Compile instructions (macOS 10.10+) - Git

Updated 3 years ago

    Use these instructions to compile MuseScore master branch on MacOS 10.10+ (see http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/supported-platforms.html).

    For macOS 10.12+, please go to Compile Instructions for Xcode and Qt 5.12 on macOS 10.12+.

    From revision 5b7c72a onwards, committed 9 March 2017, the development version of MuseScore (master) requires Qt 5.9 or newer and a C++11 capable toolchain.
    As of 484f8dc, 09Oct2020, Qt 5.15 (and a C++17 capable toolchain) is required for the master branch, this does exclude macOS 10.10, 10.11 and 10.12.
    the 3.x branch though stays on Qt 5.9, see above.

    The 2.x branches require Qt 5.4 however.

    Although MuseScore 3.x can be built with Qt 5.12, and is, on other platforms, it is currently (November 2019) a business requirement that it support MacOS 10.10 and 10.11 (which were still called OS X at that time). Qt 5.12 does not support these earlier releases, and, thus, MuseScore 3.x for MacOS is released with Qt 5.9; therefore, you should build and test with that Qt release as long as this business requirement persists. Code intentionally or unintentionally depending on Qt features and even fixes since 5.9 will not work in the release.

    Setting the build and development environment

    1. Install the latest version of Xcode from the Mac App Store.
    2. Launch Xcode and accept the licence
    3. In Xcode, go to Preferences -> Download and install the Command line Tools. With Xcode 5, you might need to run xcode-select --install instead.
    4. Install the dependencies. If you are new to macOS development or do not have a preference, we suggest Homebrew
      $ ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
      $ brew install libogg libsndfile libvorbis pkg-config portaudio jack lame cmake git
    5. If you prefer MacPorts, choose the DMG of your OS and install MacPorts
      Open a terminal and enter the following (in your home):
      $ sudo port install git libsndfile pkgconfig lame portaudio jack cmake
    6. Qt is normally shipped via an online installer, which you should use if you are running the current version of macOS. Download the open source version of Qt (not the commercial version), open the DMG and run the online installer. It will offer Qt 5.12. To get Qt 5.9, uncheck Latest releases, check LTS and press Refresh. By default it will install Qt in your home directory. If you want to build a 2.x version of MuseScore, you also need to make sure to check Qt 5.4.2 for installation. To build MuseScore 2.x on older macOS versions, you should also install Qt 5.4.2 directly via the same online installer.
      Note: if you are using MacOS Catalina (10.15) to debug MuseScore, Qt 5.9 is known to have issues, so you should use Qt 5.12 instead
    7. Append the following line to ~/.profile (or alternatively ~/.bash_profile if you already have it)
      export PATH=$PATH:~/Qt/5.9.8/clang_64/bin
      and run source ~/.profile
    8. Clone the repository from GitHub:
      git clone git://github.com/musescore/MuseScore.git

      If you plan to contribute to MuseScore, you can setup your own fork on GitHub and clone it instead. See the Git Workflow page.

    Building MuseScore

    1. In a terminal, enter:
      cd MuseScore
    2. Set the revision SHA1 for this build
      make -f Makefile.osx revision
    3. Start the actual compilation. It takes more than one hour on a MacBook 2 GHz but it's pretty fast on a MacBook Pro Core i7 (4 to 5 minutes max).
      make -f Makefile.osx release
    4. Call the install target. The bundle is copied from the Release directory into the applebuild directory. All resources (such as help and templates) are added to it
      make -f Makefile.osx install
    5. The package step. This target calls a script derived from this one. It creates a self-contained bundle, thanks to macdeployqt, by adding and stripping the Qt libraries into the MuseScore bundle. It also adds Qt plugins, PortAudio and libsndfile. A DMG file is the result
      make -f Makefile.osx package

    Debugging and developing MuseScore

    If you are a developer, look at the xcode target in the makefile. It generates a xcodeproj file. You can open this xcodeproj file and use the Apple IDE for tasks such as modifying, debugging and compiling MuseScore code.

    Run
    make -f Makefile.osx xcode

    Then open the xcodeproj bundle in Xcode
    open build.xcode/mscore.xcodeproj

    In Xcode, run the ALL_BUILD scheme. It will compile all the files. Then run the install scheme. It will install the required files (fonts, images etc...) for runtime. Debug by running the mscore scheme.

    If MuseScore won't start

    You may get this error message on the Xcode Console when you try to run the mscore scheme:

    This application failed to start because it could not find or load the Qt platform plugin "cocoa".
    

    This mean MuseScore can't find the Qt plugins. You need to edit the mscore scheme to set the environment variable QT_PLUGIN_PATH to point to your Qt plugins directory. The default value for Qt 5.9 is:

    QT_PLUGIN_PATH=~/Qt/5.9/clang_64/plugins

    The actual value you need to set depends on your Qt version and where you installed it earlier on. You may also need to expand the tilde (~) to it's full value /Users/<username> to point to your home directory.

    If MuseScore doesn't start for any other reason then try reverting to factory settings, but make sure you revert the compiled mscore debug build rather than the official version if you have it installed.

    Debugging in Xcode 5+

    In Xcode 5+, you might need to uncheck “Allow debugging when using document Versions Browser” in Product > Edit Scheme... > Run mscore.app. Otherwise --NSDocumentRevisionsDebugMode YES gets passed to MuseScore, and it doesn't know how to handle it.

    In Xcode > 5, you'll find the menu item elsewhere: Product > Scheme > Edit Scheme...
    Select Run (on the left hand side), and select Options along the top of the form.
    Then you'll find "Allow debugging when using document Versions Browser" in the form. Uncheck the checkbox.

    Contributing

    The preferred way to contribute is via a Pull Request on GitHub. Patches are also taken on the Issue Tracker.

    Building a release for distribution

    Dependencies built with Homebrew will not run on older versions of macOS. Here is a zip file with the dependencies as "bottles" built on Mac OS X 10.7 (since February 2020 bottles built on MacOS 10.10 are used as binaries built on systems older than MacOS 10.9 don't pass Apple's notarization). They can be installed with brew install {file}.tar.gz

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    bottles_MuseScore-2.0.zip 2.79 MB
    bottles-MuseScore-3.0.zip 2.91 MB
    bottles-MuseScore-3.0-yosemite.zip 2.94 MB