* GCC-7 and glibc-2.27 compat code
* Statically link libstdc++ for GCC based builds
Makes sure binaries which are built on a newer build host still work
on older distros.
* Use python3 when installing MacOS native tools
* Move actual build logic out of Travis and upgrade to gcc-7
Travis will now simply call a few scripts which do the actual work.
These scripts will first create a "builder image" which contains the
necessary environment for the actual build. Then scripts are called
inside this builder image to do the build.
This should make us more independant from Travis and also allows us
to do local CI testing.
The build matrix is also moved out of .travis.yml and instead moved
into ci/matrix.sh. This script is sourced with only "BUILD_TARGET" being
set so that it internally can figure out which other environment
variables need to be set.
This commit also upgrades the used GCC version to 7. This is due to the
use of ubuntu:bionic as base image for the builder image.
* Add Jenkinsfiles for regular CI and nightly gitian builds
* Automatically download OSX SDK in gitian-build.sh
* Remove bogus "export MAKEJOBS=-j5"
* Forward cache/src dirs into builder container
Fixes caching issues on Travis.
* fix
* Fail build immediately when building depends took too long
- Detect endian instead of stopping configure on big-endian
- Add `byteswap.h` and `endian.h` header for compatibility with
Windows and other operating systems that don't come with them
- Update `crypto/common.h` functions to use compat
endian header
Backwards-compatibility for libstdc++ is not limited to straightforward abi
changes. Symbol visibility also needs to be taken into consideration, and
that really can't be addressed simply.
Instead, just static-link libstdc++ for backwards-compat.
bitcoin-config.h moved, but the old file is likely to still exist when
reconfiguring or switching branches. This would've caused files to not rebuild
correctly, and other strange problems.
Make the path explicit so that the old one cannot be found.
Core libs use config/bitcoin-config.h.
Libs (like crypto) which don't want access to bitcoin's headers continue
to use -Iconfig and #include bitcoin-config.h.
glibc/libstdc++ have added new symbols in later releases. When running a new
binary against an older glibc, the run-time linker is unable to resolve the
new symbols and the binary refuses to run.
This can be fixed by adding our own versions of those functions, so that the
build-time linker does not emit undefined symbols for them.
This enables our binary releases to work on older Linux distros, while not
incurring the downsides of a fully static binary.