TOC 1. Introduction 2. Getting the source code 3. Install required libs 3.1. Install Xcode 3.2. Install MacPorts 1.7 4. How to compile and run 4.1 Using XCode 4.2 Using Command line 5. Packaging ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1. Introduction ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- This is a platform port of XBMC for the Apple OSX operating system. Both 10.5 and 10.4 Intel development platforms are supported. The current build system is Xcode 2.5 or Xcode 3.1.2 There are two ways to build XBMC for Mac. 1) command-line or 2) Xcode. Generally, Xcode is the easiest as it presents the build system in a GUI environment. The command-line build is still under development. XBMC for Mac is composed of a main binary with numerous dynamic libraries and codecs that support a multitude of music and video formats. NOTE TO NEW OS X USERS: All lines that are prefixed with the '$' character are commands that need to be typed into a Terminal window. Note that the '$' character itself should NOT be typed as part of the command. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2. Getting the source code ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- $ cd $HOME $ svn checkout https://xbmc.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/xbmc/trunk ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3.0 Install XCODE ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Install latest Xcode. You can download it from Apple's site after registration at (http://developer.apple.com/tools/download). You also need to install the 10.4 sdk. If using Xcode 3.x, you MUST use Xcode 3.1.2 so update your existing version if you are running a previous Xcode 3.x version. Xcode 3.x only runs on 10.5. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3.1 Install MacPorts 1.7 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- These build instructions depend on MacPorts 1.7.1 from xbmc-port-depends. If you have another version of MacPorts installed, it's best to remove it and install this 1.7.1 version. To remove a previous install of MacPorts, enter the following from a terminal windows: $ sudo rm -rf \ /opt/local \ /etc/manpaths.d/macports \ /etc/paths.d/macports \ /Applications/DarwinPorts \ /Applications/MacPorts \ /Library/LaunchDaemons/org.macports.* \ /Library/Receipts/DarwinPorts*.pkg \ /Library/Receipts/MacPorts*.pkg \ /Library/StartupItems/DarwinPortsStartup \ /Library/Tcl/darwinports1.0 \ /Library/Tcl/macports1.0 Install MacPorts 1.7.1 (see http://code.google.com/p/xbmc-port-depends/). No NOT install the versions from http://www.macports.org, they were hopelessly broke for XBMC usage when their devs released MacPorts 1.8. Change MacPorts's behavior to always build universal against 10.4sdk using the following instructions. 1) $ sudo nano /opt/local/etc/macports/macports.conf a) change "universal_target 10.5" to "universal_target 10.4" b) change "universal_sysroot /Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.5.sdk" to "universal_sysroot /Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.4u.sdk" c) change "universal_archs ppc i386" to reflect the arch you are building by removing the unused arch. 2) These are needed to build openssl (used by samba3 and mysql5) against 10.4sdk $ sudo ln -s /Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.4u.sdk/usr/lib/dylib1.o /Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.4u.sdk/usr/lib/dylib1.10.5.o $ sudo ln -s /Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.4u.sdk/usr/lib/crt1.o /Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.4u.sdk/usr/lib/crt1.10.5.o Then install the following port packages (order is very important): $ sudo port install pcre +universal $ sudo port install expat +universal $ sudo port install libiconv +universal $ sudo port install gettext +universal $ sudo port install libtool yasm cmake gmake pkgconfig $ sudo port install lzo +universal $ sudo port install lzo2 +universal $ sudo port install bzip2 +universal $ sudo port install fontconfig +universal $ sudo port install boost +universal $ sudo port install jpeg +universal $ sudo port install tiff +universal $ sudo port install libpng +universal $ sudo port install libogg +universal $ sudo port install libvorbis +universal $ sudo port install libmad macosx_deployment_target=10.4 $ sudo port install fribidi +universal $ sudo port install libmms +universal $ sudo port install glew +universal $ sudo port install libcdio +universal $ sudo port install openssl +universal $ sudo port install samba3 macosx_deployment_target=10.4 $ sudo port install mysql5 +universal $ sudo port install sqlite3 +universal $ sudo port install libsamplerate +universal $ sudo port install libsdl +no_x11 +universal $ sudo port install smpeg +universal $ sudo port install libsdl_mixer +universal $ sudo port install libsdl_image +universal If you understand the following two lines, you can run it to automate the installation of the ports in the above order: sudo bash cat README.osx | perl -ne 'print `port install $1` if /^ \$ sudo port install (.*)$/;' Finally, fix the mysql package default install location with this symlink: $ sudo ln -s /opt/local/include/mysql5/mysql/ /opt/local/include/mysql ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4. How to compile ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Both Xcode and Terminal compilation require that build environment be setup first. This is a simple step and involves the following: $ cd $HOME/XBMC $ ./bootstrap $ ./configure $ make clean $ make xcode_depends The configure operation will setup the build environment for codecs and internal libraries that are used by XBMC. This step is required for both Xcode and command-line building. The "make clean" ensures that there areno stale binaries from svn that might cause problems The last step will pre-build the majority of the codecs and libs: The configure operation will default to building "debug". To build "release" codecs and libraries for Xcode, do the configure step with "--disable-debug" but remember that Xcode will need to be also built "Release": $ ./configure --disable-debug ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4.1 Using Xcode ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Start XCode and open the XBMC project (XBMC.xcodeproj) located in $HOME/XBMC. For development, XBMC is run from the $HOME/XBMC directory and needs to have the XBMC_HOME environment variable set to know where that directory is located. To set XBMC_HOME environment variable: Menu -> Project -> Edit Active Executable "XBMC", click "Arguments" tab and add "XBMC_HOME" as an enviroment variable. Set the value to the path to the XBMC root folder. For example, "/Users/bigdog/Documents/XBMC" There are two build targets "XBMC" and "XBMC.app" with debug and release settings. The "XBMC" target is used for rapid build and debug cycles while the "XBMC.app" target is used to build a self contained OSX application. Set the build target to "XBMC" or "XBMC.app", then build. The build process will take a long time when builting the first time. You can see the progress in "Build Results". There are a large number of static and dynamic libaries that will need to be built. Once these are built, subsequent builds will be faster. After the build, you can ether run XBMC for Mac from Xcode or run it from the command-line. If you run it from the command-line, make sure your set the XBMC_HOME environment variable (export XBMC_HOME=$HOME/XBMC). Then, to run the debug version: $ ./build/Debug/XBMC Or the release version: $ ./build/Release/XBMC You can also build via Xcode from the command-line using the following: $ xcodebuild -configuration Release -target "XBMC.app" -project XBMC.xcodeproj You can specify "Release" instead of "Debug" as a configuration. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4.2 Using Terminal (command-line) (this is a work in progress and might fail) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- There are two methods, a) make/Xcode and b) make (which might fail as it's under construction). If you want to build a cross-compiled version that can run under 10.5/10.4/AppleTV, then you'll need to follow the additional steps listed in $HOME/XBMC/tools/XBMCTex/README.osx before running xcodebuild from the command-line. a) $ cd $HOME/XBMC $ export XBMC_HOME=`pwd` $ make xcode_depends $ xcodebuild -sdk macosx10.4 -project XBMC.xcodeproj -target XBMC.app -configuration Release build b) $ cd $HOME/XBMC $ export XBMC_HOME=`pwd` $ make xbmc $ ./xbmc.bin ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5. Packaging ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- This section describes how to package XBMC in a disk image for distribution. 1. Create 2 directories "extras/user" and "extras/system" in the root of the source tree. 1.1. "extras/user" - anything found in this directory will be copied to the users XBMC directory (~/Library/Application Support/XBMC) on first run. Examples: extras/user/scripts/XBMC Lyrics extras/user/plugins/music/iTunes 1.2. "extras/system" - anything found in this directory will be copied to the XBMC application bundle at build time (XBMC.app/Contents/Resources/XBMC/). Examples: extras/system/skin/MediaStream extras/system/skin/My Skin 2. After performing step 1, build XBMC.app from XCode so that the application bundle is correctly updated. 3. make -C tools/PackageMaker/ 4. If completed successfully, a disk image named XBMC_for_Mac.dmg will be present in the users XBMC build directory: Remember to unmount/eject XBMC.dmg before attempting to recreate it, otherwise dmgmaker.pl will fail.