Index: build/mac/strip_from_xcode |
diff --git a/build/mac/strip_from_xcode b/build/mac/strip_from_xcode |
new file mode 100755 |
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..c26b9fb492bf95715fd6a3a915f91cb2d7326794 |
--- /dev/null |
+++ b/build/mac/strip_from_xcode |
@@ -0,0 +1,62 @@ |
+#!/bin/bash |
+ |
+# Copyright (c) 2008 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved. |
+# Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be |
+# found in the LICENSE file. |
+ |
+# This is a handy wrapper script that figures out how to call the strip |
+# utility (strip_save_dsym in this case), if it even needs to be called at all, |
+# and then does it. This script should be called by a post-link phase in |
+# targets that might generate Mach-O executables, dynamic libraries, or |
+# loadable bundles. |
+# |
+# An example "Strip If Needed" build phase placed after "Link Binary With |
+# Libraries" would do: |
+# exec "${XCODEPROJ_DEPTH}/build/mac/strip_from_xcode" |
+ |
+if [ "${CONFIGURATION}" != "Release" ] ; then |
+ # Only strip in release mode. |
+ exit 0 |
+fi |
+ |
+declare -a FLAGS |
+ |
+# MACH_O_TYPE is not set for a command-line tool, so check PRODUCT_TYPE too. |
+# Weird. |
+if [ "${MACH_O_TYPE}" = "mh_execute" ] || \ |
+ [ "${PRODUCT_TYPE}" = "com.apple.product-type.tool" ] ; then |
+ # Strip everything (no special flags). No-op. |
+ true |
+elif [ "${MACH_O_TYPE}" = "mh_dylib" ] || \ |
+ [ "${MACH_O_TYPE}" = "mh_bundle" ]; then |
+ # Strip debugging symbols and local symbols |
+ FLAGS[${#FLAGS[@]}]=-S |
+ FLAGS[${#FLAGS[@]}]=-x |
+elif [ "${MACH_O_TYPE}" = "staticlib" ] ; then |
+ # Don't strip static libraries. |
+ exit 0 |
+else |
+ # Warn, but don't treat this as an error. |
+ echo $0: warning: unrecognized MACH_O_TYPE ${MACH_O_TYPE} |
+ exit 0 |
+fi |
+ |
+if [ -n "${STRIPFLAGS}" ] ; then |
+ # Pick up the standard STRIPFLAGS Xcode setting, used for "Additional Strip |
+ # Flags". |
+ for stripflag in "${STRIPFLAGS}" ; do |
+ FLAGS[${#FLAGS[@]}]="${stripflag}" |
+ done |
+fi |
+ |
+if [ -n "${CHROMIUM_STRIP_SAVE_FILE}" ] ; then |
+ # An Xcode project can communicate a file listing symbols to saved in this |
+ # environment variable by setting it as a build setting. This isn't a |
+ # standard Xcode setting. It's used in preference to STRIPFLAGS to |
+ # eliminate quoting ambiguity concerns. |
+ FLAGS[${#FLAGS[@]}]=-s |
+ FLAGS[${#FLAGS[@]}]="${CHROMIUM_STRIP_SAVE_FILE}" |
+fi |
+ |
+exec "$(dirname ${0})/strip_save_dsym" "${FLAGS[@]}" \ |
+ "${BUILT_PRODUCTS_DIR}/${EXECUTABLE_PATH}" |