[Spice-devel] OSX spice-gtk and pyparsing

Cliff Sharp csharp at vbridges.com
Mon May 9 07:15:13 PDT 2011


How about a spice-opengl?

On May 8, 2011, at 6:48 AM, Mosebach Kai wrote:

> I think having a xcode project would be quite nice. Furthermore a cocoa
> client completely based on spice-client-glib would be the better option
> compared to (native) gtk imho. I guess having a look at the Cord project
> (http://cord.sourceforge.net/) might be a good start (they ported freeRDP
> into a really nice cocoa app).
> 
> Cheers Kai
> 
> PS : The spice-gtk-0.6 builds nearly without any hacks on osx. I will try
> to provide a patch for the Makefile in ./gtk soon (regarding the sym-file
> issue)...
> 
> On 5/4/11 10:41 AM, "Christophe Fergeau" <cfergeau at redhat.com> wrote:
> 
>> On Tue, May 03, 2011 at 05:32:12PM -0500, Cliff Sharp wrote:
>>> So, now I use the X11 environment that comes with osx when I actually
>>> run
>>> spiced and/or spicy. But I feel you are correct in saying that it is
>>> better to use the X11 system that comes with osx.
>>> 
>>> I was just attempting to notify others of these issues in hopes that it
>>> might help them to save some time.
>> 
>> Ah ok, thanks for that, I thought you wanted to fix things on the macports
>> X side :) Since spice-gtk-x11 on osx isn't that interesting to me (I'd
>> rather have a more native port using gtk-osx), if it works with Apple X11,
>> I'd leave it at that :)
>> 
>>> Do you feel it is worth the time to build an Xcode project for building
>>> spicec and spice-gtk to distribute?  The visual debugger is sure nice in
>>> Xcode.
>> 
>> I wouldn't spend too much time on an Xcode project for spicec. It might be
>> useful for spice-gtk, but it might be too early for that. In my opinion,
>> what would be really nice is
>> * a working spice-gtk using gtk-osx (spice-gtk currently has X11/windows
>> specific bits that needs to be ported)
>> * when we have that, having some kind of bundle that people can install to
>> use in xcode would be great (I think the gtk-osx project has some tools
>> to help in doing that)
>> * longer term, a cocoa spice client (probably using spice-client-glib for
>> the low-level spice stuff) would be even better (I assume this would
>> ease
>> iOS porting)
>> 
>> Christophe
>> _______________________________________________
>> Spice-devel mailing list
>> Spice-devel at lists.freedesktop.org
>> http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/spice-devel
> 


____

Cliff Sharp | csharp at vbridges.com




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