crosstool-ng/config/global/download_extract.in

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# Options specific to downloading and extracting packages
comment "Downloading"
config FORCE_DOWNLOAD
bool
prompt "Force downloads"
default n
help
Force downloading tarballs, even if one already exists.
Usefull if you suspect a tarball to be damaged.
config ONLY_DOWNLOAD
bool
prompt "Stop after downloading tarballs"
default n
help
Only download the tarballs. Exit once it done.
Usefull to pre-retrieve the tarballs before going off-line.
config CONNECT_TIMEOUT
int
prompt "connection timeout"
default 10
help
From the curl manual:
Maximum time in seconds that you allow the connection to the server to take.
The scenario is as follows;
- some enterprise networks have firewalls that prohibit FTP traffic, while
still allowing HTTP
- most download sites have http:// equivalent for the ftp:// URL
- after this number of seconds, it is considered that the connection could
not be established, and the next URL in the list is tried, until we reach
an URL that will go through the firewall, most probably an http:// URL.
If you have a slow network, you'd better set this value higher than the default
10s. If you know a firewall is blocking connections, but your network is globally
fast, you can try to lower this value to jump more quickly to allowed URLs. YMMV.
Note that this value applies equally to wget if you have that installed.
Of course, you'd be better off to use a proxy, as offered by the following
choice of options.
choice
bool
prompt "Proxy type"
default PROXY_TYPE_NONE
config PROXY_TYPE_NONE
bool
prompt "No proxy"
help
Select this option if you have a direct connection to the internet,
or if you already set the environment adequately.
config PROXY_TYPE_HTTP
bool
prompt "HTTP proxy"
help
Use an HTTP proxy to connect to to the internet.
Only the http and ftp protocols will be tunneled through this
proxy.
Alternatively to setting this option, you can set and export the
following variables in your environment:
ftp_proxy=http://user:passwd@proxy.server:port/
http_proxy=http://user:passwd@proxy.server:port/
https_proxy=http://user:passwd@proxy.server:port/
# Haha! Here is an interesting feature/bug of mconf!
# The following config entries will be shown out-side the
# choice menu!
# To add a third entry in the choice menu, add it after the
# if...endif conditional below, and so on for a fourth entry...
if PROXY_TYPE_HTTP
config PROXY_HOST
string
prompt "hostname/IP"
config PROXY_PORT
int
prompt "port"
default 8080
config PROXY_USER
string
prompt "user name"
config PROXY_PASS
string
prompt "password"
endif # USE_HTTP_PROXY
config PROXY_TYPE_SOCKS
bool
prompt "SOCKS 4/5 proxy (EXPERIMENTAL)"
depends on EXPERIMENTAL
help
Use a Socks 4/5 proxy to connect to the internet.
All protocols can get tunneled through this kind of proxy (depending
on your proxy configuration, some do not allow all protocols, but
chances are that protocols needed by crosstool-NG are allowed).
Alternatively to setting this option, you can configure tsocks
system-wide, and set and export the following variable in your
environment:
LD_PRELOAD=/path/to/your/tsocks-library.so
This option makes use of the tsocks library. You will have to have tsocks
installed on your system, of course.
If you think you do not know what tsocks is, or how to configure it,
chances are that you do not need to set this option.
if PROXY_TYPE_SOCKS
choice
bool
prompt "type"
default PROXY_TYPE_SOCKS_SYS
config PROXY_TYPE_SOCKS_SYS
bool
prompt "Use system settings"
help
Use that if tsocks is already configured on your system.
config PROXY_TYPE_SOCKS_AUTO
bool
prompt "Auto"
help
crosstool-NG will attempt to guess what type of SOCKS version
the proxy speaks.
config PROXY_TYPE_SOCKS_4
bool
prompt "SOCKS 4"
config PROXY_TYPE_SOCKS_5
bool
prompt "SOCKS 5"
endchoice
if ! PROXY_TYPE_SOCKS_SYS
config PROXY_HOST
string
prompt "hostname/IP"
config PROXY_PORT
int
prompt "port"
default 1080
config PROXY_USER
string
prompt "user name"
config PROXY_PASS
string
prompt "password"
endif # ! PROXY_TYPE_SOCKS_SYS
endif # USE_SOCKS_PROXY
endchoice
config PROXY_TYPE
string
default "none" if PROXY_TYPE_NONE
default "http" if PROXY_TYPE_HTTP
default "sockssys" if PROXY_TYPE_SOCKS_SYS
default "socksauto" if PROXY_TYPE_SOCKS_AUTO
default "socks4" if PROXY_TYPE_SOCKS_4
default "socks5" if PROXY_TYPE_SOCKS_5
# Force restore indentation
config BREAK_INDENT
bool
default n
if ! ONLY_DOWNLOAD
comment "Extracting"
config FORCE_EXTRACT
bool
prompt "Force extractions"
default n
help
Force extraction of already exctracted tarballs.
Usefull if you suspect a previous extract did not complete (eg. broken
tarball), or you added a new set of patches for this component.
config OVERIDE_CONFIG_GUESS_SUB
bool
prompt "Override config.{guess,sub}"
default y
help
Override tools' versions of config.guess and config.sub with the ones
from crosstool-NG. This means that all instances of config.guess and
config.sub in gcc, binutils, glibc, etc... will be replaced.
Most of the time, the versions of those scripts found in packages are old
versions, thus lacking some target definitions. This is the case for
uClibc-based tuples in old versions of gcc and gdb, for example.
Also, doing so will guarantee that all components have the same tuples
definitions for your target, and not diverging ones.
You can update the ones provided with crosstool-NG by first running:
ct-ng updatetools
in the directory where you want to run crosstool-NG prior to the build.
config ONLY_EXTRACT
bool
prompt "Stop after extracting tarballs"
default n
help
Exit after unpacking and patching tarballs.
Usefull to look at the code before doing the build itself.
endif # ! ONLY_DOWNLOAD