* Instead of separate variables, HAIKU_BUILD_TYPE is set to one of
'bootstrap', 'minimum' or 'regular'.
* Adjust uses of HAIKU_BOOTSTRAP_BUILD accordingly.
This reverts commit 4a4e2dae77.
It broke the build with:
Resolving package dependencies ...
Encountered problems:
problem 1: nothing provides cmd:as>=2.23.2_2013_04_09 needed by
gcc-4.8.2_2014_01_28-2
solution 1:
- allow deinstallation of gcc-4.8.2_2014_01_28-2
Instead, the fixed binutils package should be used. Reverting this now
as otherwise it's not even possible to build a system to build a fixed
package.
* Move actual definitions of respective image contents to files
underneath build/jam/images/definitions (minimum, bootstrap, regular).
* HaikuImage now only includes the image definitions for the selected
build profile and adds the Haiku packages.
* Simplified topmost Jamfile to some extent.
* Move definition of DESKBAR_APPLICATIONS and DESKBAR_DESKTOP_APPLETS
from build/jam/packages/Haiku to the respective image definition file.
* Sort and reformat several lists to make them more readable.
* Add new build profile 'minimum', which defines a minimum set of
packages.
* Introduce HAIKU_BOOTSTRAP_SOURCES_PROFILE and let it default to
'@minimum-raw'. This can be overruled in UserBuildConfig, setting
it to '@release-raw' will cause all source packages required for a
full release to be put onto the bootstrap-image.
* Add new image HaikuImageMinimum, which is meant to define the minimum
useful Haiku image (yeah, I know that's vague).
* Add HAIKU_MINIMUM_BUILD, which indicates that HaikuImageMinimum should
be used (it would be better to merge this with HAIKU_BOOTSTRAP_BUILD
into something like HAIKU_BUILD_TYPE)
* Cleanup duplicate references to basic packages - those are now added
by the topmost Jamfile (no longer referenced by the build profiles).
* This decouples the versions referenced by the architecture-specific
repository file from the actual versions available in the haikuports
branch that happens to be used for the bootstrap build.
* Before, we were putting both rigged and standard source packages
onto the bootstrap image, which caused the build to fail (because
non-rigged source packages can only be built with git available).
* Don't assume verdex as it isn't clear this was
occurring.
* Make an educated guess on HAIKU_BOOT_PLATFORM
based on provided board (but still allow it to
be overridden)
* Error out if user doesn't populate
HAIKU_BOOT_PLATFORM or enters an unknown board
name.
* You need to add "-sHAIKU_BOOT_BOARD=xxx" to
your jam to build for the proper ARM device.
* Rename beagle to beagleboneblk as per the
documentation.
HAIKU_* variables are copied to TARGET_*, making it possible to also
build for other targets (libbe_build, or BeOS R5 when we still allowed
that).
Thanks to Ingo for explaining how this is meant to work.
... mirroring home/config/non-packaged/
Also, sort the list lexographically and move the creation of the non-packaged
decorators directory from HaikuImage to HaikuImageCommon along with the rest.
* ArchitectureRules define a variable named HAIKU_ASFLAGS, so other
Jamfiles can append to it.
* But, TARGET_ASFLAGS was used instead in the single place where we
tried to make use of this (the verdex BoardSetup), and in the As rule
* Moreover, the As rule used $(architecture) instead of
$(TARGET_PACKAGING_ARCH) (I suspect a bogus copypaste?). So, it never
actually made use of the flags
With this working, add the proper flags to the BeagleBoard BoardSetup,
so we implement atomic operations the ARMv7 way (no need to syscall).
This helps with compiling, as the As and Cc/Cpp rules now agree on the
defines and the atomic implementation to use.
* As per the ML discussions. Bumps MIPS to tier 3.
* We've reached a unanimous descision that MIPS doesn't
target any real / valid hardware Haiku wants to pursue
at the moment. In the event that anyone wants to pursue
MIPS, feel free to fork Haiku into your own repository
(and we'll even link to it on the website ports page)
* If someone develops a viable plan for MIPS (and gets the
port working, it can be readded at a later date)
The ones with ARCH extension are used for setting up the KERNEL
ones, so no need to try and set both.
Also, the verdex target was not setting the ARCH one, and therefore
never configured gcc for ARMv5.
The new version breaks git, but only once it's in the repository.
Installing it manually alongside the old one works. Rebuilding git and
uploading a new package does not work, as for the package management,
the new version is exactly equal to the old, as the port revision isn't
newer. We need to come up with a proper way to handle this.
Also removes zsh, as that requires the new libpcre.
* build kernel libgcc and libsupc++ with disabled posix threads for all
architectures. We currently change the configuration manually, as gcc
doesn't easily let us reconfigure without a full rebuild.
This is required on OS X and other systems which do not have the glibc
extensions for regular expressions (FreeBSD is not one of them as it
already includes gnuregex in /usr). With this there are no hardcoded
non-standard paths for OS X anymore.
regex.c and regex.h are from the official gnuregex 0.12 distribution,
the only modification is that I added __BEGIN_DECLS and __END_DECLS to
regex.h.
* Added cards need testing.
* 3dfx, ati, neomagic, and s3 still don't build due to some
more complex pointer size issues. (and I don't have hardware
to test on)