From 47be081dc18f47e8b4955721c3db3812adf475d9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Marius Mauch Date: Fri, 24 Mar 2006 18:14:00 +0000 Subject: Replacing arch specific make.conf files with patches for the fallback make.conf which should be applied in the ebuild. Add a helper script to update patches if the main make.conf is changed. svn path=/main/trunk/; revision=2987 --- cnf/make.conf.arm | 364 ------------------------------------------------------ 1 file changed, 364 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 cnf/make.conf.arm (limited to 'cnf/make.conf.arm') diff --git a/cnf/make.conf.arm b/cnf/make.conf.arm deleted file mode 100644 index d9a4bdacb..000000000 --- a/cnf/make.conf.arm +++ /dev/null @@ -1,364 +0,0 @@ -# Copyright 1999-2006 Gentoo Foundation -# Distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License v2 -# $Id: /var/cvsroot/gentoo-src/portage/cnf/make.conf.arm,v 1.31.2.5 2005/04/13 15:28:38 jstubbs Exp $ -# Contains local system settings for Portage system - -# Please review 'man make.conf' for more information. - -# Build-time functionality -# ======================== -# -# The USE variable is used to enable optional build-time functionality. For -# example, quite a few packages have optional X, gtk or GNOME functionality -# that can only be enabled or disabled at compile-time. Gentoo Linux has a -# very extensive set of USE variables described in our USE variable HOWTO at -# http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/handbook/handbook-x86.xml?part=2&chap=1 -# -# The available list of use flags with descriptions is in your portage tree. -# Use 'less' to view them: --> less /usr/portage/profiles/use.desc <-- -# -# 'ufed' is an ncurses/dialog interface available in portage to make handling -# useflags for you. 'emerge app-portage/ufed' -# -# Example: -#USE="X gtk gnome -alsa" - -# Host Setting -# ============ -# -# DO NOT CHANGE THIS SETTING UNLESS YOU ARE USING STAGE1! -# It's very important you select the right CHOST from the start. A wrong -# CHOST could easily lead to weird errors either in compiling or running. -# -# Netwinder (or any StrongArm110): armv4l-unknown-linux-gnu -# nslu2: armvbe-unknown-linux-gnu -# Generic ARM: arm-unknown-linux-gnu -# -CHOST="armv4l-unknown-linux-gnu" - -# Host and optimization settings -# ============================== -# -# For optimal performance, enable a CFLAGS setting appropriate for your CPU. -# -# Please note that if you experience strange issues with a package, it may be -# due to gcc's optimizations interacting in a strange way. Please test the -# package (and in some cases the libraries it uses) at default optimizations -# before reporting errors to developers. -# -# -mcpu= means optimize code for the particular type of CPU without -# breaking compatibility with other CPUs. -# -# -march= means to take full advantage of the ABI and instructions -# for the particular CPU; this will break compatibility with older CPUs (for -# example, -march=xscale code will not run on a StrongARM 11x0, and -# -march=strongarm110 code will not run on a regular StrongARM). -# -# Don't use -O3. Even -O2 may be risky in some cases. -# -# For a full listing of supported CPU models, please refer to the GCC website: -# http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-3.3/gcc/ARM-Options.html -# -# Netwinder: -#CFLAGS="-mcpu=strongarm110 -O2 -pipe" -# NSLU2: -#CFLAGS="-mcpu=armeb -O2 -pipe" - -# If you set a CFLAGS above, then this line will set your default C++ flags to -# the same settings. -#CXXFLAGS="${CFLAGS}" - -# Advanced Masking -# ================ -# -# Gentoo is using a new masking system to allow for easier stability testing -# on packages. KEYWORDS are used in ebuilds to mask and unmask packages based -# on the platform they are set for. A special form has been added that -# indicates packages and revisions that are expected to work, but have not yet -# been approved for the stable set. '~arch' is a superset of 'arch' which -# includes the unstable, in testing, packages. Users of the 'x86' architecture -# would add '~x86' to ACCEPT_KEYWORDS to enable unstable/testing packages. -# '~ppc', '~sparc' are the unstable KEYWORDS for their respective platforms. -# -# Please note that this is not for development, alpha, beta, nor cvs release -# packages. "Broken" packages will not be added to testing and should not be -# requested to be added. Alternative routes are available to developers -# for experimental packages, and it is at their discretion to use them. -# -# DO NOT PUT ANYTHING BUT YOUR SPECIFIC ~ARCHITECTURE IN THE LIST. -# IF YOU ARE UNSURE OF YOUR ARCH, OR THE IMPLICATIONS, DO NOT MODIFY THIS. -# -#ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="~arch" - -# Portage Directories -# =================== -# -# Each of these settings controls an aspect of portage's storage and file -# system usage. If you change any of these, be sure it is available when -# you try to use portage. *** DO NOT INCLUDE A TRAILING "/" *** -# -# PORTAGE_TMPDIR is the location portage will use for compilations and -# temporary storage of data. This can get VERY large depending upon -# the application being installed. -#PORTAGE_TMPDIR=/var/tmp -# -# PORTDIR is the location of the portage tree. This is the repository -# for all profile information as well as all ebuilds. If you change -# this, you must update your /etc/make.profile symlink accordingly. -#PORTDIR=/usr/portage -# -# DISTDIR is where all of the source code tarballs will be placed for -# emerges. The source code is maintained here unless you delete -# it. The entire repository of tarballs for gentoo is 9G. This is -# considerably more than any user will ever download. 2-3G is -# a large DISTDIR. -#DISTDIR=${PORTDIR}/distfiles -# -# PKGDIR is the location of binary packages that you can have created -# with '--buildpkg' or '-b' while emerging a package. This can get -# upto several hundred megs, or even a few gigs. -#PKGDIR=${PORTDIR}/packages -# -# PORT_LOGDIR is the location where portage will store all the logs it -# creates from each individual merge. They are stored as NNNN-$PF.log -# in the directory specified. This is disabled until you enable it by -# providing a directory. Permissions will be modified as needed IF the -# directory exists, otherwise logging will be disabled. NNNN is the -# increment at the time the log is created. Logs are thus sequential. -#PORT_LOGDIR=/var/log/portage -# -# PORTDIR_OVERLAY is a directory where local ebuilds may be stored without -# concern that they will be deleted by rsync updates. Default is not -# defined. -#PORTDIR_OVERLAY=/usr/local/portage - -# Fetching files -# ============== -# -# If you need to set a proxy for wget or lukemftp, add the appropriate "export -# ftp_proxy=" and "export http_proxy=" lines to /etc/profile if -# all users on your system should use them. -# -# Portage uses wget by default. Here are some settings for some alternate -# downloaders -- note that you need to merge these programs first before they -# will be available. -# -# Default fetch command (5 tries, passive ftp for firewall compatibility) -#FETCHCOMMAND="/usr/bin/wget -t 5 --passive-ftp \${URI} -P \${DISTDIR}" -#RESUMECOMMAND="/usr/bin/wget -c -t 5 --passive-ftp \${URI} -P \${DISTDIR}" -# -# Using wget, ratelimiting downloads -#FETCHCOMMAND="/usr/bin/wget -t 5 --passive-ftp --limit-rate=200k \${URI} -P \${DISTDIR}" -#RESUMECOMMAND="/usr/bin/wget -c -t 5 --passive-ftp --limit-rate=200k \${URI} -P \${DISTDIR}" -# -# Lukemftp (BSD ftp): -#FETCHCOMMAND="/usr/bin/lukemftp -s -a -o \${DISTDIR}/\${FILE} \${URI}" -#RESUMECOMMAND="/usr/bin/lukemftp -s -a -R -o \${DISTDIR}/\${FILE} \${URI}" -# -# Portage uses GENTOO_MIRRORS to specify mirrors to use for source retrieval. -# The list is a space separated list which is read left to right. If you use -# another mirror we highly recommend leaving the default mirror at the end of -# the list so that portage will fall back to it if the files cannot be found -# on your specified mirror. We _HIGHLY_ recommend that you change this setting -# to a nearby mirror by merging and using the 'mirrorselect' tool. -#GENTOO_MIRRORS=" http://distfiles.gentoo.org http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/distributions/gentoo" -# -# Portage uses PORTAGE_BINHOST to specify mirrors for prebuilt-binary packages. -# The list is a single entry specifying the full address of the directory -# serving the tbz2's for your system. Running emerge with either '--getbinpkg' -# or '--getbinpkgonly' will cause portage to retrieve the metadata from all -# packages in the directory specified, and use that data to determine what will -# be downloaded and merged. '-g' or '-gK' are the recommend parameters. Please -# consult the man pages and 'emerge --help' for more information. For FTP, the -# default connection is passive -- If you require an active connection, affix -# an asterisk (*) to the end of the host:port string before the path. -#PORTAGE_BINHOST="http://grp.mirror.site/gentoo/grp/1.4/i686/athlon-xp/" -# This ftp connection is passive ftp. -#PORTAGE_BINHOST="ftp://login:pass@grp.mirror.site/pub/grp/i686/athlon-xp/" -# This ftp connection is active ftp. -#PORTAGE_BINHOST="ftp://login:pass@grp.mirror.site:21*/pub/grp/i686/athlon-xp/" - -# Synchronizing Portage -# ===================== -# -# Each of these settings affects how Gentoo synchronizes your Portage tree. -# Synchronization is handled by rsync and these settings allow some control -# over how it is done. -# -# -# SYNC is the server used by rsync to retrieve a localized rsync mirror -# rotation. This allows you to select servers that are geographically -# close to you, yet still distribute the load over a number of servers. -# Please do not single out specific rsync mirrors. Doing so places undue -# stress on particular mirrors. Instead you may use one of the following -# continent specific rotations: -# -# Default: "rsync://rsync.gentoo.org/gentoo-portage" -# North America: "rsync://rsync.namerica.gentoo.org/gentoo-portage" -# South America: "rsync://rsync.samerica.gentoo.org/gentoo-portage" -# Europe: "rsync://rsync.europe.gentoo.org/gentoo-portage" -# Asia: "rsync://rsync.asia.gentoo.org/gentoo-portage" -# Australia: "rsync://rsync.au.gentoo.org/gentoo-portage" -#SYNC="rsync://rsync.gentoo.org/gentoo-portage" -# -# PORTAGE_RSYNC_RETRIES sets the number of times portage will attempt to retrieve -# a current portage tree before it exits with an error. This allows -# for a more successful retrieval without user intervention most times. -#PORTAGE_RSYNC_RETRIES="3" -# -# PORTAGE_RSYNC_EXTRA_OPTS can be used to feed additional options to the rsync -# command used by `emerge --sync`. This will not change the default options -# which are set by PORTAGE_RSYNC_OPTS (don't change those unless you know -# exactly what you're doing). -#PORTAGE_RSYNC_EXTRA_OPTS="" -# -# Advanced Features -# ================= -# -# EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPTS allows emerge to act as if certain options are -# specified on every run. Useful options include --ask, --verbose, -# --usepkg and many others. Options that are not useful, such as --help, -# are not filtered. -#EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPTS="" -# -# MAKEOPTS provides extra options that may be passed to 'make' when a -# program is compiled. Presently the only use is for specifying -# the number of parallel makes (-j) to perform. The suggested number -# for parallel makes is CPUs+1. -#MAKEOPTS="-j2" -# -# PORTAGE_NICENESS provides a default increment to emerge's niceness level. -# Note: This is an increment. Running emerge in a niced environment will -# reduce it further. Default is unset. -#PORTAGE_NICENESS=3 -# -# AUTOCLEAN enables portage to automatically clean out older or overlapping -# packages from the system after every successful merge. This is the -# same as running 'emerge -c' after every merge. Set with: "yes" or "no". -# This does not affect the unpacked source. See 'noclean' below. -#AUTOCLEAN="yes" -# -# PORTAGE_TMPFS is a location where portage may create temporary files. -# If specified, portage will use this directory whenever possible -# for all rapid operations such as lockfiles and transient data. -# It is _highly_ recommended that this be a tmpfs or ramdisk. Do not -# set this to anything that does not give a significant performance -# enhancement and proper FS compliance for locks and read/write. -# /dev/shm is a glibc mandated tmpfs, and should be a reasonable -# setting for all linux kernel+glibc based systems. -#PORTAGE_TMPFS="/dev/shm" -# -# FEATURES are settings that affect the functionality of portage. Most of -# these settings are for developer use, but some are available to non- -# developers as well. -# -# 'autoaddcvs' causes portage to automatically try to add files to cvs -# that will have to be added later. Done at generation times -# and only has an effect when 'cvs' is also set. -# 'buildpkg' causes binary packages to be created of all packages that -# are being merged. -# 'ccache' enables ccache support via CC. -# 'collision-protect' -# prevents packages from overwriting files that are owned by -# another package or by no package at all. -# 'confcache' enable confcache support; speeds up autotool based configure -# calls -# 'cvs' causes portage to enable all cvs features (commits, adds), -# and to apply all USE flags in SRC_URI for digests -- for -# developers only. -# 'digest' causes digests to be generated for all packages being merged. -# 'distcc' enables distcc support via CC. -# 'distlocks' enables distfiles locking using fcntl or hardlinks. This -# is enabled by default. Tools exist to help clean the locks -# after crashes: /usr/lib/portage/bin/clean_locks. -# 'fixpackages' allows portage to fix binary packages that are stored in -# PKGDIR. This can consume a lot of time. 'fixpackages' is -# also a script that can be run at any given time to force -# the same actions. -# 'gpg' enables basic verification of Manifest files using gpg. -# This features is UNDER DEVELOPMENT and reacts to features -# of strict and severe. Heavy use of gpg sigs is coming. -# 'keeptemp' prevents the clean phase from deleting the temp files ($T) -# from a merge. -# 'keepwork' prevents the clean phase from deleting the WORKDIR. -# 'test' causes ebuilds to perform testing phases if they are capable -# of it. Some packages support this automaticaly via makefiles. -# 'metadata-transfer' -# automatically perform a metadata transfer when `emerge --sync` -# is run. -# 'noauto' causes ebuild to perform only the action requested and -# not any other required actions like clean or unpack -- for -# debugging purposes only. -# 'noclean' prevents portage from removing the source and temporary files -# after a merge -- for debugging purposes only. -# 'nostrip' prevents the stripping of binaries. -# 'notitles' disables xterm titlebar updates (which contain status info). -# 'sandbox' enables sandboxing when running emerge and ebuild. -# 'strict' causes portage to react strongly to conditions that are -# potentially dangerous, like missing/incorrect Manifest files. -# 'userpriv' allows portage to drop root privileges while it is compiling, -# as a security measure. As a side effect this can remove -# sandbox access violations for users. -# 'usersandbox' enables sandboxing while portage is running under userpriv. -#FEATURES="sandbox buildpkg ccache distcc userpriv usersandbox notitles noclean noauto cvs keeptemp keepwork autoaddcvs" -#FEATURES="sandbox ccache distcc distlocks autoaddcvs" -# -# CCACHE_SIZE sets the space use limitations for ccache. The default size is -# 2G, and will be set if not defined otherwise and ccache is in features. -# Portage will set the default ccache dir if it is not present in the -# user's environment, for userpriv it sets: ${PORTAGE_TMPDIR}/ccache -# (/var/tmp/ccache), and for regular use the default is /root/.ccache. -# Sizes are specified with 'G' 'M' or 'K'. -# '2G' for 2 gigabytes, '2048M' for 2048 megabytes (same as 2G). -#CCACHE_SIZE="512M" -# -# DISTCC_DIR sets the temporary space used by distcc. -#DISTCC_DIR="${PORTAGE_TMPDIR}/.distcc" -# -# RSYNC_EXCLUDEFROM is a file that portage will pass to rsync when it updates -# the portage tree. Specific chunks of the tree may be excluded from -# consideration. This may cause dependency failures if you are not careful. -# The file format is one pattern per line, blanks and ';' or '#' lines are -# comments. See 'man rsync' for more details on the exclude-from format. -#RSYNC_EXCLUDEFROM=/etc/portage/rsync_excludes - -# logging related variables: -# PORTAGE_ELOG_CLASSES: selects messages to be logged, possible values are: -# info, warn, error, log -# Warning: commenting this will disable elog -PORTAGE_ELOG_CLASSES="warn error log" - -# PORTAGE_ELOG_SYSTEM: selects the module(s) to process the log messages. Modules -# included in portage are (empty means logging is disabled): -# save (saves one log per package in $PORTAGE_TMPDIR/elogs) -# custom (passes all messages to $PORTAGE_LOG_COMMAND) -# syslog (sends all messages to syslog) -# mail (send all messages to the mailserver defined -# in $PORTAGE_LOG_MAILURI) -# To use elog you should enable at least one module -#PORTAGE_ELOG_SYSTEM="save mail" - -# PORTAGE_ELOG_COMMAND: only used with the "custom" logging module. Specifies a command -# to process log messages. Two variables are expanded: -# ${PACKAGE} - expands to the cpv entry of the processed -# package (see $PVR in ebuild(5)) -# ${LOGFILE} - absolute path to the logfile -# Both variables have to be quoted with single quotes -#PORTAGE_ELOG_COMMAND="/path/to/logprocessor -p '${PACKAGE}' -f '${LOGFILE}'" - -# PORTAGE_ELOG_MAILURI: this variable holds all important settings for the mail -# module. In most cases listing the recipient address and -# the receiving mailserver should be sufficient, but you can -# also use advanced settings like authentication or TLS. The -# full syntax is: -# address [[user:passwd@]mailserver[:port]] -# where -# address: recipient adress -# user: username for smtp auth (defaults to none) -# passwd: password for smtp auth (defaults to none) -# mailserver: smtp server that should be used to deliver the mail (defaults to localhost) -# port: port to use on the given smtp server (defaults to 25, values > 100000 indicate that starttls should be used on (port-100000)) -# Examples: -#PORTAGE_ELOG_MAILURI="root@localhost localhost" (this is also the default setting) -#PORTAGE_ELOG_MAILURI="user@some.domain mail.some.domain" (sends mails to user@some.domain using the mailserver mail.some.domain) -#PORTAGE_ELOG_MAILURI="user@some.domain user:secret@mail.some.domain:100465" (this is left uncommented as a reader excercise ;) -- cgit v1.2.3-1-g7c22