Marshall,
What is the process (magic?) for building a universal .dylib, capable of running on MacOS and an M1 Apple Silicon OR Intel (64-bit MacOS 10.14 or above)?
Stephen
On Nov 5, 2021, at 9:33 AM, Marshall Clow via Boost-users wrote:
On Nov 4, 2021, at 2:20 PM, Marshall Clow mailto:mclow.lists@gmail.com> wrote:
The first release candidates for the 1.78.0 beta release are now available at:
https://boostorg.jfrog.io/ui/native/main/beta/1.78.0.beta1/source
The SHA256 checksums are as follows:
7a3a025451dfa2923129214eef7d16b03c02310a353d02158a549f6caa4284b0 boost_1_78_0_b1_rc1.tar.bz2
c491b1dcb916195598aa6581d6708d57fcc750516641c22511c088d572de9c07 boost_1_78_0_b1_rc1.tar.gz
35e7a3b0eb412a3933e57c72ba96374eb7d88ff1f89dbec62a16d67ffea2105a boost_1_78_0_b1_rc1.7z
e6b68feb2f63401c96ca9fe25e939b409189fbe526a6e784e4bd69832c8f09cb boost_1_78_0_b1_rc1.zip
As always, the release managers would appreciate it if you download the
candidate of your choice and give building it a try. Please report both
success and failure, and anything else that is noteworthy.
I have successfully built the libraries:
* On Mac OS 10.15, using Apple clang version 11.0.3, and and c++03/11/14/17/2a
— Marshall
_______________________________________________
Boost-users mailing list
Boost-users@lists.boost.org
https://lists.boost.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/boost-users