Make sure a codec is not only known to us, but that it can actually be
used, in places where it makes sense. This is partially redundant
because ensure_codec_def_type already takes care of this, but a codec
definition may come from a different source, so it doesn't help to
double check.
Change-Id: I91af84afc2477840f1400674b2538ad8fb7746ee
Add a callback type to read config groups and their contents based on a
group prefix.
Unused at this point.
Change-Id: I7d9e043e96f48e599bc4da2d8ef4079559cb8b47
Switch from specialised handling of config sections (used to load
signalling templates) to a more general approach using a callback
mechanism. This allows us to add more information to the config file
while keeping the details of the underlying GKeyFile hidden. Use a typed
hash table for type safety.
Change-Id: I71ddfda0202b47df363bcc5acf1725078774f8f1
These are potentially computed from inside each subdir, and in addition
due to what appears to be a regression in GNU make 4.4, where it is
reevaluating variables that contain $(shell) functions, many times (in
the order of thousands, this was slowing down the build, were on the
Debian amd64 build daemons it went from 5m with GNU make 4.3 to 2h40m
with GNU make 4.4. Although the bulk of the slow down has been fixed
with previous commits, the remaining optimizations are only to avoid
this potentially happening again in the future, and to reduce useless
duplicate work.
Instead of trying to cache the values from within make itself, where
programming this there is extremely painful, and does not seem to be
able to greatly reduce the number of calls, because the build system
is going to be called multiple times for different targets. Simply
externalize the generation into several shell scripts, that we call
to generate a make fragment that then we include from the various
Makefiles.
For a Debian build with GNU make 4.3, this reduces the amount of total
pkg-config calls from around ~1600 to 128, for dpkg-buildflags from
~1100 down to 6, and for dpkg-parsechangelog from ~56 to 17, but the
slow down is not as significant there anyway.
For a Debian build with GNU make 4.4, this reduces the amount of total
pkg-config calls from around ~2600 to 128, for dpkg-buildflags from
~2800 down to 6, and for dpkg-parsechangelog from ~350 to 21.
For a Debian build with GNU make 4.4, this reduces the build time
on this system from 2m10s to ~ 1m30s.
Change-Id: I427d0ea5106dc6ed1ff9e664ccdba2fa0725b7d0
This variable is unknown to dpkg-buildflags. This also reduces the
amount of global calls generated with GNU make 4.4 (which has a
regression causing massive amounts of shell calls to be generated).
Change-Id: Ia9d7099228bf5e181df4725939ed4f76f1e63dc9
This makes sure the target is the default, regardless of the place where
it gets declared, so that we do not get surprises due to targets
declared in includes that might happened to be performed before the
default target.
Change-Id: I2fab47ccb46d68dc56332acef966e369c5183c07
Starting with GNU make 4.4, build time have massively regressed
where before they would take 5m on amd64 now can take 2h40m. While this
seems clearly broken, the release notes are filled with notices for
breaking changes, and in particular the one for passing all make
variables down to the invoked programs executed via the «shell» GNU make
function, so it is not clear what is expected breakage and what is not.
This has been reported in Debian, but not yet upstream, and while it
seems like a clear regression, it's not clear what will be the upstream
take on it. For now apply workarounds that do not change semantics, and
which do not regress with older GNU make versions.
Use the GNU make «origin» function instead of «?=» which defaults to
defining a variable as a recursive one. Coerce already defined variables
into simple ones to avoid GNU make re-evaluating these variables for
each «shell» function invocation.
Ref: https://bugs.debian.org/1092051
Change-Id: I076fc05dd616918473a22e7e942fecfdc9851d47
Teach rtpengine to distinguish between G.729 with and without annex B,
which are incompatible to each other.
Change-Id: I09b66a097007ba3283546880f06f81b4f89e126d
This allows us to deallocate all held strings in one go without having
to iterate much.
Requires adjusting tests, Makefiles and dependencies.
Change-Id: Ic214f9dd2cd9609cb472301f52bb10d1918d859e
Change old code to directly return `str` objects instead of pointers to
allocated ones. Largely a no-op change but makes some code easier and
eliminates some old kludges.
Change-Id: I2be19dd24bb7ff046d86cc32a3af235283e65dd0