With Debian and Ubuntu, the default installation path for the 64-bit
libraries is set to e.g. /usr/local/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/, compared to
/usr/local/lib64 on Fedora and Redhat distributions. This causes issues
when using "pkg-config --define-prefix" since pkg-config assumes the prefix
to be the grandparent of where the .pc file is. On Ubuntu we then get the
cflags include path as being "/path/to/install-root/usr/local/lib/include"
i.e. with an extra "lib" in the path.
This issue only applies for test installs on Ubuntu and similar distros,
and is not a problem for regular installs since the --define-prefix
parameter would not be passed to pkg-config in those cases.
The workaround for this in our test build script is to explicitly make
"lib" the "libdir" setting for the install, overriding the distro-provided
default.
Fixes:
7f80a2102bbb ("devtools: test pkg-config file")
Signed-off-by: Bruce Richardson <bruce.richardson@intel.com>
Acked-by: Luca Boccassi <bluca@debian.org>
done
# test compilation with minimal x86 instruction set
+# Set the install path for libraries to "lib" explicitly to prevent problems
+# with pkg-config prefixes if installed in "lib/x86_64-linux-gnu" later.
default_machine='nehalem'
ok=$(cc -march=$default_machine -E - < /dev/null > /dev/null 2>&1 || echo false)
if [ "$ok" = "false" ] ; then
default_machine='corei7'
fi
-build build-x86-default -Dmachine=$default_machine $use_shared
+build build-x86-default -Dlibdir=lib -Dmachine=$default_machine $use_shared
# enable cross compilation if gcc cross-compiler is found
c=aarch64-linux-gnu-gcc