view README.OS2 @ 1321:e05bc5d315e3

Date: Wed, 1 Feb 2006 18:20:33 -0800 From: Eric Wing Subject: SDL/Universal Binary updates Hi Sam, Attached is a big set of changes to the Xcode projects to support Universal Binaries. I have also included .dmgs that include the prebuilt frameworks. Ryan, I also updated SMPEG which is also in the package. The SDL and smpeg binaries were built against the CVS version (pulled maybe a month ago?). I do not have an Intel Mac to test on so I have no idea if this stuff actually works. However, Christian Walther has been a big help in testing 10.2.8 and 10.3.9 so I'm fairly confident we got the build settings correct for at least PPC. I have attempted to document the important things for producing these Universal Binaries. Documentation is somewhat scattered through out everything, but there is a big centralized piece of documentation in the UniversalBinaryNotes.rtf in the SDL.dmg. As far as Universal Binaries are concerned, the big things were: - Build with gcc 3.3 on PPC, 4.0 on Intel. - We couldn't get any of the MMX/SSE code to compile/link (SDL and smpeg). - All 3rd party dependencies had to be rebuilt as Universal There were also a bunch of non-Universal things that have been updated: - I converted the SDL-satellites to create .dmg's instead of .pkg installers - Updated all 3rd party static libraries with current versions. (I think libpng was the most dramatic going from 1.0.? to 1.2.8 with API breakage. I haven't found any problems so far in doing this.) - Changed some compiler optimization settings - Finally updated the exports list for SDL_mixer - Tried to include a static smpeg in SDL_mixer (multiple build variants in Xcode project now) - Enabled Altivec in SDL (we forgot to add the flags to Xcode last time) - More documentation Since so many things have changed, there might be new problems introduced. The big issue I've found so far is with SDL_mixer. As I mentioned on the mailing list, MP3's produce an assertion failure. And the MikMod problem reported on Bugzilla continues to persist. There's probably a bunch of other stuff I'm forgetting. There really were hundreds of little things I mucked with so it's hard to remember them all. If you have any questions, feel free to ask. Thanks, Eric
author Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org>
date Thu, 02 Feb 2006 06:26:39 +0000
parents 173c063d4f55
children e3242177fe4a
line wrap: on
line source


===========
SDL on OS/2
===========

Last updated on Oct 02, 2005.


1. How to compile?
------------------

To compile this, you'll need the followings installed:
- The OS/2 Developer's Toolkit
- The OpenWatcom compiler 
  (http://www.openwatcom.org)
- The FSLib library
  (ftp://ftp.netlabs.org/pub/SDL)

Please edit the second, fourth and fifth lines of setvars.cmd file
to set the folders where the toolkit, the OW compiler and the FSLib are. 
You won't need NASM yet (The Netwide Assembler), you can leave that line.
Run setvars.cmd, and you should get a shell in which you can
compile SDL.

Check the "Watcom.mif" file. This is the file which is included by all the
Watcom makefiles, so changes here will affect the whole build process.
There is a line in there which determines if the resulting SDL.DLL will be
a 'debug' or a 'release' build. The 'debug' version is full of printf()'s,
so if something goes wrong, its output can help a lot for debugging.

Then go to the 'src' folder, and run "wmake -f makefile.wat".
This should create the SDL.DLL and the corresponding SDL.LIB file there.

To test applications, it's a good idea to use the 'debug' build of SDL, and
redirect the standard output and standard error output to files, to see what
happens internally in SDL.
(like: testsprite >stdout.txt 2>stderr.txt)

To rebuild SDL, use the following commands in 'src' folder:
wmake -f makefile.wat clean
wmake -f makefile.wat



2. How to compile the testapps?
-------------------------------

Once you have SDL.DLL compiled, navigate into the 'test' folder, copy in there
the newly built SDL.DLL, and copy in there FSLib.DLL.

Then run "wmake -f makefile.wat" in there to compile some of the testapps.



3. What is missing?
-------------------

The following things are missing from this SDL implementation:
- MMX, SSE and 3DNOW! optimized video blitters?
- HW Video surfaces
- OpenGL support



4. Special Keys / Full-Screen support
-------------------------------------

There are two special hot-keys implemented:
- Alt+Home switches between fullscreen and windowed mode
- Alt+End simulates closing the window (can be used as a Panic key)
Only the LEFT Alt key will work.



5. Joysticks on SDL/2
---------------------

The Joystick detection only works for standard joysticks (2 buttons, 2 axes
and the like). Therefore, if you use a non-standard joystick, you should
specify its features in the SDL_OS2_JOYSTICK environment variable in a batch
file or CONFIG.SYS, so SDL applications can provide full capability to your
device. The syntax is:

SET SDL_OS2_JOYSTICK=[JOYSTICK_NAME] [AXES] [BUTTONS] [HATS] [BALLS]

So, it you have a Gravis GamePad with 4 axes, 2 buttons, 2 hats and 0 balls,
the line should be:

SET SDL_OS2_JOYSTICK=Gravis_GamePad 4 2 2 0

If you want to add spaces in your joystick name, just surround it with
quotes or double-quotes:

SET SDL_OS2_JOYSTICK='Gravis GamePad' 4 2 2 0

or

SET SDL_OS2_JOYSTICK="Gravis GamePad" 4 2 2 0

   Notive However that Balls and Hats are not supported under OS/2, and the
value will be ignored... but it is wise to define these correctly because 
in the future those can be supported.
   Also the number of buttons is limited to 2 when using two joysticks,
4 when using one joystick with 4 axes, 6 when using a joystick with 3 axes
and 8 when using a joystick with 2 axes. Notice however these are limitations 
of the Joystick Port hardware, not OS/2.



6. Next steps...
----------------

Things to do:
- Implement missing stuffs (look for 'TODO' string in source code!)
- Finish video driver (the 'wincommon' can be a good example for missing
  things like application icon and so on...)
- Enable MMX/SSE/SSE2 acceleration functions
- Rewrite CDROM support using DOS Ioctl for better support.



7. Contacts
-----------

   You can contact the developers for bugs:

   Area					Developer		email
   General (Audio/Video/System)		Doodle			doodle@scenergy.dfmk.hu
   CDROM and Joystick			Caetano			daniel@caetano.eng.br

   Notice however that SDL/2 is 'in development' stage so ... if you want to help,
please, be our guest and contact us!