CMake provides a user package registry (stored in ~/.cmake/packages) and
a system package registry (not available on non-Windows platforms).
The "export(PACKAGE)" command may store information in the user package
registry, and the "find_package()" command may search both user and
system package registries for information.
This sets various variables to disable the use of these package
registries (both saving and retrieval of package information).
This also sets deprecated variables that perform similar functions, in
case external toolchains include older versions of CMake.
Signed-off-by: Jeffery To <jeffery.to@gmail.com>
Several CMake packages such as log4cplus and protobuf(-c) install to
lib64 instead of lib on some hosts. This completely breaks rpath linking.
Override it globally to avoid fixing each package individually.
Signed-off-by: Rosen Penev <rosenp@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Sebastian Kemper <sebastian_ml@gmx.net>
Sometimes, the CMakeLists.txt file is not in the root directory of a
repo. In those cases, the CMAKE_SOURCE_SUBDIR variable can be specified
to use CMakeLists.txt from a subdirectory instead.
Signed-off-by: Amol Bhave <ambhave@fb.com>
cmake checks the build system and its variables on its own to detect if
the makefiles need to be regenerated.
Unfortunately this can invalidate overrides passed in the
Build/Configure step. On non-Linux systems this breaks the build when
switching between targets of the same package architecture.
Fix this by forcibly disabling the build system check and relying on the
LEDE build system to take care of these things
Signed-off-by: Felix Fietkau <nbd@nbd.name>
Using a single host package staging dir (and build dir) significantly speeds up
builds when multiple targets are built in succession, especially for large host
packages like NodeJS.
$(STAGING_DIR)/host is kept in addition to $(STAGING_DIR_HOSTPKG) in most
places; it is still used as destination for host files in Build/InstallDev.
Signed-off-by: Matthias Schiffer <mschiffer@universe-factory.net>
Instead of using TARGET_CFLAGS and EXTRA_CFLAGS in cmake and scons
build use the TARGET_CXXFLAGS and EXTRA_CXXFLAGS like it is done for
normal make and configure. configure used TARGET_CXXFLAGS and
EXTRA_CFLAGS for the CXXFLAGS. The package-default.mk sets
"EXTRA_CXXFLAGS = $(EXTRA_CFLAGS)" so using EXTRA_CXXFLAGS flags should
be save.
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
Some packages need out of source tree building with cmake, for example
when building kernel modules.
See an example here:
https://sourceforge.net/p/accel-ppp/code/ci/master/tree/README
Signed-off-by: Luke McKee <hojuruku@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Felix Fietkau <nbd@nbd.name> [cleanup, rework]
CMAKE_ASM_COMPILER is automatically set to CMAKE_C_COMPILER by CMake, but
CMAKE_C_COMPILER_ARG1 is lost. This causes assembly builds to fail when ccache
is enabled (for example the package fastd on x86).
Fix this by explicitly defining CMAKE_ASM_COMPILER and CMAKE_ASM_COMPILER_ARG1.
Signed-off-by: Matthias Schiffer <mschiffer@universe-factory.net>
SVN-Revision: 45119
Since GCC 4.7, GCC provides its own wrappers around ar, nm and ranlib, which
should be used for builds with link-time optimization. Since GCC 4.9, using them
actually necessary for LTO builds using convenience libraries to succeed.
There are some packages which try to automatically detect if gcc-{ar,nm,ranlib}
exist (one example is my package "fastd" in the package repository, which tries
to use LTO). This breaks because the OpenWrt build system explicitly sets the
binutils versions of these tools.
As it doesn't cause any issues to use gcc-{ar,nm,ranlib} instead of
{ar,nm,ranlib} even without LTO, this patch just makes OpenWrt use the
GCC-provided versions by default, which fixes the build of such packages with
GCC 4.9.
(I know that builds fail though when clang is used with -flto and
gcc-{ar,nm,ranlib}, but as all OpenWrt toolchains are based on GCC, this isn't
a real issue.)
Completely cleaning the tree (or at least `make clean toolchain/clean`) is
necessary to get a consistent state after the binutils plugins support patch and
this one (as trying to use gcc-{ar,nm,ranlib} with a binutils built without
plugin support will definitely lead to a build failure).
Signed-off-by: Matthias Schiffer <mschiffer@universe-factory.net>
SVN-Revision: 43784