octave-maintainers
[Top][All Lists]
Advanced

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: MXE Octave: "... has no symbols" warning under Mac OS X


From: Ben Abbott
Subject: Re: MXE Octave: "... has no symbols" warning under Mac OS X
Date: Sun, 22 Sep 2013 16:01:49 -0400

On Sep 22, 2013, at 1:45 PM, c. wrote:

> 
> On 22 Sep 2013, at 18:48, Anirudha Bose <address@hidden> wrote:
> 
>> 
>> On Sun, Sep 22, 2013 at 7:14 PM, Ben Abbott <address@hidden> wrote:
>> 
>> On Sep 22, 2013, at 2:05 AM, Anirudha Bose wrote:
>> 
>>> 
>>> On Sun, Sep 22, 2013 at 5:22 AM, Benjamin Abbott <address@hidden> wrote:
>>> On Sep 21, 2013, at 3:33 PM, Anirudha Bose <address@hidden> wrote:
>>> 
>>>> On Sun, Sep 22, 2013 at 12:44 AM, Ben Abbott <address@hidden> wrote:
>>>> On Sep 21, 2013, at 3:21 AM, Anirudha Bose wrote:
>>>> 
>>>>>> Can you attempt to try to apply install_name_tool manually and then 
>>>>>> check the result with otool?
>>>>> 
>>>>> This will be a very long process. I can try it though. Or better if I can 
>>>>> find some tools to automate this job. For future use should I include 
>>>>> your scripts in my MXE repo, so that others can try reusing your scripts?
>>>> 
>>>> If you think my scripts are the correct approach, then go ahead and commit 
>>>> them. However, maybe before committing my scripts to your repo, maybe its 
>>>> a good idea to first determine the reason my scripts aren't working for 
>>>> you with the MXE approach?
>>>> 
>>>> The good thing about mxe-octave is that it has grown very diverse and 
>>>> capable of doing many things. I am not familiar with m-scripting so I will 
>>>> have trouble debugging your scripts. But maybe someone else can reuse your 
>>>> scripts to make them work with MXE. I have come up with a temporary 
>>>> solution in Python and I have been able to produce a working application 
>>>> bundle of Octave for Mac OS X. I have committed all the scripts to my repo 
>>>> since it will be handy to have them all at one place.
>>> 
>>> I'll pulled a copy of you repo.  I haven't used mxe before.  What commands 
>>> are needed to produce a MacOSX app?
>>> 
>>> Hi Ben.
>>> 
>>> Here are the steps for compiling Octave from MXE.
>>> 1. Check the requirements for Mac OS X in the file 
>>> mxe-octave-anirudha/index.html#requirements.
>>> 2. Build Octave with the command "sudo make octave".
>>> 3. Make sure you have Macports version of gfortran installed in your 
>>> machine. I will commit a change to add gfortran in the list of requirements.
>>> 4. If you are able to get a successful build, then you can use my script 
>>> mxe-octave-anirudha/darwin_files/standalone.py to rewrite the Mach-O 
>>> headers. Make sure you have created octave.app in the "dist" directory 
>>> inside mxe-octave-anirudha. You can find information on how to use 
>>> standalone.py is present inside the file.
>>> 
>>> Let me know if you face any problems.
>>> 
>>> - Anirudha
>> 
>> I think I'm in need of a bit more detail.  I've cloned your repo.  Does your 
>> repo include all the mxe stuff and your changes?  I see a configure.ac and 
>> Makefile.in.  Do I start with autoconf -> configure -> make?  To build a 
>> Darwin app are there any specific options needed?
>> 
>> Oops! Sorry for missing that out. Do autoconf -> ./configure 
>> --enable-native-build --enable-shared --disable-static --target=darwin 
>> --build=darwin --host=darwin --enable-pic-flag --enable-64 -> sudo make 
>> octave
>> 
>> - Anirudha
> 
> Anirudha,
> 
> as I would also like to try building Octave binaries using your set-up, I 
> recently started reading
> this thread and your blog.
> 
> I just noticed these lines in a recent post:
> 
> "On a Mac OS X system, there is no special need to compile LLVM separately 
> because it is the default compiler present. The llvm-config utility happens 
> to be installed in the path /opt/local/libexec/llvm-3.3/bin/llvm-config. I 
> added this path in the environment variable LLVM_CONFIG and explicitly 
> specified the --enable-jit option in the configure and Octave successfully 
> compiled with JIT. Here are the configure details."
> 
> this information is incorrect. 
> 
> No default system libraries are installed in "/opt/local/", that is the place 
> where MacPorts will usually install libraries. Are you going to require 
> MacPorts to be installed in order to make your binay package work?
> 
> I'm sorry if this had been pointed out before, as I said I just started 
> reading about MXE and your binaty packaging scripts.
> 
> c.

Anirudha, I recall this being discussed some weeks ago ... but is Macports just 
needed to satisfy the gfortran requirement, or are there other problems using 
Apple's tools?

Ben



reply via email to

[Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread]