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Porting Tips
Documentation
Some documentation:
- A short but very helpful slideset on porting applications to BeOS by François Revol (mmu_man).
- A comprehensive tutorial on the GNU Autotools
The CommonProblems page lists a number of common problems encountered when porting applications to BeOS.
Getting started on Haiku OS
gcc 2.x (default)
When building your own Haiku image, you can add
AddOptionalHaikuImagePackages Development ;
to your build/jam/UserBuildConfig file. This sets up a development environment and unzips a small tree of ready-to-use binary tools onto your image, including a Haiku-specific gcc2, Perl and autotools. Other helpful packages are OpenSSL and the Pe text editor (which allows you to jump to the line of an error message).
Most software cannot handle i586-pc-haiku yet, so it is usually necessary to configure with --build=i586-pc-beos.
gcc 4.x
A native development environment is not yet available for gcc4-based Haiku; the cross-compiler can be used instead.
A shell script to aid in this is available for use with autotools based software.
Porting considerations
To automatically patch software with the BePorter? tool, source tarballs should be diff'ed (cf. CreatePatch).
Most projects however use SCM/VCS software including CVS, Subversion, git and Mercurial and accept patches only against their latest (HEAD) development version. A possible strategy is:
- Download and try the latest released source tarball. If it works, no further steps are necessary.
- Otherwise, check if the project maintains a publicly accessible (anonymous) source code repository. You might be able to choose between a branch corresponding to the version number of the source tarball or trunk. (Terminology varies between the VCS tools.)
Doing so, you can easily track or revert your own changes, and this is the preferred format for submitting patches to the respective projects.
Note that it is not easily automatable for BePorter? though, but once accepted, future source tarballs promise to compile without patching.
Also note that doing so may, depending on the project, result in more dependencies but might be easier to handle, for instance when modifying configure.in or Makefile.am instead of an Autoconf-generated configure or Automake-generated Makefile.
