In addition, the Mozilla project has a script (unfortunately I forget
the exact name) which takes 2 single-architecture trees and combines
them via lipo. It creates a new tree that contains all files that are
the same in the 2 old trees. Any differing files that are binaries it
combines via lipo. Any differing files that aren't binaries it tosses
(can't do anything else with them), so you have to be careful in some
projects (if, say, it builds a header file for distribution that
changes per-architecture), but in general it works quite well.
On Jan 3, 2007, at 1:14 PM, Kevin Walzer wrote:
Bob Ippolito's py2app package (which wraps up Python applications into
standard Mac .app bundles) has a separate script/command-line tool
called macho_standalone, which scans an app bundle and rewrites all
the
linker bits so that the dylibs in the app bundle are self-
contained. It
runs install_name_tool on them, IIRC. You may want to Google for
"macho_standalone" to find the most recent version and documentation.
--
Kevin Ballard
http://kevin.sb.org
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.tildesoft.com
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