This guide will walk you through building CoreCLR on OS X. We'll start by showing how to set up your environment from scratch.
These instructions were validated on OS X Yosemite, although they probably work on earlier versions. Pull Requests are welcome to address other environments.
If your machine has Command Line Tools for XCode 6.3 installed, you'll need to update them to the 6.3.1 version or higher in order to successfully build. There was an issue with the headers that shipped with version 6.3 that was subsequently fixed in 6.3.1.
Clone the CoreCLR and CoreFX repositories (either upstream or a fork).
dotnet-mbp:git richlander$ git clone https://github.com/dotnet/coreclr
# Cloning into 'coreclr'...
dotnet-mbp:git richlander$ git clone https://github.com/dotnet/corefx
# Cloning into 'corefx'...
This guide assumes that you've cloned the coreclr and corefx repositories into ~/git/coreclr
and ~/git/corefx
on your OS X machine. If your setup is different, you'll need to pay careful attention to the commands you run. In this guide, I'll always show what directory I'm in.
CoreCLR has a dependency on CMake for the build. You can download it from CMake downloads.
Alternatively, you can install CMake from Homebrew.
dotnet-mbp:~ richlander$ brew install cmake
ICU (International Components for Unicode) is also required to build and run. It can be obtained via Homebrew.
brew install icu4c
brew link --force icu4c
The CoreFX cryptography libraries are built on OpenSSL. The version of OpenSSL included on OS X (0.9.8) has gone out of support, and a newer version is required. A supported version can be obtained via Homebrew.
brew install openssl
brew link --force openssl
To Build CoreCLR, run build.sh from the root of the coreclr repo.
dotnet-mbp:~ richlander$ cd ~/git/coreclr
dotnet-mbp:coreclr richlander$ ./build.sh
After the build is completed, there should some files placed in bin/Product/OSX.x64.Debug
. The ones we are interested in are:
corerun
: The command line host. This program loads and starts the CoreCLR runtime and passes the managed program you want to run to it.libcoreclr.dylib
: The CoreCLR runtime itself.mscorlib.dll
: Microsoft Core Library.
dotnet-mbp:corefx richlander$ ./build.sh
After the build is complete you will be able to find the output in the bin
folder.