# This package is rather exotic. The compiled library is a typical shared # library with a C API. However, it has only a tiny bit of C source code. Most # of the library is written in TypeScript, which is transpiled to C, via LLVM # IR, using llparse (https://github.com/nodejs/llparse)—all of which happens # within the NodeJS ecosystem. # # The package therefore “builds like” a NodeJS package, and to the extent they # are relevant we apply the NodeJS packaging guidelines. However, the result of # the build “installs like” a traditional C library package and has no NodeJS # dependencies, including bundled ones. # # Furthermore, the package is registered with npm as “llhttp”, but current # releases are not published there, so we use the GitHub archive as the # canonical source and use a custom bundler script based on # nodejs-packaging-bundler to fetch NodeJS build dependencies. # # Overall, we cherry-pick from the standard and NodeJS packaging guidelines as # each seems to best apply, understanding that this package does not fit well # into any of the usual patterns or templates. # # Note that there is now a “release” tarball, e.g. # https://github.com/nodejs/llhttp/archive/refs/tags/release/v%%{version}tar.gz, # that allows this package to be built without the NodeJS/TypeScript machinery. # However, the release archive lacks the original TypeScript source code for # the generated C code, which we would need to include in the source RPM as an # additional source even if we do not do the re-generation ourselves. Name: llhttp Version: 6.0.9 %global so_version 6.0 Release: %autorelease Summary: Port of http_parser to llparse # License of llhttp is (SPDX) MIT; nothing from the NodeJS dependency bundle is # installed, so its contents do not contribute to the license of the binary # RPMs, and we do not need a file llhttp-%%{version}-bundled-licenses.txt. License: MIT URL: https://github.com/nodejs/llhttp Source0: %{url}/archive/v%{version}/llhttp-%{version}.tar.gz # Based closely on nodejs-packaging-bundler, except: # # - The GitHub source tarball specified in this spec file is used since the # current version is not typically published on npm # - No production dependency bundle is generated, since none is needed—and # therefore, no bundled licenses text file is generated either Source1: llhttp-packaging-bundler # Created with llhttp-packaging-bundler (Source1): Source2: llhttp-%{version}-nm-dev.tgz # While nothing in the dev bundle is installed, we still choose to audit for # null licenses at build time and to keep manually-approved exceptions in a # file. Source3: check-null-licenses Source4: audited-null-licenses.toml # The compiled RPM does not depend on NodeJS at all, but we cannot *build* it # on architectures without NodeJS. ExclusiveArch: %{nodejs_arches} # For generating the C source “release” from TypeScript: BuildRequires: nodejs-devel BuildRequires: make # For compiling the C library BuildRequires: cmake BuildRequires: gcc # For tests BuildRequires: gcc-c++ # For check-null-licenses BuildRequires: python3-devel BuildRequires: (python3dist(tomli) if python3 < 3.11) %description This project is a port of http_parser to TypeScript. llparse is used to generate the output C source file, which could be compiled and linked with the embedder's program (like Node.js). This copy of the library is compiled with LLHTTP_STRICT_MODE set to 0 (disabled), which is the default. %package devel Summary: Development files for llhttp Requires: llhttp%{?_isa} = %{?epoch:%{epoch}:}%{version}-%{release} %description devel The llhttp-devel package contains libraries and header files for developing applications that use llhttp. %prep %autosetup # Remove build flags specifying ISA extensions not in the architectural # baseline from the test fixture setup. sed -r -i 's@([[:blank:]]*)(.*-m(sse4))@\1// \2@' test/fixtures/index.ts # We build the library that we install via release/CMakeLists.txt, but the # tests are built via Makefile targets. Don’t apply non-default optimization or # debug flags to the test executables. sed -r -i 's@ -[Og].\b@@g' Makefile # Set up bundled (dev) node modules required to generate the C sources from the # TypeScript sources. tar -xzf '%{SOURCE2}' mkdir -p node_modules pushd node_modules ln -s ../node_modules_dev/* . ln -s ../node_modules_dev/.bin . popd # We run ts-node out of node_modules/.bin rather than using npx (which we will # not have available). sed -r -i 's@\bnpx[[:blank:]](ts-node)\b@node_modules/.bin/\1@' Makefile %build # Generate the C source “release” from TypeScript using the “node_modules_dev” # bundle. %make_build release TAG='%{version}' # To help prove that nothing from the bundled NodeJS dev dependencies is # included in the binary packages, remove the “node_modules” symlinks. rm -rvf node_modules cd release %cmake %cmake_build %install cd release %cmake_install %check # Symlink the NodeJS bundle again so that we can test with Mocha mkdir -p node_modules pushd node_modules ln -s ../node_modules_dev/* . ln -s ../node_modules_dev/.bin . popd # Verify that no bundled dev dependency has a null license field, unless we # already audited it by hand. This reduces the chance of accidentally including # code with license problems in the source RPM. %{python3} '%{SOURCE3}' --exceptions '%{SOURCE4}' --with dev node_modules_dev # See scripts.mocha in package.json: NODE_ENV=test CLANG=gcc ./node_modules/.bin/mocha \ -r ts-node/register/type-check \ test/*-test.ts %files %license release/LICENSE-MIT %{_libdir}/libllhttp.so.%{so_version}{,.*} %files devel %doc release/README.md %{_includedir}/llhttp.h %{_libdir}/libllhttp.so %{_libdir}/pkgconfig/libllhttp.pc %{_libdir}/cmake/llhttp %changelog %autochangelog