SUMMARY = "An interpreter of object-oriented scripting language" DESCRIPTION = "Ruby is an interpreted scripting language for quick \ and easy object-oriented programming. It has many features to process \ text files and to do system management tasks (as in Perl). \ It is simple, straight-forward, and extensible. \ " HOMEPAGE = "http://www.ruby-lang.org/" SECTION = "devel/ruby" LICENSE = "Ruby | BSD | GPLv2" LIC_FILES_CHKSUM = "\ file://COPYING;md5=837b32593517ae48b9c3b5c87a5d288c \ file://BSDL;md5=3949e007205deef714bd225e1ee4a8ea \ file://GPL;md5=393a5ca445f6965873eca0259a17f833 \ file://LEGAL;md5=3ce1fae39fe573b818c0af162bce6579 \ " DEPENDS = "ruby-native zlib openssl tcl libyaml db gdbm readline" DEPENDS_class-native = "libyaml-native" INC_PR = "r1" SHRT_VER = "${@bb.data.getVar('PV',d,1).split('.')[0]}.${@bb.data.getVar('PV',d,1).split('.')[1]}" SRC_URI = "http://cache.ruby-lang.org/pub/ruby/${SHRT_VER}/ruby-${PV}.tar.gz \ file://extmk.patch \ " S = "${WORKDIR}/ruby-${PV}" inherit autotools # This snippet lets compiled extensions which rely on external libraries, # such as zlib, compile properly. If we don't do this, then when extmk.rb # runs, it uses the native libraries instead of the target libraries, and so # none of the linking operations succeed -- which makes extconf.rb think # that the libraries aren't available and hence that the extension can't be # built. do_configure_prepend() { sed -i "s#%%TARGET_CFLAGS%%#$TARGET_CFLAGS#; s#%%TARGET_LDFLAGS%%#$TARGET_LDFLAGS#" ${S}/common.mk rm -rf ${S}/ruby/ }