* Instead of faking libstdc++.so from libstdc++.a, use libstdc++.so
from the gcc_syslibs build feature for everything except x86_gcc2.
* Use libgcc_s.so from the gcc_syslibs build feature for everything but
x86_gcc2 (which still carries libgcc as part of libroot.so).
* Drop filtering of libgcc objects for libroot, as that is no longer
necessary since we're only using libgcc-as-single-object for libroot
with x86_gcc2, where the filtered object file doesn't exist. Should
the objects that used to be filtered cause any problems as part of
libgcc_s.so, we can always filter them as part of the gcc build.
* Use libsupc++.so from the gcc_syslibs build feature for everything but
x86_gcc2.
* Adjust all Jamfiles accordingly.
* Deactivate building of faked libstdc++.so for non-x86-gcc2. For
x86_gcc2, we still build libstdc++.so from the sources in the Haiku
source tree as part of the Haiku build .
* Put gcc_syslibs package onto the image, when needed.
* Now that system updates seem to work properly, put the haiku
repository config and cache file onto the image automatically.
* Adjust URL of haiku repository (it is currently redirected
to some other URL at download.haiku-os.org, but that will be
changed later).
libalm.so is used by Stack & Tile as well as for the constraint-based
layout BALMLayout. This also adds libalm.so to the development package;
links it to /boot/system/development/lib.
* data files are still in the source tree.
* gutenprint headers contain a image.h header file which collides
with ours. This is solved by forcing include search first on
os/kernel directory.
* Instead of separate variables, HAIKU_BUILD_TYPE is set to one of
'bootstrap', 'minimum' or 'regular'.
* Adjust uses of HAIKU_BOOTSTRAP_BUILD accordingly.
* 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).
* 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).
... 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.
* 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)
* HaikuRepository rule: Create the repository config.
* HaikuImage: Add the repository config for the Haiku image. The
repository cache is not added, though (it would only be available, if
the repository had been built before).
Implements #10287. The Haiku repository is now available in Haiku by
default.
We can't reliably set contemporary processors to an arbitrary frequency.
There are dependencies between cores and thechnologies like Turbo Boost
which may make actual frequency significantly different than the requested.
Moreover, it is the scheduler job to decide how much CPU performance is
needed and user shouldn't interfere with that.