* spell check * Prep for new README * Work on the new README * FHS notes added * tweaks * GLibC bootstrap subversion etc. * layers * not needed * work on layers * rename * layers work * rename multilib * rename again * more file renaming * stuff * link fixes etc. * cleaning up a bit * spell fixes etc. * nuke un-needed * fips note * spellfix * started TOS * ToC work
9.7 KiB
Non-Standard RPM Macros
RPM itself defines many macros and there are several other macros that are non defined by RPM but are considered ‘defacto-standard’ such as some of the python macros.
When using non-standard macros that are defined outside of an RPM spec file, the RPM spec file must accommodate building when and where that macro is not defined.
The following non-standard macros are being used by YJL.
- The
%dist
macro - The
%repo
macro - The
%insinfo
macro - The
%runtests
macro - The
%libresslAPI
macro - The
%cpuoptimize
macro - Perl Specific Macros
- TODO --- Python Custom Macros
The %dist
macro
Most distributions use this so it could be considered a ‘defacto-standard’ but it still is better to not assume it is present.
YJL (and most distributions) use it at the end of the RPM Release:
tag definition to give a string identifier of the distribution the RPM
package was built for.
The only place this macro should be used is at the end of the Release:
tag definition (with one exception) and when defined, it should be be
defined within the distribution specific macro definitions of the RPM
package. It must start with a .
and must not end with a .
or
else the package Release
metadata will be broken.
When used in an RPM spec file it must be of the form %{?dist}
so
that it expands to a zero-length string if not defined.
The %repo
macro
To the best of my limited knowledge, no other distribution uses this tag.
YLJ uses it to define which package repository within YJL the package was built for, and also uses it for conditional features depending upon which package repository it is being built for.
See the Repository-Macro for more information.
It is most commonly used at the beginning of a RPM Release:
tag
definition and when used in RPM Release:
tag, it must be used at
the very beginning of the Release:
tag definition.
When defined, it must start with a positive integer followed by a
.
followed by a string that defines the repository the package is
being built for. It must end in a .
or else the package Release:
metadata will be broken.
When used within the RPM Release:
tag definition it must be of the
form %{?repo}
so that it expands to a zero-length string if not
defined.
Using %repo
for Condition Features
When the %repo
macro is used outside of the RPM Release:
tag, it
must also be used inside the Release:
tag as described above.
When the %repo
macro is used for conditional building, you must
define a spec-file specific macro for the actual condition and set it
to a reasonable default.
Then you can test to see if %repo
is defined and if defined, use
string comparisons to change your spec file defined conditional macro.
An example from the gcc.spec file:
# buildlevel 0 is just c,c++,ada,d -- the languages
# that always should be built because they are required
# to build themselves.
# buildlevel 1 adds fortran,go,objc,obj-c++
%global buildlevel 1
%if %{?repo:1}%{!?repo:0}
%if "%{repo}" == "1.core."
%global buildlevel 0
%endif
%endif
In that example, the %buildlevel
is the spec-file specific macro and
it defaults to a definition of 1
.
If the %repo
macro is defined, then it checks to see if it is defined
to the string 1.core.
and if it is defined as such, the %buildlevel
macro is redefined to a value of 0
.
By doing this, the spec file remains mostly portable to build in a different GNU/Linux distribution. A user who needs the package in a distribution that does not provide it can rebuild the source RPM and may not need to manually edit the spec file at all unless they need conditionals other than the default.
The %insinfo
macro
Many GNU/Linux distributions have the install-info
command installed
at either /sbin/install-info
or at /usr/sbin/install-info
. I
believe that is wrong because users may have a valid reason to need
the command outside the context of system documentation administration,
but it is what it is.
Unfortunately there does not seem to be a RPM standard macro that
defines the location of the install-info
command, so to maintain at
least partial portability of spec files written for YJL, I created
the %insinfo
macro that in YJL expands to /usr/bin/install-info
and when that macro is used, the spec file must have the following
fallback to define it if not defined:
%if %{!?insinfo:1}%{?insinfo:0}
%global insinfo /sbin/install-info
%endif
On YJL the macro is defined so the fall-back is not used, but where
the macro is not defined, the fallback then defines %insinfo
to
/sbin/install-info
which will at least be correct for some systems.
When a package installs .info
files, the %insinfo
macro must be
used in the %post
scriptlet to add the info file to the info database
and %insinfo --delete
must be used in the %preun
scriptlet to
remove the file from the info database when the package is deleted
and not just being updated.
The code block above must be used to define the %insinfo
macro on
systems where it is not defined by default.
The %runtests
macro
The test suite in some packages takes a very long time to complete.
For such packages, the packager may optionally use the presence of a
defined %runtests
macro to determine whether or not to actually run
the test suite.
If the %runtests
macro is set, regardless of what it is set to, then
in spec files with conditional testing any test dependency packages
needed to run the tests (such as DejaGnu or Valgrind) must
be triggered as BuildRequires
and the test suite runs.
On the other hand if %runtests
is not defined, then any BuildRequires
that are only needed for the test suite should not be required and
the test suite does not run.
With most packages, tests are fast enough that they just should always be run.
The %libresslAPI
macro
Packages the require the OpenSSL API but can build against LibreSSL are
built against LibreSSL however to keep the RPM spec file portable to
other GNU/Linux distributions that likely do not have libressl-devel
.
YJL defines the %libresslAPI
macro so that during package build time,
the RPM spec file can use it as a Boolean (either defined or not) to
determine whether it should build require libressl-devel
or openssl-devel
.
Example:
%if 0%{?libresslAPI:1} == 1
BuildRequires: libressl-devel
%else
BuildRequires: openssl-devel
%endif
The %cpuoptimize
macro
There are some packages that can be optimized for the specific CPU they are being built for.
In such cases, the default build of the package must be without the optimization so that the package will run regardless of the CPU specific capabilities.
However the user should have the ability to rebuild the source RPM and benefit from those optimizations if they so choose.
In YJL this is accomplished with the %cpuoptimize
macro.
The Release:
metadata tag
When a spec file offers CPU specific optimization, the RPM Release:
metadata tag must have %{?cpuoptimize}
at the very end of the
tag directly after the %{?dist}
tag.
If the %cpuoptimize
macro is not defined, then %{?cpuoptimize}
will expand to a zero-length string. When it is defined then the RPM
package name itself indicates it is a CPU optimized package that should
only be installed on that a CPU with the specific capabilities the
build is optimized for.
As the %cpuoptimize
macro is used at the end of the Release:
tag,
when defined it must begin with a .
and must not end with a .
or the Release:
metadata will be broken.
Package Build Optimization
In cases where the RPM spec file has to take specific action to build a generic package, use the following:
%if 0%{!?cpuoptimize:1} == 1
[do stuff]
%endif
An example of that scenario can be seen in the [gmp.spec](SPECS/gmp.spec]
file, where the action takes place during %setup
.
In cases where the RPM spec file has to take specific action to build an optimized package, use the following:
%if 0%{?cpuoptimize:1} == 1
[do stuff]
%endif
Defining the %cpuoptimize
macro
For packages like GMP where the build script itself determines the
proper optimizations to make, it does not really matter what the macro
is defined to be as long as it begins with a .
, does not end with a
.
, and otherwise only contains characters legal in an RPM Release:
metadata tag.
Currently in my ~/.rpmmacros
file I have the following:
%cpuoptimize .xeonE3
However there may be optimizations where the build scripts (e.g.
configure
) has to be specifically told what optimizations to make.
It may be necessary to develop a standard list of valid %cpuoptimize
definitions to deal with cases where the build scripts have to be told
how to optimize the package.
At present, there are no plans to distribute CPU optimized packages. I do however desire to make it easy for the user to just rebuild a source package and get such optimization.
CPU Optimized Kernel
Linux kernel optimization is not done within the RPM spec file itself
but is performed during make config
. Kernel packages should not use
this macro tag.
Perl Specific Macros
For Perl, see Perl Modules
TODO --- Python Custom Macros
Will add when I upload the python3.spec
and python2.spec
RPM spec
files.