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view net-misc/rabbitmq-server/rabbitmq-server-1.4.0.ebuild @ 58:92f35dfbf2b8
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author | holger@hoho.dyndns.org |
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date | Wed, 13 Aug 2008 20:56:04 +0200 |
parents | 11f27faa9896 |
children | 6a65c52cb465 |
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# Copyright 1999-2008 Gentoo Foundation # Distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License v2 # $Header: $ inherit eutils DESCRIPTION="RabbitMQ is a high-performance AMQP-compliant message broker written in Erlang." HOMEPAGE="http://www.rabbitmq.com/" SRC_URI="http://www.rabbitmq.com/releases/rabbitmq-server/v${PV}/rabbitmq-server-generic-unix-${PV}.tar.gz" LICENSE="MPL" SLOT="0" KEYWORDS="~alpha ~amd64 ~ppc ~ppc64 ~sparc ~x86" IUSE="" # HH: is RDEPEND-only sufficient for a binary package? DEPEND="dev-lang/erlang" 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}" src_compile() { # Most open-source packages use GNU autoconf for configuration. # The quickest (and preferred) way of running configure is: econf || die "econf failed" # # 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=${CHOST} \ # --prefix=/usr \ # --infodir=/usr/share/info \ # --mandir=/usr/share/man || die "./configure failed" # Note the use of --infodir and --mandir, above. This is to make # this package FHS 2.2-compliant. For more information, see # http://www.pathname.com/fhs/ # emake (previously known as pmake) is a script that calls the # standard GNU make with parallel building options for speedier # builds (especially on SMP systems). Try emake first. It might # not work for some packages, because some makefiles have bugs # related to parallelism, in these cases, use emake -j1 to limit # make to a single process. The -j1 is a visual clue to others # that the makefiles have bugs that have been worked around. emake || die "emake failed" } src_install() { # You must *personally verify* that this trick doesn't install # anything outside of DESTDIR; do this by reading and # understanding the install part of the Makefiles. # This is the preferred way to install. emake DESTDIR="${D}" install || die "emake install failed" # 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 "emake install failed" # Again, verify the Makefiles! We don't want anything falling # outside of ${D}. # The portage shortcut to the above command is simply: # #einstall || die "einstall failed" }