-Building wxPython 2.5 for Development and Testing
+Building wxPython 2.6 for Development and Testing
=================================================
This file describes how I build wxWidgets and wxPython while doing
development and testing, and is meant to help other people that want
to do the same thing. I'll assume that you are using either a CVS
snapshot from http://wxWidgets.org/snapshots/, a checkout from CVS, or
-one of the released wxPython-src-2.5.* tarballs. I'll also assume that
+one of the released wxPython-src-2.6.* tarballs. I'll also assume that
you know your way around your system, the compiler, etc. and most
importantly, that you know what you are doing! ;-)
cd $WXDIR
mkdir bld
cd bld
- ../configure --prefix=/opt/wx/2.5 \
+ ../configure --prefix=/opt/wx/2.6 \
--with-gtk \
+ --with-gnomeprint \
--with-opengl \
--enable-debug \
--enable-geometry \
On OS X of course you'll want to use --with-mac instead of
- --with-gtk.
+ --with-gtk and --with-gnomeprint.
**NOTE**: Due to a recent change there is currently a dependency
problem in the multilib builds of wxWidgets on OSX, so I have
--enable-monolithic \
- By default GTK2 will be selected if its development pacakge is
- installed on your build system. To force the use of GTK 1.2.x
- instead add this flag::
+ By default GTK 2.x will be used for the build. If you would rather
+ use GTK 1.2.x for some reason then you can force configure to use
+ it by changing the --with-gtk flag to specify it like this::
- --disable-gtk2 \
+ --with-gtk=1 \
To make the wxWidgets build be unicode enabled (strongly
recommended if you are building with GTK2) then add the following.
--enable-unicode \
- Notice that I used a prefix of /opt/wx/2.5. You can use whatever
+ Notice that I used a prefix of /opt/wx/2.6. You can use whatever
path you want, such as a path in your HOME dir or even one of the
standard prefix paths such as /usr or /usr/local if you like, but
using /opt this way lets me easily have multiple versions and ports
of wxWidgets "installed" and makes it easy to switch between them,
without impacting any versions of wxWidgets that may have been
installed via an RPM or whatever. For the rest of the steps below
- be sure to also substitute "/opt/wx/2.5" with whatever prefix you
+ be sure to also substitute "/opt/wx/2.6" with whatever prefix you
choose for your build.
If you want to use the image and zlib libraries included with
.make install
When it's done you should have an installed set of files under
- /opt/wx/2.5 containing just wxWidgets. Now to use this version of
- wxWidgets you just need to add /opt/wx/2.5/bin to the PATH and set
- LD_LIBRARY_PATH (or DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH on OS X) to /opt/wx/2.5/lib.
+ /opt/wx/2.6 containing just wxWidgets. Now to use this version of
+ wxWidgets you just need to add /opt/wx/2.6/bin to the PATH and set
+ LD_LIBRARY_PATH (or DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH on OS X) to /opt/wx/2.6/lib.
3. I also have a script to help me build wxPython and it is checked in
other version of it found first, then you can add this to the
command line to ensure your new one is used instead::
- WX_CONFIG=/opt/wx/2.5/bin/wx-config
+ WX_CONFIG=/opt/wx/2.6/bin/wx-config
By default setup.py will assume that you built wxWidgets to use
GTK2. If you built wxWidgets to use GTK 1.2.x then you should add
PYTHONPATH to the wxPython dir located in the source tree. For
example::
- export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/opt/wx/2.5/lib
+ export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/opt/wx/2.6/lib
export PYTHONPATH=$WXDIR/wxPython
cd $WXDIR/wxPython/demo
python2.3 demo.py
SOLARIS NOTE: If you get unresolved symbol errors when importing
wxPython and you are running on Solaris and building with gcc, then
you may be able to work around the problem by uncommenting a bit of
- code in setup.py and building again. Look for 'SunOS' in setup.py
+ code in config.py and building again. Look for 'SunOS' in config.py
and uncomment the block containing it. The problem is that Sun's ld
does not automatically add libgcc to the link step.