summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
blob: 51cdaab1a09ac2ae08c7345c378049af5925fdc9 (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
# Copyright 1999-2012 Gentoo Foundation
# Distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License v2
# $Header: $

# NOTE: The comments in this file are for instruction and documentation.
# They're not meant to appear with your final, production ebuild.  Please
# remember to remove them before submitting or committing your ebuild.  That
# doesn't mean you can't add your own comments though.

# The 'Header' on the third line should just be left alone.  When your ebuild
# will be committed to cvs, the details on that line will be automatically
# generated to contain the correct data.

# The EAPI variable tells the ebuild format in use.
# Defaults to 0 if not specified.
# It is suggested that you use the latest EAPI approved by the Council.
# The PMS contains specifications for all EAPIs. Eclasses will test for this
# variable if they need to use EAPI > 0 features.
EAPI=4

# inherit lists eclasses to inherit functions from. Almost all ebuilds should
# inherit eutils, as a large amount of important functionality has been
# moved there. For example, the epatch call mentioned below wont work
# without the following line:
inherit eutils
# A well-used example of an eclass function that needs eutils is epatch. If
# your source needs patches applied, it's suggested to put your patch in the
# 'files' directory and use:
#
#   epatch "${FILESDIR}"/patch-name-here
#
# eclasses tend to list descriptions of how to use their functions properly.
# take a look at /usr/portage/eclass/ for more examples.

# Short one-line description of this package.
DESCRIPTION="This is a sample skeleton ebuild file"

# Homepage, not used by Portage directly but handy for developer reference
HOMEPAGE="http://foo.example.org/"

# Point to any required sources; these will be automatically downloaded by
# Portage.
SRC_URI="ftp://foo.example.org/${P}.tar.gz"


# License of the package.  This must match the name of file(s) in
# /usr/portage/licenses/.  For complex license combination see the developer
# docs on gentoo.org for details.
LICENSE=""

# The SLOT variable is used to tell Portage if it's OK to keep multiple
# versions of the same package installed at the same time.  For example,
# if we have a libfoo-1.2.2 and libfoo-1.3.2 (which is not compatible
# with 1.2.2), it would be optimal to instruct Portage to not remove
# libfoo-1.2.2 if we decide to upgrade to libfoo-1.3.2.  To do this,
# we specify SLOT="1.2" in libfoo-1.2.2 and SLOT="1.3" in libfoo-1.3.2.
# emerge clean understands SLOTs, and will keep the most recent version
# of each SLOT and remove everything else.
# Note that normal applications should use SLOT="0" if possible, since
# there should only be exactly one version installed at a time.
# DO NOT USE SLOT=""! This tells Portage to disable SLOTs for this package.
SLOT="0"

# Using KEYWORDS, we can record masking information *inside* an ebuild
# instead of relying on an external package.mask file.  Right now, you should
# set the KEYWORDS variable for every ebuild so that it contains the names of
# all the architectures with which the ebuild works.  All of the official
# architectures can be found in the arch.list file which is in
# /usr/portage/profiles/.  Usually you should just set this to "~x86".  The ~
# in front of the architecture indicates that the package is new and should be
# considered unstable until testing proves its stability.  So, if you've
# confirmed that your ebuild works on x86 and ppc, you'd specify:
# KEYWORDS="~x86 ~ppc"
# Once packages go stable, the ~ prefix is removed.
# For binary packages, use -* and then list the archs the bin package
# exists for.  If the package was for an x86 binary package, then
# KEYWORDS would be set like this: KEYWORDS="-* x86"
# DO NOT USE KEYWORDS="*".  This is deprecated and only for backward
# compatibility reasons.
KEYWORDS="~x86"

# Comprehensive list of any and all USE flags leveraged in the ebuild,
# with the exception of any ARCH specific flags, i.e. "ppc", "sparc",
# "x86" and "alpha".  Not needed if the ebuild doesn't use any USE flags.
IUSE="gnome X"

# A space delimited list of portage features to restrict. man 5 ebuild
# for details.  Usually not needed.
#RESTRICT="strip"


# Build-time dependencies, such as
#    ssl? ( >=dev-libs/openssl-0.9.6b )
#    >=dev-lang/perl-5.6.1-r1
# It is advisable to use the >= syntax show above, to reflect what you
# had installed on your system when you tested the package.  Then
# other users hopefully won't be caught without the right version of
# a dependency.
#DEPEND=""

# Run-time dependencies. Must be defined to whatever this depends on to run.
# The below is valid if the same run-time depends are required to compile.
RDEPEND="${DEPEND}"

# Source directory; the dir where the sources can be found (automatically
# unpacked) inside ${WORKDIR}.  The default value for S is ${WORKDIR}/${P}
# If you don't need to change it, leave the S= line out of the ebuild
# to keep it tidy.
#S=${WORKDIR}/${P}


# The following src_configure function is implemented as default by portage, so
# you only need to call it if you need a different behaviour.
# This function is available only in EAPI 2 and later.
#src_configure() {
	# Most open-source packages use GNU autoconf for configuration.
	# The default, quickest (and preferred) way of running configure is:
	#econf
	#
	# You could use something similar to the following lines to
	# configure your package before compilation.  The "|| die" portion
	# at the end will stop the build process if the command fails.
	# You should use this at the end of critical commands in the build
	# process.  (Hint: Most commands are critical, that is, the build
	# process should abort if they aren't successful.)
	#./configure \
	#	--host=${CHOST} \
	#	--prefix=/usr \
	#	--infodir=/usr/share/info \
	#	--mandir=/usr/share/man || die
	# Note the use of --infodir and --mandir, above. This is to make
	# this package FHS 2.2-compliant.  For more information, see
	#   http://www.pathname.com/fhs/
#}

# The following src_compile function is implemented as default by portage, so
# you only need to call it, if you need different behaviour.
# For EAPI < 2 src_compile runs also commands currently present in
# src_configure. Thus, if you're using an older EAPI, you need to copy them
# to your src_compile and drop the src_configure function.
#src_compile() {
	# emake (previously known as pmake) is a script that calls the
	# standard GNU make with parallel building options for speedier
	# builds (especially on SMP systems).  Try emake first.  It might
	# not work for some packages, because some makefiles have bugs
	# related to parallelism, in these cases, use emake -j1 to limit
	# make to a single process.  The -j1 is a visual clue to others
	# that the makefiles have bugs that have been worked around.

	#emake || die
#}

# The following src_install function is implemented as default by portage, so
# you only need to call it, if you need different behaviour.
# For EAPI < 4 src_install is just returing true, so you need to always specify
# this function in older EAPIs.
#src_install() {
	# You must *personally verify* that this trick doesn't install
	# anything outside of DESTDIR; do this by reading and
	# understanding the install part of the Makefiles.
	# This is the preferred way to install.
	#emake DESTDIR="${D}" install || die

	# When you hit a failure with emake, do not just use make. It is
	# better to fix the Makefiles to allow proper parallelization.
	# If you fail with that, use "emake -j1", it's still better than make.

	# For Makefiles that don't make proper use of DESTDIR, setting
	# prefix is often an alternative.  However if you do this, then
	# you also need to specify mandir and infodir, since they were
	# passed to ./configure as absolute paths (overriding the prefix
	# setting).
	#emake \
	#	prefix="${D}"/usr \
	#	mandir="${D}"/usr/share/man \
	#	infodir="${D}"/usr/share/info \
	#	libdir="${D}"/usr/$(get_libdir) \
	#	install || die
	# Again, verify the Makefiles!  We don't want anything falling
	# outside of ${D}.

	# The portage shortcut to the above command is simply:
	#
	#einstall || die
#}