dlltool --> build_files/make/dlltool
bin --> release/bin
Since dlltool is only used make + mingw and ./bin is misleading because it would seem the blender binary would be copied there, but its just used for home directory files.
updated scons/cmake/make
* added some new variables (mostly the same as with scons):
- USE_COCOA: use Cocoa for ghost (defaults to true)
- MACOSX_ARCHITECTURE: can be ppc, ppc64, i386, x86_64. By default this is the host architecture
(ppc for PowerPC Macs, i386 for Intel Macs). In theory this allows to cross compile blender for
a different architecture, though cross compilation only works on Intel Macs, because makesdna
and makesrna are built for the target architecture.
For a 64 bit build, set MACOSX_ARCHITECTURE to x86_64 (Intel) or ppc64 (PowerPC).
- MACOSX_MIN_VERS: minimum OS X version to run blender on (10.4 for 32 bit builds, 10.5 for 64 bit builds)
- MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET: needed by the linker to create an Application targeted for a specific
OS version (defaults to 10.4 for 32 bit builds, 10.5 for 64 bit builds)
- MACOSX_SDK: path to a specific SDK. currently not used
- USE_QTKIT: use QTKit instead of QuickTime (defaults to true for 64 bit builds, as using QTKit
is mandatory in that case))
* use the same compiler flags as scons
* default compiler now is gcc-4.0 when building for 10.4 and gcc-4.2 when building for 10.5
* extract $(LCGDIR)/release/python_$(MACOSX_ARCHITECTURE).zip to Application bundle. This might
break building on 10.4, to fix that, rename $(LCGDIR)/release/python.zip
When compiling blender, only MACOSX_ARCHITECTURE might be of interest, as it allows doing 64 bit
builds (or 32 bit PowerPC builds on Intel). All other variables are then set to reasonable defaults.
For current users of the Makefile system, this commit shouldn't change much.
It seemed trivial enough, so I updated all systems (makefiles, xcode, scons, scons win installer), please complain if something went wrong. Mostly it was just removing release/bpydata references, since the release/scripts dir is already worked on recursevely, handling dirs inside it.
For the scons nsi file writer script I had to write code for each new dir, but it can be recoded recursively, too (in fact joining all release stuff in a single dir tree with nothing else would be a good idea, making installation code simpler). Since it's just python and I have a little more time now, I can help scons managers if they still need.
Thanks Campbell Barton for reporting.
X. Opening a file selector is no longer needed in order to switch the
language for the first time; apparently gettext wasn't too happy about
relative paths.