This new variable is extremely useful when iterating on creating a large package,
as otherwise you have to wipe the source and rebuild each time you make a mistake
with the patches or build.sh script.
Simply set TERMUX_PKG_QUICK_REBUILD=true in build.sh if a build fails and then the
TERMUX_PKG_SRCDIR and TERMUX_PKG_BUILDDIR will not be touched when you rebuild,
including that the patches will not be applied again. When you're done iterating,
diff for any new patches, save them, and remove this variable before rebuilding
from scratch, hopefully for the last time. ;)
An example is shown for the giant libllvm package, where other modifications are
also excluded if this variable is set.
By defining __TERMUX__ and __TERMUX_PREFIX__ in <sys/cdefs.h> (which is
basically always included) one can more easily target Termux
specifically, both when cross-compiling packages and when code is built
on-device.
Variables
TERMUX_PKG_PLATFORM_INDEPENDENT
TERMUX_DEBUG
TERMUX_PKG_HAS_DEBUG
TERMUX_PKG_ESSENTIAL
TERMUX_SUBPKG_ESSENTIAL
TERMUX_PKG_NO_STATICSPLIT
TERMUX_PKG_BUILD_IN_SRC
TERMUX_PKG_FORCE_CMAKE
TERMUX_PKG_HOSTBUILD
should not accept arbitrary values for marking them "enabled". Instead
they should accept boolean values which makes them easier to handle and
also makes their meaning clear.
build-package.sh should make decision based on variable's value but not on
whether it is set or empty.
%ci:no-build
Partial compatibility for on-device builds.
There is no guarantee that it will be possible to build all available
packages and built packages will have same reliability that cross-compiled
but should solve "self-hosting" problems as much as possible.
* Do not re=download release files.
* Efficiently handle dependencies: do not try to download \*.deb files when they already downloaded, do not try to extract them more than one time.
Can be set to the path to packages/ directories in other repos (like
unstable-package/packages/, termux-root-packages/packages/,
..). buildorder.py then searches these directories for packages and
dependencies
Use scripts/buildorder.py with a new -i flag to get all dependencies
(including subpackages). The script now also spits out both package
name and package dir, to make it easier to build packages from another
repo.