https://bugzilla.icculus.org/show_bug.cgi?id=5986
Created make-macosx-app.sh to handle manually creating an app bundle from other scripts.
Updated make-macosx.sh to create bundle with make-macosx-app.sh (TODO: make-macosx-ub.sh support).
Updated Makefile to create bundle with make-macosx-app.sh and zip up the resulting ioquake3.app if ARCHIVE is defined.
[As with GNU/kFreeBSD, it's treated as "Linux": all three use the GNU libc
and runtime linker, which is mostly what matters for ioquake3. -smcv]
Bug-Debian: http://bugs.debian.org/679330
Reviewed-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
As usual, the order of precedence is: user override, pkg-config,
or assume they're in standard locations.
In particular, Opus isn't in the default search path on Debian.
We didn't add CURL_CFLAGS to CLIENT_CFLAGS on all platforms, and didn't
use CURL_LIBS at all, so if "pkg-config --libs" returned "-L... -lcurl"
or even "/.../libcurl.a", it wouldn't work.
This lets us find a library in a non-standard library directory
(via -L in the pkg-config metadata), and allows overrides similar to
the Autoconf convention, e.g.
make FREETYPE_CFLAGS=-I/opt/freetype/include \
FREETYPE_LIBS="-L/opt/freetype/lib -lfreetype"
If pkg-config didn't work, assume that Freetype is in the default
location.
Linux distributions that want to link dependencies externally will
generally want to link (almost) every dependency externally; similarly,
minimal-dependency builds that want to use the embedded copies of
dependencies will generally want to do so for (almost) every dependency.
Make it easier to choose one of those by setting USE_INTERNAL_LIBS=0
or USE_INTERNAL_LIBS=1, respectively.
The default can still be overridden per-dependency; for instance,
"make USE_INTERNAL_LIBS=0 USE_INTERNAL_OPUS=1" will use the system
version of everything except Opus.
amd64, x64, x86_64 -> x86_64
i386, i86pc, x86 -> x86
powerpc, ppc -> ppc
powerpc64, ppc64 -> ppc64
axp -> alpha
Some exceptions are made for the actual build product names