This should improve build time if you only want to
build Python3 (and not Python).
Because python-pip-conf was part of the python package,
the whole python package (host + target) would get built if Python3
would need to get built.
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Ardelean <ardeleanalex@gmail.com>
This should hopefully fix the Python3 build on buildbot.
For a while I assumed it may be a build-bot issue, but
then looking through the packages repo [and finding
the bluez package] it looks like, if you try
to build all packages, Python3 detects the bluetooth
headers installed by bluez.
It looks like Python's bluetooth support was somewhat
broken ; it was not detecting the <bluetooth/bluetooth.h>
header, so a backport from Python3 to Python fixed that.
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Ardelean <ardeleanalex@gmail.com>
That way some python packages can choose
to keep their egg-info dirs, if they want to, or they're needed.
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Ardelean <ardeleanalex@gmail.com>
Not sure how it can happen that the files are not
installed via the host build.
Maybe some SDK-like build.
Let's make sure they are installed via InstallDev rule too.
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Ardelean <ardeleanalex@gmail.com>
The host pip install should have the host's CFLAGS, LDFLAGS, etc
available.
And not the target's flags.
Otherwise, weird things can happen when installing
packages (host-side) that need to build C code.
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Ardelean <ardeleanalex@gmail.com>
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>
The host pip install should have the host's CFLAGS, LDFLAGS, etc
available.
And not the target's flags.
Otherwise, weird things can happen when installing
packages (host-side) that need to build C code.
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Ardelean <ardeleanalex@gmail.com>
This build script supports both Python 2.x (python-evdev) and 3.x (python3-evdev)
From the README:
This package provides bindings to the generic input event interface in Linux.
The evdev interface serves the purpose of passing events generated in the kernel
directly to userspace through character devices that are typically located in /dev/input/.
This package also comes with bindings to uinput, the userspace input subsystem.
Uinput allows userspace programs to create and handle input devices that can inject
events directly into the input subsystem.
Signed-off-by: Paulo Costa <me@paulo.costa.nom.br>