I will create a specific sub-dir and let you know.
--
-a
"Ideally, a code library must be immediately usable by naive
developers, easily customized by more sophisticated developers, and
readily extensible by experts." -- L. Stein
On May 20, 2009, at 3:20 AM, Daniel Veillard wrote:
On Fri, May 08, 2009 at 08:19:40AM -0500, Schley Andrew Kutz wrote:
> Happy to do it, I just need permission to put a file there.
> Additionally, you can grab the binaries at
>
http://files.lostcreations.com/libvirt-0.6.3-bin.tar.gz and
>
http://files.lostcreations.com/libvirt-java-0.2.1-bin.tar.gz. Both
> archives belong in /opt. They will decompress to libvirt-0.6.3 and
> libvirt-java-0.2.1 respectively. The latter depends on the former's
> location. Additionally, the libvirt binaries depend on gnutls and
> all of
> its dependencies existing in /opt/local (the default MacPorts root
> location).
Okidoc, I have mirrored those 2 at
ftp://libvirt.org/libvirt/osx/
I guess the best way if you want to maintain OS X builds is to create
a specific subdir on the HTTP server (or even better FTP) that you
can populate with updates, and I can mirror them for example twice a
day. Just tell me where you end up creating the repository !
>> On Thu, May 07, 2009 at 11:50:25PM -0500, Schley Andrew Kutz wrote:
>>> Getting libvirt-0.6.3 (client) to compile on OS X
>>>
>>> - Use MacPorts to install gnutls (and its several dependencies)
>>>
>>> - Set environment variables:
>>>
>>> export LDFLAGS="-L/opt/local/lib"
>>> export CPPFLAGS="-I/opt/local/include"
>>> export MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET=10.4
Hum ...
>>> - Configure
>>>
>>> --prefix=/opt/libvirt/ --without-sasl --without-avahi --without-
>>> polkit
>>> --without-python --without-xen --without-qemu --without-lxc --
>>> without-
>>> openvz --without-libvirtd --without-uml
>>>
>>> - Apply patches
>>>
>>> src/pci.c
>>>
>>> #ifndef MODPROBE
>>> #define MODPROBE 0
>>> #endif
Actually one really expect a string, so I just defined it to
"modprobe" instead.
>>> src/virsh.c:5665
>>>
>>> if (command_ret != 0 /* WEXITSTATUS (0) */) {
That's bizarre ...
WEXITSTATUS is defined in virsh.c:
#ifndef WEXITSTATUS
# define WEXITSTATUS(x) ((x) & 0xff)
#endif
it's used only once at the place you pointed out:
if (command_ret != WEXITSTATUS (0)) {
I think it was used for cygwin portability, but in that
case I would have expected
if (WEXITSTATUS(command_ret) != 0) {
Why did this break on OS-X ?
>> That's great - we can easily fix these 2 bugs.
>>
>>> - Compile
>>>
>>> The MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET variable is very important, otherwise
>>> you
>>> will get symbol errors when linking.
What about detecting MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET, because I assume it
will change from one environment to another, do this in configure.in
and
export is in all Makefiles.am ? There must be a way to export the env
variable from the generated Makefiles surely...
Daniel
--
Daniel Veillard | libxml Gnome XML XSLT toolkit
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