HowTo compile on Mac

From AMule Project FAQ
Revision as of 00:27, 18 November 2004 by 80.224.220.41 (Talk)

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The following steps will lead you to install aMule in your MacOS X box.

This HowTo is written to install aMule 2.0.0-rc7 but should work for any other version. Please note that you should always download the latest aMule version available.

NOTE: This document explains how to download files using curl. However, curl might not be installed on your system: either install it (you can use Fink to instal it) or download the files with whatever application you want (maybe your web browser), but place then in the directory that's being used on each part of the guide, otherwise the commands that are shown here will not work.

  1. Install Xcode Tools from http://developer.apple.com/tools/download
  2. "Getting ADC ID"->"Log In"->"Download Software"->"Developer Tools"->"Download Xcode Tools last release">"Install"
  3. Install (or verify installation if already installed) Fink, since gettext and wxMac are installed along with Fink, from http://fink.sourceforge.net/download
  4. Install gettext and wxMac (wxMac is only available through Fink unstable on MacOS 10.3. If you are using Fink stable or MacOS 10.2 or earlier, either upgrade Fink to unstable and/or MacOS to 10.3, or check the Installing wxMac form sources section of this document and then go on with this section) through Fink. Read Fink's installation guide to learn how to install applications through Fink (the gettext package is gettext and the wxMac package is wxmac and wxmac-shlibs),
  5. Read the documentation at http://fink.sourceforge.net/download to learn how to install wxMac.
  6. Make amule dir in your home directory: mkdir ~/amule
  7. Enter the amule directory you just created: cd ~/amule
  8. Get aMule's latest source code (aMule 2.0.0-rc7 sourcecode: http://download.berlios.de/amule/aMule-2.0.0rc7.tar.bz2) and place it in your ~/amule directory: curl -O http://download.berlios.de/amule/aMule-2.0.0rc7.tar.bz2
  9. Extract it: tar -xjf aMule-2.0.0rc7.tar.bz2
  10. Enter aMule's sources directory: cd aMule-2.0.0rc7
  11. Prepare the compilation (thanks to one_2_one and Babboia for his test&fix): ./configure --disable-systray --disable-gtk --with-wx-config=/sw/bin/wx-config
  12. And compile it: make
  13. Optional: You can reduce the size of aMule from 44MB to 3MB by doing the following (anyway, this will make the aMule binnary loose debug info, so you'll be unable to report problems to the aMule Team to make aMule a better program, which it is not recommended): strip src/amule
  14. Get back to your amule directory: cd ~/amule
  15. Download aMule's app-Container: curl -O http://download.berlios.de/amule/aMule-App-Container.tar.bz2
  16. Extract it: tar -xjf aMule-App-Container.tar.bz2
  17. Copy the amule binnary to the app-Container directory: cp aMule-2.0.0rc7/src/amule amule.app/Contents/MacOS/
  18. And move amule.app directory to your Applications folder: mv amule.app /Applications
  19. If everything went ok, you can safely remove the downloaded packages:
    1. Remove aMule's sources package: rm ~/amule/aMule-2.0.0rc7.tar.bz2
    2. Remove the app-Container package: rm aMule-App-Container.tar.bz2
    3. Optionally remove the extracted aMule sources (not recommended, since you might want to compile it again someday): rm -r ~/amule/aMule-2.0.0rc7
    4. Optionally, if you if you decided to remove the extracted aMule sources, remove the ~/amule directory (which should be empty by now): rmdir ~/amule

Installing wxMac form sources

Only follow this part of the guide if wxMac is not available through your Fink installation or if you really know what you're doing. In any other case, just jump to the next section.

  1. Create a directory where all the work will be done: mkdir ~/wxmac
  2. Enter that directory: cd ~/wxmac
  3. Download wxMac sources: curl -O ftp://biolpc22.york.ac.uk/pub/2.5.3/wxMac-2.5.3.tar.gz
  4. Extract the file: tar -xzf wxMac-2.5.3.tar.gz
  5. Enter the extracted sources' directory: cd wxMac-2.5.3
  6. Directory build should already be there. If not, create it with: mkdir build
  7. Now enter build directory: cd build
  8. Prepare the compilation: ../configure
  9. And compile: make
  10. Now install wxMac compilation: sudo make install
  11. Get back to your home directory, you're done: cd ~
  12. If everything went ok, you can safely remove:
    1. wxMac's sources package: rm wxMac-2.5.3.tar.gz
    2. Optionally remove the extracted wxMac sources (not recommended, since you might want to compile it again someday): rm -r ~/wxmac

NOTE: Since you're installing wxMac from sources instead of through Fink, use ./configure --disable-systray --disable-gtk --with-wx-config=/usr/local/bin/wx-config as your configure command at aMule's compilation instead of ./configure --disable-systray --disable-gtk --with-wx-config=/sw/bin/wx-config

Problems and solutions

  • If Fink reports something like: After unpacking 11.2GB will be freed, don't be afraid. Fink has evolved into a different way of managing packet's size and some old ("old": at least some months old) packages' sizes aren't handled correctly on the output. If this is your case, devide the number by 1024. So, what the above example really means is: After unpacking 11.2MB will be freed.
  • If the app-Container failed to extract try running this command instead of the app-Container extraction step: mkdir -p amule.app/Contents/MacOS
  • If you get an error like this: You cannot open the application "amule" because it may be damaged or incomplete, right click on amule, then click on Show Packages Contents, go to "Contents">"MacOS"> and double click on amule. Next time you start from amule.app it will run fine. If you still get the same error, move amule.app to the desktop and run it from there.