On 5/24/07, Benjamin Dasnois <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hello Yen-Ju,thanks for your help. I prefer using gnustep-make, I read the articles you've sent but I don't really see how to do that with gnustep-make... Could you give me an actual example? Regards,
Here is my GNUmakefile.postamble.
It is a little messy at the first sight because I have frameworks,
libraries and bundles.
For framework, you can just look at OrganizeKit.framework.
First, you need to copy it after the compilation:
@mkdir -p $(CURDIR)/$(APP_NAME).app/Contents/Frameworks
@cp -fr $(CURDIR)/OrganizeKit/OrganizeKit.framework \
$(CURDIR)/$(APP_NAME).app/Contents/Frameworks/
Then you change the symbol of it:
install_name_tool -id
@executable_path/../Frameworks/OrganizeKit.framework/OrganizeKit
$(APP_NAME).app/Contents/Frameworks/OrganizeKit.framework/OrganizeKit
Finally, tell application where it is by changing the default symbol:
install_name_tool -change
OrganizeKit.framework/OrganizeKit
@executable_path/../Frameworks/OrganizeKit.framework/OrganizeKit
$(APP_NAME).app/Contents/MacOS/$(APP_NAME)
To know the default symbol in application,
do
'otool -L $(APP_NAME).app/Contents/MacOS/$(APP_NAME)'
The last step make sure the symbol in application point to the right place.
Yen-Ju
DASNOIS Benjamin On 5/21/07, Yen-Ju Chen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 5/21/07, Benjamin Dasnois <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Hello, > > as my first post to this list, I would like to say that this project > > is really impressing and that's something I'm going to use from now. > > :) I hope I will be able later to give back to the community. > > > > But, nowadays I have some problems; I'm a student in a computing > > school and I have to develop a tool that will work on MacOS. My main > > concern is that once compiled I should be able to distribute my > > application to MacOS users without telling them to install gnustep and > > renaissance. I can compile on a MacOS so I think that gnustep is not a > > problem but what about renaissance? I thought about static linking but > > I've to admit that I don't really know how to do that... (I use > > gnustep's make system) > > The way I do is that I build application on Unix with GNUstep > and on Mac with Cocoa. > In that case, you don't need to include GNUstep on Mac. > If you are using 3rd party frameworks on Mac, ex, Renaissance, > you can include that framework inside your application for delivery. > Therefore, users don't need to install that framework in advance. > > There are 2 ways of doing it: > 1. Use xcode for your project on Mac. It should be easier, > but you have to maintain both GNUmakefile for GNUstep and xcode > project for Cocoa. > 2. If you like gnustep-make as me, > you can use GNUmakefile.postamble to move that framework into > AppName.app/Contents/Frameworks/ > You also need to use 'install_name_tool' to change symbols. > You can google it or these two links may be useful: > http://qin.laya.com/tech_coding_help/dylib_linking.html > http://doc.trolltech.com/qq/qq09-mac-deployment.html > > Yen-Ju > > > > > Thank you in advance. > > > > Regards, > > > > -- > > DASNOIS Benjamin > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > > Help-gnustep mailing list > > [email protected] > > http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/help-gnustep > >
GNUmakefile.postamble
Description: Binary data
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