Development:Building:Intel
Contents
Building Camino on your Intel Mac
These instructions are constantly changing and should not be considered a definitive resource, even though there is no other resource.
Preparing your Macintosh
Download and install XCode 2.3 from the Apple Developer Connection. (free registration)
Download and install Fink 0.8.1 from Fink.
Open Terminal.app
sudo apt-get install orbit orbit-dev glib libidl2
Close Terminal.app
Download and install the Shared Menus Cocoa framework using the instructions at Mozilla Developer Centre.
Open Terminal.app
sudo mkdir -p /Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.2.8.sdk/Library/Frameworks sudo ln -s /Library/Frameworks/SharedMenusCocoa.framework /Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.2.8.sdk/Library/Frameworks sudo mkdir -p /Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.4u.sdk/Library/Frameworks sudo ln -s /Library/Frameworks/SharedMenusCocoa.framework /Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.4u.sdk/Library/Frameworks
Pulling source and building in Terminal.app
Open Terminal.app, change directory to where you would like to build Camino from.
export CVSROOT=:pserver:anonymous@cvs-mirror.mozilla.org:/cvsroot cvs login cvs co mozilla/client.mk cvs co mozilla/camino/config/mozconfig
Use your favourite text editor to create the file .mozconfig
If your Intel Mac has a Core Duo processor then your .mozconfig file should contain the following:
. $topsrcdir/camino/config/mozconfig ac_add_options --disable-optimize ac_add_options --enable-debug mk_add_options MOZ_MAKE_FLAGS=-jN
Where N = # of CPUs +1, where # of CPUs = 2 on a Core Duo processor.
Please read the above line, again, you are not setting 'N' MAKE_FLAGS, but a real number as defined above!
To pull from cvs and build:
Please visit the Tinderbox and make sure that the 2nd, 3rd, and 6th columns are green.
make -f client.mk
Building in XCode
Open XCode, click your left-mouse button on File ... Open
Browse to mozlla/camino/ and select Camino.xcode
Choose to Upgrade a Copy
Click on Project... Edit Project Settings
In the General tab select Mac OS X 10.4 (Universal) in the Cross-Develop Using Target SDK drop-down menu.
Click on Change in the panel that pops up.
Setting Camino to use a different profile
This means you can run the Camino you are developing on alongside your day-to-day copy of Camino!
There are 2 ways to do this, you can either set this within XCode:
Click Project... Edit Active Executable 'Camino' In the Arguments tab click the + button under the "Variables to be set in the environment" table. In the Name column type 'CAMINO_PROFILE_DIR' in the Value column type in where you would like to store Camino's profile for your development copy. Click Build & Go in the XCode Toolbar
Or you can set this at a Terminal:
Instead of clicking on Build & Go in the XCode toolbar, click on Build.
Open a Terminal.app
export CAMINO_PROFILE_DIR=AbsolutePathToDir cd PathToWhereYourCamino.appLies open Camino.app
Your CAMINO_PROFILE_DIR can be anywhere you have write access to, my CAMINO_PROFILE_DIR points to ~/Documents/SoC/CAMINO_PROFILE_DIR/
My Camino.app is in ~/Documents/SoC/mozilla/camino/build/Development/ so I cd to that directory before executing open Camino.app
(Weak) Statistics
Total time to pull and make from scratch on:
- MacBook Core Duo 1.83GHz w/ 512MB RAM : 48 minutes.
I tested this using the command uptime && make -f client.mk && uptime.