Mercurial > emacs
view mac/INSTALL @ 49242:b1f3f94fcefe
Misc changes to avoid using path == file name.
author | Kim F. Storm <storm@cua.dk> |
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date | Tue, 14 Jan 2003 23:04:19 +0000 |
parents | 4d9ad5d4f2d4 |
children | 23a1cea22d13 |
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* BUILDING EMACS ON MAC OS 8/9 AND MAC OS X -*- outline -*- Copyright (c) 2001, 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Permission is granted to anyone to make or distribute verbatim copies of this document as received, in any medium, provided that the copyright notice and permission notice are preserved, and that the distributor grants the recipient permission for further redistribution as permitted by this notice. Permission is granted to distribute modified versions of this document, or of portions of it, under the above conditions, provided also that they carry prominent notices stating who last changed them. * BUILDING EMACS ON MAC OS X You should be able to build Emacs on Mac OS X by typing the following commands at the top-level directory after the source distribution is un-tarred. ./configure --enable-carbon-app make make install The last step may fail if you do not have permissions to install. If you try to install into /usr (with ./configure --prefix=/usr), then you must install as root using the sudo command. However, it is not recommended; see the notes section below for more details. The --enable-carbon-app specifies that the carbon GUI application should be installed into /Application. If you want it to install in a different location, specify --enable-carbon-app=<mydir> If you have X Window installed on your Mac and you are building Emacs to run under Carbon and not X Window, you need to type `./configure --without-x' instead of `./configure'. You can type `make bootstrap' instead of `make' to rebuild everything, including byte-compiling the Lisp files. If you are compiling on Mac OS X versions before 10.2 and have not installed the GNU texinfo package on your system, the build will complain that makeinfo cannot be found. Instructions for installing the GNU texinfo package are given below. Alternatively, you can type `make -k' instead of `make' and safely ignore the error messages and use the existing info files. After Emacs is installed, you can run it by typing `emacs -nw' from a terminal (make sure your path contains /usr/local/bin) or by double-clicking on /Applications/Emacs.app in the Finder. To start Emacs as a GUI application from the terminal, the pathname to the executable in the bundle, i.e., /Application/Emacs.app/Contents/MacOS/Emacs must be typed to the shell to enable Emacs to locate its resources correctly. You may want to create a symlink or alias to this path to quickly access both the terminal and GUI versions. If you are building Emacs to run on Mac OS X and X Window, you need to create a directory containing statically-linked X libraries. sudo mkdir /usr/X11R6/libstatic cd /usr/X11R6/libstatic sudo ln -s ../lib/lib*.a ../lib/X11 . Instead of typing `./configure' above, type ./configure --without-carbon --with-x --x-libraries=/usr/X11R6/libstatic To use colors in a terminal, put the following lines in the file ~/.termcap and log in again. ----- # added ANSI color vt100|vt100-am|vt100am|dec vt100:\ :pa#64:Co#8:Sf=\E[3%dm:Sb=\E[4%dm:op=\E[m:AF=\E[3%dm:AB=\E[4%dm:\ :do=^J:co#80:li#24:cl=\E[;H\E[2J:sf=2*\ED:\ :le=^H:bs:am:cm=5\E[%i%d;%dH:nd=2\E[C:up=2\E[A:\ :ce=3\E[K:cd=50\E[J:so=2\E[7m:se=2\E[m:us=2\E[4m:ue=2\E[m:\ :md=2\E[1m:mr=2\E[7m:mb=2\E[5m:me=2\E[m:\ :rf=/usr/share/tabset/vt100:\ :rs=\E>\E[?3l\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?7h\E[?8h\E[;r\E[0m\E(B\E)B\E[2J:\ :ks=\E[?1h\E=:ke=\E[?1l\E>:\ :ku=\EOA:kd=\EOB:kr=\EOC:kl=\EOD:kb=^H:\ :ho=\E[H:k1=\EOP:k2=\EOQ:k3=\EOR:k4=\EOS:pt:sr=2*\EM:vt#3:xn:\ :sc=\E7:rc=\E8:cs=\E[%i%d;%dr: ----- To build the `info' files in versions prior to Mac OS X 10.2, you need to install the texinfo software. To install from source, obtain texinfo-4.2.tar.gz from ftp.gnu.org or a mirror. Un-tar it, enter its directory and type ./configure make make install The last step may need to be performed as root (sudo make install). You may also like to install ispell, which will allow you to use ispell and flyspell-mode. To install ispell from source, you first need to install GNU textutils. To do so, download textutils-2.0.tar.gz from ftp.gnu.org or a mirror. Un-tar it, enter its directory, type ./configure --host=powerpc-apple-bsd make make install Again, the last step may need to be performed as root. Note that if you run `make check', the test for `pr' will fail. Get and un-tar ispell-3.2.06.tar.gz. Look for it here: http://fmg-www.cs.ucla.edu/geoff/ispell.html Go into its directory, type cp local.h.samp local.h Add a line `#define TERMLIB ""' to the end of local.h. Set the environment variable TMPDIR to an existing directory. For example since `/tmp' exists on my machine and I am using `bash', I typed export TMPDIR=/tmp Run `make' and `make install', the latter as root. * BUILDING BINARY DISTRIBUTIONS FOR MAC OS X If you are intending to build a binary distribution of Emacs, there is a script that will greatly simplify the process. It is called make-package and it is contained in this directory. It will generate a disc image containing a installer bundle. By default the installer will place the emacs common files in /usr/local/* and the carbon application in /Applications. Typical usage would be ./make-package After running, an compressed disk image of the installer will be placed in a file called EmacsInstaller.dmg. This file can be then distributed to whomever would like a binary distribution. Here are the common options to user --with-x - Use the X11 GUI instead of the Carbon GUI. --prefix=DIR - Place the common emacs files in the given DIR. The default is /usr/local. See note below if placing in /usr --self-contained - Place the common emacs files inside the Emacs.app itself. This makes the application trivial to uninstall and copy between computers. --app-symlink - Use a symlink inside the Application to the $prefix/bin/emacs to reduce disk space. Note, this option may removed in the future. If you are intending to build a binary distribution for X windows, you will probably want to follow the directions above to create static X11R6 libraries and run the make-package script like this ./make-package --with-x -C,--x-libraries=/usr/X11R6/libstatic For usage of other options, use the --help option. * BUILDING EMACS ON MAC OS 8/9 You can use either Metrowerks CodeWarrior Pro 6 or MPW-GM (Aug. 2001) to build Emacs. MPW-GM can be downloaded free of charge from Apple. In either case, you will need MPW-GM to build the make-docfile utility and to generate the doc string file DOC. ### IMPORTANT ### You can use StuffIf Expander to decompress and untar the distribution. However, you *must* set the radio button in the Preferences->Cross Platform->Convert text files to Macintosh format to "Never". Otherwise the compiled Lisp files will be corrupted. (Optional) A subset of the fonts from the GNU intlfonts-1.2 distribution converted to NFNT format can be obtained from ftp://mac-emacs.sourceforge.net/pub/mac-emacs/GNU-fonts.smi.bin To build Emacs in the MPW Shell, simply set the directory to ...:emacs:mac: and build the target Emacs of the make file makefile.mpw. I.e., execute the commands make Emacs -f makefile.MPW > Emacs.MakeScript Emacs.MakeScript To build Emacs using CodeWarrior, start up the CodeWarrior IDE, choose File->Import Project... and select the file cw6-mcp.xml. When prompted to save the project, navigate to same directory as the file cw6-mcp.xml, name the project emacs-cw6.mcp, and save it there. Then choose Project->Make. Note that this does not build the DOC file. To do so, use MPW and build the target "Doc" in makefile.MPW. Once built, the Emacs application (Emacs CW or Emacs MPW) can be launched where it is created. To build an optimized version of Emacs in CodeWarrior, change the value in the Emacs Settings->Code Generation->Global Optimization dialog. To build a version for profiling, check the Profiler Information box in the Emacs Settings->Code Generation->PPC Processor dialog and include the Profiler PPC.Lib library. * NOTES Emacs should build and run on a PowerMac running Mac OS 8.6 - 10.2. You will need around 100 MB of disk space for the source files and intermediate files. It will not run on machines running Mac OS 8/9 with more than 256 MB of physical or virtual memory. It does not have this restriction when it is run under Mac OS X. But the usual 128MB buffer limit of a 32-bit Emacs still exists. Under Mac OS 8/9, there is no support for building the LEIM directory. However, it can be built on Mac OS X or another platform and transferred to the Mac. On Mac OS 8/9, to use the same icon as when Emacs is built on Windows NT, define GNU_ICON in mac/src/Emacs.r. Currently Emacs uses a generic application icon on the Mac OS X. A better looking one is coming soon. On Mac OS X, installing the emacs files in /usr can cause issues with system sofware updates possibly overwriting the distribution. If this is a concern, as it should be in normal binary distributions, please use /usr/local as the prefix for installation. Enjoy! Andrew. <akochoi@mac.com>