man pkgdata (Commandes) - pkgdata - package data for use by ICU
NAME
pkgdata - package data for use by ICU
SYNOPSIS
pkgdata [ -h, -?, --help ] [ -v, --verbose ] [ -c, --copyright | -C, --comment comment ] [ -m, --mode mode ] -p, --name name -O, --bldopt options [ -e, --entrypoint name ] [ -r, --revision version ] [ -M arg ] [ -F, --rebuild ] [ -k, --clean ] [ -I, --install ] [ -n, --nooutput ] [ -N, --numaric ] [ -s, --sourcedir source ] [ -d, --destdir destination ] [ -T, --tempdir directory ] [ file ... ]
DESCRIPTION
pkgdata takes a set of data files and packages them for use by ICU or applications that use ICU. The typical reason to package files using pkgdata is to make their distribution easier and their loading by ICU faster and less consuming of limited system resources such as file descriptors. Packaged data also allow applications to be distributed with fewer resource files, or even with none at all if they link against the packaged data directly.
pkgdata supports a few different methods of packaging data that serve different purposes.
The default packaging mode is common, or archive. In this mode, the different data files are bundled together as an architecture-dependent file that can later be memory mapped for use by ICU. Data packaged using this mode will be looked up under the ICU data directory. Such packaging is easy to use for applications resource bundles, for example, as long as the application can install the packaged file in the ICU data directory.
Another packaging mode is the dll, or library, mode, where the data files are compiled into a shared library. ICU used to be able to dynamically load these shared libraries, but as of ICU 2.0, such support has been removed. This mode is still useful for two main purposes: to build ICU itself, as the ICU data is packaged as a shared library by default; and to build resource bundles that are linked to the application that uses them. Such resource bundles can then be placed anywhere where the system's dynamic linker will be looking for shared libraries, instead of being forced to live inside the ICU data directory.
The static packaging mode is similar to the shared library one except that it produces a static library.
Finally, pkgdata supports a files mode which simply copies the data files instead of packaging them as a single file or library. This mode is mainly intended to provide support for building ICU before it is packaged as separate small packages for distribution with operating systems such as Debian GNU/Linux for example. Please refer to the packaging documentation in the ICU source distribution for further information on the use of this mode.
pkgdata relies on GNU make(1) to do the packaging, and generates a makefile with rules to build, package, install, or clean the appropriate data.
OPTIONS
- -h, -?, --help Print help about usage and exit.
- -v, --verbose Display extra informative messages during execution.
- -c, --copyright Include a copyright notice in the binary data.
- -C, --comment comment Includes the specified comment in the resulting data instead of the ICU copyright notice.
- -m, --mode mode Set the packaging mode to be used by pkgdata. The different modes and their meaning are explained in the DESCRIPTION section above. The valid mode names are common (or archive), dll (or library), and files.
- -O, --bldopt options Specify options for the builder. The builder is used internally by pkgdata to generate the correct packaged file. Such options include, but are not limited to, setting variables used by make(1) during the build of the packaged file. Note: If icu-config is available, then this option is not needed.
- -p, --name name Set the packaged file name to name. This name is also used as the default entry point name after having been turned into a valid C identifier.
- -e, --entrypoint name
Set the data entry point (used for linking against the data in a
shared library form) to
name.
The default entry point name is the name set by the
-n, --name
option.
- -r, --revision version
Enable versioning of the shared library produced in
dll,
or
library,
mode. The version number has the format
major.minor.patchlevel
and all parts except for
major
are optional. If only
major
is supplied then the version is
assumed to be
major.0
for versioning purposes.
- -M arg
- Pass arg to make(1).
- -F, --rebuild Force the rebuilding of all data and their repackaging.
- -k, --clean Clean temporary files and other build residues.
- -I, --install Install the packaged file (or all the files in the files mode). If the variable DESTDIR is set it will be used for installation.
- -n, --nooutput Do not produce any output but simply a list of affected files.
- -N, --numeric
Instead of using temporary filenames similar to the input symbols, use numeric filenames such
as t0002.c, etc. May be needed for systems which don't allow many similar long filenames, or
for systems that tend to run out of argument space. Note, using this option
implies "-F, --rebuild" - all packaging will be rebuilt every time pkgdata is run.
- -s
- , --sourcedir source Set the source directory to source. The default source directory is the current directory.
- -d, --destdir destination Set the destination directory to destination. The default destination directory is the current directory.
- -T, --tempdir directory Set the directory used to generate temporary files to directory. The default temporary directory is the same as the destination directory as set by the -d, --destdir option.
- -r, --revision version
Enable versioning of the shared library produced in
dll,
or
library,
mode. The version number has the format
major.minor.patchlevel
and all parts except for
major
are optional. If only
major
is supplied then the version is
assumed to be
major.0
for versioning purposes.
AUTHORS
Steven Loomis
Yves Arrouye
VERSION
3.4.1
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2000-2003 IBM, Inc. and others.