On 11/22/05, Frank Eory <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > The fastest approach to get it up and running on Mac OS X would be to > work directly from the binaries.
That may be the fastest way for you, but it means a lot more work for me. I don't have a farm of Macs here for testing all versions of the OS and Xcode (donations accepted, though). > The source downloading and compilation > is not the most efficient path. Could you upload your binaries that are > known to work on the geda.seul.org site? Several problems: 1) 10.3 doesn't have readline, and I don't want to deal with the fallout from installing readline shared libraries in /usr/local. 2) My binaries are from 10.4 3) Even if my binaries were linked against the system versions of readline, libz and libbz2 (instead of the Fink versions in /sw), they wouldn't work for you because 10.3 is missing some of those libraries. > Once I get it running, I could > work on the .info files for the binaries and give you the results such > that other people could benefit. I don't remember how many people have made the .info files work on 10.3, but it's more than just me. It sounds like something is messing with your Fink install, and I have run out of suggestions on how to fix it. I volunteered to make Fink packages for these tools because Fink (normally) provides a consistent build environment. Trying to cope with an unstructured build environment without taking a look around the machine is not my idea of fun, and I don't have time to look at everyone's machine when problems arise. Sorry. -- - Charles Lepple
