commit | c818011ee7342f43fe9cd22101eb2cdbbb4ed12e | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Alexandre Lision <alexandre.lision@savoirfairelinux.com> | Wed Jan 27 11:27:50 2016 -0500 |
committer | Alexandre Lision <alexandre.lision@savoirfairelinux.com> | Mon Feb 01 10:28:58 2016 -0500 |
tree | 3c4504c5626f088bcb3e51f165eb6897274b1cb8 | |
parent | 210fe2125a5d05fd8dd604b666d3905038f4bf72 [diff] |
i18n: translation update - new file Conversation.string - update other source files - new translations - fix some i18n warnings in source code Change-Id: Ic6378f7947c47cea0b36a87f5b1c52f575ee1959
Ring Mac OSX
This is the official Mac port of Ring.
Ring can ship with the Sparkle framework to allow automatic app updates. This can be disabled for your custom build by specifying -DENABLE_SPARKLE=false in the cmake phase.
mkdir build && cd build
export CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=<dir_to_qt5>
Now generate an Xcode project with CMake: 3. cmake ../ -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=<libringclient_install_path> -G Xcode 4. open Ring.xcodeproj/ 5. Build and run it from Xcode. You can also generate the final Ring.app bundle.
You can also build it from the command line:
If you want to create the final app (self-containing .dmg):
Notes:
By default the client version is specified in CMakeLists.txt but it can be overriden by specifying -DRING_VERSION= in the cmake command line.
For now, the build type of the client is "Debug" by default, however it is useful to also have the debug symbols of libRingClient. To do this, specify this when compiling libRingClient with '-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug' in the cmake options.