diff options
author | Denys Dmytriyenko <denis@denix.org> | 2009-03-17 14:32:59 -0400 |
---|---|---|
committer | Denys Dmytriyenko <denis@denix.org> | 2009-03-17 14:32:59 -0400 |
commit | 709c4d66e0b107ca606941b988bad717c0b45d9b (patch) | |
tree | 37ee08b1eb308f3b2b6426d5793545c38396b838 /packages/netpbm | |
parent | fa6cd5a3b993f16c27de4ff82b42684516d433ba (diff) |
rename packages/ to recipes/ per earlier agreement
See links below for more details:
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.handhelds.openembedded/21326
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.handhelds.openembedded/21816
Signed-off-by: Denys Dmytriyenko <denis@denix.org>
Acked-by: Mike Westerhof <mwester@dls.net>
Acked-by: Philip Balister <philip@balister.org>
Acked-by: Khem Raj <raj.khem@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Marcin Juszkiewicz <hrw@openembedded.org>
Acked-by: Koen Kooi <koen@openembedded.org>
Acked-by: Frans Meulenbroeks <fransmeulenbroeks@gmail.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'packages/netpbm')
-rw-r--r-- | packages/netpbm/files/oeendiangen | 30 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | packages/netpbm/netpbm-10.28/Makefile.config | 380 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | packages/netpbm/netpbm-10.28/ppmtojpeg.patch | 17 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | packages/netpbm/netpbm_10.28.bb | 90 |
4 files changed, 0 insertions, 517 deletions
diff --git a/packages/netpbm/files/oeendiangen b/packages/netpbm/files/oeendiangen deleted file mode 100644 index b01e5e855b..0000000000 --- a/packages/netpbm/files/oeendiangen +++ /dev/null @@ -1,30 +0,0 @@ -#!/bin/sh -# -# This replaces 'endiangen' for OpenEmbedded. OE builds can rely on -# the GNU endian.h, however this generates __ names, (unless __USE_BSD -# is set) so we need to deal with this. Match the output of endiangen. -cat <<EOF -#ifndef OE_ENDIAN_H -#define OE_ENDIAN_H 1 -#include <ctype.h> -#include <endian.h> - -#ifndef LITTLE_ENDIAN -# define LITTLE_ENDIAN __LITTLE_ENDIAN -#endif -#ifndef BIG_ENDIAN -# define BIG_ENDIAN __BIG_ENDIAN -#endif -#ifndef PDP_ENDIAN -# define PDP_ENDIAN __PDP_ENDIAN -#endif -#ifndef BYTE_ORDER -# define BYTE_ORDER __BYTE_ORDER -#endif - -#ifndef BITS_PER_WORD -# include <bits/wordsize.h> -# define BITS_PER_WORD __WORDSIZE -#endif -#endif -EOF diff --git a/packages/netpbm/netpbm-10.28/Makefile.config b/packages/netpbm/netpbm-10.28/Makefile.config deleted file mode 100644 index 3407fcfd18..0000000000 --- a/packages/netpbm/netpbm-10.28/Makefile.config +++ /dev/null @@ -1,380 +0,0 @@ -# This is the configuration file for OpenEmbedded -# It is a generic file for *all* architectures supported by -# OpenEmbedded. -# -# This is a make file inclusion, to be included in all the Netpbm make -# files. - -# This file is meant to contain variable settings that customize the -# build for a particular target system configuration. - -# The distribution contains the file Makefile.config.in. You edit -# Makefile.config.in in ways relevant to your particular environment -# to create Makefile.config. The "configure" program will do this -# for you in simple cases. - -# Some of the variables that the including make file must set for this -# file to work: -# -# SRCDIR: The directory at the top of the Netpbm source tree. Note that -# this is typically a relative directory, and it must be relative to the -# make file that includes this file. - -DEFAULT_TARGET = merge - -# Fiasco has some special requirements that make it fail to compile on -# some systems, and since it isn't very important, just set this to "N" -# and skip it on those systems unless you want to debug it and fix it. -# OpenBSD: -#BUILD_FIASCO = N -BUILD_FIASCO = Y - -# The following are commands for the build process to use. These values -# do not get built into anything. - -# The C compiler (including macro preprocessor) -#CC = gcc - -# The linker. -LD = $(CC) - -#If the linker identified above is a compiler that invokes a linker -#(as in 'cc foo.o -o foo'), set LINKERISCOMPILER. The main difference is -#that we expect a compiler to take linker options in the '-Wl,-opt1,val1' -#syntax whereas the actual linker would take '-opt1 val1'. -LINKERISCOMPILER=Y - -#LINKER_CAN_DO_EXPLICIT_LIBRARY means the linker specified above can -#take a library as just another link object argument, as in 'ld -#pnmtojpeg.o /usr/local/lib/libjpeg.so ...' as opposed to requiring a -#-l option as in 'ld pnmtojpeg.o -L/usr/local/lib -l jpeg'. -#This variable controls how 'libopt' gets built. Note that with some -#linkers, you can specify a shared library explicitly, but then it has -#to live in that exact place at run time. That's not good enough for us. -LINKER_CAN_DO_EXPLICIT_LIBRARY=Y - -# This is the name of the header file that declares the types -# uint32_t, etc. This name is used as #include $(INTTYPES_H) . -# Set to null if the types come automatically without including anything. -INTTYPES_H = <inttypes.h> - -# HAVE_INT64 tells whether, assuming you include the header indicated by -# INTTYPES_H, you have the int64_t type and related stuff. (If you don't -# the build will omit certain code that does 64 bit computations). -HAVE_INT64 = Y - -# CC and LD are for building the Netpbm programs, which are not necessarily -# intended to run on the same system on which Make is running. But when we -# build a build tool such as Libopt, it is meant to run only on the same -# system on which the Make is running. The variables below define programs -# to use to compile and link build tools. -CC_FOR_BUILD = $(BUILD_CC) -LD_FOR_BUILD = $(BUILD_CC) - -# MAKE is set automatically by Make to what was used to invoke Make. - -INSTALL = install - -# STRIPFLAG is the option you pass to the above install program to make it -# strip unnecessary information out of binaries. -STRIPFLAG = -s - -SYMLINK = ln -s - -#MANPAGE_FORMAT is "nroff" or "cat". It determines in what format the -#pointer man pages are installed (ready to nroff, or ready to cat). -#A pointer man pages is just a single-paragraph pages that tells you there is -#no man page for the program, to look at the HTML documentation instead. -MANPAGE_FORMAT = nroff - -LEX = flex - -# EXE is a suffix that the linker puts on any executable it generates. -# In cygwin, this is .exe and most programs deal with its existence without -# us having to know about it. Some don't though, so set this: -EXE = - -# linker options. - -# Linker options for created Netpbm shared libraries. - -# Here, $(SONAME) resolves to the soname for the shared library being created. -# The following are gcc options. This works on GNU libc systems. -LDSHLIB = -shared -fpic -Wl,-soname,$(SONAME) - -# LDRELOC is the command to combine two .o files (relocateable object files) -# into a single .o file that can later be linked into something else. NONE -# means no such command is available. -LDRELOC = $(TARGET_LD) --reloc - -# On older systems, you have to make shared libraries out of position -# independent code, so you need -fpic or fPIC here. (The rule is: if -# -fpic works, use it. If it bombs, go to fPIC). On newer systems, -# it isn't necessary, but can save real memory at the expense of -# execution speed. Without position independent code, the library -# loader may have to patch addresses into the executable text. On an -# older system, this would cause a program crash because the loader -# would be writing into read-only shared memory. But on newer -# systems, the system silently creates a private mapping of the page -# or segment being modified (the "copy on write" phenomenon). So it -# needs its own private real page frame. In one experiment, A second -# copy of Pbmtext used 16K less real memory when built with -fpic than -# when built without. 2001.06.02. - -# We have seen -fPIC required on IA64 and AMD64 machines (GNU -# compiler/linker). Build-time linking fails without it. I don't -# know why -- history seems to be repeating itself. 2005.02.23. - -CFLAGS_SHLIB = -fpic - -# SHLIB_CLIB is the link option to include the C library in a shared library, -# normally "-lc". On typical systems, this serves no purpose. On some, -# though, it causes information about which C library to use to be recorded -# in the shared library and thus choose the correct library among several or -# avoid using an incompatible one. But on some systems, the link fails. -# On 2002.09.30, "John H. DuBois III" <spcecdt@armory.com> reports that on -# SCO OpenServer, he gets the following error message with -lc: -# -# -lc; relocations referenced ; from file(s) /usr/ccs/lib/libc.so(random.o); -# fatal error: relocations remain against allocatable but non-writable -# section: ; .text - -SHLIB_CLIB = - -# On some systems you have to build into an executable the list of -# directories where its dynamically linked libraries can be found at -# run time. This is typically done with a -R or -rpath linker -# option. Even on systems that don't require it, you might prefer to do -# that rather than set up environment variables or configuration files -# to tell the system where the libraries are. A "Y" here means to put -# the directory information in the executable at link time. -NEED_RUNTIME_PATH = Y - -# RPATHOPTNAME is the option you use on the link command to specify -# a runtime search path for a shared library. It is meaningless unless -# NEED_RUNTIME_PATH is Y. -RPATHOPTNAME = -rpath - -# The following variables tell where your various libraries on which -# Netpbm depends live. The LIBxxx variable is a full file -# specification of the link library (not necessarily the library used -# at run time). e.g. "/usr/local/lib/graphics/libpng.so". It usually -# doesn't matter if the library prefix and suffix are right -- you can -# use "lib" and ".so" or ".a" regardless of what your system actually -# uses because these just turn into "-L" and "-l" linker options -# anyway. ".a" implies a static library for some purposes, though. -# If you don't have the library in question, use a value of NONE for -# LIBxxx and the build will simply skip the programs that require that -# library. If the library is in your linker's (or the Netpbm build's) -# default search path, leave off the directory part, e.g. "libpng.so". - -# The xxxHDR_DIR variable is the directory in which the interface -# headers for the library live (e.g. /usr/include). If they are in your -# compiler's default search path, set this variable to null. - -# This is where the Netpbm shared libraries will reside when Netpbm is -# fully installed. In some configurations, the Netpbm builder builds -# this information into the Netpbm executables. This does NOT affect -# where the Netpbm installer installs the libraries. A null value -# means the libraries are in a default search path used by the runtime -# library loader. -NETPBMLIB_RUNTIME_PATH = $(libdir) -#NETPBMLIB_RUNTIME_PATH = /usr/lib/netpbm - -# The TIFF library. See above. If you want to build the tiff -# converters, you must have the tiff library already installed. - -TIFFLIB = libtiff.so -TIFFHDR_DIR = - -# Some TIFF libraries do Jpeg and/or Z (flate) compression and thus any -# program linked with the TIFF library needs a Jpeg and/or Z library. -# Some TIFF libraries have such library statically linked in, but others -# need it to be dynamically linked at program load time. -# Make this 'N' if youf TIFF library doesn't need such dynamic linking. -# As of 2005.01, the most usual build of the TIFF library appears to require -# both. -TIFFLIB_NEEDS_JPEG = Y -TIFFLIB_NEEDS_Z = Y - -# The JPEG library. See above. If you want to build the jpeg -# converters you must have the jpeg library already installed. - -# Tiff files can use JPEG compression, so the Tiff library can reference -# the JPEG library. If your Tiff library references a dynamic JPEG -# library, you must specify at least JPEGLIB here, or the Tiff -# converters will not build. Note that your Tiff library may have the -# JPEG stuff statically linked in, in which case you won't need -# JPEGLIB in order to build the Tiff converters. - -JPEGLIB = libjpeg.so -JPEGHDR_DIR = - -# The PNG library. See above. If you want to build the PNG -# converters you must have the PNG library already installed. - -# The PNG library, by convention starting around April 2002, gets installed -# with names that include a version number, such as libpng10.a and header -# files in /usr/include/libpng10. -# option. -PNGLIB = libpng.so -PNGHDR_DIR = -PNGVER = - -# The zlib compression library. See above. You need it to build -# anything that needs the PNG library (see above). If you selected -# NONE for the PNG library, it doesn't matter what you specify here -- -# it won't get used. -ZLIB = libz.so -ZHDR_DIR = - -# The JBIG lossless image compression library (aka JBIG-KIT): -JBIGLIB = $(BUILDDIR)/converter/other/jbig/libjbig.a -JBIGHDR_DIR = $(SRCDIR)/converter/other/jbig - -# The Jasper JPEG-2000 image compression library (aka JasPer): -JASPERLIB = $(INTERNAL_JASPERLIB) -JASPERHDR_DIR = $(INTERNAL_JASPERHDR_DIR) -# JASPERDEPLIBS is the libraries (-l options or file names) on which -# The Jasper library depends -- i.e. what you have to link into any -# executable that links in the Jasper library. -JASPERDEPLIBS = -#JASPERDEPLIBS = -ljpeg - -# And the Utah Raster Toolkit (aka URT aka RLE) library: -URTLIB = $(BUILDDIR)/urt/librle.a -URTHDR_DIR = $(SRCDIR)/urt - -# The Linux SVGA library (Svgalib) is a facility for displaying graphics -# on the Linux console. It is required by Ppmsvgalib. -LINUXSVGALIB = NONE -LINUXSVGAHDR_DIR = - -# If you don't want any network functions, set OMIT_NETWORK to "y". -# The only thing that requires network functions is the option in -# ppmtompeg to run it on multiple computers simultaneously. On some -# systems network functions don't work or we haven't figured out how to -# make them work, or they just aren't worth the effort. -OMIT_NETWORK = - -# These are -l options to link in the network libraries. Often, these are -# built into the standard C library, so this can be null. This is irrelevant -# if OMIT_NETWORK is "y". -NETWORKLD = - -VMS = -#VMS: -#VMS = yes - -# The following variables are used only by 'make install' (and the -# variants of it). Paths here don't, for example, get built into any -# programs. - -# This is where everything goes when you do 'make package', unless you -# override it by setting 'pkgdir' on the Make command line. -PKGDIR_DEFAULT = /tmp/netpbm - -# File permissions for installed files. -# Note that on some systems (e.g. Solaris), 'install' can't use the -# mnemonic permissions - you have to use octal. - -# binaries (pbmmake, etc) -INSTALL_PERM_BIN = 755 # u=rwx,go=rx -# shared libraries (libpbm.so, etc) -INSTALL_PERM_LIBD = 755 # u=rwx,go=rx -# static libraries (libpbm.a, etc) -INSTALL_PERM_LIBS = 644 # u=rw,go=r -# header files (pbm.h, etc) -INSTALL_PERM_HDR = 644 # u=rw,go=r -# man pages (pbmmake.1, etc) -INSTALL_PERM_MAN = 644 # u=rw,go=r -# data files (pnmtopalm color maps, etc) -INSTALL_PERM_DATA = 644 # u=rw,go=r - -# Specify the suffix that want the man pages to have. - -SUFFIXMANUALS1 = 1 -SUFFIXMANUALS3 = 3 -SUFFIXMANUALS5 = 5 - -#NETPBMLIBTYPE tells the kind of libraries that will get built to hold the -#Netpbm library functions. The value is used only in make file tests. -# "unixshared" means a unix-style shared library, typically named like -# libxyz.so.2.3 -NETPBMLIBTYPE = unixshared -# "unixstatic" means a unix-style static library, (like libxyz.a) -#NETPBMLIBTYPE = unixstatic -# "dll" means a Windows DLL shared library -#NETPBMLIBTYPE = dll -# "dylib" means a Darwin/Mac OS shared library -#NETPBMLIBTYPE = dylib - -#NETPBMLIBSUFFIX is the suffix used on whatever kind of library is -#selected above. All this is used for is to construct library names. -#The make files never examine the actual value. -NETPBMLIBSUFFIX = so - -# "a" is the suffix for unix-style static libraries. It is also -# traditionally used for shared libraries on AIX. The Visual Age C -# manual says sometimes .so works on AIX, and GNU software for AIX -# 5.1.0 does indeed use it. In our experiments, it works fine if you -# name the library file explicitly on the link, but isn't in the -l -# search order. If you name the library explicitly on the link, the -# library must live in exactly the same position at run time, so we -# can't use that. Therefore, you cannot build both static and shared -# libraries with AIX. You have to choose. -#NETPBMLIBSUFFIX = a -# For HP-UX shared libraries: -#NETPBMLIBSUFFIX = sl -# Darwin/Mac OS shared library: -#NETPBMLIBSUFFIX = dylib -# Windows shared library: -#NETPBMLIBSUFFIX = dll - -#STATICLIB_TOO is "y" to signify that you want a static library built -#and installed in addition to whatever library type you specified by -#NETPBMLIBTYPE. If NETPBMLIBTYPE specified a static library, -#STATICLIB_TOO simply has no effect. -STATICLIB_TOO = y -#STATICLIB_TOO = n - -#STATICLIBSUFFIX is the suffix that static libraries have. It's -#meaningless if you aren't building static libraries. -STATICLIBSUFFIX = a - -#SHLIBPREFIXLIST is a blank-delimited list of prefixes that a filename -#of a shared library may have on this system. Traditionally, it's -#just "lib", as in libc or libnetpbm. On Windows, though, varying -#prefixes are used when multiple alternative forms of a library are -#available. The first prefix in this list is what we use to name the -#Netpbm shared libraries. -# -# This variable controls how 'libopt' gets built. -# -SHLIBPREFIXLIST = lib - -NETPBMSHLIBPREFIX = $(firstword $(SHLIBPREFIXLIST)) - -#DLLVER is used to version the DLLs built on cygwin or other -#windowsish platforms. We can't add this to LIBROOT, or we'd -#version the static libs (which is bad). We can't add this -#at the end of the name (like unix does with so numbers) because -#windows will only load dlls whose name ends in "dll". So, -#we have this variable, which becomes the end of the library "root" name -#for DLLs only. -# -# This variable controls how 'libopt' gets built. -# -DLLVER = -#Cygwin -#DLLVER = $(NETPBM_MAJOR_RELEASE) - -#NETPBM_DOCURL is the URL of the main documentation page for Netpbm. -#This is a directory which contains a file for each Netpbm program, -#library, and file type. E.g. The documentation for jpegtopnm might be in -#http://netpbm.sourceforge.net/doc/jpegtopnm.html . This value gets -#installed in the man pages (which say no more than to read the webpage) -#and in the Webman netpbm.url file. -NETPBM_DOCURL = http://netpbm.sourceforge.net/doc/ -#For a system with no web access, but a local copy of the doc: -#NETPBM_DOCURL = file:/usr/doc/netpbm/ diff --git a/packages/netpbm/netpbm-10.28/ppmtojpeg.patch b/packages/netpbm/netpbm-10.28/ppmtojpeg.patch deleted file mode 100644 index 39df5edbea..0000000000 --- a/packages/netpbm/netpbm-10.28/ppmtojpeg.patch +++ /dev/null @@ -1,17 +0,0 @@ -# This patch makes the /usr/bin/ppmtojpeg work on OE. - ---- netpbm-10.28/netpbm.c.orig 2005-08-04 13:20:15.665273549 -0700 -+++ netpbm-10.28/netpbm.c 2005-08-04 13:21:09.288647855 -0700 -@@ -62,8 +62,11 @@ - which would know whether pnmtojpeg was built into the merged binary - or not. But that's too much work. - -- TRY("ppmtojpeg", main_pnmtojpeg); -+ * Patched for OE because OE builds the jpeg library (always) and the -+ * subdirectory creates the link anyway, so otherwise we have a bogus -+ * link. - */ -+ TRY("ppmtojpeg", main_pnmtojpeg); - TRY("bmptoppm", main_bmptopnm); - TRY("pgmnorm", main_pnmnorm); - TRY("ppmnorm", main_pnmnorm); diff --git a/packages/netpbm/netpbm_10.28.bb b/packages/netpbm/netpbm_10.28.bb deleted file mode 100644 index ff90310e1b..0000000000 --- a/packages/netpbm/netpbm_10.28.bb +++ /dev/null @@ -1,90 +0,0 @@ -DESCRIPTION = "Netpbm is a toolkit for manipulation of graphic images, including\ -conversion of images between a variety of different formats. There\ -are over 220 separate tools in the package including converters for\ -about 100 graphics formats." -HOMEPAGE = "http://netpbm.sourceforge.net" -SECTION = "console/utils" -LICENSE = "GPL MIT Artistic" -# NOTE: individual command line utilities are covered by different -# licenses. The compiled and linked command line utilties are -# subject to the licenses of the libraries they use too - including -# libpng libz, IJG, and libtiff licenses -DEPENDS = "jpeg zlib libpng tiff install-native flex-native" -RDEPENDS = "perl\ - perl-module-cwd\ - perl-module-english\ - perl-module-fcntl\ - perl-module-file-basename\ - perl-module-file-spec\ - perl-module-getopt-long\ - perl-module-strict\ - " - -# these should not be required, they are here because the perl -# module dependencies are currently incorrect: -RDEPENDS += "perl-module-exporter-heavy" -RDEPENDS += "perl-module-file-spec-unix" - -PR = "r5" - -SRC_URI = "${SOURCEFORGE_MIRROR}/netpbm/netpbm-${PV}.tgz \ - file://ppmtojpeg.patch;patch=42 \ - file://Makefile.config \ - file://oeendiangen" - -PARALLEL_MAKE = "" - -EXTRA_OEMAKE = "ENDIANGEN=${S}/buildtools/oeendiangen TARGET_LD=${LD}" - -do_configure() { - install -c -m 644 ../Makefile.config . - # The following stops the host endiangen program being run and uses - # the target endian.h header instead. - install -c -m 755 ../oeendiangen buildtools -} - -do_compile() { - # need all to get the static library too - oe_runmake all default -} - -do_install() { - # netpbm makes its own installation package, which must then be - # installed to form the dummy installation for ipkg - rm -rf ${WORKDIR}/netpbm-package - oe_runmake package pkgdir=${WORKDIR}/netpbm-package - # now install the stuff from the package into ${D} - for d in ${WORKDIR}/netpbm-package/* - do - # following will cause an error if used - case "$d" in - */README) ;; - */VERSION) ;; - */pkginfo) ;; - */bin) install -d ${D}${bindir} - cp -pPR "$d"/* ${D}${bindir} - rm ${D}${bindir}/doc.url;; - */include) install -d ${D}${includedir} - cp -pPR "$d"/* ${D}${includedir};; - */link|*/lib) install -d ${D}${libdir} - cp -pPR "$d"/* ${D}${libdir};; - */man) install -d ${D}${mandir} - cp -pPR "$d"/* ${D}${mandir};; - */misc) install -d ${D}${datadir}/netpbm - cp -pPR "$d"/* ${D}${datadir}/netpbm;; - */config_template) - install -d ${D}${bindir} - sed "/^@/d - s!@VERSION@!$(<'${WORKDIR}/netpbm-package/VERSION')! - s!@DATADIR@!${datadir}/netpbm! - s!@LIBDIR@!${libdir}! - s!@LINKDIR@!${libdir}! - s!@INCLUDEDIR@!${includedir}! - s!@BINDIR@!${bindir}! - " "$d" >${D}${bindir}/netpbm-config - chmod 755 ${D}${bindir}/netpbm-config;; - *) echo "netpbm-package/$d: unknown item" >&2 - exit 1;; - esac - done -} |