The patch Bitcoin Core has been maintaining for mac_alias was pulled by the mac_alias maintainer in commit 4f31cb084c1c6a8626128b0b00842020b6db9037. Delete the patch and remove the patch from the depends system.
Note that this PR won't be complete until a new version of mac_alias containing the path has been released, and the depends system is updated to reflect the new version.
31a013563 Add required package dependencies for depends cross compilation [skip-ci] (Jonas Schnelli)
Pull request description:
Stumbled over this during a setup of a new depends compile system.
Related to #8913.
Tree-SHA512: 67e2fdf9ca3cbedeb02982fa73771dd36978b319e9291ea5a41ede7fdf772c4505ccc9523b48fe66ead927f141efefbdf1e3eaa19a9d8a1304861a8ede040056
This is broken for a number of reasons, including:
- g++ understands "-static-libstdc++ -lstdc++" to mean "link against whatever
libstdc++ exists, probably shared", which in itself is buggy.
- another stdlib (libc++ for example) may be in use
4f92b5f Run Qt wallet tests on travis (Russell Yanofsky)
Pull request description:
Currently these test failures are not caught by travis leading to bugs like:
https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/10506
Tree-SHA512: db1e4ff5b17bcd6fd000a3d21aa74f6b7e4c194e0663c1896a100612671910a7cdadd896b59642420ea016598895b54a8468914847ebefef105a3c47c311d4b2
ld64 is threaded, and uses a worker for each CPU to parse input files. But
there's a bug in the parser causing dependencies to be calculated differently
based on which files have already been parsed.
As a result, builders with more CPUs are more likely to see non-determinism.
This looks to have been fixed in a newer version of ld64, so just disable
threading for now. There's no noticible slowdown.
This contains a few hacks very specific to Qt's buildsystem. These can be
reverted once we split the build between native and target builds.
Qt's build contains a circular dependency when not using a system zlib.
By far the easiest fix is to switch to a system zlib, rather than Qt's own.
However, that confuses Qt's cross build which assumes that when using a system
zlib, it should also find a system (native) zlib for native tools. The build
breaks if that zlib is not present.
To solve this:
1. Always use a system zlib rather than the one provided by qt
2. Set force_bootstrap, which instructs the build tools to be built as though
we're cross-compiling (build != target)
3. For build tools, use qt's internal zlib so that a native zlib is not
required.
Step 3 means that if any zlib headers are found by the native build, it will
confuse Qt's internal zlib build. So we also need to make sure that the target
headers/libs aren't found. To do so, specify that our
cflags/cxxflags/cppflags/ldflags only apply for non-host builds.
qt5.7 changed the location of some of its symbols, creating a circular
dependency in Qt5Core. Rather than trying to fix that up, build our own zlib
rather than having it built for us.
Their buildsystem insists on using the installed ltranslate, but gets confused
about how to find it. Since we manually control the build order, just drop the
dependency.