@@ -62,6 +62,9 @@ ifeq ($(HOST_QEMU_ARCH),powerpc)
endif
HOST_QEMU_TARGETS=$(HOST_QEMU_ARCH)-linux-user
+# Note: although QEMU has a ./configure script, it is not a real autotools
+# package, and ./configure chokes on options such as --host or --target.
+# So, provide out own _CONFIGURE_CMDS to override the defaults.
define HOST_QEMU_CONFIGURE_CMDS
(cd $(@D); $(HOST_CONFIGURE_OPTS) ./configure \
--target-list="$(HOST_QEMU_TARGETS)" \
@@ -74,19 +77,7 @@ define HOST_QEMU_CONFIGURE_CMDS
)
endef
-define HOST_QEMU_BUILD_CMDS
- $(MAKE) -C $(@D) all
-endef
-
-define HOST_QEMU_INSTALL_CMDS
- $(MAKE) -C $(@D) install
-endef
-
-define HOST_QEMU_CLEAN_CMDS
- $(MAKE) -C $(@D) clean
-endef
-
-$(eval $(host-generic-package))
+$(eval $(host-autotools-package))
# variable used by other packages
QEMU_USER = $(HOST_DIR)/usr/bin/qemu-$(QEMU_ARCH)
Turns out that, with a little bit of tweaking, we can use the autotools-package infrastructure to build QEMU. That's better than defining all the _CMDS and using the generic-package infra. Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr> Cc: Francois Perrad <fperrad@gmail.com> --- package/qemu/qemu.mk | 17 ++++------------- 1 files changed, 4 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-)