# vim: set sw=4 ts=4 et: %define soname 0 Name: libstfl Version: 0.21 Release: 0 Summary: Structured Terminal Forms Library Source: http://www.clifford.at/stfl/stfl-%{version}.tar.gz Source99: libstfl-rpmlintrc Patch1: stfl-optflags.patch Patch2: stfl-ncurses.patch URL: http://www.clifford.at/stfl/ Group: System/Libraries License: GNU Lesser General Public License version 3 (LGPL v3) BuildRoot: %{_tmppath}/build-%{name}-%{version} #BuildRequires: swig perl python python-devel ruby ruby-devel BuildRequires: ncurses-devel pkgconfig BuildRequires: gcc make glibc-devel %description ............................................................................. %package -n libstfl%{soname} Summary: Structured Terminal Forms Library Group: System/Libraries %description -n libstfl%{soname} STFL is a library which implements a curses-based widget set for text terminals. The STFL API can be used from C, SPL, Python, Perl and Ruby. Since the API is only 14 simple function calls big and there are already generic SWIG bindings it is very easy to port STFL to additional scripting languages. A special language (the Structured Terminal Forms Language) is used to describe STFL GUIs. The language is designed to be easy and fast to write so an application programmer does not need to spend ages fiddling around with the GUI and can concentrate on the more interesting programming tasks. %package -n libstfl-devel Summary: Structured Terminal Forms Library Group: Development/Libraries/C and C++ Requires: ncurses-devel Requires: libstfl%{soname} = %{version} %description -n libstfl-devel STFL is a library which implements a curses-based widget set for text terminals. The STFL API can be used from C, SPL, Python, Perl and Ruby. Since the API is only 14 simple function calls big and there are already generic SWIG bindings it is very easy to port STFL to additional scripting languages. A special language (the Structured Terminal Forms Language) is used to describe STFL GUIs. The language is designed to be easy and fast to write so an application programmer does not need to spend ages fiddling around with the GUI and can concentrate on the more interesting programming tasks. %prep %setup -q -n "stfl-%{version}" %patch1 %patch2 %build # -j breaks build %__make %{?jobs:-j%{jobs}} \ prefix="%{_prefix}" \ libdir="%{_lib}" \ CC="%__cc" \ OPTFLAGS="%{optflags}" \ FOUND_SPL=0 \ FOUND_SWIG=0 \ FOUND_RUBY=0 \ FOUND_PERL=0 \ FOUND_PYTHON=0 %install %makeinstall \ prefix="%{_prefix}" \ libdir="%{_lib}" \ FOUND_SPL=0 \ FOUND_SWIG=0 \ FOUND_RUBY=0 \ FOUND_PERL=0 \ FOUND_PYTHON=0 [ -e "%{buildroot}%{_libdir}/libstfl.so.%{soname}" ] || { pushd "%{buildroot}%{_libdir}/" %__ln_s libstfl.so.*.* libstfl.so.%{soname} popd } %post -n libstfl%{soname} -p /sbin/ldconfig %postun -n libstfl%{soname} -p /sbin/ldconfig %clean %{?buildroot:%__rm -rf "%{buildroot}"} %files -n libstfl%{soname} %defattr(-,root,root) %doc COPYING README %{_libdir}/libstfl.so.%{soname} %{_libdir}/libstfl.so.%{soname}.* %files -n libstfl-devel %defattr(-,root,root) %{_includedir}/stfl.h %{_libdir}/libstfl.so %{_libdir}/libstfl.a %{_libdir}/pkgconfig/stfl.pc %changelog