
This adds SPDX license headers in place of the wide assortment of things currently in our script headers. We default to GPL-2.0-only except for the oeqa code where it was clearly submitted and marked as MIT on the most part or some scripts which had the "or later" GPL versioning. The patch also drops other obsolete bits of file headers where they were encoountered such as editor modelines, obsolete maintainer information or the phrase "All rights reserved" which is now obsolete and not required in copyright headers (in this case its actually confusing for licensing as all rights were not reserved). More work is needed for OE-Core but this takes care of the bulk of the scripts and meta/lib directories. The top level LICENSE files are tweaked to match the new structure and the SPDX naming. (From OE-Core rev: f8c9c511b5f1b7dbd45b77f345cb6c048ae6763e) Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2.3 KiB
Executable File
#!/bin/sh
SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
This script is called from inside postinstall scriptlets at do_rootfs time. It
actually adds, at the end, the list of packages for which the intercept script
is valid. Also, if one wants to pass any variables to the intercept script from
the postinstall itself, they will be added immediately after the shebang line.
Usage: postinst_intercept <intercept_script_name> <package_name> <mlprefix=...> <var1=...> ... <varN=...>
* intercept_script_name - the name of the intercept script we want to change;
* package_name - add the package_name to list of packages the intercept script
is used for;
* mlprefix=... - this one is needed in order to have separate hooks for multilib.
* var1=... - var1 will have the value we provide in the intercept script. This
is useful when we want to pass on variables like ${libdir} to
the intercept script;
[ $# -lt 3 ] && exit 1
intercept_script=$INTERCEPT_DIR/$1 && shift package_name=$1 && shift mlprefix=$(echo $1 |sed -ne "s/^mlprefix=(.*)-/\1/p") && shift
if the hook we want to install does not exist, then there's nothing we can do
[ -f "$intercept_script" ] || exit 1
if the postinstall wanting to install the hook belongs to a multilib package,
then we'd better have a separate hook for this because the default ${libdir} and
${base_libdir} will point to the wrong locations
if [ -n "$mlprefix" ]; then ml_intercept_script=$intercept_script-$mlprefix # if the multilib hook does not exist, create it from the default one if [ ! -f "$ml_intercept_script" ]; then cp $intercept_script $ml_intercept_script
# clear the ##PKGS: line and the already set variables
[ -x "$ml_intercept_script" ] && sed -i -e "2,$(($#+1)) {/.*/d}" -e "/^##PKGS: .*/d" $ml_intercept_script
fi
intercept_script=$ml_intercept_script
fi
chmod +x "$intercept_script"
pkgs_line=$(grep "##PKGS:" $intercept_script) if [ -n "$pkgs_line" ]; then # line exists, add this package to the list only if it's not already there if [ -z "$(echo "$pkgs_line" | grep " $package_name ")" ]; then sed -i -e "s/##PKGS:.*/\0${package_name} /" $intercept_script fi else for var in "$@"; do sed -i -e "%^#!/bin/.*sh%a $var" $intercept_script done echo "##PKGS: ${package_name} " >> $intercept_script fi