On Mon, Sep 16, 2019 at 08:05:50PM +0200, Michał Górny wrote:
> On Mon, 2019-09-16 at 09:17 -0500, William Hubbs wrote:
> > Signed-off-by: William Hubbs <willi...@gentoo.org>
> > ---
> >  eclass/go-module.eclass | 117 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
> >  1 file changed, 117 insertions(+)
> >  create mode 100644 eclass/go-module.eclass
> > 
> > diff --git a/eclass/go-module.eclass b/eclass/go-module.eclass
> > new file mode 100644
> > index 00000000000..7e16ec4e95c
> > --- /dev/null
> > +++ b/eclass/go-module.eclass
> > @@ -0,0 +1,117 @@
> > +# Copyright 2019 gentoo authors
> > +# Distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License v2
> > +
> > +# @ECLASS: go-module.eclass
> > +# @MAINTAINER:
> > +# William Hubbs <willi...@gentoo.org>
> > +# @SUPPORTED_EAPIS: 7
> > +# @BLURB: basic eclass for building software written in the go
> > +# programming language that uses go modules.
> > +# @DESCRIPTION:
> > +# This eclass provides some basic things needed by all software
> > +# written in the go programming language that uses go modules.
> > +#
> > +# You will know the software you are packaging uses modules because
> > +# it will have files named go.sum and go.mod in its top-level source
> > +# directory. If it does not have these files, use the golang-* eclasses.
> 
> Please add a big fat warning around here somewhere that people need to
> look through LICENSE files in all vendored modules, and list them
> in LICENSE.  They also need to watch out for license conflicts.
> 
> > +#
> > +# If the software you are packaging uses modules, the next question is
> > +# whether it has a directory named "vendor" at the top-level of the source 
> > tree.
> > +#
> > +# If it doesn't, you need to create a tarball of what would be in the
> > +# vendor directory and mirror it locally.
> > +# If foo-1.0 is the name of your project and you have the tarball for it
> > +# in your current directory,  this is done with the following commands:
> > +#
> > +# @CODE:
> > +#
> > +# tar -xf foo-1.0.tar.gz
> > +# cd foo-1.0
> > +# go mod vendor
> > +# cd ..
> > +# tar -acf foo-1.0-vendor.tar.gz foo-1.0/vendor
> > +#
> > +# @CODE:
> > +
> > +# If we uncomment src_prepare below, the last two lines in the above
> > +# code block are reduced to one:
> > +#
> > +# @CODE:
> > +#
> > +# tar -acf foo-1.0-vendor.tar.gz vendor
> > +#
> > +# @CODE:
> > +
> > +case ${EAPI:-0} in
> > +   7) ;;
> > +   *) die "${ECLASS} API in EAPI ${EAPI} not yet established."
> > +esac
> > +
> > +if [[ -z ${_GO_MODULE} ]]; then
> > +
> > +_GO_MODULE=1
> > +
> > +BDEPEND=">=dev-lang/go-1.12"
> > +
> > +# The following go flags should be used for all go builds.
> > +# -mod=vendor stopps downloading of dependencies from the internet.
> > +# -v prints the names of packages as they are compiled
> > +# -x prints commands as they are executed
> > +export GOFLAGS="-mod=vendor -v -x"
> > +
> > +# Do not complain about CFLAGS etc since go projects do not use them.
> > +QA_FLAGS_IGNORED='.*'
> > +
> > +# Go packages should not be stripped with strip(1).
> > +RESTRICT="strip"
> > +
> > +# EXPORT_FUNCTIONS src_prepare pkg_postinst
> > + EXPORT_FUNCTIONS pkg_postinst
> > +
> > +# @FUNCTION: go-module_src_prepare
> > +# @DESCRIPTION:
> > +# Run a default src_prepare then move our provided vendor directory to
> > +# the appropriate spot if upstream doesn't provide a vendor directory.
> > +#
> > +# This is commented out because I want to see where the discussion on
> > +# the ml leads.
> > +# Commenting it out and following the above instructions means that you
> > +# are forced to manually re-tar the vendored dependencies for every
> > +# version bump.
> > +# Using the previous method, it would be possible to decide if you need
> > +# to do this by comparing the contents of go.mod in the previous and new
> > +# version.
> > +# Also, note that we can generate a qa warning if a maintainer forgets
> > +# to drop the vendor tarball and upstream starts vendoring.
> > +# go-module_src_prepare() {
> > +#  default
> > +#  # If upstream vendors the dependencies and we provide a vendor
> > +#  # tarball, generate a qa warning.
> > +#  if [[ -d vendor ]] && [[ -d ../vendor ]] ; then
> > +#          eqawarn "This package's upstream source includes a vendor
> > +#          eqawarn "directory and the maintainer provides a vendor 
> > tarball."
> > +#          eqawarn "Please report this on https://bugs.gentoo.org";
> 
> Why aren't you making it fatal?

I didn't make it fatal because it doesn't break the build. The build
will ignore the ../vendor directory from the tarball since it is not
under ${S}. Do you want it to be fatal?

Thanks,

William

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