#!/bin/sh ## Output: ## - ARCH (e.g. x86_64) ## - osver (e.g., 18.7.0) ## - oscode (e.g., high-sierra) - locked to supported builds! ## - TNAME: $oscode-$ARCH ## - host_oscode - actual oscode of the machine ## - configarch (e.g., powerpc isntead of ppc) ## - texarch (e.g., i686 instead of i386) ARCH=`uname -m` osver=`uname -r` ## This would be real name, but we only build the above! if [ -z "${oscode}" ]; then oscode="darwin" case $osver in 5.*) oscode="puma" ;; 6.*) oscode="jaguar" ;; 7.*) oscode="panther" ;; 8.*) oscode="tiger" ;; 9.*) oscode="leopard" ;; 10.*) oscode="snowleopard" ;; 11.*) oscode="lion" ;; 12.*) oscode="mountainlion" ;; 13.*) oscode="mavericks" ;; 14.*) oscode="yosemite" ;; 15.*) oscode="el-capitan" ;; 16.*) oscode="sierra" ;; 17.*) oscode="high-sierra" ;; 18.*) oscode="mojave" ;; 19.*) oscode="catalina" ;; 20.*) oscode="big-sur" ;; 21.*) oscode="monterey" ;; 22.*) oscode="ventura" ;; esac fi ## real name of the host system host_oscode=$oscode ## we override oscode to one of the supported builds if echo $osver | grep ^2 >/dev/null; then oscode=big-sur ## FIXME: this may not be the best place to set this ... export MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET=11.0 export SDKROOT=/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/SDKs/MacOSX11.sdk else oscode=high-sierra fi if [ "$ARCH" = i386 ]; then ## 10.5+ can run both but arch always returns 32-bit - check if we can use 64-bit instead x64=`arch -arch x86_64 sh -c 'echo x86_64'` if [ "z$x64" = zx86_64 ]; then ARCH=x86_64 fi fi configarch="$ARCH" texarch="$ARCH" case "$ARCH" in ppc*) configarch=powerpc texarch=powerpc ;; i?86) configarch=i686 texarch=i386 ;; arm64) configarch=aarch64 ;; esac : ${TNAME="$oscode-$ARCH"}