Determine minimum OSX version a binary was compiled for

earl picture earl · Jun 17, 2013 · Viewed 7.9k times · Source

When using Clang's or GCC's Darwin backends to create executables for OSX, the flag -mmacosx-version-min=version can be used to set the earliest version of OSX the executable will run on.

Is there any way to trace back from a given executable which flag was used to compile it? I.e. is there a way to determine which minimum OSX version is targeted by a given executable?

Answer

user557219 picture user557219 · Jun 17, 2013

Use otool -l /path/to/binary and inspect the LC_VERSION_MIN_MACOSX load command; specifically, the version field.

For example, a binary compiled with the 10.8 SDK with deployment target (-mmacosx-version-min) 10.8 should have an LC_VERSION_MIN_MACOSX like this:

Load command 9
      cmd LC_VERSION_MIN_MACOSX
  cmdsize 16
  version 10.8
      sdk 10.8

whereas a binary compiled with the 10.8 SDK with deployment target 10.7 should have an LC_VERSION_MIN_MACOSX load command like this:

Load command 9
      cmd LC_VERSION_MIN_MACOSX
  cmdsize 16
  version 10.7
      sdk 10.8