r23b was suppose to fix so that -fno-integrated-as worked again (which
libx265 needs for example), but the symlinks added point towards an
absolute path in /buildbot/src/android/ndk-release-r23 instead of to
../../bin/. Re-create symlinks with correct destination.
When adding this, we go from compiling with
/home/builder/.termux-build/_cache/android-r21d-api-24-v4/bin/clang++ [...] -mrelocation-model pic -pic-level 2 -pic-is-pie [...]
to
/home/builder/.termux-build/_cache/android-r21d-api-24-v5/bin/clang++ [...] -mrelocation-model pic -pic-level 2 [...]
Before, we got a warning when compiling libandroid-spawn:
/home/builder/.termux-build/_cache/android-r21d-api-24-v4/bin/../lib/gcc/i686-linux-android/4.9.x/../../../../i686-linux-android/bin/ld: warning: shared library text segment is not shareable
and trying to use a program linked against libandroid-spawn gave an
error, see
https://github.com/termux/termux-packages/issues/7215#issuecomment-906154438
the Without this, libraries might end up with text relocations. For
some reason it does not seem to be an issue on the other arches.
%ci:no-build
Unlike the NDK clang, the on-device clang has already been patched to add an rpath
to the Termux-prefixed library path, so only have the build script add the rpath
flag for NDK builds.
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.
As clang++ in the NDK defaults to libc++ since r17, we no longer
need to fake a libstdc++.so at build time (and omit it from the
libc++ package we ship).