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
This will make things as std::to_string() and other C++ features
work with a modern and supported C++ library.
We package up libc++_shared.so and bump the revision of every C++
using package to make it rebuild against it.
Users who have built C++ using libraries or programs will probably
need to rebuild them if they are linked against Termux-supplied
libraries, as user code was previously linked against gnustl while
the system libraries are now using libc++, and it's not a good idea
to mix C++ standard libraries in a program.
* file: update from 5.29 to 5.30
* ffmpeg: update from 3.2.2 to 3.2.4
* mpv: update from 0.23.0 to 0.24.0
also prevent opportunistic linking with x11
* grep: update from 2.28 to 3.0
* fish: update from 2.4.0 to 2.5.0
add tarball checksum
remove patches no longer needed
see https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/pull/3585
* wget: update from 1.19 to 1.19.1
Let build-package.sh setup the $PREFIX/lib/libstdc++.so symlink
before building any package, to make sure that all C++ applications
link against a fully featured C++ standard library.
Avoid explicitly declaring a dependency on the libgnustl package
since everyone may link against it at will and instead mark it as
essential.