This updates all Python packages that download their source from PyPi to
use pypi.mk.
This will allow future improvements/changes to pypi.mk to affect all
relevant packages.
This also makes it easier for future Python packages to start using
pypi.mk, when it's clear how it is used in existing packages.
Signed-off-by: Jeffery To <jeffery.to@gmail.com>
This updates the Python 2 and 3 versions of each package to share the
same title field. (For packages that only had this change, their
PKG_RELEASE were not incremented.)
This also updates the package title, url and source urls, where
necessary.
Signed-off-by: Jeffery To <jeffery.to@gmail.com>
This guarantees for the package feeds that
the mk files will always be available for all packages.
Will need to see about external-feed Python packages
a bit later.
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Ardelean <ardeleanalex@gmail.com>
Build depends refer to source package names, not binary package names.
In many cases, PKG_BUILD_DEPENDS simply duplicated runtime dependencies of
a source package's binary packages; as the corresponding source packages
are implicitly added as bulid dependencies, PKG_BUILD_DEPENDS can simply be
dropped in these cases. In the other cases, *_BUILD_DEPENDS is fixed to
refer to the correct source package name.
Dependency of mysql-server is adjusted from libncursesw to libncurses
(as libncursesw is a virtual package provided by libncurses), so the build
dependency on ncurses is emitted unconditionally.
Signed-off-by: Matthias Schiffer <mschiffer@universe-factory.net>
fix Makefile chmod (644)
replace MD5SUM with HASH
add PKG_MIRROR_HASH when PKG_SOURCE_PROTO:=git
(PKG_SOURCE_PROTO:=svn tarballs are not reproducible for now)
Signed-off-by: Etienne Champetier <champetier.etienne@gmail.com>
I admit this may be be a bit aggressive, but the lang
folder is getting cluttered/filled up with Python, PHP, Perl,
Ruby, etc. packages.
Makes sense to try to group them into per-lang folders.
I took the Pythons.
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Ardelean <ardeleanalex@gmail.com>
From the README:
attrs is an MIT-licensed Python package with class decorators that ease
the chores of implementing the most common attribute-related object
protocols.
Signed-off-by: Jeffery To <jeffery.to@gmail.com>
From the package description:
Python wrapper module around the OpenSSL library
This depends on python-cryptography (#2035)
Signed-off-by: Jeffery To <jeffery.to@gmail.com>