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Unified Diff: third_party/yasm/README.skia

Issue 1226543003: Revert of Switch SkJpegCode to libjpeg-turbo (Closed) Base URL: https://skia.googlesource.com/skia.git@master
Patch Set: Created 5 years, 6 months ago
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Index: third_party/yasm/README.skia
diff --git a/third_party/yasm/README.skia b/third_party/yasm/README.skia
deleted file mode 100644
index 19a259ccf149cc4bdfc7e2f60bece816b6bf96cc..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/third_party/yasm/README.skia
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,138 +0,0 @@
-# Copyright (c) 2012 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved.
-# Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
-# found in the LICENSE file.
-
-These platform specific Makefiles are necesary to build yasm on different platforms. The rest of
-the yasm code is pulled into externals via the DEPS file.
-
-Chromium builds yasm using the below procedure. We take a few shortcuts. We mirror Chromium's
-yasm repositories in our DEPS file, and we copy these config files directly from Chromium.
-
-NOTE: We were are currently unable to build yasm for Android on x86 and x86_64. Instead we are
-using a precompiled binary in the config/android directory.
-TODO (msarett): Fix this!
-
-Excerpt from [chromium] //src/third_party/yasm/README.chromium:
-
-Instructions for recreating the yasm.gyp file.
- 1) Get a clean version of the yasm source tree. The clean tree can be found
- at:
-
- src/third_party/yasm/source/yasm
-
- 2) Run configure on the pristine source from a different directory (eg.,
- /tmp/yasm_build). Running configure from another directory will keep
- the source tree clean.
-
- 3) Next, capture all the output from a build of yasm. We will use the build
- log as a reference for making the yasm.gyp file.
-
- make yasm > yasm_build_log 2> yasm_build_err
-
- 4) Check yasm_build_err to see if there are any anomalies beyond yasm's
- compiler warnings.
-
- 5) Grab the generated Makefile, libyasm-stdint.h, config.h, and put into
- the correct platform location. For android platform, copy the files
- generated for linux, but make sure that ENABLE_NLS is not defined to
- allow mac host compiles to work. For ios, copy the files from mac.
-
- src/third_party/yasm/source/config/[platform]
-
- While we do not directly use the "Makefile" to build, it is needed by
- the "genmodule" subprogram as input for creating the available modules
- list.
-
- 6) Make sure all the subprograms are represented in yasm.gyp.
-
- grep '^gcc' yasm_build_log |
- grep -v ' -DHAVE_CONFIG_H '
-
- The yasm build creates a bunch of subprograms that in-turn generate
- more .c files in the build. Luckily the commands to generate the
- subprogram do not have -DHAVE_CONFIG_H as a cflag.
-
- From this list, make sure all the subprograms that are build have
- appropriate targets in the yasm.gyp.
-
- You will notice, when you get to the next step, that there are some
- .c source files that are compiled both for yasm, and for genperf.
-
- Those should go into the genperf_libs target so that they can be
- shared by the genperf and yasm targets. Find those files by appending
-
- | grep 'gp-'
-
- to the command above.
-
- 7) Find all the source files used to build yasm proper.
-
- grep -E '^gcc' yasm_build_log |
- grep ' -DHAVE_CONFIG_H ' |
- awk '{print $NF }' |
- sed -e "s/'\.\/'\`//" | # Removes some garbage from the build line.
- sort -u |
- sed -e "s/\(.*\)/'\1',/" # Add quotes to each line.
-
- Reversing the -DHAVE_CONFIG_H filter from the command above should
- list the compile lines for yasm proper.
-
- This should get you close, but you will need to manually examine this
- list. However, some of the built products are still included in the
- command above. Generally, if the source file is in the root directory,
- it's a generated file.
-
- Inspect the current yasm.gyp for a list of the subprograms and their
- outputs.
-
- Update the sources list in the yasm target accordingly. Read step #9
- as well if you update the source list to avoid problems.
-
- 8) Update the actions for each of the subprograms.
-
- Here is the real fun. For each subprogram created, you will need to
- update the actions and rules in yasm.gyp that invoke the subprogram to
- generate the files needed by the rest of the build.
-
- I don't have any good succinct instructions for this. Grep the build
- log for each subprogram invocation (eg., "./genversion"), look at
- its command inputs and output, then verify our yasm.gyp does something
- similar.
-
- The good news is things likely only link or compile if this is done
- right so you'll know if there is a problem.
-
- Again, refer to the existing yasm.gyp for a guide to how the generated
- files are used.
-
- Here are a few gotchas:
- 1) genmodule, by default, writes module.c into the current
- directory. This does not play nicely with gyp. We patch the
- source during build to allow specifying a specific output file.
-
- 2) Most of the generated files, even though they are .c files, are
- #included by other files in the build. Make sure they end up
- in a directory that is in the include path for the build.
- One of <(shared_generated_dir) or <(generated_dir) should work.
-
- 3) Some of the genperf output is #included while others need to be
- compiled directly. That is why there are 2 different rules for
- .gperf files in two targets.
-
- 9) Check for python scripts that are run.
-
- grep python yasm_build_log
-
- Yasm uses python scripts to generate the assembly code description
- files in C++. Make sure to get these put into the gyp file properly as
- well. An example is gen_x86_insn.py for x86 assembly.
-
- Note that at least the gen_x86_insn.py script suffers from the same
- problem as genmacro in that it outputs to the current directory by
- default. The yasm.gyp build patches this file before invoking it to
- allow specifying an output directory.
-
- 10) Recreate the 'AdditionalOptions!': [ '/analyze' ] block so that VC++
- /analyze builds won't fail.
-
- 11) If all that's is finished, attempt to build....and cross your fingers.
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