By blanket passing --disable-dependency-tracking to all depends packages
we end up with some warnings like:
configure: WARNING: unrecognized options: --disable-dependency-tracking
So instead, only pass it to packages that understand it.
Related to https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/16354.
Because we pass -qt-xcb to Qt, it will compile in a set of xcb helper libraries and extensions.
So skip building all of the libxcb extensions when we build libcxb in depends.
More info is available here: https://doc.qt.io/qt-5.9/linux-requirements.html
We use pkg-config where we can, which generally replaces libtool at a
higher level and does not have the same downsides as libtool. These
archives sit in our depends tree with no purpose and pollute the final
bitcoin build with massive overlinking.
Some dependency sources were downloaded via http, even though https (SSL/TLS) options are available.
Even if we potentially check the integrity of the downloaded files via hash comparison, we should make
use of this additional security layer.
bdb.mk
fontconfig.mk
freetype.mk
libX11.mk
libXau.mk
libXext.mk
libxcb.mk
native_cctools.mk
native_cdrkit.mk
xcb_proto.mk
xextproto.mk
xproto.mk
xtrans.mk
zlib.mk
miniupnp was switched to official project mirror with SSL support
See here for background: https://bugreports.qt.io/browse/QTBUG-34748
libxcb temporarily had an abi breakage which caused crashes when qt was
compiled against a non-compatible version. Building qt with -qt-xcb should have
shielded us from this issue, except that incompatible headers were used when
building qt's wrapper.
Make sure those headers aren't picked up by qt's build.
Details:
qt's build adds a wrapper around the xcb libs when -qt-xcb is used. This is
done to avoid having to link to a handful of different libs, which may not be
api/abi stable. This build depends on include-order, so that its files are
found before the real libxcb headers.
Our build (for other reasons related to qt's complicated build-system) injects
our prefix into CXXFLAGS. Because libxcb is found in this path, that reverses
the include-order, negating the purpose of the wrapper.
To fix, libxcb's includes are simply moved to a subdir. pkg-config ensures that
they're still found properly when needed.
To make things even more interesting, this behavior in qt's .pro files is broken:
INCLUDEPATH += $$QMAKE_CFLAGS_XCB
The INCLUDEPATH variable is processed by qmake which automatically prefixes each
entry with "-I". The QMAKE_CFLAGS_XCB variable comes from pkg-config and
already contains -I, making the path look like "-I-I/path/to/xcb/headers".
To work around that, CFLAGS/CXXFLAGS are used here rather than INCLUDEPATH.