#!/bin/sh # Set initial variables: PKGNAM=coreutils CWD=`pwd` TMP=/tmp PKG=$TMP/package-$PKGNAM VERSION=8.5 ARCH=alpha BUILD=2 TARGET=$ARCH-alphaslack-linux rm -rf $PKG mkdir -p $PKG ( cd $TMP rm -rf coreutils-$VERSION tar xf $CWD/coreutils-$VERSION.tar.?z* cd coreutils-$VERSION # Patch uname to correctly display CPU information: zcat $CWD/$PKGNAM.uname.diff.gz | patch -p1 --verbose || exit 1 chown -R root:root . find . -perm 666 -exec chmod 644 {} \; find . -perm 664 -exec chmod 644 {} \; find . -perm 600 -exec chmod 644 {} \; find . -perm 444 -exec chmod 644 {} \; find . -perm 400 -exec chmod 644 {} \; find . -perm 440 -exec chmod 644 {} \; find . -perm 777 -exec chmod 755 {} \; find . -perm 775 -exec chmod 755 {} \; find . -perm 511 -exec chmod 755 {} \; find . -perm 711 -exec chmod 755 {} \; find . -perm 555 -exec chmod 755 {} \; # Compilation with glibc version later than 2.3.2 needs the environment # variable DEFAULT_POSIX2_VERSION set to 199209. # Without the next line, the coreutils will start complaining about 'obsolete' # command switches, like "tail -20" will be considered obsolete. # This behaviour breaks many other packages... the 'obsolete' parameters are # too commonly used to disregard them. Better to stick with the older more # widely accepted standards until things begin to demand the new way. DEFAULT_POSIX2_VERSION=199209 \ CFLAGS=-O2 ./configure \ --prefix=/usr \ --bindir=/bin \ --sysconfdir=/etc \ --mandir=/usr/man \ --infodir=/usr/info \ --build=$TARGET make || exit 1 make install DESTDIR=$PKG || exit mkdir -p $PKG/usr/doc/coreutils-$VERSION $PKG/usr/sbin cp -a ABOUT-NLS AUTHORS COPYING NEWS README THANKS THANKS-to-translators TODO $PKG/usr/doc/coreutils-$VERSION # We have had the mktemp from debianutils included with Slackware for quite a # long time, and certain options are changed here, like changing -u to mean a # dry-run rather than to unlink the tempfile when finished. Since this could # break existing scripts, unless someone can tell me a good reason why we # should start using a new version of mktemp, we will continue to use the # one we've been using. If the new one starts to become expected, let me know. # We'll figure out what the best options are and go from there. mv $PKG/bin/mktemp $PKG/bin/mktemp-gnu mv $PKG/usr/man/man1/mktemp.1 $PKG/usr/man/man1/mktemp-gnu.1 # This seems wrong, and it stomps on files in the ksh93 package, though I'm # not sure the placement of those is correct, either... The ksh93 package # installs them as flat text files, while coreutils installs empty directories # Oh well, this is what we've done for years, and nobody's complained... rm -rf $PKG/usr/share/locale/*/LC_TIME # These are important enough that they should probably all go into /bin at this # point... Having some of them unavailable when /usr isn't mounted is just a # source of unending bug reports for various third party applications. # Time to end those reports. :-) mkdir -p $PKG/bin $PKG/usr/bin ( cd $PKG/usr/bin for file in ../../bin/* ; do ln --verbose -sf $file . done ) rm -rf $PKG/usr/info/dir gzip -9 $PKG/usr/info/* gzip -9 $PKG/usr/man/man?/*.? mkdir -p $PKG/etc # Add some defaults, although a very slack-like set of default options are built # into /bin/ls now anyway: zcat $CWD/DIR_COLORS.gz > $PKG/etc/DIR_COLORS.new # Since dircolors no longer provides any default aliases these scripts # will be needed for ls to act as expected: mkdir -p $PKG/etc/profile.d zcat $CWD/coreutils-dircolors.csh.gz > $PKG/etc/profile.d/coreutils-dircolors.csh zcat $CWD/coreutils-dircolors.sh.gz > $PKG/etc/profile.d/coreutils-dircolors.sh chmod 755 $PKG/etc/profile.d/* # Strip binaries: find $PKG | xargs file | grep -e "executable" | grep ELF | cut -f 1 -d : | xargs strip --strip-unneeded 2> /dev/null find $PKG | xargs file | grep -e "shared object" | grep ELF | cut -f 1 -d : | xargs strip --strip-unneeded 2> /dev/null # Remove things that are provided by other Slackware packages: ( cd $PKG for dupe in hostname kill su uptime ; do rm -f bin/${dupe} usr/bin/${dupe} usr/sbin/${dupe} usr/man/man?/${dupe}.* done ) # Add ginstall links (there's still a lot of stuff that needs this to compile): ( cd $PKG ( cd bin ; ln -sf install ginstall ) ( cd usr/bin ; ln -sf ../../bin/ginstall ginstall ) ( cd usr/man/man1 ; ln -sf install.1.gz ginstall.1.gz ) ) mkdir -p $PKG/install zcat $CWD/doinst.sh.gz > $PKG/install/doinst.sh cat $CWD/slack-desc > $PKG/install/slack-desc # Build the package: cd $PKG makepkg -l y -c n $TMP/$PKGNAM-$VERSION-$ARCH-$BUILD.tgz ) 2>&1 | tee $TMP/$PKGNAM.build.log