1 ========================= 2 Python on Mac OS X README 3 ========================= 4 5 :Authors: 6 Jack Jansen (2004-07), 7 Ronald Oussoren (2010-04), 8 Ned Deily (2012-06) 9 10 :Version: 3.4.0 11 12 This document provides a quick overview of some Mac OS X specific features in 13 the Python distribution. 14 15 OS X specific arguments to configure 16 ==================================== 17 18 * ``--enable-framework[=DIR]`` 19 20 If this argument is specified the build will create a Python.framework rather 21 than a traditional Unix install. See the section 22 _`Building and using a framework-based Python on Mac OS X` for more 23 information on frameworks. 24 25 If the optional directory argument is specified the framework is installed 26 into that directory. This can be used to install a python framework into 27 your home directory:: 28 29 $ ./configure --enable-framework=/Users/ronald/Library/Frameworks 30 $ make && make install 31 32 This will install the framework itself in ``/Users/ronald/Library/Frameworks``, 33 the applications in a subdirectory of ``/Users/ronald/Applications`` and the 34 command-line tools in ``/Users/ronald/bin``. 35 36 * ``--with-framework-name=NAME`` 37 38 Specify the name for the python framework, defaults to ``Python``. This option 39 is only valid when ``--enable-framework`` is specified. 40 41 * ``--enable-universalsdk[=PATH]`` 42 43 Create a universal binary build of Python. This can be used with both 44 regular and framework builds. 45 46 The optional argument specifies which OS X SDK should be used to perform the 47 build. If xcodebuild is available and configured, this defaults to 48 the Xcode default MacOS X SDK, otherwise ``/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX.10.4u.sdk`` 49 if available or ``/`` if not. When building on OS X 10.5 or later, you can 50 specify ``/`` to use the installed system headers rather than an SDK. As of 51 OS X 10.9, you should install the optional system headers from the Command 52 Line Tools component using ``xcode-select``:: 53 54 $ sudo xcode-select --install 55 56 See the section _`Building and using a universal binary of Python on Mac OS X` 57 for more information. 58 59 * ``--with-universal-archs=VALUE`` 60 61 Specify the kind of universal binary that should be created. This option is 62 only valid when ``--enable-universalsdk`` is specified. The default is 63 ``32-bit`` if a building with a SDK that supports PPC, otherwise defaults 64 to ``intel``. 65 66 67 Building and using a universal binary of Python on Mac OS X 68 =========================================================== 69 70 1. What is a universal binary 71 ----------------------------- 72 73 A universal binary build of Python contains object code for more than one 74 CPU architecture. A universal OS X executable file or library combines the 75 architecture-specific code into one file and can therefore run at native 76 speed on all supported architectures. Universal files were introduced in 77 OS X 10.4 to add support for Intel-based Macs to the existing PowerPC (PPC) 78 machines. In OS X 10.5 support was extended to 64-bit Intel and 64-bit PPC 79 architectures. It is possible to build Python with various combinations 80 of architectures depending on the build tools and OS X version in use. 81 82 2. How do I build a universal binary 83 ------------------------------------ 84 85 You can enable universal binaries by specifying the "--enable-universalsdk" 86 flag to configure:: 87 88 $ ./configure --enable-universalsdk 89 $ make 90 $ make install 91 92 This flag can be used with a framework build of python, but also with a classic 93 unix build. Universal builds were first supported with OS X 10.4 with Xcode 2.1 94 and the 10.4u SDK. Starting with Xcode 3 and OS X 10.5, more configurations are 95 available. 96 97 In general, universal builds depend on specific features provided by the 98 Apple-supplied compilers and other build tools included in Apple's Xcode 99 development tools. You should install Xcode and the command line tools 100 component appropriate for the OS X release you are running on. See the 101 Python Developer's Guide (https://devguide.python.org/setup/) 102 for more information. 103 104 2.1 Flavors of universal binaries 105 ................................. 106 107 It is possible to build a number of flavors of the universal binary build, 108 the default is a 32-bit only binary (i386 and ppc) in build environments that 109 support ppc (10.4 with Xcode 2, 10.5 and 10.6 with Xcode 3) or an 110 Intel-32/-64-bit binary (i386 and X86_64) in build environments that do not 111 support ppc (Xcode 4 on 10.6 and later systems). The flavor can be specified 112 using the configure option ``--with-universal-archs=VALUE``. The following 113 values are available: 114 115 * ``intel``: ``i386``, ``x86_64`` 116 117 * ``intel-32``: ``i386`` 118 119 * ``32-bit``: ``ppc``, ``i386`` 120 121 * ``3-way``: ``i386``, ``x86_64``, ``ppc`` 122 123 * ``64-bit``: ``ppc64``, ``x86_64`` 124 125 * ``all``: ``ppc``, ``ppc64``, ``i386``, ``x86_64`` 126 127 To build a universal binary that includes a 64-bit architecture, you must build 128 on a system running OS X 10.5 or later. The ``all`` and ``64-bit`` flavors can 129 only be built with a 10.5 SDK because ``ppc64`` support was only included with 130 OS X 10.5. Although legacy ``ppc`` support was included with Xcode 3 on OS X 131 10.6, it was removed in Xcode 4, versions of which were released on OS X 10.6 132 and which is the standard for OS X 10.7. To summarize, the 133 following combinations of SDKs and universal-archs flavors are available: 134 135 * 10.4u SDK with Xcode 2 supports ``32-bit`` only 136 137 * 10.5 SDK with Xcode 3.1.x supports all flavors 138 139 * 10.6 SDK with Xcode 3.2.x supports ``intel``, ``3-way``, and ``32-bit`` 140 141 * 10.6 SDK with Xcode 4 supports ``intel`` only 142 143 * 10.7 and 10.8 SDKs with Xcode 4 support ``intel`` only 144 145 * 10.8 and 10.9 SDKs with Xcode 5 support ``intel`` only 146 147 The makefile for a framework build will also install ``python3.4-32`` 148 binaries when the universal architecture includes at least one 32-bit 149 architecture (that is, for all flavors but ``64-bit``). 150 151 Running a specific architecture 152 ............................... 153 154 You can run code using a specific architecture using the ``arch`` command:: 155 156 $ arch -i386 python 157 158 Or to explicitly run in 32-bit mode, regardless of the machine hardware:: 159 160 $ arch -i386 -ppc python 161 162 NOTE: When you're using a framework install of Python this requires at least 163 Python 2.7 or 3.2, in earlier versions the python (and pythonw) commands are 164 wrapper tools that execute the real interpreter without ensuring that the 165 real interpreter runs with the same architecture. 166 167 Using ``arch`` is not a perfect solution as the selected architecture will 168 not automatically carry through to subprocesses launched by programs and tests 169 under that Python. If you want to ensure that Python interpreters launched in 170 subprocesses also run in 32-bit-mode if the main interpreter does, use 171 a ``python3.4-32`` binary and use the value of ``sys.executable`` as the 172 ``subprocess`` ``Popen`` executable value. 173 174 Building and using a framework-based Python on Mac OS X. 175 ======================================================== 176 177 178 1. Why would I want a framework Python instead of a normal static Python? 179 -------------------------------------------------------------------------- 180 181 The main reason is because you want to create GUI programs in Python. With the 182 exception of X11/XDarwin-based GUI toolkits all GUI programs need to be run 183 from a Mac OS X application bundle (".app"). 184 185 While it is technically possible to create a .app without using frameworks you 186 will have to do the work yourself if you really want this. 187 188 A second reason for using frameworks is that they put Python-related items in 189 only two places: "/Library/Framework/Python.framework" and 190 "/Applications/Python <VERSION>" where ``<VERSION>`` can be e.g. "3.4", 191 "2.7", etc. This simplifies matters for users installing 192 Python from a binary distribution if they want to get rid of it again. Moreover, 193 due to the way frameworks work, a user without admin privileges can install a 194 binary distribution in his or her home directory without recompilation. 195 196 2. How does a framework Python differ from a normal static Python? 197 ------------------------------------------------------------------ 198 199 In everyday use there is no difference, except that things are stored in 200 a different place. If you look in /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework 201 you will see lots of relative symlinks, see the Apple documentation for 202 details. If you are used to a normal unix Python file layout go down to 203 Versions/Current and you will see the familiar bin and lib directories. 204 205 3. Do I need extra packages? 206 ---------------------------- 207 208 Yes, probably. If you want Tkinter support you need to get the OS X AquaTk 209 distribution, this is installed by default on Mac OS X 10.4 or later. Be 210 aware, though, that the Cocoa-based AquaTk's supplied starting with OS X 211 10.6 have proven to be unstable. If possible, you should consider 212 installing a newer version before building on OS X 10.6 or later, such as 213 the ActiveTcl 8.5. See http://www.python.org/download/mac/tcltk/. If you 214 are building with an SDK, ensure that the newer Tcl and Tk frameworks are 215 seen in the SDK's ``Library/Frameworks`` directory; you may need to 216 manually create symlinks to their installed location, ``/Library/Frameworks``. 217 If you want wxPython you need to get that. 218 If you want Cocoa you need to get PyObjC. 219 220 4. How do I build a framework Python? 221 ------------------------------------- 222 223 This directory contains a Makefile that will create a couple of python-related 224 applications (full-blown OS X .app applications, that is) in 225 "/Applications/Python <VERSION>", and a hidden helper application Python.app 226 inside the Python.framework, and unix tools including "python" into 227 /usr/local/bin. In addition it has a target "installmacsubtree" that installs 228 the relevant portions of the Mac subtree into the Python.framework. 229 230 It is normally invoked indirectly through the main Makefile, as the last step 231 in the sequence 232 233 1. ./configure --enable-framework 234 235 2. make 236 237 3. make install 238 239 This sequence will put the framework in ``/Library/Framework/Python.framework``, 240 the applications in ``/Applications/Python <VERSION>`` and the unix tools in 241 ``/usr/local/bin``. 242 243 Installing in another place, for instance ``$HOME/Library/Frameworks`` if you 244 have no admin privileges on your machine, is possible. This can be accomplished 245 by configuring with ``--enable-framework=$HOME/Library/Frameworks``. 246 The other two directories will then also be installed in your home directory, 247 at ``$HOME/Applications/Python-<VERSION>`` and ``$HOME/bin``. 248 249 If you want to install some part, but not all, read the main Makefile. The 250 frameworkinstall is composed of a couple of sub-targets that install the 251 framework itself, the Mac subtree, the applications and the unix tools. 252 253 There is an extra target frameworkinstallextras that is not part of the 254 normal frameworkinstall which installs the Tools directory into 255 "/Applications/Python <VERSION>", this is useful for binary 256 distributions. 257 258 What do all these programs do? 259 =============================== 260 261 "IDLE.app" is an integrated development environment for Python: editor, 262 debugger, etc. 263 264 "Python Launcher.app" is a helper application that will handle things when you 265 double-click a .py, .pyc or .pyw file. For the first two it creates a Terminal 266 window and runs the scripts with the normal command-line Python. For the 267 latter it runs the script in the Python.app interpreter so the script can do 268 GUI-things. Keep the ``Option`` key depressed while dragging or double-clicking 269 a script to set runtime options. These options can be set persistently 270 through Python Launcher's preferences dialog. 271 272 The program ``pythonx.x`` runs python scripts from the command line. 273 Previously, various compatibility aliases were also installed, including 274 ``pythonwx.x`` which in early releases of Python on OS X was required to run 275 GUI programs. As of 3.4.0, the ``pythonwx.x`` aliases are no longer installed. 276 277 How do I create a binary distribution? 278 ====================================== 279 280 Download and unpack the source release from http://www.python.org/download/. 281 Go to the directory ``Mac/BuildScript``. There you will find a script 282 ``build-installer.py`` that does all the work. This will download and build 283 a number of 3rd-party libaries, configures and builds a framework Python, 284 installs it, creates the installer package files and then packs this in a 285 DMG image. The script also builds an HTML copy of the current Python 286 documentation set for this release for inclusion in the framework. The 287 installer package will create links to the documentation for use by IDLE, 288 pydoc, shell users, and Finder user. 289 290 The script will build a universal binary so you'll therefore have to run this 291 script on Mac OS X 10.4 or later and with Xcode 2.1 or later installed. 292 However, the Python build process itself has several build dependencies not 293 available out of the box with OS X 10.4 so you may have to install 294 additional software beyond what is provided with Xcode 2. OS X 10.5 295 provides a recent enough system Python (in ``/usr/bin``) to build 296 the Python documentation set. It should be possible to use SDKs and/or older 297 versions of Xcode to build installers that are compatible with older systems 298 on a newer system but this may not be completely foolproof so the resulting 299 executables, shared libraries, and ``.so`` bundles should be carefully 300 examined and tested on all supported systems for proper dynamic linking 301 dependencies. It is safest to build the distribution on a system running the 302 minimum OS X version supported. 303 304 All of this is normally done completely isolated in /tmp/_py, so it does not 305 use your normal build directory nor does it install into /. 306 307 Because of the way the script locates the files it needs you have to run it 308 from within the BuildScript directory. The script accepts a number of 309 command-line arguments, run it with --help for more information. 310 311 Configure warnings 312 ================== 313 314 The configure script sometimes emits warnings like the one below:: 315 316 configure: WARNING: libintl.h: present but cannot be compiled 317 configure: WARNING: libintl.h: check for missing prerequisite headers? 318 configure: WARNING: libintl.h: see the Autoconf documentation 319 configure: WARNING: libintl.h: section "Present But Cannot Be Compiled" 320 configure: WARNING: libintl.h: proceeding with the preprocessor's result 321 configure: WARNING: libintl.h: in the future, the compiler will take precedence 322 configure: WARNING: ## -------------------------------------- ## 323 configure: WARNING: ## Report this to http://bugs.python.org/ ## 324 configure: WARNING: ## -------------------------------------- ## 325 326 This almost always means you are trying to build a universal binary for 327 Python and have libraries in ``/usr/local`` that don't contain the required 328 architectures. Temporarily move ``/usr/local`` aside to finish the build. 329 330 331 Uninstalling a framework install, including the binary installer 332 ================================================================ 333 334 Uninstalling a framework can be done by manually removing all bits that got installed. 335 That's true for both installations from source and installations using the binary installer. 336 OS X does not provide a central uninstaller. 337 338 The main bit of a framework install is the framework itself, installed in 339 ``/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework``. This can contain multiple versions 340 of Python, if you want to remove just one version you have to remove the 341 version-specific subdirectory: ``/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/X.Y``. 342 If you do that, ensure that ``/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/Current`` 343 is a symlink that points to an installed version of Python. 344 345 A framework install also installs some applications in ``/Applications/Python X.Y``, 346 347 And lastly a framework installation installs files in ``/usr/local/bin``, all of 348 them symbolic links to files in ``/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/X.Y/bin``. 349 350 351 Resources 352 ========= 353 354 * http://www.python.org/download/mac/ 355 356 * http://www.python.org/community/sigs/current/pythonmac-sig/ 357 358 * https://devguide.python.org/ 359