On Friday, November 2, 2012 18:13 CET, Richard Frith-Macdonald <[email protected]> wrote: > > On 2 Nov 2012, at 16:37, Sebastian Reitenbach wrote: > > here is how I do it on OpenBSD: > > > > 1. install libobjc2 using the Makefile, not the GNUmakefile, which will end > > up in /usr/local > > 2. install gnustep-make, there I use LDFLAGS='-L/usr/local/lib' > > CPPFLAGS='-I/usr/local/include/' in the environment when running configure > > 3. install gnustep-base and others. at that time, gnustep-make should have > > picked up the CPPFLAGS and LDFLAGS from its installation time > > and should use them. > > But that's not how to install libobjc2 into a GNUstep system ... it's how to > force GNUstep to use a special location to find the library ... OK if you > want to put GNUstep on a system which already has libobjc2 installed, but > lousy if you want to put libobjc2 where you can trivially distribute it as > part of GNUstep package.
but the other way I'd have to: install gnustep-make (which would pick up the system libobjc) then install libobjc2 with the GNUMakefile then reconfigure gnustep-make (in order to pick up the libobjc2 runtime) then go on with others For me packaging, the reconfigure gnustep-make step always caused me headaches. I never got it right to and sane in a way to not unbelieavably overcomplicate the whole process of that packaging. My way of doing it may be lousy, but is easy, and just works for me ;) Sebastian > _______________________________________________ Gnustep-dev mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnustep-dev
