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$Id$ This file tries to help building Wireshark for (Mac) OS X (Wireshark does not work on earlier versions of Mac OS). You must have the developer tools (called Xcode) installed. For versions of OS X up to and including Snow Leopard, Xcode 3 should be available on the install DVD; Xcode 4 is available for download from developer.apple.com and, for Lion and later releases, from the Mac App Store. See http://guide.macports.org/chunked/installing.xcode.html for details. For Xcode 4, you will need to install the command-line tools; select Preferences from the Xcode menu, select Downloads in the Preferences window, and install Command Line Tools. You must have X11 and the X11 developer headers and libraries installed; otherwise, you will not be able to build or install GTK+, and will only be able to build TShark. The X11 and X11 SDK that come with Mac OS X releases for releases from Panther to Lion can be used to build and run Wireshark. Mountain Lion does not include X11; you should install X11 from elsewhere, such as http://xquartz.macosforge.org/ You must also have GLib and, if you want to build Wireshark as well as TShark, GTK+. The macosx-setup.sh script can be used to download, patch as necessary, build, and install those libraries and the libraries on which they depend; it will, by default, also install other libraries that can be used by Wireshark and TShark. The versions of libraries to download are specified by variables set early in the script; you can comment out the settings of optional libraries if you don't want them downloaded and installed. Before running the macosx-setup.sh script, and before attempting to build Wireshark, make sure your PKG_CONFIG_PATH environment variable's setting includes both /usr/X11/lib/pkgconfig and /usr/local/lib/pkgconfig. After you have installed those libraries: If you are building from a Git tree, rather than from a source distribution tarball, run the autogen.sh script. This should not be necessary if you're building from a source distribution tarball, unless you've added new source files to the Wireshark source. Then run the configure script, and run make to build Wireshark. If you upgrade the major release of OS X on which you are building Wireshark, we advise that, before you do any builds after the upgrade, you do, in the build directory: If you are building from a release tarball: make distclean If you are building from Git: make maintainer-clean ./autogen.sh Then re-run the configure script and rebuild from scratch. On Snow Leopard (10.6) and later releases, if you are building on a machine with a 64-bit processor (with the exception of the early Intel Core Duo and Intel Core Solo machines, all Apple machines with Intel processors have 64-bit processors), the C/C++/Objective-C compiler will build 64-bit by default. This means that you will, by default, get a 64-bit version of Wireshark. One consequence of this is that, if you built and installed any required or optional libraries for Wireshark on an earlier release of OS X, those are probably 32-bit versions of the libraries, and you will need to un-install them and rebuild them on your current version of OS X, to get 64-bit versions. Some required and optional libraries require special attention if you install them by building from source code on Snow Leopard and later releases; the macosx-setup.sh script will handle that for you. GLib - the GLib configuration script determines whether the system's libiconv is GNU iconv or not by checking whether it has libiconv_open(), and the compile will fail if that test doesn't correctly indicate whether libiconv is GNU iconv. In OS X, libiconv is GNU iconv, but the 64-bit version doesn't have libiconv_open(); a workaround for this is to replace all occurrences of "libiconv_open" with "iconv_open" in the configure script before running the script. The macosx-setup.sh setup script will patch GLib to work around this. GTK+ - GTK+ 2.24.10, at least, doesn't build on Mountain Lion with the CUPS printing backend - either the CUPS API changed incompatibly or the backend was depending on non-API implementation details. The macosx-setup.sh setup script will, on Mountain Lion and later, configure GTK+ with the CUPS printing backend disabled. libgcrypt - the libgcrypt configuration script attempts to determine which flavor of assembler-language routines to use based on the platform type determined by standard autoconf code. That code uses uname to determine the processor type; however, in Mac OS X, uname always reports "i386" as the processor type on Intel machines, even Intel machines with 64-bit processors, so it will attempt to assemble the 32-bit x86 assembler-language routines, which will fail. The workaround for this is to run the configure script with the --disable-asm argument, so that the assembler-language routines are not used. The macosx-setup.sh will configure libgcrypt with that option. PortAudio - when compiling on OS X, the configure script for the pa_stable_v19_20071207 version of PortAudio will cause certain platform-dependent build environment #defines to be set in the Makefile rules, and to cause a universal build to be done; those #defines will be incorrect for all but one of the architectures for which the build is being done, and that will cause a compile-time error on Snow Leopard. Newer versions don't have this problem, but still fail to build on Lion if a universal build is attempted. The macosx-setup.sh script downloads a newer version, and also suppresses the universal build. GeoIP - Their man pages "helpfully" have an ISO 8859-1 copyright symbol in the copyright notice, but OS X's default character encoding is UTF-8. sed on Mountain Lion barfs at the "illegal character sequence" represented by an ISO 8859-1 copyright symbol, as it's not a valid UTF-8 sequence. The macosx-setup.sh script uses iconv to convert the man page files from ISO 8859-1 to UTF-8. If you want to build Wireshark installer packages on a system that doesn't include Xcode 3.x or earlier, you will need to install some additional tools. From the Xcode menu, select the Open Developer Tool menu, and then select More Developer Tools... from that menu. That will open up a page on the Apple Developer Connection Web site; you may need a developer account to download the additional tools. Download the Auxiliary Tools for Xcode package; when the dmg opens, drag all its contents to the Contents/Applications subdirectory of the Xcode.app directory (normally /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Applications); then copy .../Contents/Applications/PackageMaker.app/Contents/MacOS/PackageMaker to /usr/bin/packagemaker (the PackageMaker app, when run from the command line rather than as a double-clicked app, is the packagemaker command).