Difference between revisions of "GNUstep under Ubuntu Linux"
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Objective-C under Ubuntu Linux | Objective-C under Ubuntu Linux | ||
Revision as of 17:41, 29 November 2015
Objective-C under Ubuntu Linux
Compiling Everything from Scratch (Ubuntu 14.04, 15.04)
The following script compiles and installs everything needed for Objective-C 2.0 from scratch. The script uses clang and libobjc2 for all the awesome new features like ARC, blocks, etc.
(See below for Ubuntu 12.04 help.)
#!/bin/bash sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get -y install build-essential git subversion ninja cmake libffi-dev libxml2-dev \ libgnutls-dev libicu-dev libblocksruntime-dev libkqueue-dev libpthread-workqueue-dev autoconf libtool \ libjpeg-dev libtiff-dev libffi-dev libcairo-dev libx11-dev:i386 libxt-dev libXft-dev cd ~ git clone git://github.com/nickhutchinson/libdispatch.git svn co http://svn.gna.org/svn/gnustep/modules/core git clone https://github.com/gnustep/libobjc2 # OBTAIN, COMPILE, INSTALL THE LATEST LLVM/clang. (Doing apt-get install clang instead may or may not work.) svn co http://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk llvm cd llvm/tools svn co http://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/trunk clang cd ~/llvm rm -rf build mkdir build cd build cmake .. make -j8 # 8=your number of build CPUs echo "export PATH=\$PATH:~/llvm/build/bin" >> ~/.bashrc echo "export CC=clang" >> ~/.bashrc echo "export CXX=clang++" >> ~/.bashrc export PATH=$PATH:~/llvm/build/bin . ~/.bashrc export CC=clang export CXX=clang++ clang -v clang++ -v cd ~/libobjc2 rm -rf build mkdir build cd build cmake .. make -j8 sudo -E make install cd ~/core/make ./configure --enable-debug-by-default --with-layout=gnustep --enable-objc-nonfragile-abi make && sudo -E make install echo ". /usr/GNUstep/System/Library/Makefiles/GNUstep.sh" >> ~/.bashrc . /usr/GNUstep/System/Library/Makefiles/GNUstep.sh sudo /sbin/ldconfig cd ~/core/base/ ./configure make -j8 sudo -E make install cd ~/libdispatch rm -rf libdispatch-build mkdir libdispatch-build && cd libdispatch-build ../configure make sudo make install sudo ldconfig cd ~/core/gui ./configure make -j8 sudo -E make install cd ~/core/back ./configure make -j8 sudo -E make install echo "Install is done. Open a new terminal or type source ~/.bashrc"
Test Code
The following is some Objective-C source code from the internet. It demonstrates blocks, Grand Central Dispatch, and the use of GNUStep GUI.
cat > blocktest.m << EOF #include <stdio.h> int main() { void (^hello)(void) = ^(void) { printf("Hello, block!\n"); }; hello(); return 0; } EOF cat > helloGCD_objc.m << EOF #include <dispatch/dispatch.h> #import <stdio.h> #import "Fraction.h" int main( int argc, const char *argv[] ) { dispatch_queue_t queue = dispatch_queue_create(NULL, NULL); Fraction *frac = [[Fraction alloc] init]; [frac setNumerator: 1]; [frac setDenominator: 3]; // print it dispatch_sync(queue, ^{ printf( "The fraction is: " ); [frac print]; printf( "\n" ); }); dispatch_release(queue); return 0; } EOF cat > Fraction.h << EOF #import <Foundation/NSObject.h> @interface Fraction: NSObject { int numerator; int denominator; } -(void) print; -(void) setNumerator: (int) n; -(void) setDenominator: (int) d; -(int) numerator; -(int) denominator; @end EOF cat > Fraction.m << EOF #import "Fraction.h" #import <stdio.h> @implementation Fraction -(void) print { printf( "%i/%i", numerator, denominator ); } -(void) setNumerator: (int) n { numerator = n; } -(void) setDenominator: (int) d { denominator = d; } -(int) denominator { return denominator; } -(int) numerator { return numerator; } @end EOF cat > guitest.m << EOF #import <AppKit/AppKit.h> int main() { NSApplication *app; // Without these 2 lines, seg fault may occur app = [NSApplication sharedApplication]; NSAlert * alert = [[NSAlert alloc] init]; [alert setMessageText:@"Hello alert"]; [alert addButtonWithTitle:@"All done"]; int result = [alert runModal]; if (result == NSAlertFirstButtonReturn) { NSLog(@"First button pressed"); } } EOF # ====================================================================== # COMPILE USING THE FOLLOWING COMMAND LINES, OR CREATE A MAKEFILE # ====================================================================== # Using COMMAND LINE clang `gnustep-config --objc-flags` `gnustep-config --objc-libs` -fobjc-runtime=gnustep -fblocks -fobjc-arc -lobjc blocktest.m clang `gnustep-config --objc-flags` `gnustep-config --objc-libs` -fobjc-runtime=gnustep -fblocks -lobjc -ldispatch -lgnustep-base Fraction.m helloGCD_objc.m clang `gnustep-config --objc-flags` `gnustep-config --objc-libs` -fobjc-runtime=gnustep -fblocks -lobjc -fobjc-arc -ldispatch -lgnustep-base -lgnustep-gui guitest.m # Using MAKEFILE cat > GNUmakefile << EOF include \$(GNUSTEP_MAKEFILES)/common.make APP_NAME = GUITest GUITest_OBJC_FILES = guitest.m include \$(GNUSTEP_MAKEFILES)/application.make EOF make openapp ./GUITest.app
General Note: When compiling your own code, it is generally good to tell clang both the family and version of the runtime: -fobjc-runtime=gnustep-1.8.1 (The current version number can be had by looking at the latest ANNOUNCE filename in https://github.com/gnustep/libobjc2 (e.g., ANNOUNCE.1.8.1))
Ubuntu 12.04 Help
On Ubuntu 12.04, the default installed version of CMake is 2.8.7 but you need 2.8.8 or later to compile LLVM. And the default installed version of GCC and G++ is 4.6 but you need 4.8 or later to compile LLVM.
For CMake, the solution is to download and compile CMake yourself. Use the existing CMake 2.8.7 and then replace it:
- Download the latest CMake version from the CMake web site (http://www.cmake.org/cmake/resources/software.html), and uncompress it in a folder.
- Create a _build directory in the CMake sources folder.
- From the _build directory, run the following commands to build and install CMake from sources:
cmake .. -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr make cpack -G DEB sudo apt-get remove cmake cmake-data sudo dpkg -i cmake*.deb
To get GCC and G++ 4.8, do the following:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ubuntu-toolchain-r/test sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install gcc-4.8 g++-4.8 sudo update-alternatives --install /usr/bin/gcc gcc /usr/bin/gcc-4.8 50 sudo update-alternatives --install /usr/bin/g++ g++ /usr/bin/g++-4.8 50
You should be good to go.