| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Fixed typo in darwin config
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Add an --enable-motif option, which will enable the Motif widgets in
libGLw and link it with libXm. The Motif installation information will
be gathered from the motif-config script (this comes with LessTif) or
fallback to the standard autoconf checks.
To allow the location of the Motif headers to be set from configure, the
default setting of -I/usr/include/Motif1.2 has been moved into
configs/default and then passed to the Makefile through the MOTIF_CFLAGS
variable.
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Respect the user's choice of shell when running mklib rather than always
using /bin/sh.
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Running minstall directly means that /bin/sh is always used as hte
interpreter. If the user needs or wants to use a different shell fo
minstall, they can use the SHELL make variable.
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Most make implementations will use /bin/sh as the interpreter for
commands and only use a different shell when the $(SHELL) make variable
is set. This makes the setting explicit and allows $(SHELL) to be used
in the commands themselves.
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Establish the shell that make will use from configure. This is exactly
how autoconf/automake operate, with the environment variable
CONFIG_SHELL respected to override the autoconf checks. In the usual
case where the user just executes `./configure', autoconf will pick a
shell from the current shell, sh, bash, ksh or sh5 that meets its base
criteria.
The special Solaris case of looking for a POSIX shell has been changed
to just set the SHELL variable since autoconf substitutes this already.
The EXTRA_CONFIG_LINES substitution is dropped as it should no longer be
needed.
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Currently the installation directories for libraries and headers are
resolved within the install commands. For instance, the libraries will
be installed to $(INSTALL_DIR)/$(LIB_DIR). This limits the flexibility
of the installation, such as when the libraries should be installed to a
subdirectory like /usr/lib/tls.
This adds the make variables $(INSTALL_LIB_DIR) and $(INSTALL_INC_DIR)
to define the locations that the libraries and headers are installed.
For the static configs, this resolves exactly as before to
$(INSTALL_DIR)/include and $(INSTALL_DIR)/$(LIB_DIR). For autoconf, they
are derived directly from the --libdir and --includedir settings.
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Signed-off-by: Brian Paul <[email protected]>
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Since the only valid consumer of the DRI drivers is the X.Org xserver,
this changes the default DRI driver directory to match xorg-server:
${libdir}/dri. The old default of /usr/X11R6/modules/dri was wrong for
nearly all current systems.
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Added the make script version.mk to print the various version numbers
from configs/default. This is used to substitute the version in autoconf
rather than duplicating it in both places.
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based on patch by Dan Nicholson <[email protected]>
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Since the autoconf config inherits from default, we don't need to
duplicate and substitute the MESA_* version numbers in configure.ac.
The version number is only needed in configure for the help text.
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Add DRI2 direct rendering support to libGL and add DRI2 client side
protocol code. Extend the GLX 1.3 create drawable functions in
glx_pbuffer.c to call into the DRI driver when possible.
Introduce __DRIconfig, opaque struct that represents a DRI driver
configuration. Get's rid of the open coded __GLcontextModes in the
DRI driver interface and the context modes create and destroy
functions that the loader was requires to provide. glcore.h is no
longer part of the DRI driver interface. The DRI config is GL binding
agnostic, that is, not specific to GLX, EGL or other bindings.
The core API is now also an extension, and the driver exports a list
of extensions as the symbol __driDriverExtensions, which the loader
must dlsym() for. The list of extension will always include the DRI
core extension, which allows creating and manipulating DRI screens,
drawables and contexts. The DRI legacy extension, when available,
provides alternative entry points for creating the DRI objects that
work with the XF86DRI infrastructure.
Change DRI2 client code to not use drm drawables or contexts. We
never used drm_drawable_t's and the only use for drm_context_t was as
a unique identifier when taking the lock. We now just allocate a
unique lock ID out of the DRILock sarea block. Once we get rid of the
lock entirely, we can drop this hack.
Change the interface between dri_util.c and the drivers, so that the
drivers now export the DriverAPI struct as driDriverAPI instead of the
InitScreen entry point. This lets us avoid dlsym()'ing for the DRI2
init screen function to see if DRI2 is supported by the driver.
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(cherry picked from commit a21c61ee8bc86a8843024cbf8e9daf4b39a7571a)
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Also added darwin-fat-32bit darwin-fat-all configs and deleted old darwin-x86ppc config
(cherry picked from commit 7120c0089d663a2b7e7b0c97da38f9bc233fbdd7)
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Windows/DOS users should enable core.autocrlf from now on:
git config --global core.autocrlf true
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Also, use -include to avoid error message when make initially fails to
include the non-existent depend file.
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darwin again
(cherry picked from commit e70609b7b877dc0d8e67c958c453305e78f831df)
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Put the path to indent and the flags to call it with in configs/default
rather than in the Makefile. This makes it easier to change the values
globally.
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Allow the user to specify that they want static libraries through the
--{enable,disable}-{static,shared} switches like libtool. The mesa build
only allows for one at a time, so static will be chosen if someone has
passed --enable-static or --disable-shared.
This also allows the mklib options to be set at build time. This allows
-static to be set for mklib, but any platform specific settings are
allowed by setting MKLIB_OPTIONS for configure.
Handling of the program libraries through the APP_LIB_DEPS variable is
pretty ugly, but it seems to work.
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Allow the user to specify channel bits of 16 or 32 to enable OSMesa16 or
OSMesa32 instead of the default OSMesa. This option is controlled
through the option --with-osmesa-bits=BITS and is only honored when the
driver is osmesa.
The osdemos are not enabled in the 16 or 32 bit case because the
Makefile is currently hardcoded to link to -lOSMesa.
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Added autoconf bits to allow using DRI as the driver through the option
--with-dri-driver=DRIVER. The options are x11 (default) and dri. Three
DRI specific options for controlling the driver directory, direct
rendering and TLS are also added.
The DRI will probably not work for platforms besides linux and freebsd.
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This adds the initial support for using autoconf configuration. Support
is available for shared Xlib driver builds. Later this will be extended
to dri and osmesa-only builds and possibly targetting non-X backends.
Support for static library builds will also be added.
The configure script fills in the autoconf config. This is then used by
running `make autoconf' after ./configure.
Testing has been done on Linux/GNU. The configure script tries to
faithfully reproduce the current configs/linux* and configs/freebsd*.
Other platforms can be handled later by adding similar statements and
feature tests.
Pkg-config is used to search for packages when possible. This makes the
build much more flexible and robust to the user's configuration. This
requires that the pkg-config autoconf macros pkg.m4 are included in
aclocal.m4. This requires autoconf and aclocal from autoconf and
automake, respectively.
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Most of the programs list their dependencies on the Mesa libraries in
their Makefiles. This works with the default configuration where
APP_LIB_DEPS only lists external libraries. This changes the
linux-osmesa configs and the osdemos Makefile to follow that convention.
Some cleanup of the Makefile is also added to refer to the GL libraries
through the existing variables rather than hardcoding their names.
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Linking of the programs breaks when using a static libGL and the GNU ld
option --as-needed. This is because libXext is needed for the XShm
functions.
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Use a GCC option to work around aliasing bugs. See commit 013dbcd for
more details.
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Quite a while ago, the GCC option -fexceptions was added for building
libglut. See here:
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.video.mesa3d.devel/9499
This was missing in the linux-dri targets.
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Mesa currently disables -fPIC for DRI on x86, but most Linux distros are
re-enabling -fPIC for all DRI arches. Let's just do that here since
that's normally what's wanted for shared libraries. Some justification:
http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=110840#c9
On the other hand, position-independent code is only necessary when
building shared libraries, so disable it for the static cases.
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Most Linux distros work around aliasing problems in Mesa by compiling
with the GCC option -fno-strict-aliasing. Two examples:
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=6046
http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=394311
This makes -fno-strict-aliasing the default with a comment that
developers should consider commenting it out. There is a already a note
about these bugs in docs/helpwanted.html.
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Since libglut is no longer hardcoded, we can build the xdemos programs
so long as a GLX enabled libGL and libGLU have been built.
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GL_LIB_DEPS was missing -lXdamage and -lXfixes, which was causing
linker errors when trying to build the programs.
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The linux-static target was missing necessary libraries and hardcoding
their location to /usr/X11R6/lib. This makes it comparable to the x86
and x86-64 static targets.
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