9 mrt 2011, at 14:40, Evan Schoenberg, M.D. wrote:

> 
> On Mar 9, 2011, at 2:26 AM, Thijs Alkemade wrote:
> 
>> 
>> I'm trying to remember what I did exactly.
>> 
>> It was configuring for PPC, and it gave warnings about using the wrong one. 
>> Something along the lines of "If you are cross compiling, did you mean 
>> --build instead of --host?" Without seeing if it would not work without or 
>> thinking about it, I changed it, and it finished successfully.
> 
> As noted in the docs (and in that commit message):
> 
> "There are three system names that the build knows about: the machine you are 
> building on (build), the machine that you are building for (host), and the 
> machine that GCC will produce code for (target). When you configure GCC, you 
> specify these with --build=, --host=, and --target=."
> 
> 
>> After committing I realised I had changed that and didn't really know what 
>> it meant, so I read that same GCC documentation and decided it was wrong, 
>> and that I should change it back. But after I changed it, it wouldn't 
>> compile anymore (I don't know what the error was anymore, though).
> 
> Have you installed Xcode 4?  PPC compilation is no longer supported... and if 
> it's the most recent Xcode you've installed, it will have removed the 
> necessary applications.
> 
> Also, Rosetta may need to be installed for glib's PPC compilation to complete 
> successfully; I messed with that for about 15 minutes before giving up and 
> installing Rosetta.  It'll need to be fixed to compile in 10.7 since Rosetta 
> isn't supported there at all... however, it may or may not be an issue on 
> trunk.
> 
> -Evan


I might have had it at that moment, but installed alongside XCode 3, so I'm 
quite sure I wasn't using it. Also, I do have Rosetta.

If you really want me to, I can go back and see what goes wrong, but it looks 
glib is upgraded rarely in Adium, so I'd say leave it as it is. :)

Regards,
Thijs

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