commit d2af5fbfaefffbd3d0ef15ef8cea7bf5332401d4 Author: Georg Koppen gk@torproject.org Date: Mon Aug 28 08:24:31 2017 +0000
Fix some typos in README.HACKING --- README.HACKING | 16 ++++++++-------- 1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-)
diff --git a/README.HACKING b/README.HACKING index ea5d500..df87410 100644 --- a/README.HACKING +++ b/README.HACKING @@ -55,7 +55,7 @@ to the linux-x86_64 and linux targets. You should define an option under the linux target if it applies to Linux on both architectures, or under the linux-x86_64 if it only applies to the x86_64 architecture.
-An option that is defined at the root of rbm.conf can be overrided by +An option that is defined at the root of rbm.conf can be overridden by an other definition under a target, or inside projects/$project/config. You can find the complete priority order in rbm/doc/rbm_config.7.
@@ -150,7 +150,7 @@ $platform should be one of the following:
- torbrowser-osx-x86_64
-For example, to see the tor's build script for linux x86_64 on the alpha +For example, to see tor's build script for linux x86_64 on the alpha channel, you can use:
$ ./rbm/rbm showconf tor build --target alpha --target \ @@ -159,7 +159,7 @@ channel, you can use: If the component you are looking at has many dependencies, the display can take some time as various build_id values need to be computed. If you don't care about the accuracy of input and output file names, you -can add '--target no_build_id' to the command line. For instance if you +can add '--target no_build_id' to the command line. For instance, if you want to look at the build script for the tor-browser component (which has a lot of dependencies), you can use:
@@ -168,7 +168,7 @@ has a lot of dependencies), you can use:
The same type of commands can be used to look at any option values, replacing build with the name of the option you want to look at. For -instance if you want to know the output filename of tor on linux-x86_64 +instance, if you want to know the output filename of tor on linux-x86_64 on the alpha channel, you can use:
$ ./rbm/rbm showconf tor filename --target alpha --target \ @@ -189,7 +189,7 @@ This can be done with the following command: See the previous section "Evaluating a component's build script" for a list of possible values for $channel and $platform.
-For instance if you want to build tor for linux-x86_64 on the alpha +For instance, if you want to build tor for linux-x86_64 on the alpha channel, you can run:
$ ./rbm/rbm build tor --target alpha --target torbrowser-linux-x86_64 @@ -201,7 +201,7 @@ to find the file with the last modification time. Patching Firefox (or an other component) ----------------------------------------
-If you want to test a firefox patch, the easiest way to do it is to +If you want to test a Firefox patch, the easiest way to do it is to copy the patch file to the projects/firefox/ directory, then edit projects/firefox/config to add the new patch to the list of input_files:
@@ -231,10 +231,10 @@ tor-browser.git repository (the .mozconfig, .mozconfig-mac and
In the rbm build however, we need to make some small modifications to those files, so we are instead using mozconfig files stored in the -projects/firefox/ directory and ignoring the .mozconfig files from the +projects/firefox/ directory, ignoring the .mozconfig files from the tor-browser.git repository.
-This could change in the future, when we are not using gitian anymore. +This could change in the future, when we are not using Gitian anymore.
Debugging a build error