| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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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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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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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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Install Abseil’s CMake support files. Some of these files are
autogenerated, and the generator produces files with a googletest
dependency if Abseil is built with unit tests enabled; to prevent this,
turn off unit tests.
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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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