![]() |
|
|
by Mike Pinkerton As some of you may know (and most of you probably don't), Apple is
currently developing MacOS
X, a replacement to MacOS based on top of Mach3 and BSD but with
the traditional Macintosh look and feel. In order to allow developers
to quickly port their existing MacOS-based applications to MacOS X,
Apple has created a portability layer named Carbon.
Carbon takes the nearly 9000 MacOS APIs, trims the dead weight, adds
some new stuff, and offers the remaining 6000 APIs for use on top of
MacOS X. All developers need to do is tweak their existing MacOS code
to fit the new Carbon API and their apps will run in a separate
process, taking full advantage of MacOS X's memory protection and
pre-emptiveness. To this end, we have made those modifcations to Mozilla so that a
single binary will run on both MacOS 8.5 and MacOS X. These
modifications (code named Fizzilla while they lived on Pink's
hard drive) are now in the tip of the Mozilla tree, but are hidden
behind an ifdef. One day we will flip the switch for daily builds,
but for the time being, only those of us who want to build with these
changes will. Fizzilla made its public debut onstage at the MacOS X Session at
Apple's WWDC '99. People liked it. Basing MacMozilla upon CarbonLib instead of the MacOS libraries
gets us the following: The following documents discuss where to go from here and how you
can help Why start over from scratch (new NSPR, new GFX, new Widget...)
when the exact same code base that we use for our MacOS product will
get us to this new platform? And besides, no one wants to write in
objective-C. Many thanks to the following people at Apple for helping out: Eoin
Norris, Dave Evans, Curt Rothert, John Signa, Christine
O'Sullivan
|
|||||||||
| Copyright © 1998 The Mozilla Organization. | ||||||||||