Fixes for the make install build command.

Fix the make install build command to overwrite the existing framework
in the system framework library.
Update README.md to clarify the instructions for using make install.
This commit is contained in:
Bill Hollings 2020-04-02 21:11:14 -04:00
parent d57c3c845e
commit 23818e30ec
3 changed files with 14 additions and 6 deletions

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@ -32,6 +32,8 @@ Released 2020/04/05
- Fix issue causing screen captures from swapchain image to deadlock.
- Fix memory estimates for iOS 13+.
- Broaden conditions for host read sync for image memory barriers on macOS.
- Fix the `make install` build command to overwrite the existing framework in the system
framework library, and update `README.md` to clarify the instructions for using `make install`.
- Update the `README.md` and `MoltenVK_Runtime_UserGuide.md` documents to clarify that
**MoltenVK** is not a fully-compliant implementation of *Vulkan*.
- Support Xcode 11.4.

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@ -18,8 +18,9 @@ clean:
xcodebuild -quiet -project "$(XCODE_PROJ)" -scheme "$(XCODE_SCHEME_BASE)" clean
rm -rf Package
#Likely requires 'sudo make install'
#Usually requires 'sudo make install'
.PHONY: install
install:
/bin/cp -a Package/Latest/MoltenVK/macOS/framework/MoltenVK.framework /Library/Frameworks/
rm -rf /Library/Frameworks/MoltenVK.framework
cp -a Package/Latest/MoltenVK/macOS/framework/MoltenVK.framework /Library/Frameworks/

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@ -181,16 +181,21 @@ in the **_Release_** configuration from the command line. The following `make` t
make clean
make install
Running `make all` is the same as running both `make macos` and `make ios`. Running `make` with no
arguments is the same as running `make all`.
The `install` target will copy the most recently built *macOS* `MoltenVK.framework` into
the `/Library/Frameworks` folder of your computer. Since `/Library/Frameworks` is protected,
you will generally need to run it as `sudo make install` and enter your password.
The default `make` command with no arguments is the same as `make all`.
The `install` target just installs the built framework, it does not first build the framework.
So you will first need to at least run `make macos`, or use *Xcode* to build the framework as described above.
The `make` targets all require that *Xcode* is installed on your system.
Building from the command line creates the same `Package` folder structure described above when building
from within *Xcode*.
Building from the command line creates the same `Package` folder structure described above when
building from within *Xcode*.
### Building Within a Larger External Build Environment