kumquat-buildroot/docs/manual/adding-packages-luarocks.txt
Thomas De Schampheleire 86a415df8a manual: use one-line titles instead of two-line titles (trivial)
Asciidoc supports two syntaxes for section titles: two-line titles (title
plus underline consisting of a particular symbol), and one-line titles
(title prefixed with a specific number of = signs).

The two-line title underlines are:
Level 0 (top level):     ======================
Level 1:                 ----------------------
Level 2:                 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Level 3:                 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Level 4 (bottom level):  ++++++++++++++++++++++

and the one-line title prefixes:
= Document Title (level 0) =
== Section title (level 1) ==

=== Section title (level 2) ===
==== Section title (level 3) ====
===== Section title (level 4) =====

The buildroot manual is currenly using the two-line titles, but this has
multiple disadvantages:

- asciidoc also uses some of the underline symbols for other purposes (like
  preformatted code, example blocks, ...), which makes it difficult to do
  mass replacements, such as a planned follow-up patch that needs to move
  all sections one level down.

- it is difficult to remember which level a given underline symbol (=-~^+)
  corresponds to, while counting = signs is easy.

This patch changes all two-level titles to one-level titles in the manual.
The bulk of the change was done with the following Python script, except for
the level 1 titles (-----) as these underlines are also used for literal
code blocks.
This patch only changes the titles, no other changes. In
adding-packages-directory.txt, I did add missing newlines between some
titles and their content.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#!/usr/bin/env python

import sys
import mmap
import re

for input in sys.argv[1:]:

    f = open(input, 'r+')
    f.flush()
    s = mmap.mmap(f.fileno(), 0)

    # Level 0 (top level):     ======================   =
    # Level 1:                 ----------------------   ==
    # Level 2:                 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~   ===
    # Level 3:                 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^   ====
    # Level 4 (bottom level):  ++++++++++++++++++++++   =====

    def replace_title(s, symbol, replacement):
        pattern = re.compile(r'(.+\n)\%s{2,}\n' % symbol, re.MULTILINE)
        return pattern.sub(r'%s \1' % replacement, s)

    new = s
    new = replace_title(new, '=', '=')
    new = replace_title(new, '+', '=====')
    new = replace_title(new, '^', '====')
    new = replace_title(new, '~', '===')
    #new = replace_title(new, '-', '==')

    s.seek(0)
    s.write(new)
    s.resize(s.tell())
    s.close()
    f.close()

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de.schampheleire@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
2014-05-02 10:27:59 +02:00

91 lines
3.3 KiB
Plaintext

// -*- mode:doc; -*-
// vim: set syntax=asciidoc:
=== Infrastructure for LuaRocks-based packages
[[luarocks-package-tutorial]]
==== +luarocks-package+ tutorial
First, let's see how to write a +.mk+ file for a LuaRocks-based package,
with an example :
------------------------
01: ################################################################################
02: #
03: # luafoo
04: #
05: ################################################################################
06:
07: LUAFOO_VERSION = 1.0.2-1
08: LUAFOO_DEPENDENCIES = foo
09:
10: LUAFOO_BUILD_OPT += FOO_INCDIR=$(STAGING_DIR)/usr/include
11: LUAFOO_BUILD_OPT += FOO_LIBDIR=$(STAGING_DIR)/usr/lib
12: LUAFOO_LICENSE = luaFoo license
13: LUAFOO_LICENSE_FILES = COPYING
14:
15: $(eval $(luarocks-package))
------------------------
On line 7, we declare the version of the package (the same as in the rockspec,
which is the concatenation of the upstream version and the rockspec revision,
separated by a hyphen '-').
On line 8, we declare our dependencies against native libraries, so that they
are built before the build process of our package starts.
On lines 10-11, we tell Buildroot to pass custom options to LuaRocks when it is
building the package.
On lines 12-13, we specify the licensing terms for the package.
Finally, on line 15, we invoke the +luarocks-package+
macro that generates all the Makefile rules that actually allows the
package to be built.
[[luarocks-package-reference]]
==== +luarocks-package+ reference
LuaRocks is a deployment and management system for Lua modules, and supports
various +build.type+: +builtin+, +make+ and +cmake+. In the contetx of
Buildroot, the +luarocks-package+ infrastructure only supports the +builtin+
mode. LuaRocks packages that use the +make+ or +cmake+ build mechanisms
should instead be packaged using the +generic-package+ and +cmake-package+
infrastructures in Buildroot, respectively.
The main macro of the LuaRocks package infrastructure is +luarocks-package+:
like +generic-package+ it works by defining a number of variables providing
meta informations about the package, and then calling +luarocks-package+. It
is worth mentioning that building LuaRocks packages for the host is not
supported, so the macro +host-luarocks-package+ is not implemented.
Just like the generic infrastructure, the LuaRocks infrastructure works
by defining a number of variables before calling the +luarocks-package+
macro.
First, all the package metadata information variables that exist in
the generic infrastructure also exist in the LuaRocks infrastructure:
+LUAFOO_VERSION+, +LUAFOO_SOURCE+, +LUAFOO_SITE+,
+LUAFOO_DEPENDENCIES+, +LUAFOO_LICENSE+, +LUAFOO_LICENSE_FILES+.
Two of them are populated by the LuaRocks infrastructure (for the
+download+ step). If your package is not hosted on the LuaRocks mirror
+$(BR2_LUAROCKS_MIRROR)+, you can override them:
* +LUAFOO_SITE+, which defaults to +$(BR2_LUAROCKS_MIRROR)+
* +LUAFOO_SOURCE+, which defaults to +luafoo-$(LUAFOO_VERSION).src.rock+
A few additional variables, specific to the LuaRocks infrastructure, are
also defined. They can be overridden in specific cases.
* +LUAFOO_ROCKSPEC+, which defaults to +luafoo-$(LUAFOO_VERSION).rockspec+
* +LUAFOO_SUBDIR+, which defaults to
+luafoo-$(LUAFOO_VERSION_WITHOUT_ROCKSPEC_REVISION)+
* +LUAFOO_BUILD_OPT+ contains additional build options for the
+luarocks build+ call.