For my own sanity: 10.9: Mavericks, last release Dec 2013 10.8: Mountain Lion, last release Oct 2013 (maybe not dead) 10.7: Lion, last release Oct 2012 (dead) 10.6: Snow Leopard, last release 2011 (dead) 10.5: Leopard, last release 2009 (dead)
I don't think we should expend any effort for 10.5; it's too old. I don't think I care about 10.6, either, but if it still works, I guess there's no real reason to remove it. So this is just a +1 on removing 10.5 from the README. On Jan 9, 2014, at 7:50 PM, Paul Hargrove <phhargr...@lbl.gov> wrote: > Ralph, > > I can build fine on 10.7 (the system I am typing on now), and on 10.6 too. > > I have no strong opinion on fix-vs-document, but as Jeff knows quite well if > you say you support it I am going to try to make it break :). > > -Paul > > > On Thu, Jan 9, 2014 at 4:46 PM, Ralph Castain <r...@open-mpi.org> wrote: > I dunno if we really go back that far, Paul - I doubt anyone has tested on > anything less than 10.8, frankly. Might be better if we update to not make > claims that far back. > > Were you able to build/run on 10.7? > > On Jan 9, 2014, at 3:25 PM, Paul Hargrove <phhargr...@lbl.gov> wrote: > >> As I noted in another email, 1.7.4's README claims support for Mac OSX >> versions 10.5 through 10.7. So, I just now tried (but failed) to build on >> 10.5 (Leopard): >> >> *** Assembler >> checking dependency style of gcc -std=gnu99... gcc3 >> checking for BSD- or MS-compatible name lister (nm)... /usr/bin/nm -p >> checking the name lister (/usr/bin/nm -p) interface... BSD nm >> checking for fgrep... /usr/bin/grep -F >> checking if need to remove -g from CCASFLAGS... OS X Leopard - yes ( -O3 >> -DNDEBUG -finline-functions -fno-strict-aliasing) >> checking whether to enable smp locks... yes >> checking if .proc/endp is needed... no >> checking directive for setting text section... .text >> checking directive for exporting symbols... .globl >> checking for objdump... no >> checking if .note.GNU-stack is needed... no >> checking suffix for labels... : >> checking prefix for global symbol labels... none >> configure: error: Could not determine global symbol label prefix >> >> The same failure is seen on a PPC system running OSX Leopard, too. However, >> I figure it best to focus on getting x86 working first before worrying any >> about PPC. >> >> The only configure option used was --prefix. >> The bzip2-compressed config.log is attached. >> >> -Paul >> >> -- >> Paul H. Hargrove phhargr...@lbl.gov >> Future Technologies Group >> Computer and Data Sciences Department Tel: +1-510-495-2352 >> Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Fax: +1-510-486-6900 >> <openmpi-1.7-latest-macos10.5-x86.config.log.bz2>_______________________________________________ >> devel mailing list >> de...@open-mpi.org >> http://www.open-mpi.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/devel > > > _______________________________________________ > devel mailing list > de...@open-mpi.org > http://www.open-mpi.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/devel > > > > -- > Paul H. Hargrove phhargr...@lbl.gov > Future Technologies Group > Computer and Data Sciences Department Tel: +1-510-495-2352 > Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Fax: +1-510-486-6900 > _______________________________________________ > devel mailing list > de...@open-mpi.org > http://www.open-mpi.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/devel -- Jeff Squyres jsquy...@cisco.com For corporate legal information go to: http://www.cisco.com/web/about/doing_business/legal/cri/