]>
Commit | Line | Data |
---|---|---|
6ecd355e DE |
1 | Title: Metrowerks w/ configure HOWTO |
2 | Author: David Elliott | |
3 | Id: $Id$ | |
4 | ||
5 | === Introduction to Metrowerks command line tools === | |
6 | ||
7 | Since CodeWarrior version 8, Metrowerks has provided command-line compilers | |
8 | hosted on OS X. There are three available targets. | |
9 | ||
10 | 1) Mac OS X/PPC | |
11 | Compiler: mwcc | |
12 | Linker: mwld | |
13 | -- File formats -- | |
14 | Executable: Mach-O | |
15 | Shared Library: Mach-O (bundle, dylib, etc.) | |
16 | Static Library: CodeWarrior | |
17 | Object: CodeWarrior | |
18 | ||
19 | 2) Mach-O/PPC | |
20 | Compiler: mwccppc | |
21 | Linker: mwldppc | |
22 | -- File formats -- | |
23 | Executable: Mach-O | |
24 | Shared Library: Mach-O (bundle, dylib, etc.) | |
25 | Static Library: Archived (ar) Mach-O (.a files) | |
26 | Object: Mach-O .o files | |
27 | ||
28 | 3) Mac/PPC | |
29 | Compiler: mwpefcc | |
30 | Linker: mwpefld | |
31 | -- File formats -- | |
32 | Executable: PEF | |
33 | Shared Library: PEF ("code fragments") | |
34 | Static Library: CodeWarrior | |
35 | Object: CodeWarrior | |
36 | ||
37 | As you can see, only one of these targets produces Mach-O .o files that | |
38 | normal ar and ranlib could hope to handle. It's no matter though, | |
39 | really all that ar and ranlib do is create a static library (.a) from a | |
40 | collection of .o files. This can be emulated by a shell script which | |
41 | calls the appropriate mwld. I've provided one called mwar which does this. | |
42 | For ranlib simply use true since mwar does all of the work. | |
43 | ||
44 | === Metrowerks Environment Variables === | |
45 | ||
46 | In order for any of these programs to work some environment variables | |
47 | must be set. The compiler must know where to look for headers (CIncludes). | |
48 | The linker needs to know where to look for libraries (Libraries) such as | |
49 | those specified on the commandline with -l as well as crt1.o (or sometimes | |
50 | mwcrt1.o) for OS X. The linker also needs to know if any additional | |
51 | libraries should be linked into executables (LibraryFiles). Finally, | |
52 | on OS X the linker needs to know where to look for Frameworks (FrameworkPaths). | |
53 | These are controlled by the following environment variables: | |
54 | ||
55 | 1) Mac OS X/PPC | |
56 | CIncludes: MWCMacOSXPPCIncludes | |
57 | Libraries: MWMacOSXPPCLibraries | |
58 | LibraryFiles: MWMacOSXPPCLibraryFiles | |
59 | FrameworkPaths: MWFrameworkPaths | |
60 | ||
61 | 2) Mach-O/PPC | |
62 | CIncludes: MWCMachPPCIncludes | |
63 | Libraries: MWMachPPCLibraries | |
64 | LibraryFiles: MWMachPPCLibraryFiles | |
65 | FrameworkPaths: MWFrameworkPaths | |
66 | ||
67 | 3) Mac/PPC | |
68 | CIncludes: MWPEFCIncludes | |
69 | Libraries: MWPEFLibraries | |
70 | LibraryFiles: MWPEFLibraryFiles | |
71 | FrameworkPaths: (N/A) | |
72 | Notes (mwldppc 3.0.3 build 343): | |
73 | The environment variables (including MWPEFLibraries) aren't read until after | |
74 | the command line options have been parsed! The command line option parser | |
75 | actually tries to do the linking from within the parser and thus -l options | |
76 | which don't have a -L specifying where to look for the library do not work. | |
77 | Yes, this means that MWPEFLibraries is essentially useless AFAICT. | |
78 | ||
79 | I have provided an example mwvars.sh. It's what I use with CW 8.3. YMMV. | |
80 | ||
81 | === Compiling wxWidgets targetting Mac OS X with Metrowerks === | |
82 | ||
83 | With recent wxWidgets (2.5.5) it is possible to compile using the | |
84 | Metrowerks tools with minimal effort. You may use either mwcc/mwld | |
85 | or mwccppc/mwldppc. Ideally you will have the tools on your path | |
86 | on your path as well as the mwar script I've provided. You will also | |
87 | have had to source mwvars.sh (either yourself or by sourcing it from | |
88 | your .profile or .bash_profile). | |
89 | ||
90 | Before beginning I strongly recommend you write a simple C++ hello world | |
91 | program. I recommend #include <iostream> and cout << "Hello World" << endl;. | |
92 | This will ensure your C++ standard library is working. Note that | |
93 | you can compile this using mwcc hello.cpp. You will find a hello.cpp.o | |
94 | file as well as an a.out file if the compiler and linker were successful. | |
95 | Assuming your compiler can produce a.out you're ready to begin. | |
96 | ||
97 | As per usual, I recommend building outside the source tree. | |
98 | From the source tree (workingDirectory$ is the prompt) | |
99 | ||
100 | wxWidgets$ mkdir ../BUILD_MACd_CW8 | |
101 | wxWidgets$ cd ../BUILD_MACd_CW8 | |
102 | BUILD_MACd_CW8$ ../wxWidgets/configure --enable-debug --disable-shared CC=mwcc CXX=mwcc LD=mwld AR=mwar RANLIB=true | |
103 | [ configure hopefully succeeds ] | |
104 | BUILD_MACd_CW8$ make | |
105 | [ make hopefully succeeds ] | |
106 | BUILD_MACd_CW8$ make -C samples/minimal | |
107 | [ minimal make succeeds ] | |
108 | BUILD_MACd_CW8$ ./samples/minimal/minimal.app/Contents/MacOS/minimal | |
109 | [ minimal runs and your prompt will return when you Quit the app ] | |
110 | ||
111 | The important options are CC=mwcc CXX=mwcc LD=mwld AR=mwar RANLIB=true | |
112 | Right now you also need --disable-shared. Eventually I hope to add the | |
113 | ability to created shared libraries. | |
114 | ||
115 | If you wish to use the Mach-O compilers instead of the Mac OS X compilers | |
116 | then use CC=mwccppc CXX=mwccppc LD=mwldppc. You don't need a special | |
117 | AR or RANLIB with this compiler. | |
118 | ||
119 | At the moment, precompiled headers aren't supported though you don't need | |
120 | to pass --disable-precomp-headers since the Makefiles know they can't do PCH. | |
121 | I hope to add this soon. | |
122 | ||
123 | As you can see, this is not wildly different from compiling using any | |
124 | other compiler (for instance GCC). The same files that would be compiled | |
125 | by gcc are now compiled by mwcc. The same files that would be linked | |
126 | by the combination of ar and ranlib are now linked using the mwar shell | |
127 | script that calls mwld to do the work and using true in place of ranlib. | |
128 | The same files that would be linked using ld (i.e. the executable sample) | |
129 | are linked using mwld. | |
130 | ||
131 | ||
132 | === Compiling wxWidgets targetting Mac OS (Carbon) with Metrowerks === | |
133 | ||
134 | Compiling for Mac OS PEF Carbon is not really more or less difficult | |
135 | than compiling for OS X. However, there is still some work left to do. | |
136 | ||
137 | In particular, the -lCarbonLib and -lQuickTimeLib options to the linker don't | |
138 | work because of the aforementioned bug in mwpefld. To fix this you can add | |
139 | -L/path/to/Universal/Libraries/StubLibraries to LDFLAGS. Unfortunately | |
140 | because autoconf (2.59) doesn't always use eval appropriately you cannot | |
141 | have spaces in the path. What I recommend is to make a symlink from | |
142 | /Applications/Metrowerks CodeWarrior 8.0/Metrowerks CodeWarrior/MacOS Support to some path which can be accessed without using spaces. | |
143 | Something like this: | |
144 | ~$ ln -snf "/Applications/Metrowerks CodeWarrior 8.0/Metrowerks CodeWarrior/MacOS Support" MW_MacOS | |
145 | ||
146 | There is also a problem with the samples Makefiles. Currently they clear | |
147 | the resource fork of the executable rather than append to it. This | |
148 | can be remedied by adding the -a option to Rez before making in that | |
149 | sample's directory. I hope to fix this soon. | |
150 | ||
151 | Assuming you work around these it's pretty straightforward: | |
152 | ||
153 | wxWidgets$ mkdir ../BUILD_MACCARBONd_CW8 | |
154 | wxWidgets$ cd ../BUILD_MACCARBONd_CW8 | |
155 | BUILD_MACCARBONd_CW8$ ../wxWidgets/configure --host=powerpc-apple-macos --enable-debug --disable-shared CC=mwpefcc CXX=mwpefcc LD=mwpefld AR=mwpefar RANLIB=true LDFLAGS=-L/Users/yourname/MW_MacOS/Universal/Libraries/StubLibraries | |
156 | [ configure hopefully succeeds ] | |
157 | BUILD_MACd_CW8$ make | |
158 | [ make hopefully succeeds ] | |
159 | BUILD_MACd_CW8$ make -C samples/minimal | |
160 | [ minimal make succeeds ] | |
161 | BUILD_MACd_CW8$ /System/Library/Frameworks/Carbon.framework/Versions/A/Support/LaunchCFMApp ./samples/minimal/minimal | |
162 | [ minimal runs and your prompt will return when you Quit the app ] | |
163 | ||
164 | Unlike the OS X case not many people compile wxMac Carbon PEF using configure. | |
165 | From time to time there may be minor problems. Please report these using | |
166 | the sourceforge bug tracker. | |
167 | ||
168 | === Other Metrowerks notes === | |
169 | --- Object file extension --- | |
170 | By default, the mw compilers when used with the -c option will append .o | |
171 | to the source filename (following symlinks even). This is in contrast to | |
172 | normal compilers which replace the files extension with .o. To get the | |
173 | normal behavior you must add -ext o to the compiler options. The wxWidgets | |
174 | configure script does this and the macros to check for this are part of | |
175 | Bakefile (bakefile.sourceforge.net). | |
176 | ||
177 | --- Static library extension --- | |
178 | The CodeWarrior IDE typically uses the .lib extension for CodeWarrior static | |
179 | libraries and .a for Mach-O static libraries (ar/ranlib archives). The | |
180 | wxWidgets makefiles always use .a. This isn't really a problem just be | |
181 | aware that the .a files aren't really ar/ranlib archives and aren't useable | |
182 | by anything other than CodeWarrior itself. | |
183 | ||
184 | --- IDE --- | |
185 | As far as I know it should be possible to use libraries created by | |
186 | the command line tools from the IDE. For instance, you could compile | |
187 | wxWidgets using this method but continue to use the IDE for your application. | |
188 | Personally, I prefer sticking with the command line so I haven't tried this. | |
189 | ||
190 | --- OS X SDKs --- | |
191 | Before CodeWarrior 9.3 the usage of SDKs (those in /Developer/SDKs) is | |
192 | impossible. You might think that it would work simply be prefacing any | |
193 | /System or /usr paths with the SDK path when setting the environment variables. | |
194 | Unfortunately, the libraries and frameworks inside these SDKs contain absolute | |
195 | paths to libraries and frameworks which they depend on. Thus, the linker | |
196 | attempts to load the non-SDK version to satisfy the dependency. | |
197 | ||
198 | To ensure an app will work correctly on previous versions of the OS you | |
199 | can use Apple's availability macros. | |
200 | ||
201 | --- CodeWarrior 8.3 and Panther --- | |
202 | CodeWarrior 8.3 has some problems running on Panther. When using the IDE | |
203 | version it is typical to change the OS X directory to the 10.2 SDK. | |
204 | Unfortunately, this is impossible with the command line compiler due to | |
205 | the aforementioned bug. Thus, the only solution is to allow CodeWarrior | |
206 | 8.3 to work with Panther's headers. Fortunately, this isn't as hard | |
207 | as some people (particularly those at Metrowerks) would make you think. | |
208 | ||
209 | First of all, there are issues with Apple's headers declaring conflicting | |
210 | types. Particularly with respect to wchar_t. Now, I'm sure you're | |
211 | aware of the "(wchar_t Support fix)" directory. What you need to do | |
212 | is create another one called "(wchar_t Support Panther fix)" using the | |
213 | provided machine/ansi.h file which contains some minor changes from | |
214 | the Metrowerks version. | |
215 | ||
216 | Secondly, there is an issue with crt1.o. Apple's position is that | |
217 | /usr/lib/crt1.o is intended to be used only with Apple's GCC. | |
218 | Metrowerks does provide an mwcrt1.o and when you're using the IDE you | |
219 | can perfectly well use it instead of Apple's crt1.o. Unfortunately, | |
220 | when you are using mwld it has crt1.o hardcoded. Very fortunately, it | |
221 | has only the filename encoded and it searches the libraries path! | |
222 | What I do is symlink "Mac OS X Support/Libraries/Startup/mwcrt1.o" to | |
223 | crt1.o in the same directory. | |
224 | ||
225 | --- MSL on OS X --- | |
226 | In mwvar.sh for the Mac OS X/PPC toolchain I've used MSL C++ with the | |
227 | BSD CRT. To do this I used the .a files. Earlier I used the .lib files | |
228 | but these also require the MSL C .lib. AFAIK using this would cause | |
229 | the MSL CRT to be used and I think I don't want that unless I'm using | |
230 | the MSL CRT headers. It did work although I never tested it with | |
231 | anything too complex. I suspect it would have failed although I'm | |
232 | wondering how it works with the CW projects because I think they do | |
233 | link with the MSL_C libs. This is probably very wrong. | |
234 | ||
235 | If you do decide to use the MSL_C libs you'll need to add | |
236 | "MSL/MSL_C/MSL_MacOS/Src/console_OS_X.c". Unfortunately, | |
237 | mwld is a linker and doesn't understand C source code. Thus you must | |
238 | compile this file and use the compiled version. | |
239 | ||
240 | What I did was simply run mwcc -c console_OS_X.c to generate a | |
241 | console_OS_X.c.o object file. This file must be in MWMacOSXPPCLibraryFiles. | |
242 |