This patchset contains multiple changes to xbps-src and
its required package "base-chroot" for building packages
via chroot.
- moved xbps.d(5) conf files to `etc/xbps.d`.
- renamed xbps.d(5) repository files to `etc/xbps.d/repos-{local,remote}*`.
- do not set `--repository` to any xbps command that supports it,
xbps-src now simply populates `rootdir/etc/xbps.d` with correct
settings (taking care of CHROOT_READY/IN_CHROOT).
- Unless `-C` is set (to preserve builddir/destdir/autodeps), when
entering to the chroot (if CHROOT_READY is set), xbps-src will
clean up the masterdir and then perform a system update to always
use a constant set of packages for that exact date.
- Improved some normal/error msgs.
- Includes support for `xbps>=0.58`.
- common/hooks: switch to bsdtar.
- base-chroot:
- base-chroot-musl is gone, now unified for glibc/musl.
- deps removed: gettext, mpfr, readline, texinfo, which, xz.
- deps changed: tar -> bsdtar.
Effectively this reduces dependencies in `base-chroot`, makes
it unified for musl and glibc, switches xbps-src to use `bsdtar`
rather than GNU `tar` and `xz`, gets rid of useless host dependencies
like GNU gettext, texinfo, etc.
I've been testing these changes for 1 month or so already,
I was able to build from scratch `base-system` for both native
and multiple targets, i.e `./xbps-src -a target -Nt pkg base-system`
As reported by @pullmoll via https://github.com/void-linux/xbps/issues/190
the culprit is this assignment, rather than in the xbps code.
Tested with local and remote repos, no regressions found.
- use xbps-checkvers(1) to resolve dependencies.
- all dependencies are installed at once for the host and target.
- the show-build-deps target is now much faster.
- the update-bulk/show-repo-updates targets are now much faster.
- the update-sys/show-sys-updates targets are now much faster.
- the bootstrap target now works on musl hosts.
- simplified some loops.
- use cut(1) rather than awk(1) where applicable.
- multiple random changes to improve performance.
Based on work started by @Duncaen on #12433Close#12433Close#11282
- use xbps-checkvers(1) to resolve dependencies.
- all dependencies are installed at once for the host and target.
- the `show-build-deps` target is now much faster.
- the `update-bulk/show-repo-updates` targets are now much faster.
- the `update-sys/show-sys-updates` targets are now much faster.
- the `bootstrap` target now works on musl hosts.
- simplified some loops.
- use cut(1) rather than awk(1) where applicable.
- multiple random changes to improve performance.
Based on work started by @Duncaen on https://github.com/void-linux/void-packages/pull/12433
Close https://github.com/void-linux/void-packages/pull/12433
Close https://github.com/void-linux/void-packages/pull/11282
Due to -I it cannot return EEXIST, and this error value shall
be treated as a real error.
Does not change the current behaviour but will do if we drop -I.
Build dependencies are now installed with -I, --ignore-file-conflicts.
A new option introduced in xbps-0.55 that just prints
conflicting files but does not error out.
Switch to xbps-fetch and xbps-digest.
if xbps-install(1) returns EEXIST, treat it as an error,
do not ignore it.
xbps-install(1) now returns only EEXIST for file conflicts
in transaction, so that it should not be ignored.
Add another stage 'check' between 'build' and 'install'. It is be enabled using the
variable XBPS_CHECK_PKGS=yes and disabled if unset, set to "0" or "no" in your
local etc/conf.
A new xbps-src option `-q` for `quick` will disable XBPS_CHECK_PKGS by overriding it to 0.
If enabled, `common/xbps-src/shutils/xbps-src-docheck.sh` checks for an existing
`do_check()` function in the package's template and, if it exists, calls it.
A new template variable `checkdepends` may be present and list packages required
to run the `do_check()` function. Example: `checkdepends="bc unittest-cpp"`.
The `etc/virtual` file declares the default package to be built for
virtual dependencies declared as "virtual?foo" in $depends.
Before this change, the run-time dependency was added as is to the final
binary package but no pkg providing this virtual pkg was built.
With this file we declare the *default* pkg to be built.
NOTE: "virtual?foo" is only applicable to *run* time dependencies, i.e
only those declared in $depends.
This should result in a considerable performance improvement, because the
expensive configuration phase of all dependencies is skipped.
Hopefully this does not introduce build issues :-)
... otherwise deps specified by the cross-vpkg-dummy pkg aren't
taken into account. Assume that version provided by the vpkg is
good enough for building.
That means that version comparators are not supported anymore in
hostmakedepends and makedepends.
This will ensure that a pkg is always built with the same build dependencies
everywhere, if the srcpkgs tree is uptodate.
The build.sh script is now responsible to handle all the logic to build
a source package and its subpackages, as well as all its required
build dependencies. Thanks to this and subshells, dependencies are now
built into its own child process, creating a process tree that can go
nested as long as your system allows forking and has enough memory :-)
This fixes some issues that have been while building pkgs that have lots
of nested dependencies.
- This should work for almost 90% current packages, as reported by OpenBSD/ports.
- Packages that use install -o <user> -g <group> will get fixed progressively.
- xbps-create(8) by default sets pkg files as 0:0, if any pkg needs special
permissions those can be set via INSTALL scripts (for now).
...otherwise the following would happen:
- foo depends on musl
- musl is provided by cross-vpkg-dummy
- musl is then detected as resolved and it's not built.
The `etc/defaults.virtual` file contains the default replacement
for our use cases; at this moment we only use it to use `eudev`
rather than `systemd` for udev.
If `etc/virtual` exists it overrides the settings of `etc/defaults.virtual`.
The syntax "pkg?vpkg" can be used in hostmakedepends, makedepends and depends;
but the "virtual" keyword can be declared specifically for runtime dependencies
(depends).
Run-time dependencies declared via "${depends}" are now also part of the
build process, but those are not installed to the master directory; rather
those dependencies are only checked if a binary package exists in a
local repository to satisfy the required version.
Thanks to @dominikh for idea and suggestions.