The goal of OSXCross is to provide a well working OS X cross toolchain for Linux, *BSD, and Cygwin.
For cross-compiling for OS X you need
- the Clang/LLVM compiler
- the the cctools (ld, lipo, …), and
- the OSX SDK.
Clang/LLVM is a cross compiler by default and is now available on nearly every Linux distribution, so we just need a proper port of the cctools and the OS X SDK.
OSXCross includes a collection of scripts for preparing the SDK and building the cctools.
It also includes scripts for optionally building
- Clang using gcc (for the case your distribution does not include it),
- an up-to-date vanilla GCC as a cross-compiler for target OS X,
- the "compiler-rt" runtime library, and
- the
llvm-dsymutil
tool required for debugging.
Basically everything you can build on OS X with clang/gcc should build with this cross toolchain as well.
OSXCross comes with a minimalistic MacPorts Packet Manager. See README.MACPORTS for more.
Windows/Cygwin users should follow README.CYGWIN.
Move your packaged SDK to the tarballs/ directory.
Then ensure you have the following installed on your system:
Clang 3.2+
, patch
, libxml2-devel
(<=10.6 only) and the bash shell
.
You can run 'sudo tools/get_dependencies.sh' to get these (and the optional packages) automatically.
Optional:
llvm-devel
: For Link Time Optimization supportuuid-devel
: For ld64-random_uuid
supportllvm-devel
+xar-devel
: For ld64-bitcode_bundle
support
You can find xar here. Do not install libxar-dev on Ubuntu, it's a different package.
OSXCross uses clang
as the default compiler for building its tools, and also
as a cross-compiler to create OSX binaries.
In clang
there is no difference between cross-compilation and native
compilation, so OSXCross can use a normal clang
install for both. You can
use either a clang
installation you already have, or build your own from
source.
To build and install your own clang
from a recent source tree, using gcc
,
run:
./build_clang.sh
This installs clang
into /usr/local
. If you want to install somewhere
else, set the INSTALLPREFIX
variable. For example:
INSTALLPREFIX=/opt/clang ./build_clang.sh
On debian-like systems you can also use llvm.org/apt to get a newer version of clang. But be careful, that repository is known to cause troubles.
To build the cross toolchain (using clang
), run:
./build.sh
Or, set variable UNATTENDED
to 1
to skip the prompt and proceed straight to
the build:
UNATTENDED=1 ./build.sh
(This will search 'tarballs' for your SDK and then build in its own directory.)
Once this is done: add <path>/target/bin
to your PATH variable so that
you can invoke the cross-compiler.
That's it. See usage examples below.
If you also want to build GCC as a cross-compiler, you can do that by running:
./build_gcc.sh
The script lets you select a GCC version by setting the variable GCC_VERSION
.
By default you get C and C++ compilers, but you can tell the script to build a
Fortran compiler as well:
GCC_VERSION=5.2.0 ENABLE_FORTRAN=1 ./build_gcc.sh
[A gfortran usage example can be found here]
Before you do this, make sure you have the GCC build depedencies installed on your system.
On debian like systems you can install these using:
sudo apt-get install gcc g++ zlib1g-dev libmpc-dev libmpfr-dev libgmp-dev
ATTENTION:
OSXCross links libgcc and libstdc++ statically by default (this affects
-foc-use-gcc-libstdc++
too). You can turn this behavior off with
OSXCROSS_GCC_NO_STATIC_RUNTIME=1
(env).
The build also creates aliases *-g++-libc++
which link with the clang
implementation of the C++ standard library instead of the GCC version. Don't
use these variants unless you know what you're doing.
Please ensure you have read and understood the Xcode license terms before continuing.
- [Download Xcode **]
- [Mount Xcode.dmg (Open With -> DiskImageMounter) ***]
- Run:
./tools/gen_sdk_package.sh
(from the OSXCross package) - Copy the packaged SDK (*.tar.* or *.pkg) on a USB Stick
- (On Linux/BSD) Copy or move the SDK into the tarballs/ directory of OSXCross.
** Xcode up to 7.3.x is known to work.
*** If you get a dialog with a crossed circle, ignore it. You don't need to install Xcode.
Step 1. and 2. can be skipped if you have Xcode installed.
- Download Xcode like described in 'Packaging the SDK on Mac OS X'
- Install
cmake
,libxml2-dev
andfuse
- Run
./tools/gen_sdk_package_darling_dmg.sh <xcode>.dmg
- Copy or move the SDK into the tarballs/ directory
- Download Xcode like described in 'Packaging the SDK on Mac OS X'
- Ensure you have
clang
andmake
installed - Run
./tools/gen_sdk_package_p7zip.sh <xcode>.dmg
- Copy or move the SDK into the tarballs/ directory
- Download Xcode 4.2 for Snow Leopard
- Ensure you are downloading the "Snow Leopard" version
- Install
dmg2img
- Run (as root):
./tools/mount_xcode_image.sh /path/to/xcode.dmg
- Follow the instructions printed by
./tools/mount_xcode_image.sh
- Copy or move the SDK into the tarballs/ directory
-
Clang:
- 32 bit:
o32-clang++ test.cpp -O3 -o test
ORi386-apple-darwinXX-clang++ test.cpp -O3 -o test
- 64 bit:
o64-clang++ test.cpp -O3 -o test
ORx86_64-apple-darwinXX-clang++ test.cpp -O3 -o test
- 32 bit:
-
GCC:
- 32 bit:
o32-g++ test.cpp -O3 -o test
ORi386-apple-darwinXX-g++ test.cpp -O3 -o test
- 64 bit:
o64-g++ test.cpp -O3 -o test
ORx86_64-apple-darwinXX-g++ test.cpp -O3 -o test
- 32 bit:
XX= the target version, you can find it out by running osxcross-conf
and
then see TARGET
.
You can use the shortcuts o32-...
for i386-apple-darwin...
, depending on
which you prefer.
I'll continue from here on with o32-clang
, but remember,
you can simply replace it with o32-gcc
or i386-apple-darwin...
.
make CC=o32-clang CXX=o32-clang++
CC=o32-clang CXX=o32-clang++ ./configure --host=i386-apple-darwinXX
Note: libc++ requires Mac OS X 10.7 or newer! If you really need C++11 for an older OS X version, then you can do the following:
- Build GCC so you have an up-to-date libstdc++
- Build your source code with GCC or
clang++-gstdc++
/clang++ -foc-use-gcc-libstdc++
Usage Examples:
-
Clang:
- C++98:
o32-clang++ -stdlib=libc++ test.cpp -o test
- C++11:
o32-clang++ -stdlib=libc++ -std=c++11 test1.cpp -o test
- C++14:
o32-clang++ -stdlib=libc++ -std=c++14 test1.cpp -o test
- C++1z:
o32-clang++ -stdlib=libc++ -std=c++1z test1.cpp -o test
- C++98:
-
Clang (shortcut):
- C++98:
o32-clang++-libc++ test.cpp -o test
- C++11:
o32-clang++-libc++ -std=c++11 test.cpp -o test
- C++14:
o32-clang++-libc++ -std=c++14 test.cpp -o test
- C++1z:
o32-clang++-libc++ -std=c++1z test.cpp -o test
- C++98:
-
GCC
- C++11:
o32-g++-libc++ -std=c++11 test.cpp
- C++14:
o32-g++-libc++ -std=c++14 test.cpp -o test
- C++1z:
o32-g++-libc++ -std=c++1z test.cpp -o test
- C++11:
- build the first object file:
o32-clang++ test1.cpp -O3 -flto -c
- build the second object file:
o32-clang++ test2.cpp -O3 -flto -c
- link them with LTO:
o32-clang++ -O3 -flto test1.o test2.o -o test
- Clang:
o64-clang++ test.cpp -O3 -arch i386 -arch x86_64 -o test
- GCC:
- build the 32 bit binary:
o32-g++ test.cpp -O3 -o test.i386
- build the 64 bit binary:
o64-g++ test.cpp -O3 -o test.x86_64
- use lipo to generate the universal binary:
x86_64-apple darwinXX-lipo -create test.i386 test.x86_64 -output test
- build the 32 bit binary:
The default deployment target is Mac OS X 10.5
.
However, there are several ways to override the default value:
- by passing
OSX_VERSION_MIN=10.x
to./build.sh
- by passing
-mmacosx-version-min=10.x
to the compiler - by setting the
MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET
environment variable
>= 10.9 also defaults to libc++
instead of libstdc++
, this behavior
can be overriden by explicitly passing -stdlib=libstdc++
to clang.
x86_64h defaults to Mac OS X 10.8
and requires clang 3.5+.
x86_64h = x86_64 with optimizations for the Intel Haswell Architecture.
You can build OSXCross with GCC this way:
CC=gcc CXX=g++ ./build.sh
You will need gcc/g++/gcc-objc 4.7+.
- multiarch/crossbuild: various cross-compilers (Systems: Linux, OS X, Windows, Archs: x86_64, i386, arm, ppc, mips) in Docker. OSXCross powers the Darwin builds.
- Smartmontools
- scripts/wrapper: GPLv2
- cctools/ld64: APSL 2.0
- xar: New BSD