forked from Aleph-One-Marathon/alephone-dingoo
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
/
INSTALL.MacOSX
100 lines (74 loc) · 4.21 KB
/
INSTALL.MacOSX
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
Aleph One/SDL MacOSX Installation Instructions
==============================================
The supplied project files are for Apple's Project Builder (I'm using version
1.0.1, but an earlier version might work). If the development tools weren't
included in your OSX installation, you can download them from
http://connect.apple.com. You must be a registered Apple Developer Connection
(ADC) member, but a free registration is available which gives you access to a
version of the developer tools.
This is not the MacOS X Carbon version. For that see INSTALL.MacOSX.Carbon.
Required Libraries
------------------
Aleph One/SDL for MacOSX requires the Simple DirectMedia Layer (SDL)
library, available from the official SDL site:
http://www.libsdl.org/
Aleph One expects SDL to be installed as a Framework, which is MacOSX's fancy
version of a shared library. If you build SDL from source use Project Builder
rather than command line tools, because (as far as I can tell) the command line
tools do not build framework versions. The developer package available at the
SDL webpage does install as a framework.
The SDL_net library, available from the "Libraries" section of the SDL site, is
also required.
The SDL_image library, available from the "Libraries" section of the SDL site,
is only required if you want to use replacement textures.
Building and Installing the Program
-----------------------------------
From the command line, unpack the PBProjects directory:
$ cd aleph
$ tar xzvf PBProjects.tar.gz
If you use StuffIt Expander to unpack this archive, the project files will be
placed in a subfolder, and Project Builder won't know where to find any source
files. Moving the PBProjects folder to the aleph directory should fix this.
Project Builder needs to know where to find SDL.framework and SDL_net.framework
(typically in $(HOME)/Library/Frameworks). Make sure to add these to the
"Frameworks" group using the "Add Frameworks..." command from the Project menu.
Now, build the program (click on the hammer icon or choose "Build" from the Build menu).
If all goes well, you'll have an executable called "AlephOne" in
aleph/PBProjects/build. You can run this from within Project Builder (probably a
good way to test the program, as Project Builder will give you console output),
or move this wherever you want it installed.
Build Options:
--------------
If you have the SDL_image framework installed, make sure to change config.h (in
the file window of Project Builder, look under the "Sources" group) as needed,
and add SDL_image to the "Frameworks" group.
Installing the data files
-------------------------
Okay, this is the silly part. At present the MacOSX/SDL version of AlephOne
can't read Mac Classic-style resource forks, so you need SDL-style data files.
You'll either need to download some, or you'll need a Marathon 2, Marathon
Infinity, or Marathon Trilogy Box Set CD and access to a linux system or a PC
with the ability to read Mac filesystems. For details on how to do this, look at
the file "INSTALL.Unix".
Note that by default, the OSX version of Aleph One expects the data files to be
in /Library/Application Support/AlephOne. You can change this by modifying
confpaths.h in the "Sources" group. It might be more Mac-like to have this point
to the same directory as the executable eventually.
To enable the default SDL UI theme you need to do the following. Star by cd'ing
to the aleph/data directory and enter these commands:
mkdir -p ~/.alephone/Themes
cp -r default_theme ~/.alephone/Themes/Default
Issues, Bugs, and annoyances
----------------------------
Terminals don't work in OpenGL mode. (This also happens on the Windows/SDL
version.)
In OpenGL mode, if the OpenGL HUD option is not turned on, gameplay can feel
extremely jerky and slow; if the display is set to millions of colors,
framerates can drop to ~3 fps. (This is on a Powerbook G3 Firewire; your mileage
may vary.)
Aleph One opens a new window every time a new chapter screen or level is
entered, or when you return to a menu, and these windows don't get closed.
After simply starting the program, clicking on "New Game", watching the chapter
screen, and playing the first level, you're left with three windows, none of
which get closed.
The software renderer seems extremely slow.