OSXHorrors » History » Version 24

Chris Cannam, 2011-03-24 03:03 PM

1 1 Chris Cannam
h1. OS/X version, hardware platform, and Qt version compatibility
2 1 Chris Cannam
3 22 Chris Cannam
{{>toc}}
4 22 Chris Cannam
5 22 Chris Cannam
6 6 Chris Cannam
*Executive summary:* For a program like EasyHg that demands the widest possible compatibility, we currently want to hit the following targets:
7 6 Chris Cannam
8 6 Chris Cannam
* 10.4 PPC 32-bit Carbon
9 6 Chris Cannam
* 10.4 Intel 32-bit Carbon
10 6 Chris Cannam
* 10.6 Intel 64-bit Cocoa
11 1 Chris Cannam
12 8 Chris Cannam
To do this, we currently need at least two builds of Qt:
13 8 Chris Cannam
14 12 Chris Cannam
* 10.6 gcc-4.2 Cocoa x86_64
15 8 Chris Cannam
* 10.4 gcc-4.0 Carbon PPC and i386
16 1 Chris Cannam
17 24 Chris Cannam
And we need at least three builds of our PyQt (Python plus C++) modules:
18 1 Chris Cannam
19 24 Chris Cannam
* Python 2.6 gcc-4.2 Cocoa x86_64
20 24 Chris Cannam
* Python 2.6 gcc-4.0 Carbon PPC and i386
21 24 Chris Cannam
* Python 2.5 gcc-4.0 Carbon PPC and i386
22 24 Chris Cannam
23 24 Chris Cannam
Our Qt builds need to be custom rather than stock distribution (see Qt Plugins below).
24 24 Chris Cannam
25 1 Chris Cannam
Note it is not possible to cover all platforms in a single build step, we always need to do at least two separate builds plus lipo.
26 12 Chris Cannam
27 12 Chris Cannam
If we are going to make a 3-way universal binary, we need to ensure the 10.4 build gets selected for i386 -- i.e. to pull only the x86_64 architecture from any 10.5 or 10.6 SDK build we do.  The inability to select between different i386 versions from a single universal binary is a strong incentive to stick to a single 10.4+ Carbon build for all 32-bit platforms.
28 1 Chris Cannam
29 24 Chris Cannam
So our bundle layout will look like this (beneath the Contents directory):
30 24 Chris Cannam
31 24 Chris Cannam
<pre>
32 24 Chris Cannam
 Contents/
33 24 Chris Cannam
  +- Frameworks/
34 24 Chris Cannam
  |   +- QtCore [ppc] [i386] [x86_64]
35 24 Chris Cannam
  |   +- QtGui [ppc-carbon] [i386-carbon] [x86_64-cocoa]
36 24 Chris Cannam
  |   `- QtNetwork [ppc] [i386] [x86_64]
37 24 Chris Cannam
  +- MacOS/
38 24 Chris Cannam
      +- Py2.5/
39 24 Chris Cannam
      |   +- sip.so [ppc] [i386]
40 24 Chris Cannam
      |   +- PyQt4
41 24 Chris Cannam
      |       +- Qt.so [ppc] [i386]
42 24 Chris Cannam
      |       +- QtCore.so [ppc] [i386]
43 24 Chris Cannam
      |       `- QtGui.so [ppc-carbon] [i386-carbon]
44 24 Chris Cannam
      +- Py2.6/
45 24 Chris Cannam
      |   +- sip.so [ppc] [i386] [x86_64]
46 24 Chris Cannam
      |   +- PyQt4
47 24 Chris Cannam
      |       +- Qt.so [ppc] [i386] [x86_64]
48 24 Chris Cannam
      |       +- QtCore.so [ppc] [i386] [x86_64]
49 24 Chris Cannam
      |       `- QtGui.so [ppc-carbon] [i386-carbon] [x86_64-cocoa]
50 24 Chris Cannam
      +- EasyMercurial [ppc-carbon] [i386-carbon] [x86_64-cocoa]
51 24 Chris Cannam
</pre>
52 24 Chris Cannam
53 1 Chris Cannam
h2. Qt Plugins
54 1 Chris Cannam
55 1 Chris Cannam
Qt will by default load any plugins for e.g. image format support that it finds in the system.  There are various ways to block plugin loading (e.g. through build key) but I can't see any way that will prevent Qt from at least dlopen()ing the shared object and rifling through its drawers.
56 1 Chris Cannam
57 1 Chris Cannam
This is a problem, because the plugins have dependencies on the Qt framework components, so we may end up with two different versions of Qt (the one in our bundle and the system one) being loaded at once.  Result: mysterious crashes.
58 1 Chris Cannam
59 1 Chris Cannam
For the moment we "fix" this by applying the following elegant patch to our Qt build:
60 1 Chris Cannam
61 1 Chris Cannam
<pre>
62 1 Chris Cannam
--- src/corelib/plugin/qfactoryloader.cpp_	2011-03-14 12:21:11.000000000 +0000
63 1 Chris Cannam
+++ src/corelib/plugin/qfactoryloader.cpp	2011-03-14 12:22:04.000000000 +0000
64 1 Chris Cannam
@@ -104,7 +104,7 @@
65 1 Chris Cannam
 
66 1 Chris Cannam
 void QFactoryLoader::update()
67 1 Chris Cannam
 {
68 1 Chris Cannam
-#ifdef QT_SHARED
69 1 Chris Cannam
+#ifdef NO_WE_DONT_WANT_PLUGINS_THANKS
70 1 Chris Cannam
     Q_D(QFactoryLoader);
71 1 Chris Cannam
     QStringList paths = QCoreApplication::libraryPaths();
72 1 Chris Cannam
     QSettings settings(QSettings::UserScope, QLatin1String("Trolltech"));
73 1 Chris Cannam
--- src/corelib/plugin/qpluginloader.cpp_	2011-03-14 12:23:31.000000000 +0000
74 1 Chris Cannam
+++ src/corelib/plugin/qpluginloader.cpp	2011-03-14 12:23:53.000000000 +0000
75 1 Chris Cannam
@@ -285,7 +285,7 @@
76 1 Chris Cannam
 */
77 1 Chris Cannam
 void QPluginLoader::setFileName(const QString &fileName)
78 1 Chris Cannam
 {
79 1 Chris Cannam
-#if defined(QT_SHARED)
80 1 Chris Cannam
+#if defined(NO_WE_DONT_WANT_PLUGINS_THANKS)
81 1 Chris Cannam
     QLibrary::LoadHints lh;
82 1 Chris Cannam
     if (d) {
83 1 Chris Cannam
         lh = d->loadHints;
84 1 Chris Cannam
</pre>
85 1 Chris Cannam
86 1 Chris Cannam
h2. Python versions
87 1 Chris Cannam
88 1 Chris Cannam
Python versioning and compatibility is a bit of a nightmare.  We need to load a Python module with C components (using PyQt) in Mercurial, so we need to take into account both the Python version and the architecture.
89 1 Chris Cannam
90 24 Chris Cannam
The system Python is 2.5 on 10.4/10.5 and 2.6 on 10.6.  PyQt compiled for 2.5 will not work in 2.6, and vice versa.  This makes it very difficult to provide a single bundle for all platforms, as we have no easy way (without an installer script) to ensure that the PyQt modules for the right version of Python get loaded.  It's quite likely that users of older (10.4) OS/X will have updated their Python to 2.6 as well, since that's advisable for installing Mercurial.
91 1 Chris Cannam
92 1 Chris Cannam
On 10.6, Python is 32-/64-bit universal which runs in 64-bit by default on a 64-bit system, so any modules need to be available both ways as well (troubleshooting this when it goes wrong is quite tricky).  There is an environment variable @VERSIONER_PYTHON_PREFER_32_BIT@ which you can set to cause it always to run in 32-bit.
93 1 Chris Cannam
94 1 Chris Cannam
Where things get complicated is when users install additional versions of Python from other ports repositories; this seems to be quite common around these parts.  Then your user-installed Python is likely to get picked up before the system one, and you don't know whether it's going to be 32- or 64-bit, and it won't support the versioning environment variable.  My impression is that people get custom Python installs dragged in as dependencies of other packages, and that tends to break quite a lot of things.
95 1 Chris Cannam
96 1 Chris Cannam
Some 10.6 system Pythons have a problem loading modules, apparently something getting broken during the upgrade from 10.5 -- this affects my home machine, but I haven't had time to look into it properly yet.
97 23 Chris Cannam
98 23 Chris Cannam
h2. OS/X versions
99 23 Chris Cannam
100 23 Chris Cannam
h3. 10.6
101 23 Chris Cannam
102 23 Chris Cannam
h4. As target
103 23 Chris Cannam
104 23 Chris Cannam
* By far the most common version as of Feb 2011 (apparently >80%)
105 23 Chris Cannam
* Not supported on PPC
106 23 Chris Cannam
* Runs in 64-bit mode by default where possible
107 23 Chris Cannam
* Note Python is also 64-bit by default, so PyQt needs to be as well
108 23 Chris Cannam
* Is _not_ always 64-bit -- it is supported on 32-bit-only hardware such as Core Duo (first Intel Macs)
109 23 Chris Cannam
110 23 Chris Cannam
h4. As build host
111 23 Chris Cannam
112 23 Chris Cannam
* Builds 64-bit by default
113 23 Chris Cannam
* Can be used to do 32-bit Intel and PPC builds
114 23 Chris Cannam
115 23 Chris Cannam
h3. 10.5
116 23 Chris Cannam
117 23 Chris Cannam
h4. As target
118 23 Chris Cannam
119 23 Chris Cannam
* Not all that much more widely used than 10.4 -- if we were dropping 10.4, we probably might as well drop 10.5 as well
120 23 Chris Cannam
* Last version supported for PPC platforms
121 23 Chris Cannam
* Runs in 32-bit mode by default
122 23 Chris Cannam
* Can build for it from 10.5, 10.6
123 23 Chris Cannam
* Requires SDK @/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.5.SDK@
124 23 Chris Cannam
* First version to support Objective-C 2.0
125 23 Chris Cannam
* Qt Cocoa supported
126 23 Chris Cannam
127 23 Chris Cannam
h4. As build host
128 23 Chris Cannam
129 23 Chris Cannam
* Builds 32-bit by default
130 23 Chris Cannam
* Can be used to do 64-bit builds
131 23 Chris Cannam
132 23 Chris Cannam
h3. 10.4
133 23 Chris Cannam
134 23 Chris Cannam
h4. As target
135 23 Chris Cannam
136 23 Chris Cannam
* Oldest version still apparently in use as of Feb 2011: not very widespread (low single digit %age of Mac users), but at least two researchers here use it
137 23 Chris Cannam
* Appears in PPC and i386 systems
138 23 Chris Cannam
* Runs in 32-bit mode only
139 23 Chris Cannam
* Can build for it from 10.4, 10.5, 10.6
140 23 Chris Cannam
* Requires SDK @/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.4u.SDK@
141 23 Chris Cannam
* Requires @-mmacosx-version-min=10.4@ on 10.5+
142 23 Chris Cannam
* Requires gcc-4.0 to be requested explicitly on 10.6
143 23 Chris Cannam
* Does not support Objective-C 2.0
144 23 Chris Cannam
* Not a supported target for Qt's Cocoa builds, Qt Carbon needed
145 23 Chris Cannam
146 23 Chris Cannam
h4. As build host
147 23 Chris Cannam
148 23 Chris Cannam
* Does not support Objective-C 2.0
149 23 Chris Cannam
* 10.4u SDK can be used to build 64-bit executables of simple C/C++ programs such as plugins, but not of GUIs or anything using Core frameworks