#!/bin/sh #************************************************************** # # Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one # or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file # distributed with this work for additional information # regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file # to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the # "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance # with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at # # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 # # Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, # software distributed under the License is distributed on an # "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY # KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the # specific language governing permissions and limitations # under the License. # #************************************************************** # Documentation # ------------- # # The purpose of this script to take Mac OS X executables and shared libraries # and package them into the required Mac OS X bundle format. # # This script has the following usage: # macosx-create-bundle file1 [file2] ... [fileN] # # Note that file1 through fileN can in either of the following formats: # - A file name # - A file name and a directory to look for missing files. To use this option, # use the following format: # filename=directory # # The file argument is the file that you want to package into a Mac OS X # bundle. Currently, this script will only package executables and shared # libraries. # # The output for each executable will be a bundle named .app and # the output for each shared library will be a symlink from libfoo.jnilib # back to libfoo.dylib. # These output directories will be in the same directory as the executable or # shared library. # Code # ---- # Parse command line arguments if [ $# = 0 ]; then printf "macosx-create-bundle: error: incorrect number of arguments\n" >&2 printf "Usage: macosx-create-bundle file1 [file2] ... [fileN]\n" >&2 exit 1 fi while [ $# != 0 ]; do inputfile=`echo "$1" | awk -F= '{print $1}'` sourcedir=`echo "$1" | awk -F= '{print $2}'` shift inputfilename=`basename "$inputfile"` outputdir=`dirname "$inputfile"` solverlibdir="$SOLARVERSION/$INPATH/lib" locallibdir="../../../../lib" solverbindir="$SOLARVERSION/$INPATH/bin" localbindir="../../.." # Determine file type filetype=`file -L "$inputfile"` # Create bundle based on file type if printf "$filetype" | grep -q 'Mach-O.* executable'; then # Do nothing as this step is obsolete : elif printf "$filetype" | grep -q 'Mach-O.* dynamically linked shared library'; then # Screen out lib\w+static libraries as they are not used directly if ! printf "$inputfilename" | grep -q -x -E 'lib\w+static.*\.dylib'; then # Create jnilib link inputjnilibname="`basename $inputfilename .dylib`.jnilib" if [ ! -L "$outputdir/$inputjnilibname" ]; then rm -Rf "$outputdir/$inputjnilibname" fi # Link jnilib ln -sf "$inputfilename" "$outputdir/$inputjnilibname" #printf "macosx-create-bundle: $outputdir/$inputjnilibname successfully created\n" fi else printf "macosx-create-bundle: error: \"$inputfile\" is not an executable or shared library.\n" >&2 exit 1 fi done