asterisk/third-party/pjproject/Makefile

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build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
.PHONY: _all all _install install clean distclean echo_cflags configure
.NOTPARALLEL:
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
include ../versions.mak
export PJDIR := $(shell pwd -P)/source
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
SPECIAL_TARGETS :=
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
ifneq ($(findstring configure,$(MAKECMDGOALS))$(findstring echo_cflags,$(MAKECMDGOALS)),)
# Run from $(ASTTOPDIR)/configure
SPECIAL_TARGETS += configure
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
endif
ifeq ($(findstring echo_cflags,$(MAKECMDGOALS)),echo_cflags)
-include build.mak
ECHO_PREFIX=@\#
endif
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
ifeq ($(findstring clean,$(MAKECMDGOALS)),clean)
# clean or distclean
SPECIAL_TARGETS += clean
endif
ifeq ($(findstring uninstall,$(MAKECMDGOALS)),uninstall)
SPECIAL_TARGETS += uninstall
endif
ifneq ($(wildcard ../../makeopts),)
include ../../makeopts
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
endif
TARGETS = build.mak
ifeq ($(SPECIAL_TARGETS),)
# Run locally or from $(ASTTOPDIR)/Makefile. All include files should be present
ifeq ($(wildcard ../../makeopts),)
$(error ASTTOPDIR/configure hasn't been run)
endif
ifeq ($(PJPROJECT_BUNDLED),yes)
ifneq ($(wildcard ../../menuselect.makeopts),)
include ../../menuselect.makeopts
else
$(warning ASTTOPDIR/menuselect hasn't been run yet. Can't find debug options.)
endif
all: _all
install: _install
include source/user.mak
include source/version.mak
include source/build.mak
CF := $(filter-out -W%,$(CC_CFLAGS))
CF := $(filter-out -I%,$(CF))
ifeq ($(findstring TEST_FRAMEWORK,$(MENUSELECT_CFLAGS)),TEST_FRAMEWORK)
apps := source/pjsip-apps/bin/pjsua-$(TARGET_NAME) source/pjsip-apps/bin/pjsystest-$(TARGET_NAME)
TARGETS += $(apps)
ifneq ($(PYTHONDEV_LIB),)
TARGETS += source/pjsip-apps/src/python/_pjsua.so
endif
endif
ifeq ($(AST_DEVMODE),yes)
CF += -DPJPROJECT_BUNDLED_ASSERTIONS=yes
endif
ifeq ($(findstring MALLOC_DEBUG,$(MENUSELECT_CFLAGS)),MALLOC_DEBUG)
CF += -DMALLOC_DEBUG
MALLOC_DEBUG_LIBS = source/pjsip-apps/lib/libasterisk_malloc_debug.a
MALLOC_DEBUG_LDFLAGS = -L$(PJDIR)/pjsip-apps/lib -Wl,-whole-archive -lasterisk_malloc_debug -Wl,-no-whole-archive
endif
ifeq ($(findstring DONT_OPTIMIZE,$(MENUSELECT_CFLAGS)),)
CF += -O3
endif
export CFLAGS += $(CF) -g3
export LDFLAGS += $(CC_LDFLAGS)
TARGETS += pjproject.symbols
else
all install:
endif
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
endif
include ../../Makefile.rules
include ../Makefile.rules
include Makefile.rules
ECHO_PREFIX := $(ECHO_PREFIX) echo '[pjproject] '
SHELL_ECHO_PREFIX := echo '[pjproject] '
_all: $(TARGETS)
define tarball_exists
(if [ -f $(TARBALL) -a -f $(PJMD5SUM) ] ; then exit 0 ;\
else exit 1; fi; )
endef
define verify_tarball
($(SHELL_ECHO_PREFIX) Verifying $(TARBALL) &&\
tarball_sum=$$($(CAT) $(TARBALL) | $(MD5) | $(SED) -n -r -e "s/^([^ ]+)\s+.*/\1/gp") ;\
required_sum=$$($(SED) -n -r -e "s/^([^ ]+)\s+$(TARBALL_FILE)/\1/gp" $(PJMD5SUM)) ;\
if [ "$$tarball_sum" != "$$required_sum" ] ; then $(SHELL_ECHO_PREFIX) Verify failed ; exit 1 ;\
else $(SHELL_ECHO_PREFIX) Verify successful ; exit 0 ; fi; )
endef
define download_from_pjproject
($(SHELL_ECHO_PREFIX) Downloading $(TARBALL_URL) to $(TARBALL) ;\
$(DOWNLOAD_TO_STDOUT) $(call DOWNLOAD_TIMEOUT,5,60) $(TARBALL_URL) > $(TARBALL) &&\
$(SHELL_ECHO_PREFIX) Downloading $(PJPROJECT_URL)/MD5SUM.TXT to $(PJMD5SUM) &&\
$(DOWNLOAD_TO_STDOUT) $(call DOWNLOAD_TIMEOUT,5,60) $(PJPROJECT_URL)/MD5SUM.TXT > $(PJMD5SUM) &&\
$(verify_tarball))
endef
.DELETE_ON_ERROR:
DOWNLOAD_DIR := $(or $(EXTERNALS_CACHE_DIR),$(TMPDIR),$(wildcard /tmp),.)
TARBALL_FILE = pjproject-$(PJPROJECT_VERSION).tar.bz2
TARBALL = $(DOWNLOAD_DIR)/$(TARBALL_FILE)
TARBALL_URL = $(PJPROJECT_URL)/$(TARBALL_FILE)
PJMD5SUM = $(patsubst %.tar.bz2,%.md5,$(TARBALL))
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
$(TARBALL): ../versions.mak
$(CMD_PREFIX) ($(tarball_exists) && $(verify_tarball) && touch $@) || (rm -rf $@ ;\
$(download_from_pjproject)) || (rm -rf $@ ;\
$(SHELL_ECHO_PREFIX) Retrying download ; $(download_from_pjproject))
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
source/.unpacked: $(DOWNLOAD_DIR)/pjproject-$(PJPROJECT_VERSION).tar.bz2
$(CMD_PREFIX) $(verify_tarball) || (rm -rf $@ ;\
$(SHELL_ECHO_PREFIX) Retrying download ; $(download_from_pjproject))
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
$(ECHO_PREFIX) Unpacking $<
-@rm -rf source pjproject-* >/dev/null 2>&1
$(CMD_PREFIX) $(TAR) -xjf $<
@mv pjproject-$(PJPROJECT_VERSION) source
$(ECHO_PREFIX) Applying patches
$(CMD_PREFIX) ./apply_patches $(QUIET_CONFIGURE) patches source
-@touch source/.unpacked
source/version.mak: source/.unpacked
source/user.mak: source/.unpacked patches/user.mak
$(ECHO_PREFIX) Applying user.mak
$(CMD_PREFIX) cp -f patches/user.mak source/
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
source/pjlib/include/pj/%.h: patches/%.h
$(ECHO_PREFIX) Applying custom include file $<
$(CMD_PREFIX) cp -f $< source/pjlib/include/pj/
.rebuild_needed: $(wildcard ../../.lastclean)
$(ECHO_PREFIX) Rebuilding
$(CMD_PREFIX) $(MAKE) clean $(REALLY_QUIET)
source/build.mak: Makefile.rules source/version.mak source/user.mak $(addprefix source/pjlib/include/pj/,$(notdir $(wildcard patches/*.h))) .rebuild_needed
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
$(ECHO_PREFIX) Configuring with $(PJPROJECT_CONFIG_OPTS)
$(CMD_PREFIX) (cd source ; ./aconfigure $(QUIET_CONFIGURE) $(PJPROJECT_CONFIG_OPTS))
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
build.mak: source/build.mak
$(CMD_PREFIX) $(SED) -r -e "/prefix|export PJ_SHARED_LIBRARIES|MACHINE_NAME|OS_NAME|HOST_NAME|CC_NAME|CROSS_COMPILE|LINUX_POLL/d" source/build.mak > build.mak
configure: source/build.mak
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
echo_cflags: source/build.mak
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
@echo $(PJ_CFLAGS)
libpj%.a: source/build.mak
$(ECHO_PREFIX) Compiling lib $(@F)
$(CMD_PREFIX) $(MAKE) -C $(dir $(shell dirname $@))/build $(@F) $(REALLY_QUIET)
# pjsua needs resample and g711 to successfully run the testsuite
libresample%.a: source/build.mak
$(ECHO_PREFIX) Compiling lib $(@F)
$(CMD_PREFIX) $(MAKE) -C $(dir $(shell dirname $@))/build/resample all $(REALLY_QUIET)
# We need to compile pjlib, then pjlib-util, then the rest
# so we separate them out and create the dependencies
PJLIB_LIB_FILES = $(foreach lib,$(PJ_LIB_FILES),$(if $(findstring libpj-,$(lib)),$(lib),))
PJLIB_UTIL_LIB_FILES = $(foreach lib,$(PJ_LIB_FILES),$(if $(findstring libpjlib-util,$(lib)),$(lib),))
PJSIP_LIB_FILES = $(filter-out $(PJLIB_LIB_FILES) $(PJLIB_UTIL_LIB_FILES) $(APP_THIRD_PARTY_LIB_FILES),$(PJ_LIB_FILES))
ALL_LIB_FILES = $(PJLIB_LIB_FILES) $(PJLIB_UTIL_LIB_FILES) $(PJSIP_LIB_FILES)
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
$(PJLIB_UTIL_LIB_FILES): $(PJLIB_LIB_FILES)
$(PJSIP_LIB_FILES): $(PJLIB_UTIL_LIB_FILES)
pjproject.symbols: $(ALL_LIB_FILES)
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
$(ECHO_PREFIX) Generating symbols
$(CMD_PREFIX) $(NM) -Pog $(ALL_LIB_FILES) | $(SED) -n -r -e "s/.+: ([pP][jJ][^ ]+) .+/\1/gp" | sort -u > pjproject.symbols
source/pjsip-apps/src/asterisk_malloc_debug.c: patches/asterisk_malloc_debug.c
$(ECHO_PREFIX) Copying $< to $@
$(CMD_PREFIX) cp -f $< $@
source/pjsip-apps/lib/asterisk_malloc_debug.o: source/pjsip-apps/src/asterisk_malloc_debug.c .rebuild_needed
$(ECHO_PREFIX) Compiling asterisk debug malloc stubs
$(CMD_PREFIX) $(CC) -fPIC $(PJ_CFLAGS) -c $< -o $@
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
source/pjsip-apps/lib/libasterisk_malloc_debug.a: source/pjsip-apps/lib/asterisk_malloc_debug.o
$(ECHO_PREFIX) Creating archive $(@F)
$(CMD_PREFIX) ar qs $@ $< >/dev/null 2>&1
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
$(apps): APP = $(filter pj%,$(subst -, ,$(notdir $@)))
$(apps): LDFLAGS += $(MALLOC_DEBUG_LDFLAGS)
$(apps): $(MALLOC_DEBUG_LIBS) pjproject.symbols $(APP_THIRD_PARTY_LIB_FILES)
$(ECHO_PREFIX) Compiling $(APP)
$(CMD_PREFIX) +$(MAKE) -C source/pjsip-apps/build $(filter pj%,$(subst -, ,$(notdir $@))) $(REALLY_QUIET)
source/pjsip-apps/src/python/_pjsua.o: source/pjsip-apps/src/python/_pjsua.c $(apps)
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
$(ECHO_PREFIX) Compiling python bindings
$(CMD_PREFIX) $(CC) -o $@ -c $< $(PYTHONDEV_INCLUDE) $(CFLAGS) $(PJ_CFLAGS)
source/pjsip-apps/src/python/_pjsua.so: LDFLAGS += $(MALLOC_DEBUG_LDFLAGS)
source/pjsip-apps/src/python/_pjsua.so: source/pjsip-apps/src/python/_pjsua.o
$(ECHO_PREFIX) Linking python bindings $(@F)
$(CMD_PREFIX) gcc -shared -pthread -o $@ $< $(LDFLAGS) $(PJ_LDFLAGS) $(APP_LDLIBS) $(PYTHONDEV_LIB) $(REALLY_QUIET)
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
_install: _all
@if [ ! -d "$(DESTDIR)$(ASTDATADIR)/third-party/pjproject" ]; then \
$(INSTALL) -d "$(DESTDIR)$(ASTDATADIR)/third-party/pjproject"; \
fi;
ifneq ($(findstring source/pjsip-apps/bin/pjsua-$(TARGET_NAME),$(TARGETS)),)
$(ECHO_PREFIX) Installing apps
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
$(CMD_PREFIX) $(INSTALL) -m 755 source/pjsip-apps/bin/pjsua-$(TARGET_NAME) "$(DESTDIR)$(ASTDATADIR)/third-party/pjproject/pjsua"
$(CMD_PREFIX) $(INSTALL) -m 755 source/pjsip-apps/bin/pjsystest-$(TARGET_NAME) "$(DESTDIR)$(ASTDATADIR)/third-party/pjproject/pjsystest"
endif
ifneq ($(findstring _pjsua.so,$(TARGETS)),)
$(ECHO_PREFIX) Installing python bindings
$(CMD_PREFIX) $(INSTALL) -m 755 source/pjsip-apps/src/python/_pjsua.so "$(DESTDIR)$(ASTDATADIR)/third-party/pjproject/"
$(CMD_PREFIX) $(INSTALL) -m 644 source/pjsip-apps/src/python/pjsua.py "$(DESTDIR)$(ASTDATADIR)/third-party/pjproject/"
endif
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
uninstall:
$(ECHO_PREFIX) Uninstalling apps and python bindings
$(CMD_PREFIX) rm -rf "$(DESTDIR)$(ASTDATADIR)/third-party/pjproject"
clean:
$(ECHO_PREFIX) Cleaning
+-$(CMD_PREFIX) test -d source && ($(SUBMAKE) -C source clean || : ;\
rm -rf source/pjsip-apps/bin/* || : ;\
find source -name *.a | xargs rm -rf ;\
find source -name *.o | xargs rm -rf ;\
find source -name *.so | xargs rm -rf ; ) || :
build-system: Allow building with static pjproject Background here: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-January/075266.html From CHANGES: * To help insure that Asterisk is compiled and run with the same known version of pjproject, a new option (--with-pjproject-bundled) has been added to ./configure. When specified, the version of pjproject specified in third-party/versions.mak will be downloaded and configured. When you make Asterisk, the build process will also automatically build pjproject and Asterisk will be statically linked to it. Once a particular version of pjproject is configured and built, it won't be configured or built again unless you run a 'make distclean'. To facilitate testing, when 'make install' is run, the pjsua and pjsystest utilities and the pjproject python bindings will be installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. The default behavior remains building with the shared pjproject installation, if any. Building: All you have to do is include the --with-pjproject-bundled option on the ./configure command line (and remove any existing --with-pjproject option if specified). Everything else is automatic. Behind the scenes: The top-level Makefile was modified to include 'third-party' in the list of MOD_SUBDIRS. The third-party directory was created to contain any third party packages that may be needed in the future. Its Makefile automatically iterates over any subdirectories passing on targets. The third-party/pjproject directory was created to house the pjproject source distribution. Its Makefile contains targets to download, patch configure, generate dependencies, compile libs, apps and python bindings, sanitized build.mak and generate a symbols list. When bootstrap.sh is run, it automatically includes the configure.m4 file in third-party/pjproject. This file has a macro to download and conifgure pjproject and get and set PJPROJECT_INCLUDE, PJPROJECT_DIR and PJPROJECT_BUNDLED. It also tests for the capabilities like PJ_TRANSACTION_GRP_LOCK by parsing preprocessor output as opposed to trying to compile. Of course, bootstrap.sh is only run once and the configure file is incldued in the patch. When configure is run with the new options, the macro in configure.m4 triggers the download, patch, conifgure and tests. No compilation is performed at this time. The downloaded tarball is cached in /tmp so it doesn't get downloaded again on a distclean. When make is run in the top-level Asterisk source directory, it will automatically descend all the subdirectories in third_party just as it does for addons, apps, etc. The top-level Makefile makes sure that the 'third-party' is built before 'main' so that dependencies from the other directories are built first. When main does build, a new shared library (libasteriskpj) is created that links statically to the pjproject .a files and exports all their symbols. The asterisk binary links to that, just as it does with libasteriskssl. When Asterisk is installed, the pjsua and pjsystest apps, and the pjproject python bindings are installed in ASTDATADIR/third-party/pjproject. This will facilitate testing, including running the testsuite which will be updated to check that directory for the pjsua module ahead of the system python library. Modules should continue to depend on pjproject if they use pjproject APIs directly. They should not care about the implementation. No changes to any res_pjsip modules were made. Change-Id: Ia7a60c28c2e9ba9537c5570f933c1ebcb20a3103
2016-01-19 03:54:28 +00:00
-$(CMD_PREFIX) rm -rf pjproject.symbols
distclean:
$(ECHO_PREFIX) Distcleaning
-$(CMD_PREFIX) rm -rf source pjproject.symbols pjproject-*.tar.bz2 build.mak .rebuild_needed