If lib32symlinks contains plain library names without a path as in
the case of glibc (lib32symlinks="ld-linux.so.2") the expression
${f%/*} is not empty, but returns the basename.
Handle that case by verifying that ${f%/*} is different from ${f}.
Signed-off-by: Jürgen Buchmüller <pullmoll@t-online.de>
* noarch=yes is replaced with archs=noarch
* only_for_archs= is renamed to archs=
* archs= allows the use of wildcards and negations; first matching rule applies:
* archs="*-musl" will build the pkg only for musl-libcs
* archs="~*-musl" will build the pkg only on non-musl-libc
* archs="x86_64-musl ~*-musl" will build for x86_64-musl and any non-musl
arch.
* archs= defaults to "*"
/usr/lib
some packages install stuff to places like /etc/udev/rules.d and
/etc/modprobe.d.
That is wrong, they should use their equivalents in /usr/lib.
Yet another variable to permit skipping of runtime dependency checks
for a list of files, specifying their absolute path in the $DESTDIR,
allows us to handle known bad detections due to e.g. binaries or
shared libraries not meant to be run or loaded in the host.
This will be used to fix the android-studio template to skip
a number of files which would create a bogus dependency on libc.so.
Signed-off-by: Jürgen Buchmüller <pullmoll@t-online.de>
- python_module build style now builds modules for python2/3 by default
- new python2_module and python3_module build styles for building
python2-only and python3-only packages respectively
- no more python_versions
- no need to define pycompile_version for Python modules anymore
(still needed for non-Python modules though)
- Python version and paths are now guessed automatically and a set of
useful variables can now be used in templates
- #!/usr/bin/python2 and #!/usr/bin/python3 are now the default shebangs
- /usr/bin/foo2 and /usr/bin/foo3 are now the default names for bin
scripts (for use with alternatives)
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.