https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=491712
- Alan
On Fri, Mar 13, 2009 at 5:14 AM, Richard W.M. Jones rjones@redhat.com wrote:
On Wed, Mar 11, 2009 at 09:14:22AM -0400, Alan Dunn wrote:
Something I thought I would address to the Fedora OCaml experts:
I want to package MLGMPIDL - http://www.inrialpes.fr/pop-art/people/bjeannet/mlxxxidl-forge/mlgmpidl/inde...
- (it's a dependency for something else I want to package, in case
anyone is interested my path is MLGMPIDL -> APRON -> Frama-C). It
Excellent, I need Frama-C too ...
links to C code in a static library and produces OCaml native code and bytecode libraries. What is the ideal way to package this? The packaging guidelines state that I should try not to ship a static C library if possible, but from what I understand (which may well be wrong, so please correct me if needed) even with the latest OCaml, bytecode and native code just don't mix, and there's no way to load a shared C library from native code. Thus it seems that to ship native and bytecode versions of the library, I need to ship the static library anyway, so I should just use this for both versions (separating it out into a -static package too?) Furthermore, even if there is a way to do something great with OCaml 3.11, this isn't available for Fedora 9 and 10 (and at least 10 will be around for a while longer)...
I don't think there will be a problem. The prohibition against static linking seems to apply mainly to "proper" libraries, not to small C libraries which are essentially internal/runtime (for example: libgcc.a).
If someone doesn't mind, if there's a definitive guide to exactly what can and cannot be done with respect to native, bytecode, and external C library linking and how this varies over OCaml version it would be much appreciated - the information on this out there is tough for me to parse, it seems to be in bits and pieces all over the place.
Best thing here I think is to make a package & review request and then we can look at the issues (if any) during review.
Rich.
-- Richard Jones, Emerging Technologies, Red Hat http://et.redhat.com/~rjones virt-top is 'top' for virtual machines. Tiny program with many powerful monitoring features, net stats, disk stats, logging, etc. http://et.redhat.com/~rjones/virt-top
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