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cygport is the standard method for building and maintaining packages for the Cygwin distribution. 1. BACKGROUND In the past, the sanctioned way of building a Cygwin package was by using a build script, the template for which is commonly known as the generic-build-script, or g-b-s[2]. However, the g-b-s has many drawbacks: 1) Even the simplest changes, such as adding an argument to configure, requires wading through the entire 500+ line script; many beginners have struggled with their first packages. 2) Having a history as a ash script, it is nearly impossible to read, with run-on commands, && continuations, and backslash-escaped line breaks. 3) It is aimed primarily at autotooled packages, and adapting it to other packaging systems (e.g. perl MakeMaker, python Distutils, stand-alone Makefiles, etc.) requires having several "branches" of the script for each purpose. 4) Updating to a newer script requires either merging package-specific changes into a new template (and not forgetting anything), or back-porting g-b-s changes into an existing package script. 5) There is no simple method of dealing with an original source package whose name or top directory do not conform with the PKGNAME-VERSION form, or where the Cygwin package name differs from the upstream name (e.g. gtk2.0 from gtk+). 6) It is not designed to create more than one binary package per source package -- e.g. whereby the foo source is separated into foo, libfoo1, and libfoo-devel binary packages -- despite the fact that is often desirable to do so. Having used the g-b-s in various forms for a couple of years, during which I've packaged hundreds of unique source packages (not counting versions), I have found various ways of 'getting by'. I forked the g-b-s a while back, and created a few templates for various purposes. This solution, however, is still severely limiting, as mentioned above. In the meantime, I also had exposure to a Linux distribution and its packaging system, namely Gentoo Linux and Portage. Being a source-based distribution, the entire packaging database consists of a collection of scripts (ebuilds), which contain basic information about the package, and the steps necessary to compile and install (into a DESTDIR) the package. With the repository available through WebCVS, it is indeed an invaluable resource to anyone building a non-trivial package from scratch. In fact, Portage answers many of the drawbacks of the g-b-s: 1) Ebuilds are small, containing only package-specific information, making them easy to read, and even to create with little effort. 2) Ebuilds are written in a clean bash syntax. 3) The Eclass system allows ebuilds to be easily extended to any number of different build systems (Perl, Python, Ruby, etc.) and/or categorical templates (e.g. GNOME or KDE). 4) Updates to Portage take affect immediately, without updating all ebuilds, and ebuilds can be created without even looking at the internals of Portage itself. 5) Ebuilds anyway define the source package name, and can easily override the assumed source top directory when necessary. Despite it's advantages, implementing Portage on Cygwin is impractical, because: 1) Portage is primarily a package management system, while Cygwin already uses setup.exe, and is impractical to use just for building packages. 2) Portage is mainly Linux/BSD specific in a number of ways which would not work for Cygwin, based on its Win32 limitations (such as replacing in-use files). 3) There is no way to create multiple binary packages from a single source package, without building the source multiple times. 4) Most importantly, setup.exe provides a GUI which makes installation easier for the uninitiated. (It should be noted that, there were renewed attempts to run Portage on Cygwin, and this was ITP'd and rejected[3] in 2006. And, the project "Gentoo on Cygwin", which contains Portage, is unmaintained as of 2008. But, there is another project "Gentoo Prefix on Cygwin", as of 2020. It's a try to run well-maintained "Gentoo Prefix" sources on Cygwin[4].) 2. CONCEPT The conclusion, therefore, was that a compromise was required: take the g-b-s, and separate the package-specific (Ebuild) and package-independent (Portage) sections into two parts. The package-independent sections would become the build system, into which the package-specific information would be fed to create a package. The package-independent system could then be cleaned up and expanded without affecting package-specific information. From this idea, cygport was created. The cygport build system contains all the package-independent functions of the g-b-s, rewritten in a modern, easy-to-read bash syntax. It provides commonly-used build-time functions for the package .cygport files, which contain only the compiling, testing, and installation instructions. In addition, cygport is modularized. Support for various build systems is provided through separate cygclasses, which are 'inherit'ed by the package .cygport as necessary. The public functions and syntax (those used by a package .cygport) are closer to those of Portage then of the g-b-s (it is extremely unlikely, however, that a Gentoo ebuild will work as a .cygport with a simple rename); internal syntax is still, to some degree, similar to the g-b-s. 3. USAGE Similar to a g-b-s source package, a cygport-generated -src tarball will contain the package .cygport, one or two patchfiles, and the original source package, for example: foo-2.3.7.tar.gz foo2.cygport foo2-2.3.7-1.cygwin.patch foo2-2.3.7-1.src.patch (will be absent if package builds OOTB) GPG .sig files for any of the above may be present as well. All these files must remain in the same directory. The general format of a cygport command is: cygport CYGPORT_FILE COMMAND [COMMAND2] The first argument is the (relative or absolute) path to the .cygport file to be processed. All other arguments are interpreted as a COMMAND, which may be: prep - create working directory, unpack the source and apply patches compile - run all compilation steps test - run the package's test suite, if one exists install - install into a DESTDIR, and run post-installation steps package - create binary and source packages upload - upload finished packages to cygwin.com finish - delete the working directory all - run prep, compile, install and package Other COMMANDs are meant primarily for maintainers: fetch - download any missing upstream sources fetchall - download any all upstream sources check - run the testsuite postinst - re-run post-installation steps list - create a file listing suitable for the Cygwin README deps - list direct dependencies of all executables info - show a summary of package information diff - write a patch file capturing changes to source in the working directory stage - as upload, but don't request processing of uploaded packages announce - compose and send a package announcement repro-build - rebuild from created source package to temp directory repro-diff - check whether packages from original and rebuild differ repro-check - run repro-build and repro-diff repro-finish - delete the temp directory used for rebuild The standard arguments --help or --version may also be passed to cygport. 4. CREATING A CYGPORT PACKAGE See the data/sample.cygport file, included in the Cygwin package in ${prefix}/share/cygport, for a simple example. Many more examples are available in the Cygwin package git repositories[5]. Please see the Cygport Reference Manual, included with this package, for documentation on the cygport API. A Cygwin README file may be included in the CYGWIN-PATCHES directory, named README. A standard template for this purpose is available from the Cygwin distribution website[2]. If .hint file auto-generation isn't being used, setup.hint files may also be included in CYGWIN-PATCHES. Custom postinstall and preremove commands may be included in the CYGWIN-PATCHES directory as postinstall.sh and preremove.sh; these scripts should be written as stubs, without the shebang header. 5. REQUIREMENTS The following packages are required to build packages with cygport, in addition to the packages own dependencies: cygwin autoconf (wrapper) and autoconf2.* automake (wrapper) and automake1.* bash binutils bzip2 coreutils diffstat diffutils dos2unix file gawk grep gzip lftp libtool lndir make openssh patch rsync sed tar unzip util-linux wget which xz 6. DOWNLOAD AND INSTALLATION Cygwin binary and source packages of cygport are available as part of the Cygwin distribution, under the 'Devel' category. Installing cygport with setup.exe will automatically install all mandatory dependencies. cygport is hosted on Git. Those interested in helping with cygport development, or testing the newest features should use branch 'master'. The sources and history can be browsed at either: https://cygwin.com/git/gitweb.cgi?p=cygwin-apps/cygport.git https://github.com/cygwin/cygport Patches for cygport should be created through 'git format-patch' and based on the 'master' branch. The source repository can be cloned from: https://cygwin.com/git/cygwin-apps/cygport.git https://github.com/cygwin/cygport.git To build cygport from git, meson and ninja are required. The following packages are required for the documentation: groff, help2man, and robodoc. The testsuite will use a number of packages if they are present; at a minimum, you should have git-archive-all for the bootstrap test. 7. SUPPORT Discussion on cygport should occur on the Cygwin-apps list <[email protected]>. Do NOT, for any reason, email the author directly. [1] https://www.cygwin.com/ [2] https://cygwin.com/setup-packaging-historical.html Method Two [3] https://sourceware.org/legacy-ml/cygwin-apps/2006-03/msg00000.html [4] https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Prefix/Cygwin [5] https://cygwin.com/git-cygwin-packages/
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