blob: bb477f65810a99fb192a7d472e89ad3afe3f70ed [file] [log] [blame]
#!/bin/sh
# Some of HarfBuzz's headers are created at build time using the Ragel
# State Machine Compiler. To reduce complex dependencies, I pre-built
# these files:
# hb-buffer-deserialize-json.hh
# hb-buffer-deserialize-text.hh
# hb-ot-shape-complex-indic-machine.hh
# hb-ot-shape-complex-myanmar-machine.hh
# hb-ot-shape-complex-use-machine.hh
# from these sources:
# ../externals/harfbuzz/src/hb-buffer-deserialize-json.rl
# ../externals/harfbuzz/src/hb-buffer-deserialize-text.rl
# ../externals/harfbuzz/src/hb-ot-shape-complex-indic-machine.rl
# ../externals/harfbuzz/src/hb-ot-shape-complex-myanmar-machine.rl
# ../externals/harfbuzz/src/hb-ot-shape-complex-use-machine.rl
#
# The files in this directory are created by installing the
# prerequiste packages, checking out a new version of HarfBuzz, doing
# `./autogen.sh && ./configure && make`, then copying the
# autogenerated .h and .hh files to this directory.
#
# These files are now checked into the git repository and the HarfBuzz
# maintainers keep them up to date by using the build rules in the HarfBuzz
# build. As a result this step is no longer necessary, but if we need to
# regenerate these files ourselves, this is how to do it.
set -e
set -x
for package in automake libtool pkg-config ragel gtk-doc-tools; do
if ! ( dpkg-query -W -f'${Status}' "$package" 2>/dev/null | \
grep -q "ok installed" ); then
sudo apt-get install "$package"
fi
done
cd "$(dirname "$0")/../externals/harfbuzz"
./autogen.sh
./configure
make -j4
cp src/hb-version.h ../../harfbuzz/
for RAGEL_FILE in src/*.rl; do
BUILT_HEADER="src/$(basename "$RAGEL_FILE" '.rl').hh"
if [ -f "$BUILT_HEADER" ]; then
cp -v "$BUILT_HEADER" ../../harfbuzz/
fi
done
git clean -fxd