Currently the options array from a PKGBUILD is linted, but the global
BUILDENV and OPTIONS are not.
Fixes#233.
Signed-off-by: Allan McRae <allan@archlinux.org>
The check for the format of the PACKAGER variable did not align with the
rest of the function where it was located. Move to its own function.
Signed-off-by: Allan McRae <allan@archlinux.org>
We use NPROC for managing the number of parallel jobs to run, so it is
essentially that this is a valid number. Add a lint pass, and move the
setting of the default value to this location.
Signed-off-by: Allan McRae <allan@archlinux.org>
These variables must begin with .src.tar / .pkg.tar respectively, so
fail early if those expectations are not matched. This prevents makepkg
from creating e.g. package files literally named "./pacman-5.1.3-1-x86_64"
which are actually uncompressed tarballs.
Signed-off-by: Eli Schwartz <eschwartz@archlinux.org>
Signed-off-by: Allan McRae <allan@archlinux.org>
This can only ever be an int, and the specification states that a
malformed timestamp should be considered a fatal error.
https://reproducible-builds.org/specs/source-date-epoch/
Signed-off-by: Eli Schwartz <eschwartz@archlinux.org>
Signed-off-by: Allan McRae <allan@archlinux.org>
Provide both build systems in parallel for now, to ensure that we work
out all the differences between the two. Some time from now, we'll give
up on autotools.
Meson tends to be faster and probably easier to read/maintain. On my
machine, the full meson configure+build+install takes a little under
half as long as a similar autotools-based invocation.
Building with meson is a two step process. First, configure the build:
meson build
Then, compile the project:
ninja -C build
There's some mild differences in functionality between meson and
autotools. specifically:
1) No singular update-po target. meson only generates individual
update-po targets for each textdomain (of which we have 3). To make
this easier, there's a build-aux/update-po script which finds all
update-po targets and runs them.
2) No 'make dist' equivalent. Just run 'git archive' to generate a
suitable tarball for distribution.