Add a separate macro for each brp we have, using standard naming
convention and conditionalize the usage in %__os_install_post.
Voilà, we have a standard way to disable (and also override) any brp
scripts from specs that need it and a common scheme for new brps
to follow.
Note that this is not supposed to change the existing behavior and
default build root policy invocations at all, any change in those
would be a thinko/typo/copy-paste error in this commit.
Per fweimer: "Sorry, we need to revert the -Werror=implicit-*
bits. There is no chance we can get this working in any
reasonable time frame, there is simply too much breakage."
Introduce new language specific __global_fooflags for C, C++ and Fortran
This looks mildly strange and suspicious since because the global flags
get pulled in indirectly via %optflags (that doesn't change here but becomes
more obvious).
Depends on previous commit (8fe5b07871)
which was done separately to make the actual change (or lack of thereof)
stand out here.
This is not supposed to change any actual values for current usages,
so if it does it's a bug.
However there's a minor bonus involved for Fortran users who can now get
the correct FFLAGS/FCFLAGS for non-autoconf projects too by using
__global_fflags/fcflags
Preparing for language specific compiler flag macros, this is
simply:
perl -pi -e "s:__global_cflags:__global_compiler_flags:g" macros rpmrc
Since this looks like a much bigger change than it actually is, doing
it in a separate step without an associated build.
If java people say brp-java-repack-jars is not needed then it
probably isn't (#1235770). brp-implant-ident-static hasn't been enabled
in 13+ years, I THINK it's safe to say its not critically needed.
Leaving the actual scripts in the repo for now (amusement for
archeologists of future generations, eh?)
One possible incompatibility, hopefully non-issue: our brp-strip*
allowed setting strip and objdump to use via args and STRIP and
OBJDUMP env vars whereas the rpm ones allow it through args only
(i.e. %{__strip} and %{__objdump} as far as specfiles are concerned).
Specifically, the following are gone from here now: %_prefix,
%_sysconfdir, %_infodir, %_mandir, %_defaultdocdir, %_configure,
%makeinstall, %debug_package, %_use_internal_dependency_generator,
%_missing_doc_files_terminate_build, %_unpackaged_files_terminate_build
- Stop overriding rpm external dependency generator settings by default
- No normal package should ever end up using the old unmaintained
dependency generator scripts from here, but the kmp system depends
for now on the way this was previously set up here so letting
that old cruft live in the non-default package for now.
This reverts commit 8174ec3d10.
remove patch that forces --disable-silent-rules to configure it breaks anything set to not ignore unknown configure options
Various projects have been adding AM_SILENT_RULES from Automake to
their Makefiles for "developer convenience"; the goal being that they
see warnings more easily.
Now really the right way to do this is to have a make wrapper (or an IDE)
that knows how to filter out warnings, but let's leave that aside for now.
But for debugging builds, we really need the full log data. Being
able to see exactly how e.g. libtool is being run helps a lot for
debugging link problems as an example.
- brp-strip-comment-note is not only unnecessary here but is also
now messing up things by resetting EI_OSABI to zero (#568921)
- patch from Roland McGrath
- with %_python_bytecompile_errors_terminate_build set to non-zero,
byte-compilation errors will abort the build, this helps catch out
silly "improt foo" syntax errors early on
- not all .py files are valid python (they can be templates, inteded for
jython consumption etc), and what's valid can depend on the python
version (notably 2.x vs 3.x) so allow overriding from spec
- rpm < 4.6 used to try and fetch and import any missing keys from
keyserver automatically on rpmdb iteration if hkp_keyserver was set, which
caused hideous slowdowns and huge load on pgp keyservers AND was a
security hazard as rpm thinks imported == trusted key. This is safe
enable now as rpm will only ever import keys when explicitly told to do
so with --import
- this makes pgp import directly from PGP servers work, ie
'rpm --import 0x<keyid>'