llhttp/llhttp.spec

176 lines
5.6 KiB
RPMSpec

# This package is rather exotic. The compiled library is a typical shared
# library with a C API. However, it has only a tiny bit of C source code. Most
# of the library is written in TypeScript, which is transpiled to C, via LLVM
# IR, using llparse (https://github.com/nodejs/llparse)—all of which happens
# within the NodeJS ecosystem.
#
# The package therefore “builds like” a NodeJS package, and to the extent they
# are relevant we apply the NodeJS packaging guidelines. However, the result of
# the build “installs like” a traditional C library package and has no NodeJS
# dependencies, including bundled ones.
#
# Furthermore, the package is registered with npm as “llhttp”, but current
# releases are not published there, so we use the GitHub archive as the
# canonical source and use a custom bundler script based on
# nodejs-packaging-bundler to fetch NodeJS build dependencies.
#
# Overall, we cherry-pick from the standard and NodeJS packaging guidelines as
# each seems to best apply, understanding that this package does not fit well
# into any of the usual patterns or templates.
# Upstream has been asked to provide a proper .so version:
# https://github.com/nodejs/llhttp/issues/140
# …but for now, we must version the shared library downstream.
%global downstream_soversion 0.1
Name: llhttp
Version: 6.0.6
Release: %autorelease
Summary: Port of http_parser to llparse
# License of llhttp is MIT; nothing from the NodeJS dependency bundle is
# installed, so its contents do not contribute to the license of the binary
# RPMs, and we do not need a file llhttp-%%{version}-bundled-licenses.txt.
License: MIT
%global forgeurl https://github.com/nodejs/llhttp
%forgemeta
URL: %{forgeurl}
Source0: %{forgesource}
# Based closely on nodejs-packaging-bundler, except:
#
# - The GitHub source tarball specified in this spec file is used since the
# current version is not typically published on npm
# - No production dependency bundle is generated, since none is needed—and
# therefore, no bundled licenses text file is generated either
Source1: llhttp-packaging-bundler
# Created with llhttp-packaging-bundler (Source1):
Source2: llhttp-%{version}-nm-dev.tgz
# While nothing in the dev bundle is installed, we still choose to audit for
# null licenses at build time and to keep manually-approved exceptions in a
# file.
Source3: check-null-licenses
Source4: audited-null-licenses.toml
# The compiled RPM does not depend on NodeJS at all, but we cannot *build* it
# on architectures without NodeJS.
ExclusiveArch: %{nodejs_arches}
# For generating the C source “release” from TypeScript:
BuildRequires: nodejs-devel
BuildRequires: make
# For compiling the C library
BuildRequires: cmake
BuildRequires: gcc
# For tests
BuildRequires: clang
# For check-null-licenses
BuildRequires: python3-devel
BuildRequires: python3dist(toml)
%description
This project is a port of http_parser to TypeScript. llparse is used to
generate the output C source file, which could be compiled and linked with the
embedder's program (like Node.js).
%package devel
Summary: Development files for llhttp
Requires: llhttp%{?_isa} = %{?epoch:%{epoch}:}%{version}-%{release}
Requires: cmake-filesystem
%description devel
The llhttp-devel package contains libraries and header files for
developing applications that use llhttp.
%prep
%forgeautosetup
# Set up bundled (dev) node modules required to generate the C sources from the
# TypeScript sources.
tar -xzf '%{SOURCE2}'
mkdir -p node_modules
pushd node_modules
ln -s ../node_modules_dev/* .
ln -s ../node_modules_dev/.bin .
popd
# We run ts-node out of node_modules/.bin rather than using npx (which we will
# not have available).
sed -r -i 's@\bnpx[[:blank:]](ts-node)\b@node_modules/.bin/\1@' Makefile
%build
# Generate the C source “release” from TypeScript using the “node_modules_dev”
# bundle.
%make_build release
# Apply downstream .so versioning
cat >> release/CMakeLists.txt <<'EOF'
set_target_properties(llhttp PROPERTIES SOVERSION %{downstream_soversion})
EOF
# Fix multilib install paths. We hoped this change would be sufficient, but it
# seems to fix the install paths of the CMake files only, so we still need to
# move the libraries after they are installed.
sed -r -i 's@\b(DESTINATION[[:blank:]]+)lib($|/)@\1%{_libdir}\2@' \
release/CMakeLists.txt
# To help prove that nothing from the bundled NodeJS dependencies is included
# in the binary packages, remove the “node_modules” symlinks.
rm -rvf node_modules
cd release
%cmake -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS:BOOL=ON
%cmake_build
%install
cd release
%cmake_install
if [ '%{_prefix}/lib' != '%{_libdir}' ]
then
mv -v %{buildroot}%{_prefix}/lib/libllhttp.so* '%{buildroot}/%{_libdir}'
# Document the expectation that this directory is now empty:
rmdir '%{buildroot}%{_prefix}/lib'
fi
%check
# Symlink the NodeJS bundle again so that we can test with Mocha
mkdir -p node_modules
pushd node_modules
ln -s ../node_modules_dev/* .
ln -s ../node_modules_dev/.bin .
popd
# Verify that no bundled dev dependency has a null license field, unless we
# already audited it by hand. This reduces the chance of accidentally including
# code with license problems in the source RPM.
%{python3} '%{SOURCE3}' --exceptions '%{SOURCE4}' --with dev node_modules_dev
# See scripts.mocha in package.json:
NODE_ENV=test ./node_modules/.bin/mocha \
-r ts-node/register/type-check \
test/*-test.ts
%files
%license release/LICENSE-MIT
%{_libdir}/libllhttp.so.%{downstream_soversion}
%files devel
%doc release/README.md
%{_includedir}/llhttp.h
%{_libdir}/libllhttp.so
%{_libdir}/cmake/llhttp
%changelog
%autochangelog