Name: expat Version: 2.2.5 Release: 0 Url: http://expat.sourceforge.net/ Summary: XML Parser Toolkit License: MIT Group: System/Libraries Source0: %{name}-%{version}.tar.gz Source1: baselibs.conf Source1001: expat.manifest BuildRequires: gcc-c++ BuildRequires: libtool BuildRequires: pkg-config %description Expat is an XML 1.0 parser written in C. It aims to be fully conformant. It is currently not a validating XML processor. The current production version of expat can be downloaded from ftp://ftp.jclark.com/pub/xml/expat.zip. The directory xmltok contains a low-level library for tokenizing XML. The interface is documented in xmltok/xmltok.h. The directory xmlparse contains an XML parser library that is built on top of the xmltok library. The interface is documented in xmlparse/xmlparse.h. The directory sample contains a simple example program using this interface. The file sample/build.bat is a batch file to build the example using Visual C++. The directory xmlwf contains the xmlwf application, which uses the xmlparse library. The arguments to xmlwf are one or more files to check for well-formedness. An option -d dir can be specified. For each well-formed input file, the corresponding canonical XML is written to dir/f, where f is the filename (without any path) of the input file. A -x option causes references to external general entities to be processed. A -s option makes documents that are not stand-alone cause an error (a document is considered stand-alone if it is intrinsically stand-alone because it has no external subset and no references to parameter entities in the internal subset or it is declared as stand-alone in the XML declaration). %package -n libexpat Summary: XML Parser Toolkit Group: System/Libraries %description -n libexpat Expat is an XML 1.0 parser written in C. It aims to be fully conformant. It is currently not a validating XML processor. The current production version of expat can be downloaded from ftp://ftp.jclark.com/pub/xml/expat.zip. The directory xmltok contains a low-level library for tokenizing XML. The interface is documented in xmltok/xmltok.h. The directory xmlparse contains an XML parser library that is built on top of the xmltok library. The interface is documented in xmlparse/xmlparse.h. The directory sample contains a simple example program using this interface. The file sample/build.bat is a batch file to build the example using Visual C++. The directory xmlwf contains the xmlwf application, which uses the xmlparse library. The arguments to xmlwf are one or more files to check for well-formedness. An option -d dir can be specified. For each well-formed input file, the corresponding canonical XML is written to dir/f, where f is the filename (without any path) of the input file. A -x option causes references to external general entities to be processed. A -s option makes documents that are not stand-alone cause an error (a document is considered stand-alone if it is intrinsically stand-alone because it has no external subset and no references to parameter entities in the internal subset or it is declared as stand-alone in the XML declaration). %package -n libexpat-devel Summary: XML Parser Toolkit Group: Development/Libraries Requires: glibc-devel Requires: libexpat = %{version} Provides: expat-devel %description -n libexpat-devel Expat is an XML 1.0 parser written in C. It aims to be fully conformant. It is currently not a validating XML processor. The current production version of expat can be downloaded from ftp://ftp.jclark.com/pub/xml/expat.zip. The directory xmltok contains a low-level library for tokenizing XML. The interface is documented in xmltok/xmltok.h. The directory xmlparse contains an XML parser library that is built on top of the xmltok library. The interface is documented in xmlparse/xmlparse.h. The directory sample contains a simple example program using this interface. The file sample/build.bat is a batch file to build the example using Visual C++. The directory xmlwf contains the xmlwf application, which uses the xmlparse library. The arguments to xmlwf are one or more files to check for well-formedness. An option -d dir can be specified. For each well-formed input file, the corresponding canonical XML is written to dir/f, where f is the filename (without any path) of the input file. A -x option causes references to external general entities to be processed. A -s option makes documents that are not stand-alone cause an error (a document is considered stand-alone if it is intrinsically stand-alone because it has no external subset and no references to parameter entities in the internal subset or it is declared as stand-alone in the XML declaration). %prep %setup -q cp %{SOURCE1001} . rm -f examples/*.dsp %build export CFLAGS="${CFLAGS} -fPIC" export CXXFLAGS="${CXXFLAGS} -fPIC" export LDFLAGS="${LDFLAGS} -pie" #%reconfigure --disable-static --with-pic %reconfigure --disable-static make %{?_smp_mflags} %check %__make check || exit 0 %install %make_install rm doc/xmlwf.1 %remove_docs %post -n libexpat -p /sbin/ldconfig %postun -n libexpat -p /sbin/ldconfig %files %manifest %{name}.manifest %defattr(-, root, root) %license COPYING %{_bindir}/xmlwf %files -n libexpat %manifest %{name}.manifest %defattr(-, root, root) %{_libdir}/libexpat.so.* %files -n libexpat-devel %manifest %{name}.manifest %defattr(-, root, root) %{_includedir}/* %{_libdir}/libexpat.so %{_libdir}/pkgconfig/expat.pc %changelog