I have been building and using a subset of Boost for an app that runs on iOS 8.x for months. I build Boost 1.52 with a shell script based on “boost.sh” written by Pete Goodliffe in 2009 that you can find with Google. I’m building the thread, signals, filesystem, regex, system, and date_time libraries. It’s an older solution, but it still works fine for me. If you want more details, please email me directly (sclark@vgocom.com) so as not to clutter up the list. However, if you’re not adept at bash scripting, then you might be better served by pursuing another solution. Steven J. Clark VGo Communications From: Boost-users [mailto:boost-users-bounces@lists.boost.org] On Behalf Of David Medine Sent: Tuesday, February 10, 2015 2:30 PM To: boost-users@lists.boost.org Subject: [Boost-users] boost iOS8 failure First of all, I know that calls for help are not appropriate to the list, so let me disclaim by saying that I am not asking for help, simply reporting an issue. I am attempting to compile a C++ library (that uses boost) for iOS8 distribution. The library compiles fine on OSX (and Linux and Windows) but will not compile for iOS8. I get dozens of compiler complaints regarding boost headers that all involve some sort of 'Semantic Issue'. For example, in boost's hash.hpp, I get a 'No matching function for call to 'has_value' error on these lines (439-442): BOOST_HASH_SPECIALIZE_REF(std::string) #if !defined(BOOST_NO_STD_WSTRING) BOOST_HASH_SPECIALIZE_REF(std::wstring) #endif In this case I was able to skirt the issue by adding code to define the function hash_value for std::string and std::wstring: inline std::size_t hash_value( std::string const &v) { return hash_range(v.begin(), v.end()); } inline std::size_t hash_value( std::wstring const &v) { return hash_range(v.begin(), v.end()); } I am probably going to go through all such failures of clang to interpret the boost code correctly for iOS compilation and modify the source just so I can get this going. This is a major pain because there are dozens of these, many of which are far less straightforward to remedy. Besides I don't necessarily want a custom version of boost that ships with my library. I have the build settings in my iOS project (I'm using XCode) exactly the same as they are in the OSX project. I don't understand why the compiler behaves differently for these two targets. Finally, there are two stackoverflow questions that I posted related to this problem. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/28422862/clang-different-when-compiling-f... http://stackoverflow.com/questions/28308466/ios8-boost-hash-hpp-system-clock... THX!