On Tue, 07 Jun 2016 17:30:58 +0200, Pavel Raiskup wrote:
> In database packages we have that multilib hack for a very long time,
> mostly C&P'ed among various spec files.
#if defined(__x86_64__)
#include "${filename}${opt_additional_suffix}_x86_64.h"
#elif defined(__i386__)
#include "${filename}${opt_additional_suffix}_i386.h"
#elif defined(__ppc64__) || defined(__powerpc64__)
#include "${filename}${opt_additional_suffix}_ppc64.h"
[...]
Is this really the preferred way? For example in GDB I have just used a type
which has proper size across all the used archs:
http://pkgs.fedoraproject.org/cgit/rpms/gdb.git/plain/gdb-jit-reader-multilib.patch
(*)
And thus GDB does have now one .h file with the same content on all archs.
/usr/include/* files should remain readable, they should not be an obfuscated
intermediate compilation form.
I find the separate .h files for each arch only as a last resort hack.
And thus I find it not preferred to make a last resort hack a part of the
standard packaging macros.
Jan Kratochvil
(*) Why not <stdint.h> - it would be probably rejected upstream as too "new";
although this patch also was not approved in the end.
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