Israel Brewster <israel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > That said, I did sort of get this to work. What I ended up doing was > building for each architecture separately (but on the same machine), > then using lipo to combine the resulting libraries. When I took all > but one architecture flag out of the configure string I used, it > worked- regardless of which architecture I left in. I haven't had a > chance to test this fully yet, but so far it seems to have worked - The server executables will probably not work, except on the arch you built on. The client programs might accidentally fail to fail; I'm not sure whether they contain any dependencies on the arch-specific values that are extracted by configure. You really need to create pg_config.h contents that are correct for the specific arch you're trying to compile for. The last time I tried this, the only good way to do that was by running configure on the particular architecture. (Maybe 10.6 has got some cute way around that, but I doubt it.) > I'm somewhat curious though. I didn't have any difficulties making > universal builds of MySQL and SQLite by simply passing multiple -arch > flags to CFLAGS and LDFLAGS. Can't speak to SQLite, but I know quite well that mysql has got essentially the same issues as PG with having arch-specific configure output. Have you actually tested those universal builds on any arch except where you built them? regards, tom lane -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general