MacOS Installation

From GnuCash
Revision as of 08:59, 26 July 2010 by Horse (talk | contribs) (gnucash-2.2.x)
Jump to: navigation, search

PPC Macs

DMG Now Available for PPC Macs

The DMG installer for PPC Macs is now available on the GnuCash.org home page or directly from the link: http://downloads.sourceforge.net/sourceforge/gnucash/Gnucash-PPC-2.2.9.4.dmg

Double-click the DMG file when it finishes downloading. Read the "Readme OSX" document, then drag the GnuCash icon to your Applications folder. That's it.

The procedure for building the app bundle is found at MacOSX/Quartz.

Using Fink

Fink is a package-management tool making it easier to install all your favorite *nix tools and libraries under OS X. It's also the quickest and easiest way to get at least some version of GnuCash running on a PowerPC Mac (Intel Mac users see below.)

Installing Fink

If you are using OS X 10.4 (Tiger) or earlier, you can install fink from a binary installer application see fink binary installer page for complete instructions. At the bottom of that page, there is information about getting the newest Xcode Tools from Apple. A version of Xcode tools came with your computer's system install DVD (or CD set), but you may want to get a newer version unless your system is relatively recent. You will need some version of Xcode Tools to install GnuCash 2.2.x from fink (see below).

If you are using OS X 10.5 (Leopard), then you will need to install fink from source. You will need to install Apple's Xcode Tools before you can install anything from source (aka: compiling). Be sure you have already installed Apple's Xcode Tools (it is on your Leopard DVD) before trying to install fink from source.

Note : as of november 2008, you can also use Fink binary installer package which is available on this page with OS 10.5 (Leopard). The Fink setup disk image contains another useful tool which is called FinkCommander. FinkCommander is a graphical user interface for the fink command line version. Simply drag the FinkCommander folder from the fink setup disk image to your Application folder. Xcode is yet absolutely necessary if you wish to install GnuCash 2.x packages that are only available as source code.

August 2009 I ran into trouble installing gnucash2 using finc. The compilation failed with this error:

i686-apple-darwin9-g++-4.0.1: /usr/X11/lib/libXrandr.2.0.0.dylib: No such file or directory

I found a solution here: http://www.nabble.com/Failed:-phase-compiling:-djvulibre-3.5.20-1001-failed-td16298018.html

Which boils down to the following command:

sudo ln -s /usr/X11/liblibXrandr.2.dylib /usr/X11/lib/libXrandr.2.0.0.dylib

Also I upgraded to the latest version of X11 here http://xquartz.macosforge.org/trac/wiki/X112.4.0

Note: as of 3 September 2009 this X11 installer doesn't work on Snow Leopard

gnucash-1.8

Under Mac OS X 10.4 on a PowerPC Mac, gnucash-1.8 installation is as simple as:

  1. download and install fink
  2. run 'sudo apt-get install gnucash'
  3. start up X11 and run 'gnucash &' from an xterm


-- note: these instructions don't seem to cover installing 1.8.x with HBCI support. For those of us in Germany, that makes this a little hard to figure out. It would be great if someone could update these notes.

gnucash-2.2.x

Installing GnuCash-2.2 is more complicated, since the Fink package is not included in the binary distribution. So in addition to the basic install of Fink you need to turn on rsync or cvs updating. Note that the Fink package name for GnuCash-2.2.x is "gnucash2", and that this package is in the "crypto" category in Fink, rather than the "gnome" category as "gnucash" is. But all you have to do is type 'fink install gnucash2' in a terminal window, and fink will attempt to do all the right things. It will take some time to download all the files needed and then compile them. The first install will probably take several hours and require more than 2 GB of free space. Version upgrades after that should take less than 30 minutes.

Once fink finishes installing GnuCash, launch the program by typing 'gnucash' (not gnucash2) in an xterm window (all versions of Mac OS X) or in a normal terminal window (OS X 10.5.x).

The help files (fink package gnucash2-docs) do not work at the moment (March 24, 2008) because of a problem with the fink version of yelp (gnome help system).

Other sections on this page describe ways of obtaining GnuCash versions 2.0 and higher, but note that they all involve, directly or indirectly, downloading and compiling source code too.

Other Fink options

Further discussion of semi-manual ways to compile GnuCash using Fink tools can be found here. Most of that information is generally outdated since the availability of the gnucash2 package. However, it may still be useful in some cases, for example if you would like to use Fink in conjunction with compiling a version of GnuCash newer than any available in a Fink package.

Using MacPorts

MacPorts (formerly known as DarwinPorts) is another, parallel package manager for Mac OS X. All of the options discussed below are covered in more detail in MacOSX/MacPortsDetail.

gnucash-2.2.x

The standard gnucash port in MacPorts was up-to-date with GnuCash-2.2.8 as of 2008-Dec-28. Therefore, installing the latest stable version of GnuCash consists simply of:

  1. Download and install MacPorts. For more information Mac-How
  2. sudo port selfupdate
  3. sudo port install gnucash # Note this takes quite a while
  4. Run gnucash from an XTerm.

Moreover, note that MacPorts can now also handle the native quartz compilation of GnuCash, see MacOSX/MacPortsDetail.

Development version

Note that there is also a "development version" port of gnucash in the MacPorts system, called gnucash-devel. However it is significantly out of date as of December 2008, and it does not have an assigned maintainer, so the current recommendation is to stick with the release version described just above.

Even more bleeding edge

MacOSX/MacPortsDetail also includes instructions for compiling any GnuCash source distribution in the context of a MacPorts software installation.

Manual compilation/Quartz

It is possible to get GnuCash running completely without X Windows, and no longer requires manual compilation (which is good as GnuCash depends on a large array of other packages which must be compiled separately in the absence of a package manager.) Therefore, this section has been removed; see MacOSX/MacPortsDetail and MacOSX/Quartz for two methods of compiling GnuCash to use the native Mac OS X window system.

Intel Macs

Quartz Native Builds

Binary downloads of Quartz-native app bundles are available as noted below. The procedure for building the app bundles is found at MacOSX/Quartz.

gnucash-2.2.9

The DMG installer for Intel Macs is now available on the GnuCash.org home page or directly from the link: http://downloads.sourceforge.net/sourceforge/gnucash/Gnucash-Intel-2.2.9.4.dmg

Double-click the DMG file when it finishes downloading. Read the "Readme OSX" document, then drag the GnuCash icon to your Applications folder. That's it.

gnucash-2.3.x

A DMG installer for the latest development release is usually available on (unstable)/ Sourceforge within a few days of the release announcement.


gnucash-2.x with Fink or MacPorts

As of August 2006, GnuCash 2.x works fine on most Intel Macs. Under Mac OS 10.5 you should be able to install GnuCash 2.2.x with either the Fink or MacPorts methods described above. For Mac OS 10.4, you may find it easiest using the Fink method referenced above. Once installed, GnuCash is run from a regular Terminal window in 10.5.x and from an xTerm window in all other OS 10.x.

Perform the following steps to install GnuCash 2.2.x on an Intel Mac running a clean installation of Mac OS X 10.5.x and a current version of Xcode (Xcode is absolutely necessary because GnuCash 2.x packages are only available as source code):

  1. Download and decompress the latest version of the Fink source code.
  2. Open Terminal and use "cd" to go to the directory that contains the uncompressed Fink source code you just downloaded.
  3. Issue the following commands to install and update fink (rsync is preferred for selfupdate; the point release method will not work):
./bootstrap
. /sw/bin/init.sh
fink selfupdate; fink index; fink scanpackages

Note : as of november 2008, you can alternatively use Fink binary installer package which is available on this page. The Fink setup disk image contains another useful tool which is called FinkCommander. FinkCommander is a graphical user interface for the fink command line version. Simply drag the FinkCommander folder from the fink setup disk image to your Application folder.

To install GnuCash 2.2, compile from source using fink:

fink install gnucash2

Note : gnucash2 package may not be found by Fink. As a matter of fact, gnucash2 is part of the unstable packages tree. Fink has to be setup to use this tree. This can be achieved through the Fink tab in the FinkCommander preferences dialog. Perform then a cvs selfupdate using FinkCommander "Source/SelfUpdate CVS" command. The gnucash2 package will appear in the Fink packages list. Just select it and execute FinkCommander "Source/Install" command.


To run GnuCash from an xTerm in OS X 10.4, enter:

/sw/bin/gnucash

To run GnuCash from a Terminal in OS X 10.5, enter:

/sw/bin/gnucash

Final Words

Currently, none of the primary GnuCash development occurs under OS X; as such, clear and specific bug reports (particularly of new issues not already reported) may be helpful. If you encounter problems, please check the mailing list archives first and then, if your problem cannot be resolved based on the information found there, report it to the mailing list. Please do remember that GnuCash developers are volunteers and are not responsible for your computer; as such, your help (in the form of exhausting readily available resources before asking for help and in asking for help in a clear manner) is appreciated.