| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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Now that https://bugs.debian.org/970943 has been resolved and a new Git
snapshot of googletest has made it to testing, reenable Abseil unit
tests and run them as part of the build process. This does not change
the package as viewed by dependents; it only provides greater assurance
of correctness when an upload occurs. (It probably would have caught
http://bugs.debian.org/973492, for instance.)
Run the tests against the shared libraries, not the static ones, to
more accurately simulate the conditions under which dependents are
likely to use Abseil.
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Closes: https://bugs.debian.org/973492
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Closes: https://bugs.debian.org/971768
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Bump shared library micro level to indicate an API- and ABI-compatible
release.
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Bump package versions and names to reflect the new Abseil LTS. Remove
patches that have been incorporated upstream, and refresh the
configuration patch.
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CMake now warns if you include a module directly rather than using
find_dependency. Apply a patch from upstream to fix the problem.
Closes: https://bugs.debian.org/970333
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Remove the symbols file and replace it with an shlibs file. Since Abseil
is almost certain to break ABI with every release, maintaining
fine-grained symbol histories is not terribly useful anyway;
furthermore, since Abseil is a C++ library, maintaining a symbols file
is a lot of work.
Bug: https://bugs.debian.org/966183
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On Intel and compatibles, SwissTable can benefit from SSE2 and SSSE3 if
available. Currently, though, it determines availability through a
compile-time check, which pins binary packages to the CPU of the
builder. Correct this:
- Disable SSE2 and SSSE3 on i386. SSSE3 has never been available on
i386 CPUs, and Debian supports some i386 CPUs that lack the
extension (e.g., the Athlon XP).
- Disable SSSE3 on amd64. SSSE3 did not appear until the mid-'00s,
and Debian supports all amd64 CPUs, even going back to the original
Opteron. Keep SSE2 enabled, since all amd64 CPUs support SSE2.
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Rebuild abseil against GCC 9, the version currently in unstable, and
update the symbols file. Additionally, rework the symbols file using
pkg-kde-tools, which offers some automation for building large symbols
files. This does mean that the symbols file now contains mangled names,
but it’s still easily inspected through c++filt.
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ftpmaster has voiced concern about having dozens of tiny packages with
ABI identifiers in their names, so combine all of them into a single
binary package. Abseil now builds only two packages--libabsl20200225,
which contains shared libraries, and libabsl-dev, which contains
headers and archives.
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Upload the initial Abseil packaging for experimental. Once accepted by
ftp-master, I’ll do a source-only upload to unstable.
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Create basic packaging for Abseil. There’s still work to be done –
there are no autopkgtests, and this package doesn’t install Abseil’s
CMake integration. However, you can install the binary packages and
build programs that link the libraries.
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