5b1fe8e22a
Instead of building ourselves. |
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autoconf.sh | ||
automake.sh | ||
autotools.sh | ||
chocolate-doom.sh | ||
cndoom.sh | ||
crispy-doom.sh | ||
emscripten.sh | ||
extra-libs.sh | ||
flac.sh | ||
fluidsynth.sh | ||
gettext.sh | ||
glib.sh | ||
libffi.sh | ||
libmad.sh | ||
libmpg123.sh | ||
libogg.sh | ||
libpng.sh | ||
libsamplerate.sh | ||
libtool.sh | ||
libvorbis.sh | ||
markdown.sh | ||
pkg-config.sh | ||
README.md | ||
sdl-sopwith.sh | ||
SDL2.sh | ||
SDL2_mixer.sh | ||
SDL2_net.sh | ||
zlib.sh |
Package files are shell scripts which set variables and call well-defined functions to describe how to build the package.
Modules
chocpkg
is divided into modules which provide specific functionality.
Modules are installed by calling certain dedicated functions.
Usually, your package should install a check module, a fetch module
and a build module.
Check modules
Check modules are modules which determine whether the package is
installed on the system (may have been installed by chocpkg
itself
or the system package manager).
If a check module is not installed, the default is to always
assume the package is not installed:
check_pkgconfig
check_pkgconfig
invokes pkg-config
to determine if the package
is installed. The name of the pkg-config
.pc file must be provided
as an argument to check_pkgconfig
; for example:
check_pkgconfig SDL2
check_tool
check_tool
checks if a particular tool is installed in $PATH
to determine if the package is installed. The name of the tool must
be provided as an argument to check_tool
; for example:
check_tool gnome-terminal
Fetch modules
Fetch modules specify how to retrieve the package from the Internet:
fetch_download
fetch_download
downloads the package from a URL specified as an argument.
The file to be downloaded is assumed to be a well-formed tar.gz file with
all its contents in a directory that matches the package name; if this is
not the case, the variable $IS_TAR_BOMB
should be set to true
.
Example use:
fetch_download http://example.com/example-pkg.tar.gz
IS_TAR_BOMB=true
fetch_git
fetch_git
downloads the package from a Git repository at the URL
given as an argument. The branch master
will be checked out by
default; this can be overriden by providing the branch name as a second
argument to fetch_git
.
Example use:
fetch_git http://example.com/example.git my-neato-branch
Build modules
Build modules specify how to build the package after it is fetched:
build_autotools
build_autotools
builds the package assuming that it is laid out as a
standard autotools package (ie. ./configure; make; make install
).
Extra arguments passed to the function will be passed through to
configure
.
Example use:
build_autotools --disable-broken-feature
Variants
Variants allow building of different versions of the same package. An
example is "latest stable release" vs. "latest version from source
repository". The default variant is called stable
. A variant can be
specified on the command line with a suffix, for example, to build the
variant latest
of package neato-lib
:
chocpkg install neato-lib/latest
In package files the variant
function is used for conditional code
that is only executed for a particular variant. Usually this is used
to select a fetch module. For example:
variant stable fetch_download http://example.com/neato-lib-0.0.1.tar.gz
variant latest fetch_git git://example.com/neato-lib.git
variant frob-branch fetch_git git://example.com/neato-lib.git frob-branch
By convention, the stable
variant is "the most recent stable release
of the package" while the latest
variant is "the latest version in
the source control repository".
Other modules and functions
dependencies
Arguments provided to the dependencies
function are the names of other
packages to install before trying to build this one.
Example use:
dependencies other-package neato-lib
package_group
package_group
specifies that this is not really a package that
should be built; rather, it just specifies a number of other packages
to build.
Example use:
# File contains no other lines
package_group neato-lib dumbo-lib
Advanced builds
Complicated packages can require custom build steps. The following functions can therefore be overridden in the package file in exceptional circumstances. These are essentially the functions implemented by the modules described above.
-
do_fetch
: the function which is invoked to fetch the package from the Internet. The fetched package is placed into$PACKAGE_BUILD_DIR
for build. -
prebuild_setup
: define a function with this name to execute special setup commands in the root of a package just before it is built. -
do_build
: the function which is invoked to build the package. -
do_install
: the function which is invoked to install the package after it has been built. This function should install built files from$PACKAGE_BUILD_DIR
into$PACKAGE_INSTALL_DIR
.