MacOSX/2.4.0/Readme
* 1 Gnucash for OSX Quartz
o 1.1 Prerequisites:
o 1.2 Installation:
+ 1.2.1 Installing Finance::Quote
o 1.3 Documentation:
o 1.4 Known Issues:
o 1.5 License and Included Binaries:
Gnucash for OSX Quartz
Prerequisites:
Gnucash of OSX Quartz requires MacOSX 10.5 (Leopard) or MacOSX 10.6
(Snow Leopard). It will not work on 10.4 (Tiger) because some of the
libraries on which it depends now use features introduced in 10.5.
Installation:
If you are upgrading from a version of Gnucash older than 2.3.9, please
run the "Update Dirs" application in the dmg. This will convert your
online banking setup to work with the new version of AqBanking and will
copy your .gnucash directory to the more Mac-appropriate
Library/Application Support/Gnucash.
Simply drag Gnucash.app to the Applications folder (or anywhere else you
like).
When you first open GnuCash.app, it will create a link from the bundle
Resources folder to /Library/Gnucash-2.4. It will do this automatically,
and no authentication is required.
Installing Finance::Quote
You can easily install Finance::Quote by double-clicking the
"FinanceQuote Update" applet in the dmg.
You'll need to have Developer Tools (Tiger or Leopard) or XCode (Snow
Leopard) installed. It's available as an optional install on your
installation DVD.
Documentation:
Both the Gnucash Help system and the Gnucash Guide are provided in HTML
format. They will open in your default browser when you select the
appropriate item in the Help menu. Appropriate sections of help will be
similarly opened when you click on a Help button in a dialog box.
Known Issues:
* Gnucash is not a native Mac application: It is a Gtk+ application
which has been recompiled to run on OSX. Accordingly, some
features to which Mac users are accustomed aren't supported. Some
of these are non-menu-based keyboard shortcuts (key bindings; you
can adjust them as you like in the gtkrc file), input methods, and
Universal Access.
* An instance of dbus is started by the application startup script,
but dbus isn't designed to be run that way, so it doesn't shut
down when you close the application. When Gnucash starts up again,
it will kill any instances of dbus which are running from the same
path, but if you move Gnucash.app or are switching between stable
and development versions, you may wind up with more than one
instance. You can clean out the running dbus-daemons by either
issuing "killall dbus-daemon" at a command line or by telling it
to quit from /Applications/Utilities/Activity Monitor. Note that
if you want to delete Gnucash.app, you'll need to kill the running
instance of dbus-daemon first or you'll get "file in use" errors
from Finder.
* As of Gnucash 2.3.9, Gnucash's configuration files are in
$HOME/Library/Application Support/Gnucash instead of
$HOME/.gnucash so that they're visible with Finder. GConf and
AQBanking still have their configuration files in $HOME/.gconf,
$HOME/.gconfd, and $HOME/.aqbanking (Note that 2.3.8 and previous
used an older version of aqbanking which kept its config files in
$HOME/.banking)
* The only libdbi module included is for SQLite. If you need either
the MySQL or Postgresql modules, you will have to build them
yourself and install them into
Gnucash.app/Contents/Resources/lib/dbd.
License and Included Binaries:
Gnucash is licensed under the Gnu General Public License Version 2, a
copy of which can be found in the file LICENSE in this directory and in
each bundle's Contents folder. There is also a file "Sources" which
lists the several libraries included in the bundle upon which Gnucash
depends along with their home webpages where you may find more licensing
information and source downloads. A few of the libraries require patches
to compile on OSX; all of those patches have been submitted as bugs to
the respective libraries, but you'll find them at
http://github.com/jralls/gnucash-on-osx/patches if you're really curious.