# build-emacs-for-macos My personal hacked together script for building a completely self-contained Emacs.app application on macOS, from any git branch, tag, or ref. Use this script at your own risk. ## Why? - To use new features available from master or branches, which have not made it into a official stable release yet. - Homebrew builds of Emacs are not self-contained applications, making it very difficult when doing HEAD builds and you need to rollback to a earlier version. - Both Homebrew HEAD builds, and nightly builds from emacsformacosx.com are built from the `master` branch. This script allows you to choose any branch, tag, or git ref you want. ## Status As of writing (2020-08-19) it works for me on my machine. Your luck may vary. I have successfully built: - `emacs-27.1` release git tag - `master` branch (Emacs 28.x) - `feature/native-comp` branch (Emacs 28.x) For reference, my machine is: - 13-inch MacBook Pro (2020), 10th-gen 2.3 GHz Quad-Core Intel Core i7 (4c/8t) - macOS 10.15.6 (19G2021) - Xcode 11.6 ## Limitations The build produced does have some limitations: - It is not a universal application. The CPU architecture of the built application will be that of the machine it was built on. - The minimum required macOS version of the built application will be the same as that of the machine it was built on. - The application is not signed, so running it on machines other than the one that built the application will yield warnings. If you want to make a signed Emacs.app, google is you friend for finding signing instructions. ## Requirements - [Xcode](https://apps.apple.com/gb/app/xcode/id497799835?mt=12) - [Homebrew](https://brew.sh/) - All Homebrew formula listed in the `Brewfile`, which can all easily be installed by running: ``` brew bundle ``` ## Usage ``` Usage: ./build-emacs-for-macos [options] Branch, tag, and SHA are from the emacs-mirror/emacs/emacs Github repo, available here: https://github.com/emacs-mirror/emacs -j, --parallel COUNT Compile using COUNT parallel processes (detected: 8) --[no-]xwidgets Enable/disable XWidgets (default: enabled) --[no-]native-comp Enable/disable native-comp (default: enabled if supported) --[no-]native-fast-boot Enable/disable NATIVE_FAST_BOOT (default: enabled if native-comp supported) ``` Resulting applications are saved to the `builds` directory in a bzip2 compressed tarball. If you don't want the build process to eat all your CPU cores, pass in a `-j` value of how many CPU cores you want it to use. ### Examples To download a tarball of the `master` branch (Emacs 28.x) and build Emacs.app from it: ``` ./build-emacs-for-macos ``` To build the stable `emacs-27.1` release git tag run: ``` ./build-emacs-for-macos emacs-27.1 ``` ## Native-Comp To build a Emacs.app with native-comp support ([gccemacs](https://akrl.sdf.org/gccemacs.html)) from the `feature/native-comp` branch, you will need to install a patched version of Homebrew's `gcc` formula that includes libgccjit. The patch itself is in `./Formula/gcc.rb.patch`, and comes from [this](https://gist.github.com/mikroskeem/0a5c909c1880408adf732ceba6d3f9ab#1-gcc-with-libgccjit-enabled) gist. You can install the patched formula by running the helper script: ``` ./install-patched-gcc ``` The helper script will copy your local `gcc.rb` Forumla from Homebrew to `./Formula`, and apply the `./Formula/gcc.rb.patch` to it. After which it then proceed to install the patched gcc formula which includes libgccjit. As it requires installing and compiling GCC from source, it can take anywhere between 30-60 minutes or more depending on your machine. And finally to build a Emacs.app with native compilation enabled, run: ``` ./build-emacs-for-macos feature/native-comp ``` By default `NATIVE_FAST_BOOT` is enabled which ensures a fast build by native compiling as few lisp source files as possible to build the app. Any remaining lisp files will be dynamically compiled in the background the first time you use them. On my machine it takes around 10-15 minutes to build Emacs.app with `NATIVE_FAST_BOOT` enabled. With it disabled it takes around 25 minutes. ### Configuration Add the following near the top of your `early-init.el` or `init.el`: ```elisp (setq comp-speed 2) ``` By default natively compiled `*.eln` files will be cached in `~/.emacs.d/eln-cache/`. If you want to customize that, simply add a new path as the first element to the `comp-eln-load-path` variable. The path string must end with a `/`. For example, to cache them into `cache/eln-cache` within your Emacs configuration directory, you can do something like this: ```elisp (when (boundp 'comp-eln-load-path) (add-to-list 'comp-eln-load-path (expand-file-name "cache/eln-cache/" user-emacs-directory))) ``` ### Issues (as of 2020-08-19) After the changes in [Update 11](https://akrl.sdf.org/gccemacs.html#org4b11ea1) to gccemacs, the native `*.eln` files are cached with a hash. This hash seems to be in part based on the absolute file path of the lisp file in question. As Emacs.app is self-contained, the absolute path as build time and will not be the same as once it's installed into `/Applications`. This means that all the natively compiled `*.eln` files bundled into Emacs.app will not be used, and instead all lisp sources will be natively compiled and cached in the the user cache (`~/.emacs.d/eln-cache/` by default). Native compilation status can be viewed in the `*Async-native-compile-log*` buffer. Because of this, `NATIVE_FAST_BOOT` is enabled by default ensuring as fast a build as possible, with as little native compilation as possible on build time. ## Credits - I've borrowed some ideas from [David Caldwell](https://github.com/caldwell)'s excellent [build-emacs](https://github.com/caldwell/build-emacs) project, which produces all builds for [emacsformacosx.com](https://emacsformacosx.com). - Patches applied are pulled from [emacs-plus](https://github.com/d12frosted/homebrew-emacs-plus), which is an excellent Homebrew formula with lots of options not available elsewhere. - The following sources were extremely useful in figuring out how get get the `feature/native-comp` branch building on macOS: - https://gist.github.com/mikroskeem/0a5c909c1880408adf732ceba6d3f9ab#1-gcc-with-libgccjit-enabled - https://github.com/shshkn/emacs.d/blob/master/docs/nativecomp.md - https://gist.github.com/AllenDang/f019593e65572a8e0aefc96058a2d23e ## Internals The script downloads the source code as a gzipped tar archive from the [GitHub mirror](https://github.com/emacs-mirror/emacs) repository, as it makes it very easy to get a tarball of any given git reference. It then runs `./configure` with a various options, including copying various dynamic libraries into the application itself. So the built application should in theory run on a macOS install that does not have Homebrew, or does not have the relevant Homebrew formulas installed. Code quality of the script itself, is well, non-existent. The build script started life a super-quick hack back in 2013, and now it's even more of a dirty hack. I might clean it up and add unit tests if I end up relying on this script for a prolonged period of time. For now I plan to use it at least until native-comp lands in a stable Emacs release for macOS. ## License [CC0 1.0 Universal](http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)