On 29/06/2015 22:17, Steven Franke wrote:
> Bill,
>
>> On Jun 29, 2015, at 3:57 PM, Bill Somerville <g4...@classdesign.com> wrote:
>>
>> On 29/06/2015 21:34, Steven Franke wrote:
>>> Bill,
>>>> On Jun 29, 2015, at 9:00 AM, Bill Somerville <g4...@classdesign.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> On 28/06/2015 22:08, Steven Franke wrote:
>>>>> Thanks Bill,
>>>> Hi Steve,
>>>>> For what it’s worth, here a link to the VERBOSE build capture:
>>>>> https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/33211132/k9an_build_capture.txt
>>>>>
>>>>> Here’s the CMakeCache.txt:
>>>>> https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/33211132/CMakeCache.txt
>>>> OK, the problem wasn't quite what I thought. It is an include directive
>>>> ordering issue but it stems from the use of FFTW3 from MacPorts, this in
>>>> itself is not an issue but it has the side effect of picking up the Qt4
>>>> headers as well. Unfortunately I can't find an easy way of ensuring the
>>>> -I/opt/local/include is after the includes for Qt5. That would solve the
>>>> issue but the way that the Qt includes are detected by CMake doesn't
>>>> seem to have a way to change the ordering. I have posted a question to
>>>> the CMake ML but for now you should be able to build by deactivating
>>>> qt4-mac before building WSJT-X. It would be wise to add a
>>>> '--clean-first' to the CMake build for the first time to ensure any
>>>> incorrectly built object files are discarded. Something like:
>>>>
>>>> $ sudo port deactivate qt4-mac
>>>> $ cmake --build ~/Builds/wsjtx --clean-first --target install -- -j
>>>> $ sudo port activate qt4-mac
>>>> $ open ~/Builds/wsjtx_install/wsjtx.app
>>> This got me past the incorrect headers issue, but now it dies because of an 
>>> OpenMP problem. I’ve placed the VERBOSE build capture here:
>>> https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/33211132/k9an_build_capture.txt
>>>
>>> and the CMakeCache.txt here:
>>> https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/33211132/CMakeCache.txt
>> Is your OS X 32-bit or 64-bit?
>>
>> https://support.apple.com/en-gb/HT201948
> My processor is 64-bit:
>
> Hardware Overview:
>
>    Model Name:        MacBook Air
>    Model Identifier:  MacBookAir5,2
>    Processor Name:    Intel Core i7
>    Processor Speed:   2 GHz
>    Number of Processors:      1
>    Total Number of Cores:     2
>    L2 Cache (per Core):       256 KB
>    L3 Cache:  4 MB
>    Memory:    8 GB
>    Boot ROM Version:  MBA51.00EF.B02
>    SMC Version (system):      2.5f9
>    Serial Number (system):    C02J401ADRVG
>    Hardware UUID:     1F7ABB4C-7FB0-5918-8AE6-0CA0AB789A89
>
> and I am running the 64-bit kernel:
> $ uname -a
> Darwin Stevens-MacBook-Air.local 14.3.0 Darwin Kernel Version 14.3.0: Mon Mar 
> 23 11:59:05 PDT 2015; root:xnu-2782.20.48~5/RELEASE_X86_64 x86_64
OK, looks like the MacPorts libgcc is 32-bit only for some reason. What 
do the following print:

$ grep build_arch /opt/local/etc/macports/macports.conf

and:

$ grep universal /opt/local/etc/macports/macports.conf

and:

$ file /opt/local/lib/gcc49/libgomp.1.dylib

>> ...
>>
>> 73
>> Bill
>> G4WJS.


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