fix windows test run
unit test round 2
attempting to fix ccache use on darwin
made ccache optional, no longer pulls clang on darwin build
fixing darwin build from Dockerfile
fixed missing nproc on OSX
updated readme to include regtest example, build examples
fix QT unit tests
made -j get passed down, added build.sh
This contains significant rebase / merge / testing work by Naut
<lbrynaut@protonmail.com>, Anthony Fieroni <bvbfan@abv.bg> and Brannon
King <countprimes@gmail.com>.
Some dependency sources were downloaded via http, even though https (SSL/TLS) options are available.
Even if we potentially check the integrity of the downloaded files via hash comparison, we should make
use of this additional security layer.
bdb.mk
fontconfig.mk
freetype.mk
libX11.mk
libXau.mk
libXext.mk
libxcb.mk
native_cctools.mk
native_cdrkit.mk
xcb_proto.mk
xextproto.mk
xproto.mk
xtrans.mk
zlib.mk
miniupnp was switched to official project mirror with SSL support
- create a script to handle split debug. This will also eventually need to check
targets, and use dsymutil for osx.
- update config.guess/config.sub for bdb for aarch64.
- temporarily disable symbol checks for arm/aarch64
- quit renaming to linux32/linux64 and use the host directly
This also adds a hack to work around an Ubuntu bug in the gcc-multilib package:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gcc-defaults-armhf-cross/+bug/1347820
The problem is that gcc-multilib conflicts with the aarch toolchain.
gcc-multilib installs a symlink that points
/usr/include/asm -> /usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/asm.
Without this link, gcc -m32 can't find asm/errno.h (and others), since
/usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu isn't in its default include path. But
/usr/include/i386-linux-gnu is (though it doesn't exist on disk).
So work around the problem by linking
/usr/include/i386-linux-gnu/asm -> /usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/asm.
The symlink fix is actually quite reasonable, but echoing the password into
sudo is nasty, and should probably be addressed in gitian itself. It makes more
sense to enable passwordless sudo for the build user by default.
Newer mingw supports the features necessary to enable this api, whereas older
versions didn't. However once enabled (automatically by configure), it triggers
an unrelated build bug.
Since it was not enabled previously anyway, and we don't depend on the
functionality, just disable it across the board.