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Re: GNUstep theming (was Re: Objective-C 2.0 and other new features in L


From: Dr Tomaž Slivnik
Subject: Re: GNUstep theming (was Re: Objective-C 2.0 and other new features in Leopard)
Date: Tue, 27 Nov 2007 21:59:38 +0000

To the end user, a good look is more important than anything.

I agree there are a lot of end users like that - certainly virtually all end users whose only contact with computers is to play games on their MS Windows machine and play music on their iPod will not see anything beyond the appearance.

An investment banker, an engineer, an academic, a businessman, however, will never see things this way. They look at things like 1) what does this thing do, 2) how productive does it make me, 3) how reliable is it, 4) who is behind this, what can I do if they go bust, who can I sue if something goes wrong etc. The question of gummy never even arises.

GNUstep will never conquer the first kind of market, will not be appreciated by it if it does, and moreover, would it want to conquer it? Those sorts of customers will be asking for the sorts of changes that will make all the rest of us hate the end product. Do you think Steve Jobs and Avie Tevanian voluntarily mangled Mac OS X the way they have done, or did they do so because of pressure from ignorant users and 3rd party developers? I think GNUstep is far better off accepting that it will always be a niche environment (which it will be whether you, or I, like it or not) and cater well for its niche, the second kind of market, which it has a very good chance of conquering, or bits of it at least. Well I'll qualify this somewhat - perhaps when the younger generation, who are much more tech. savvy than our generation is, grow up and run the show, things will change, but for the foreseeable future, they will not.

Here's a question for you - if you have the choice between GNUstep taking over the world but becoming MS Windows in the process, or, staying a nice environment but only being used by a select and organically growing core of tech. savvy users who appreciate it, which would you rather have?

First of all, which OS are you talking about? Obviously Mac OS X, but which of it's flavours?

10.5.1 (Intel)

This is probably the reason why you next to never see 5-way fat executables. There isn't much point in having so many architectures as GNUstep isn't meant to do hours of number crunching.

The advantage is that you can have a single uniform installer that everyone can download and install, and moreover - if they want to - use in a shared NAS partition accessed by all manner of Apple hardware, be it Intel, PowerPC G3/G4/G5, 10.3, 10.4 or 10.5 - all executing the same binaries. I think there is value to be had in having this - it vastly simplifies system administration. I have this sort of setup, I have all manner of Apple machines running off the same /Applications/Local partition and I insist that anything installed on my setup fits within this framework. This is one of several reasons (there are others) I don't like using DarwinPorts - it doesn't seem to build such executables by default, although the source claims it can be configured to do so.

Once such a package is put together once, scripts can be written which build such a .pkg automatically when they need to be updated. So most of the work necessary should be upfront and the cost of keeping the distribution up to date should not be that much.

Did you try the apple-apple-apple combo? This should you give you a GNUstep environment with the minimum effort.

No - I thought GnuStep didn't work with Apple runtime?

No doubt, Mac OS X is moving more and more away from being a Unix.
BTW., why are you using Mac OS X instead of a much cheaper Linux- based PC?

I moved from a NextStation, to a Dell Inspiron laptop running OpenStep, to an iBook in 2001, as the only viable successor to NextStep at the time, and on to other Apples from then. GnuStep was not viable in those days, although I have always kept an eye on it. I've never been happy with Apple and I am growing more and more unhappy with it. I would love to have an alternative, and am seriously looking at migrating to a Unix variant + GnuStep. I think it's very realistic that I do so. If I can do it, if it's viable for me to do it, I would love to do it and I will do it.

I believe Apple is doing a very good job of irritating its ex-NeXT group of customers and GnuStep has a real opportunity to capture this market if it plays its cards right - and now is a very good time to do so.

The main apps I can't do without are the development environment, TeX, Mathematica, Terminal, OmniGraffle, Mail, Address Book, web browser, VOIP, software to run a scanner. I believe GnuStep has a lot of these and is a real possibility; I am interested in finding out now just how good it has become.

The cost of the hardware is not a big consideration for me - we're only talking about a few hundred dollars/pounds/euros per computer. Even if you change them every six months, what's that compared to the cost of your time, the ability to use the environment productively etc.?

Looks like seriously messed up dependencies.

Warning: violation by /opt/local/GNUstep
Warning: gnustep-make violates the layout of the ports-filesystems!
Warning: Please fix or indicate this misbehavior (if it is intended), it will be an error in future releases!
--->  Installing gnustep-make 2.0.1_0+gnustep_layout

##########################################################
To have a fully working GNUstep make system, please add
'. /opt/local/GNUstep/System/Library/Makefiles/GNUstep.sh'
to your shell login (in ~/.profile)

You may also want to set up your MANPATH :
export MANPATH=$GNUSTEP_LOCAL_ROOT/Library/Documentation/man: $GNUSTEP_SYSTEM_ROOT/Library/Documentation/man:/opt/local/share/man:/ usr/share/man:/usr/X11R6/man
##########################################################

--->  Activating gnustep-make 2.0.1_0+gnustep_layout
--->  Cleaning gnustep-make
--->  Fetching libxml2
---> Attempting to fetch libxml2-2.6.30.tar.gz from http:// xmlsoft.org/sources/
--->  Verifying checksum(s) for libxml2
--->  Extracting libxml2
--->  Configuring libxml2
--->  Building libxml2 with target all
--->  Staging libxml2 into destroot
--->  Installing libxml2 2.6.30_0
--->  Activating libxml2 2.6.30_0
--->  Cleaning libxml2
--->  Fetching libxslt
---> Attempting to fetch libxslt-1.1.22.tar.gz from ftp:// xmlsoft.org/libxslt/
--->  Verifying checksum(s) for libxslt
--->  Extracting libxslt
--->  Configuring libxslt
--->  Building libxslt with target all
--->  Staging libxslt into destroot
--->  Installing libxslt 1.1.22_0
--->  Activating libxslt 1.1.22_0
--->  Cleaning libxslt
--->  Fetching openssl
---> Attempting to fetch openssl-0.9.8g.tar.gz from http:// www.openssl.org/source/
--->  Verifying checksum(s) for openssl
--->  Extracting openssl
--->  Applying patches to openssl
--->  Configuring openssl
--->  Building openssl with target all
--->  Staging openssl into destroot
--->  Installing openssl 0.9.8g_0
--->  Activating openssl 0.9.8g_0
--->  Cleaning openssl
--->  Fetching gnustep-base
---> Attempting to fetch gnustep-base-1.14.0.tar.gz from http:// ftp.easynet.nl/mirror/GNUstep/pub/gnustep/core
--->  Verifying checksum(s) for gnustep-base
--->  Extracting gnustep-base
--->  Configuring gnustep-base
Error: Target org.macports.configure returned: configure failure: shell command " cd "/opt/local/var/macports/build/ _opt_local_var_macports_sources_rsync.macports.org_release_ports_gnustep _gnustep-base/work/gnustep-base-1.14.0" && ./configure --prefix=/opt/ local CC=gcc-mp-4.2 GNUSTEP_MAKEFILES=/opt/local/share/GNUstep/ Makefiles " returned error 1 Command output: configure: error: cannot find install-sh or install.sh in /opt/local/share/GNUstep/Makefiles "."//opt/local/share/ GNUstep/Makefiles

Error: The following dependencies failed to build: ArtResources gnustep-core gnustep-back gnustep-gui gnustep-base gnutls libgcrypt libgpg-error gettext libtasn1 lzo opencdk readline ncurses ncursesw libpng libungif tiff jpeg libart_lgpl GMastermind GMines GNUMail Etoile SQLClient Performance sqlite3 gawk dbus docbook-xml-4.1.2 xmlcatmgr xmlto docbook-xml-4.2 docbook-xsl getopt oniguruma5 poppler cairo gtk2 atk glib2 pango poppler-data Pantomime PRICE TalkSoup netclasses Yap.app ImageMagick bzip2 a2ps psutils gworkspace system- preferences PreferencePanes windowmaker
Error: Status 1 encountered during processing.


% . /opt/local/GNUstep/System/Library/Makefiles/GNUstep.sh
% port install gnustep
--->  Configuring gnustep-base
Error: Target org.macports.configure returned: configure failure: shell command " cd "/opt/local/var/macports/build/ _opt_local_var_macports_sources_rsync.macports.org_release_ports_gnustep _gnustep-base/work/gnustep-base-1.14.0" && ./configure --prefix=/opt/ local CC=gcc-mp-4.2 GNUSTEP_MAKEFILES=/opt/local/GNUstep/System/ Library/Makefiles " returned error 1
Command output: checking /proc/1213/cmdline terminated by nul... no
checking for kvm_getenvv in -lkvm... no
checking use of pass-through arguments... no
checking use of fake-main definition... yes
checking ffi.h usability... yes
checking ffi.h presence... yes
checking for ffi.h... yes
checking callback.h usability... yes
checking callback.h presence... yes
checking for callback.h... yes
checking for forwarding callback in runtime... yes
checking FFI library usage... ffcall
checking if ffcall trampolines work... no
none

You have ffcall, but it does not work properly. Most likely because
your're system's security policy is blocking some parts of ffcall
we recommend installing libffi instead.
GNUstep requires ffcall or libffi and proper libobjc hooks to do
invocations and DO.
(This does not apply on apple-apple-apple systems where DO is
not compatible with other GNUstep systems.)

You most likely do not want to build base without DO support. Many
things, including all applications, won't work at all without DO.
If you really want to build -base without DO support, add --disable-do
to the configure arguments.
For more information, read the GNUstep build guide, ffcall section:
http://gnustep.made-it.com/BuildGuide/index.html
configure: error: Incomplete support for ffi functionality.

Error: The following dependencies failed to build: ArtResources gnustep-core gnustep-back gnustep-gui gnustep-base gnutls libgcrypt libgpg-error gettext libtasn1 lzo opencdk readline ncurses ncursesw libpng libungif tiff jpeg libart_lgpl GMastermind GMines GNUMail Etoile SQLClient Performance sqlite3 gawk dbus docbook-xml-4.1.2 xmlcatmgr xmlto docbook-xml-4.2 docbook-xsl getopt oniguruma5 poppler cairo gtk2 atk glib2 pango poppler-data Pantomime PRICE TalkSoup netclasses Yap.app ImageMagick bzip2 a2ps psutils gworkspace system- preferences PreferencePanes windowmaker
Error: Status 1 encountered during processing.
--------------------------------------------------------------------

Nope. Just can't get it to install at all - I repeat, I've just tried doing everything I can to install GnuStep on a fresh, clean, unmodified installation of Leopard, and I can't figure out how to do it (other than perhaps to spend the next 3 weeks manually compiling GCC and every package needed). I can't figure it out at all!

T




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