Platform:BSD
Darwin / Mac OS X
To be provided.
Intel
To be provided.
PowerPC
To be provided.
FreeBSD-based systems
DesktopBSD
DesktopBSD joins the ranks of PC-BSD and FreeSBIE as a desktop-ready version of FreeBSD. However, their desktop is based on KDE.
DragonFly
DragonFly is an operating system and environment designed to be the logical continuation of the FreeBSD-4.x OS series.
I have mostly ported GNUstep to DragonFly, I just need to submit patches now for both GNUstep and DragonFly. To know more, you can contact me. Quentin Mathé
FreeBSD
You can install GNUstep using the /usr/ports/devel/gnustep meta-port. However, not all required dependencies seem to get installed.
If you install the following in advance, you should be fine: wmaker, libxml2, libxslt, libgmp4, libart_lgpl2, libaudiofile, portaudio, ffcall, glitz. A complete list of dependencies can be found here.
CUPS is used for printing functionality. OTOH, it is a good idea to go for Samba directly, which also includes CUPS as a dependency.
Additionally, you may also want to install mDNSResponder.
Note : Prior to FreeBSD-6.0, there is a bug in kvm(3) that requires a mounted /proc for GNUstep to work properly. Until this bug is fixed, make sure you have an entry for /proc in your /etc/fstab:
proc /proc procfs rw 0 0
References: FreeBSD GNUstep ports, Freshports GNUstep
FreeBSD-Kernel w/ GNU userland
It was reported that this runs GNUstep as well. For more details see the topic of the IRC channel #gnu-kbsd on irc.gnu.org
FreeSBIE
FreeSBIE is a Live-CD Version of FreeBSD.
PicoBSD
PicoBSD is a one floppy version of FreeBSD 3.0-current. You won't be able to use it as a platform for GNUstep.
PC-BSD
PC-BSD has as its goals to be an easy to install and use desktop OS, which is built on the FreeBSD operating system.
NetBSD
Installing GNUstep from pkgsrc is really straight-forward for NetBSD if you're using a recent pkgsrc distribution. NetBSD/i386 has no known problems right now, however there are reports of crashout problems for gdomap on NetBSD/sparc which may be related to ffi/ffcall issues.
In terms of pre-requisites, ensure you've got a working X11 environment on your system and preferrably are using WindowMaker as your window manager.
Build instructions
To install GNUstep, you need to cd to your pkgsrc tree and then cd to the right package directory, on my system:
cd /usr/pkgsrc
then go to the package you wish to install, for example:
cd meta-pkgs/gnustep
and issue the command:
make install
This command will download source code and whatever dependencies and compile and install them. The version of the meta-packages I used (released with NetBSD 2.0 and called gnustep-1.10.0nb2) installs the following GNUstep components as parts of the meta-package:
- gnustep-make-1.10.0
- gnustep-base-1.10.1
- gnustep-ssl-1.10.1
- gnustep-gui-0.9.4
- gnustep-back-0.9.4
- gnustep-examples-1.0.0
- ImageViewer-0.6.3
- Pantomime-1.1.2
- Addresses-0.4.6
- GNUMail-1.1.2
- Gorm-0.8.0
- ProjectCenter-0.4.0
- GWLib-0.6.5
- Renaissance-0.8.0
- gworkspace-0.6.5
A number of dependency packages are also installed.
This may be overkill - if you don't need all the applications etc, you can install the packages individually.
OpenBSD
Please take a look at http://mail.rochester.edu/~asveikau/gnustep-openbsd/