Pkgsrc on IRIX
Introduction
SGI no longer packages 'freeware' for IRIX, as it was discontinued in 2006. Nekoware aims to be a community-driven replacement but I've found many packages to be compiled with far too many dependancies (vim needing GTK, etc) and not everything I want is available. Therefore, much like my experience with Opensolaris, I turned to pkgsrc...
Build machine
Here's the `hinv` output:
2 300 MHZ IP30 Processors CPU: MIPS R12000 Processor Chip Revision: 2.3 FPU: MIPS R12010 Floating Point Chip Revision: 0.0 Main memory size: 2048 Mbytes Xbow ASIC: Revision 1.3 Instruction cache size: 32 Kbytes Data cache size: 32 Kbytes Secondary unified instruction/data cache size: 2 Mbytes Integral SCSI controller 0: Version QL1040B (rev. 2), single ended Disk drive: unit 1 on SCSI controller 0 Integral SCSI controller 1: Version QL1040B (rev. 2), single ended CDROM: unit 6 on SCSI controller 1 IOC3/IOC4 serial port: tty1 IOC3/IOC4 serial port: tty2 IOC3 parallel port: plp1 Graphics board: ESI with texture option Graphics board: ESI Integral Fast Ethernet: ef0, version 1, pci 2 Iris Audio Processor: version RAD revision 12.0, number 1
uname -a => IRIX64 IRIS 6.5 01090133 IP30
The machine is running a fresh install of IRIX 6.5.29.
Bootstrapping pkgsrc using gcc
As of pkgsrc 2007q1 pkgsrc bootstraps out of the box, unlike some earlier versions that have problems with PRIu64.
Download the SGI freeware binary of gcc from SGI freeware and read the documentation.
Make sure you have compiler_dev.sw.base installed (notably c_dev and c++_dev). These can be found on your IRIX 6.5 developer foundation CD.
Install the gcc tardist using the `tardist` command as root.
Add /usr/freeware/bin to your $PATH.
Patch your spec file if you want to default gcc to 64 bit mips4 mode as noted here or download a pre-patched spec. I had to patch on a freebsd box because IRIX' patch didn't like the diff.
Download pkgsrc 2007q1 or later from netbsd's ftp and untar it to /usr.
cd into /usr/pkgsrc/bootstrap, set CC=gcc and ./bootstrap
TO BE CONTINUED
Build problems
Building gcc from pkgsrc
I currently don't know how to do this. The SGI freeware gcc binary seems to be working fine.
lang/perl5
Configure fails with invalid option -64 or some such nonsense, edit the pkgsrc Makefile and remove it.
In 32 bit mode, perl is a royal bitch. It's absolutely convinced that you want to build it in 64 bit mode on IRIX64. you have to edit the hints/irix_6 file to tell it not to do the -mabi=64 crap. Also, you need to add -lpthreads to libs in the toplevel Makefile. This was a major pain, might post detailed changes if I can ever be bothered to do it again...
fonts/fontconfig
Makes dumbass assumptions about the system. Here's a patch for pkgsrc's makefile to make it work:
diff -r1.62 Makefile 30a31 > CONFIGURE_ARGS+= --libdir=/usr/pkg/lib --includedir=/usr/pkg/include --with-arch=mips4 32a34,35 > LDFLAGS+=-L/usr/pkg/lib >
archivers/unzip
The compiler coredumps when building. To fix:
bmake build (wait for it to segfault) cd work/unzip* vi Makefile (and remove the definition of LF2) gmake clean; gmake generic2 (generic doesn't work..?) cd ../../ bmake install clean
lang/ruby
When you run ruby it complains about not being able to map the soname for libruby. The solution is:
export LD_LIBRARY64_PATH=/usr/pkg/lib
A more general solution might be around, haven't done the research yet.
graphics/tiff
This fails with "invalid preprocessor flag "-c"' or something. IRIX apparently comes with tiff of some sort, so make it a builtin:
BUILTIN_PKG.tiff= tiff-3.8 USE_BUILTIN.tiff= YES
NOTE this only works for when you're using the 32 bit ABI, there's no 64 bit tiff library...
textproc/groff
groff by default depends on netpbm which depends on tiff, which won't work on 64 bit systems, so disable that stuff:
PKG_OPTIONS.groff= -x11 -groff-docs
If groff complains about a broken C++ compiler:
CXX= /usr/freeware/bin/g++
bmake clean and try to build it again.
devel/ncurses
This failed for me by complaining about a missing libncurses++.so when linking the demos. This apparently is a libtool issue, but it's way too complex for me to debug. I built it manually with --prefix=/usr/pkg and made it a builtin in mk.conf and things seemed to go well...
See also: a netbsd-bugs report and a reported fix that doesn't work for me
fonts/ttmkfdir2
If it complains about 'optarg' being undeclared it seems to be caused by pkgsrc using the wrong getopt.h header. I manually edited commandline.cpp to have
#include "/usr/include/getopt.h"
instead of
#include <getopt.h>
and it seemed to fix it, changing the order of the -I parameters to gcc might do it too...
devel/glib2
Fails with "/usr/pkg/bin/libtool[4381]: syntax error at line 1 : `|' unexpected". I think this is caused by there being '| |' in the command line generated by libtool. Apparently some command is being omitted, but I don't know what or why...
lang/python24
Dunno. Seems broken somehow, haven't figured it out yet.
lang/erlang
The build will fail with an undeclared shiftleft in os_mon. Use the patch from here (you may have to remove the DOS style newlines...)
The install will fail because IRIX' `chmod` doesn't support the -f parameter. Run `grep chmod **/Makefile*` to find the affected makefiles and remove the use of -f
wip/esdl
To fix the undeclared declaration of 'refc' use the patch from here. If you're using 64 bit mode you need to edit c_src/Makefile and set GL_LIBS to use ${OGLDIR}/lib64.
devel/pcre
If this fails with the 'unexpected |' error, rebuild libtool-base. This probably will fix glib2 too...
multimedia/libmp4v2
Doesn't build, don't care to even investigate why.
audio/musicpd
Before you build libao ensure you've enabled IRIX support in the Makefile.common. Check if the irix plugin has been built by doing `ls /usr/pkg/lib/ao/plugins-2`
Add the following to the pkgsrc Makefile:
LDFLAGS+= -lgen CONFIGURE_ARGS+= --enable-ao
You MUST build as root, or the configure script will bitch about mapping sonames. sudo isn't good enough in this case for some reason...
audio/libsndfile
CFLAGS incorrectly include -pipe in the makefiles. Fix this somehow and it'll build.
audio/portaudio
This port is fucked. I got it to build though:
- bmake configure
- Edit the work/portaudio Makefile
- Ensure /usr/pkg/bin/install-sh is being used for INSTALL
- Add -laudio -lpthread to DLL_LIBS
- Remove --version-info from the link command
- Add ${SHARED_FLAGS} to the link command