* Add support for macports lib and headers dirs.
* Link libs change for Mac OS X for tool build.
Signed-off-by: Augustin Cavalier <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
* This directory is for services that are launched per user (in a user
context), but installed globally.
* This is now used for the default "user" configuration; before this was
put into ~/config/non-packaged/data/launch, which didn't really fit,
and has the huge disadvantage that it cannot be updated.
* Fixes part of #12227.
* Instead of launching Tracker/Deskbar directly, we now launch the
Login application.
* This will now start a new session for the selected user (the password
is currently ignored).
* When a user session is started, the launch_daemon forks, and the
child then restarts the LaunchDaemon application in user mode.
* It then registers itself with its parent, in order to resolve user
dependent services.
* Added a user launch file that will cause Tracker, and Deskbar to
start in the new session.
* Added initializing /tmp & /var/shared_memory to the launch_daemon.
* Moved clockconfig.cpp code into the launch_daemon.
* This follows systemd design; since those jobs are fixed, it doesn't
matter where you maintain them.
* The init jobs are BJobs, but the JobQueue is only used for that
one use for now. At a later time, I intend to put the job launching
in there, as well. BJob allows to represent the dependencies already.
* This is actually working already, although we cannot reproduce all
the features of the former Bootscript yet. This is without any
dependency support in launch_daemon.
* All shell activity like cleaning out /tmp, setting up the environment,
setting the time, etc. is not yet working.
gcc2 only for the time being, as the other plattforms either
don't build or the resulting binary doesn't launch.
x86: "runtime_loader: Cannot open file libnetwork.so: No such file or directory"
It also refuses to build with haikuporter's -S option:
"POLICY ERROR: can't find used library "libstdc++.r4.so"
x64: "bash: ./Pe: cannot execute binary file: Not an executable"
And the same policy error with -S as x86.
Anyone feel free to fix that... :)
* Drop lib/edit and matching bsd header
* Convert Debugger to libedit build package
* Should solve problems with libedit consumers
not defining _BSD_SOURCE
* Progress on #10267
These were only used as an experiment for converting coreutils
manpages to different formats, and as coreutils is no longer in the
tree, they aren't used.
These files are required for netresolv functionality, and there is no
real use in modifying them as settings files. Restore the previous
behavior, the files are stored in data and part of the Haiku package.
This means there is no need for a fresh install from image to get the
files anymore.
Fixes#12156.
* By setting HDRGRIST to match SOURCE_GRIST in MultiArchDirSetup, the
include scanning in Jam will work properly: the generated header will
have the same grist as what the include scan looks for.
* Remove the now unneeded workaround from netresolv Jamfile.
libbind development was transferred to the NetBSD project at
http://wiki.netbsd.org/individual-software-releases/netresolv/
There isn't an official release yet, but they provide a set of patches
against the latest libbind release.
* Remove all files we don't use
* Merge the changes to the remaining files
* Add some new files we need
* Move getifaddrs implementation to libnetwork (instead of libbnetapi)
so it can be used by netresolv.
Fixes#8293 : netresolv uses getifaddrs to determine if there is a local
IPv6 address. If there is not, it will not return AAAA records.
* Icon-O-Matic and Cortex are dependent on the feature.
* remove expat lib from the build and from the tree.
* expat package is added to regular builds.
* This should support both GPT and MBR formatted partitions.
* To boot Haiku from a GPT partition, it must have the correct
BFS UUID for the partition.
* Tools such as gdisk/gptfdisk can create partitions with
the correct BFS UUID.
"Renaming" means the icu namespace is suffixed with the version number,
atm icu_55. Using "renaming" allows to use two different versions of ICU,
thus easing upgrades. For instance haikuwebkit uses a current version of ICU,
while the system uses a newer one after an upgrade.
* Replace all uses of the icu namespace in our public headers, with a macro
defaulting to icu. As the namespace is only used for private fields pointers,
there should be no impact.
* Locale kit *.cpp have to import the macro from <unicode/uversion.h> *before*
including any locale headers. Ditto for a Time preferences cpp file. This way,
the correct current icu namespace is referenced.
* Fixes bug #12057.
luroh was so kind to compile those for gcc4. cdrtools don't build on x86_64,
so there's no reason provide a 64bit BurnItNow version either.
Corrected name of gcc2 source package of burnitnow.
The script runs the guarded heap allocation output through c++filt to
demangle stack trace symbols and filters out a list of known globals
that are never freed. It also allows to exclude further patterns
provided on the command line.
This adds libroot_guarded.so to the HaikuDevel package. It is the same
as libroot_debug with the debug heap swapped out for the guarded heap.
The guarded heap has some useful features that make it desirable to use
while having the disadvantage of a large memory and address space
overhead which make it unusable in some situations. Therefore the
guarded heap cannot simply replace the debug heap but should still be
made available. As the heap init needs to happen even before having
environment variables, the heap to use can not be chosen dynamically.
Exposing them through their own libraries is the next best thing.
* Fletched out new add-on API.
* Moved InterfaceListItem from the interfaces add-on into the
application.
* Renamed NetworkSetup* to Network* respectively NetworkSettings*.
* This helps with #11023. When attributes total length exceeds the extra
field maximal length, there is no way to add them to the zip entry. We
now just warn about the problem and leave attributes out.
* The Raspberry pi 2 uses a new SoC which differs slightly
from the Raspberry Pi 1.
* Someday these two board targets could go away when we get
FDT support.
* To while there was some compatibility between
BCM2708 and BCM2805, it makes the BCM2806 changes
more confusing. We don't have any valueable BCM2708
targets.
DocBookCSS is a mostly-pure-CSS2 implementation of the DocBook standard.
Unlike DocBookXSL which relies on transforming the XML, it utilizes the
XML-styling features of modern web browsers to display the DocBook.
Its appearance still is a long way from the Haiku Book and Userguide, but
it looks (mostly) the same as the old DocBookXSL so we can stop using that.
Eventually we just need to make DocBookCSS use our styling.
* It no longer has consistent naming across architectures, as it's
now GCC4-only.
* It hasn't been in the default images for that reason since that change
was made a few months ago, and nobody has missed it.
* Only a few pieces of software use it at this point, so those who need
it can simply run "pkgman install cmd:cmake".
I didn't add the gdb package to the bundled packages because AFAIK,
most users / developers of Haiku use our built-in Debugger instead,
because it's so much more awesome (thanks, Ingo & Rene!).
If I'm somehow mistaken about that, please don't hesitate to speak
up and I'll add it.
* Put getlimits and kill back in the image, the former is not provided
by coreutils, Haiku provides an updated version of the latter.
* frcode is not provided by either coreutils or Haiku and has been
removed, do we need it?
* this is a mandatory package.
* removed related commands from the minimum image definition.
* removed related commands from the Haiku package PROVIDES.
* the su command is deprecated in 8.22. Use the 8.4 in-tree version.
* the packages contain and provide the df command, to be removed.
* It's not only broken conceptionally, but also it's implementation
is: it unconditionally filters all ctrl-cmd(-shift) key combinations.
* Since it's functionality should be implemented differently in the
first place, it should be removed completely, though.
... for switching workspaces (removed from BWindow) and
minimize all (aka Show Desktop).
This moves the workspace switch behavior out of the BWindow class
and places it into it's own input server filter that does the same
thing. The difference is that you may now uninstall the workspace
switching filter to disable the behavior. These shortcuts were not
included in the BeOS R5 version of BWindow so represent additional
behavior added to Haiku.
minimize_all (aka Show Desktop) is a new input server filter that
allows you to minimize all windows by pressing cmd+ctrl+D. If
you do not like this behavior you may uninstall the minimize_all
input server filter.
* Doxygen 1.7.6.1 is not the current version, but it's the last in the
1.7 line which is what we're using for the Haiku Book currently.
* Git 2.2 has some new features (terminal coloring) and behavioral changes
(most appeared as warning messages in Git 1.8). Most major Linux
distros successfully switched, and HaikuPorter doesn't seem to rely
on the old behavior.
* PHP is a new add, I've successfully enabled some of the more commonly
used features in our port (GD, ZLIB, CURL, i18n) so it's more useful now.
This package does not contain any webserver integration files, but it does
contain both the CLI and CGI interfaces as well as the builtin webserver.
* ZSH now provides cmd:sh, so it's possible to switch your default shell to
it. Mksh already provided cmd:sh so I didn't need to modify it. There
are still some rough patches that occur when uninstalling Bash (e.g.
Terminal app has an annoying alert that it can't find Bash so it's using
/bin/sh instead) but it appears to work.
* Go was ported in GSOC 2014 and has had a recipe since then, but nobody
bothered to upload it.
* RCS had an incorrect primary provide, fixed it (#9703).
Fix for CVE-2014-3571
Fix for CVE-2015-0206
Fix for CVE-2014-3569
Fix for CVE-2014-3572
Fix for CVE-2015-0204
Fix for CVE-2015-0205
Fix for CVE-2014-8275
Fix for CVE-2014-3570
* Notifier::HeaderFetched(): fixed the method signature (go figure how it could
build on x86).
* POP3: fSizes type is now std::vector<size_t> instead of BList. Please review.
off_t might be a better choice.
* added the mail_daemon add-ons to the Haiku package again.
For the time being, exclude the new mail_daemon add-ons from the image,
as they break both the x86 and x86_64 builds by failing to compile in a
variety of ways.
This was an old version of bash_completion and not included in the
image. An haikuports recipe is available if you need it.
Fixes#11660.
Signed-off-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
This makes it possible to %include local files. nasm doesn't allow this
otherwise (include paths are assumed relative to the working directory).
Fixes build of ape_reader.
Required for work on completing BFont implementation (::Blocks and
::IsFullAndHalfFixed can be provided using fontconfig data), as well as
a more correct font overlay and/or language > font mapping.
* None of these are required to be cross-built, as they all can be built on
the bootstrap image just fine.
* Additionally, update bash_boostrap from 4.27 to 4.30, as 4.27 causes the
build of gcc on the bootstrap image to fail.
This is based on Jalopeura's patch to #10191, however, there are some
changes.
From the patch:
* Make userlandfs use separate "interface definition" files for each
filesystem, so the netfs package can provide a configuration file
* Add a short document on how to use NetFS
* Various fixes to netfs to make it build again (volatile atomics)
* The netfs_mount script for easier use of NetFS
Additional fixes:
* Move netfs_mount and the interface description file to data/ in the
source tree
* Use strlcat instead of strcat to avoid a buffer overflow
* Some parts were already applied in previous commits
* googlefs: not working, needs update to match current page layout of
google searches
* Amiga and Apple partitionning systems: made them 68k and ppc-only,
respectively. There is not much use for those on x86 systems.
Also remove kdlhangman from the bootstrap packages.
* curl: security update for CVE-2014-3707
* libpng16 can be installed next to libpng, libpng16_devel cannot be
installed next to libpng_devel (only one of them).
Recent linux behaviour (and also copied by BSD) is to preprocess
DTS files with the C preprpocessor to enable sharing constants between
driver implementation and DTS content for more readability.
In order to automate the complete bootstrap build process we need a
mechanism to control the second phase which builds the final packages
on the booted bootstrap Haiku. To avoid additional dependencies
(buildbot slave, ssh, rsh,...) we'd have to cross-build, there's now a
pair of simple python scripts that allows executing commands on a remote
machine. The server script (bootstrap_daemon.py) is added to the
bootstrap image and started automatically during the boot.
Python 2.7.x has *much* better cross-compiling support so that it's now
actually possible to properly cross-compile Python during the bootstrap.
Before, it would just depend a lot on luck and the build host used, now
it even cross-compiles on OS X.
This means it's now possible to build a working bootstrap image on OS X!
:)
More testing shown that it crashes when decoding some videos which
work with 0.10 (mostly h263 and h264). Gcc4 versions does not seem to
have a problem, so we can keep the update at least there (WebKit and
other gcc4 compiled apps will use it).
Note that the changes in the media plugin are not reversed: they are
compatible with both ffmpeg versions.
* After testing the previous fix, I found that Flurry would crash again
because of a stack overflow in Mesa. This new package fixes that other
issue, so Flurry runs again.
* GLife and Gravity are still crashing, however. I'll debug these next.
* Includes updated CLDR with many bugfixes, including updates to tzdata
for upcoming reform of Russian timezones which reintroduces DST
* Also includes some gcc2 fixes which were missing from our previous ICU
port and were identified by running the ICU test suite.
* This is a very useful control, and 3rd-party apps should be able to
use it.
* But, there are planned improvements (making a better model/view
interface) which prevents making it part of the stable API yet.
We get several users on IRC asking for help on how to disable it. It
doesn't even look good, uses a lot of CPU, and we have better (useful)
ways to demonstrate replicants on the desktop. So this demo has no use
anymore.
* We install the headers for many things that are currently in libshared
(BColumnListView, BCalendarView, etc). So it makes sense to also provide
the lib in an "use at your own risk" way. Only the static library is
included, so apps linking against it should continue running on newer
Haiku versions even if the content of the lib changes.
* 3rd party application developers can now make use of those
experimental features without having to copypaste and fork the sources.
* Fontconfig and freetype are now building fine, so let's add correct
packages.
* Our pixman was way too old and cairo didn't want to use it
* itstool is used by gtk_doc, which will come in another commit.
The previous package was broken (would often segfault, prevented
building Haiku cross-tools under x86_64), so update to the latest
version in HaikuPorts.
Signed-off-by: Alex Smith <alex@alex-smith.me.uk>
* I rebuilt all packages that depend directly on python: I hope I
didn't miss anything.
* SVN upgraded to 1.8.10 because I couldn't get 1.6.18 to build. This
required uodating expat, apr and apr_util, and adding serf which
replaces neon for SVN http support.
* Everything seems to be running fine so far.
* With HAIKU_NO_DOWNLOADS=1, the check against existing package files
in the download folder should only be done in the phase that is
adding packages to be put onto the resulting target image, not in the
phase that is adding the bootstrap packages (as here those packages
will be *built*, not downloaded).
Let the platform mmu_map_physical_memory the initrd region, and
reserve it before calling mmu_init. This removes another hardcoded
address, since e.g. U-Boot gets the address from the uImage file.
Many bugfixes, most importantly a bug was fixed which makes network
downloads go much faster (without waiting for you to wave the mouse over
the window).
Now that the fake packages are in place, it is much easier to build the
MMC image for ARM without the need for a bootstrap build.
This image still does not manage to access the tarfs and load the kernel
modules, but it gets to KDL, at least.
Needed for the test_app_server.
The logic here may need some improvements, but I'm not sure how to find
the right library name in all cases. I fixed at least the x86_gcc2 case
here.
- Revert the change to BuildFeature since the latest version of the zlib
sources package indeed uses the correct "sources" directory.
- Make the fake zlib package for ARM use the same revision number as the
current zlib version (4) so it can use the current version of the source
package instead of some older one.
This fixes the non-bootstrap ARM build.
I'm not sure this is the right fix, the zlib package seems to come with a
"source" (not "sources") folder on both ARM and x86_gcc2 but then I
don't understand how this worked for the x86_gcc2 build before.
The packages are the bootstrap ones, modified with the "unbootstrap"
script. Not recommended for real use, but this should make playing with
the ARM build a bit simpler.
The libsolv package somehow got lost in the process when I converted
those. Anyone with a copy of the libsolv_bootstrap packages in their
arm generated folder is welcome to "unbootstrap" and upload it.
* From now on, the gcc-specific system libraries (libgcc, libsupc++ and
libstdc++) are provided by separate packages built along with gcc:
- gcc_syslibs contains the shared libraries (libgcc_s.so, libsupc++.so and
libstdc++.so)
- gcc_syslibs_devel contains the static libraries and both c++ and gcc
headers
The shared libraries now make proper use of symbol versioning and there
are version-specific symlinks
* The buildsystem has been adjusted to no longer use the libraries and
headers from the cross-compiler, but use the ones provided by the
above-mentioned packages. The only exception is that the 32-bit libraries
required for the bootloader of the x86_64 architecture are still taken
from the cross-compiler.
* This stage builds the gcc packages to get the shared syslibs, which
only requires the Haiku glue code.
* Add separate declaration section for stage0 packages to
HaikuPortsCross repository files.
* For the bootstrap_stage0 platform, fall back to the gcc headers
provided by the cross-compiler.
* No longer apply somewhat crude mechanism for converting a package name
into a corresponding port name - haikuporter by now supports package
names directly.
This fixes a problem when trying to pass 'gcc_syslibs_devel' to
haikuporter, which only ever saw 'gcc_syslibs'.
* Drop unused variables from build system that refer to the system
libraries.
* Drop unused lists of libgcc objects.
* Drop no longer used variables from configuration script.
* Remove no longer needed building of kernel-libgcc and -libsupc++ from
build_cross_tools_gcc4, only the boot-specific (32-bit) libs are
built for a x86_64 target.
* Explicitly disable threads and TLS support when building the cross
compiler, as the only libraries that are used by Haiku's build system
is the 32-bit libgcc and libsupc++ for the bootloader on x86_64 (and
for that neither is wanted).
* 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.
provided in the gcc_syslibs_devel build feature for building Haiku.
* Simplify declaration of c++ and gcc headers for the legacy compiler -
in the end we always use the ones living by our source tree anyway.
* Fix a couple of missing local declarations for jam variables, which
were necessary to avoid a build problem with strace. There are
probably more bugs like these hiding in our build system files, but
I'm saving the fix for those to the next commit.
* Add new gcc packages to the HaikuPorts (x86*-)repositories.
Parentheses in target names are considered by Jam to mean an archive
member. We have to explicitly use the M selector to keep that part.
Fixes#10378 (certain keymaps missing on image).
Stop-gap solution to make smpeg installable until the separate libstdc++
package is available. Then it will hopefully have a reliable "compat"
version we can depend on.
* Remove unneeded path mashup in curl to find the ca_root_certificates
and use the file in .self/data/ssl. This makes it possible to rename the
package providing ca_root_certificates without everything exploding.
* Use a certificate file in the format cURL expects, not Mozilla source
file in NSS format.
* The main build rules now cause their targets to depend on the
platform such that global per-platform intializations can be
set up by making the platform pseudo target depend on the
target returned by the initialization rule.
* This file contains jam rules for getting the different versions
of libgcc, libsupc++ and libstdc++ used throughout Haiku's
build system.
* Additionally, there are rules for accessing the c++ headers
and the gcc headers.
* These rules are included by Jamrules, but not yet used anywhere.
* gcc_syslibs contains the shared libraries that are being built
as part of gcc, i.e. libgcc_s.so, libsupc++.so and libstdc++.so
* gcc_syslibs_devel contains the static versions of the respective
libraries plus additionally kernel versions of libgcc.a and
libsupc++.a (which do not provide support for pthreads or TLS
and thus do not have any external dependencies). Additionally,
this build feature contains the c++ and gcc headers from the
non-legacy compiler.
* When adjusting the package name for the secondary architecture,
it is unclear where exactly in the package name the architecture
specifier is. To remedy, we try all possible positions until
we find the package (or there are no other possibilities).
Tested against wget, curl, and git, which all were still able
to verify certificates and download from HTTPS sites.
Signed-off-by: Oliver Tappe <zooey@hirschkaefer.de>
* Haiku does not currently provide crtbeginS.o and crtendS.o, so
we fall back to crtbegin.o and crtend.o.
This should not have any ill-effects, as the available compilers on
Haiku do not use __cxa_atexit() yet.
* Gcc is now using __cxa_atexit, so we need to use the crtbegin
and crtend implementations that are meant to be used for shared
libraries. This avoids crashes of servers that load add-ons
(Media-Addon-Server and Print-Server) when shutting down Haiku.
* As executable are shared on Haiku, we use crtbeginS.o and crtendS.o
for those, too.
* To simplify, we even use crtbeginS.o and crtendS.o in the kernel,
but there they don't currently make a difference, as the respective
initialization and cleanup functions are not being invoked by the
kernel.
* 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).
- acr (needed by mpd)
- dos2unix
- getconf (used by valgrind)
(also used by autoconf to determine ARG_MAX faster than try-and-error)
- getopt (needed by acr)
- html_parser (used by netsurf for its git manifest)
- readline_x86
- srm
It seems curl doesn't like the new ca_root_certificates package.
This breaks git clone and probably other things.
Maybe it has to do with the version string.
Since I can't seem to build a replacement curl, I'm reverting to the previous
ca_root_certificates so at least next nightly still works.
* Add support for hubs in AllocateDevice().
* Prevent page fault in FinishTransfers().
* Set fCapabilityLength
* Correct in BIOS ownership code
* Fix context errors in _InsertEndpointForPipe().
* Update constants according to latest Specification (v1.1)
* Fix SMI code (reference
http://lkml.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/1204.2/02460.html).
* Fix Memory/Device-Slot leaks.
* Fix area allocation for TRBs.
* Fix for Intel Lynx Point and Panther Point chipsets. Also move init
of xhci before ehci, to switch USB 2.0 ports before the ehci module
discovers them.
Signed-off-by: Jérôme Duval <jerome.duval@gmail.com>
* There was a version mismatch between HaikuPorts gcc_bootstrap recipe
and build/jam/repositories/HaikuPortsCross/arm which prevented
building @bootstrap-raw for ARM. Thanks Ingo for helping out!
* Ditto for ppc, x86, x86_64.
Signed-off-by: Jérôme Duval <jerome.duval@gmail.com>
* To avoid problems caused by the varying python versions used by the
different architectures, switch those packages from 'any' to explicit
architecture.
This also adds the libtool_cross_generic package to ARM bootstrap,
which seems to be required for building ncurses successfully. I did
not have the time to verify that this is the case for x86_64 too, so
I'm not yet adding it to there (yet).
* Cleanup the SD card image building to allow jam -q @bootstrap-mmc to
work.
There are a few remaining tricks before you can safely build an image:
* This uses a non-POSIX du option, and is only tested with Linux du
only (Linux is the only supported system to run bootstrap builds,
anyway)
* The Python recipe in haikuports.cross is known to not build on
Debian/Ubuntu, but work fine on OpenSuse. There is a patch available in
haikuports bugtracker to allow the reverse.
* You need to populate the haikuports repo package list with some
packages (which don't exist yet) to make the build system happy. But our
git hook to generate the repositories is preventnig me to share this
hack.
Once built, the image currently crashes early in the kernel execution.
On to debug that!
* That change did not make any sense, as the floppy-boot images
can't be built in debug mode anyway (the result is much too large).
This reverts commit 911821275a.
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.
* This solves the issue where libreadline wasn't actually linked to libncurses
* x86_64 update will follow later, as the build maxed out my x86_64 build VM
* Adjust the respective rules such that with disabled downloads, only
packages already available in the downloads folder will be considered
as available build features.
This way, the build system will not for instance try to build
<kdebug>qrencode after a bootstrap, as that package is not yet
available.
* If --no-downloads has been given, Haiku will be built without
trying to download anything, all required packages need to be put
into the download folder manually (the build will stop on missing
packages).
* As the required HaikuPorts repository can't be downloaded in this
mode, a local repository is created during the build, which only
contains the packages available in the downloads folder.
This is useful for building Haiku completely from source.
* The content of the preprocessed package-info files and the package
contents depend on the build type, so we use a different folder for
each build type.
Ideally, we would only need to set this in build/jam/board/*, but the
flags set there are not passed to the build of packages. The default is
using some early ARM variant, for which gcc lacks some more atomic
operations and emits calls to helper functions we don't implement.
Setting the default architecture avoids this, as all packages will now
be built to target the Cortex-A8.
Also set the proper VFP version in BeagleBoard config file.
Note this breaks the Verdex and Pi builds, but ARMv7 is what we should
focus on for now. We can try to make older archs work after finishing
the m68k port.
* This avoids mixup of the soft/hard float libs
* It also means we can use the hard-float libs for targets that supports
it
* Again, we could introduce an arm_softfp compiler for targets that
don't have floating point support, with a different gcc build.
* qrspec.h isn't yet part of the package for some reason.
* removed qrencode from the bootstrap package.
* only include qrencode when the qrencode package is found.
* didn't check qrencode itself, tests welcome.