libpq
conan-center-index
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libpq | conan-center-index | |
---|---|---|
1 | 41 | |
0 | 896 | |
- | 3.1% | |
3.7 | 10.0 | |
5 months ago | about 15 hours ago | |
C | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
libpq
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Build2 seems to have the right idea.
Scattered files: In CMake, it's quite common for the build script to be split over multiple files. Most commonly it's a top-level CMakeLists.txt, then another for each subdirectory (often corresponding to a target), plus some utilities in a cmake/ subdirectory. But that is nothing compared to build2. Just look at the build script repo for libpq. What on earth is going on? There are a few top-level files, plus a submodule for the upstream (fair enough), but then absolutely heaps of subdirectories mirroring pq directories, plus softlinks into the upstream submodule. There are others that actually look worse to me but I don't feel comfortable linking to them because I'm not sure what's going on!
conan-center-index
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The xz attack shell script
Conan is a package manager for C/C++. See: https://conan.io/.
The way it works is that you can provide "recipes", which are Python scripts, that automate the process of collecting source code (usually from a remote Git repository, or a remote source tarball), patching it, making its dependencies and transitive dependencies available, building for specific platform and architecture (via any number of build systems), then packaging up and serving binaries. There's a lot of complexity involved.
Here are the two recipes I mentioned:
libcurl: https://github.com/conan-io/conan-center-index/blob/master/r...
OpenSSL v3: https://github.com/conan-io/conan-center-index/blob/master/r...
Now, for the sake of this thread I want to highlight three things here:
- Conan recipes are usually made by people unaffiliated with the libraries they're packaging;
- The recipes are fully Turing-complete, do a lot of work, have their own bugs - therefore they should really be treated as software comonents themselves, for the purpose of OSS clearing/supply chain verification, except as far as I know, nobody does it;
- The recipes can, and do, patch source code and build scripts. There's supporting infrastruture for this built into Conan, and of course one can also do it by brute-force search and replace. See e.g. ZLib recipe that does it both at the same time:
https://github.com/conan-io/conan-center-index/blob/7b0ac710... -- `_patch_sources` does both direct search-and-replace in source files, and applies the patches from https://github.com/conan-io/conan-center-index/tree/master/r....
Now, good luck keeping track of what's going on there.
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Mokara.io Open Beta (Pre-Built C++ Third-Party Libraries)
Just checkout ConanCenter https://conan.io/center it's free.
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Looking for projects to contribute to
https://github.com/conan-io/conan-center-index there's 200+ PR that need reviewing :) we add community reviewers fairly often
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Conan package manager completely broken after 2.0 release
As for ffmpeg it was last updated 10 days ago https://github.com/conan-io/conan-center-index/commits/master/recipes/ffmpeg/all :)
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PcapPlusPlus in Conan 2.0
This is a more complicated recipe https://github.com/conan-io/conan-center-index/blob/master/recipes/pcapplusplus/all/conanfile.py
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OpenSSL 3.1 Released
You can use the Conan package manager with prebuilt binaries/libraries
https://conan.io/center
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Compiling CrowCPP on Windows and about to kms
It's available in Conan too https://github.com/conan-io/conan-center-index/tree/master/recipes/crowcpp-crow though it's not well maintained so no promises if it's working
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Is there a way to make sure that my friend on windows can compile my c++ project that i made on linux?
You need something like https://conan.io/center/ to install the dependencies. You're lucky because it works well with CMake.
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Conan 2.0, the new version of the open-source C and C++ package manager
This post on github contains a list of packages supported by conan 2.0, its also kept up to date https://github.com/conan-io/conan-center-index/discussions/16196
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First piece of complex CMake code. Need good roasting to help improeve.
Use a package manager: https://vcpkg.link/ https://conan.io/center/
What are some alternatives?
cmake-init-clang-on-windows - Using LLVM Clang on Windows with CMake
Vcpkg - C++ Library Manager for Windows, Linux, and MacOS
VulkanExamples - Examples and demos for the Vulkan C++ API
pkgconf - package compiler and linker metadata toolkit
cmake-init-vcpkg-example - cmake-init generated executable project with vcpkg integration
sol2 - `build2` package of `sol2`
C++ REST SDK - The C++ REST SDK is a Microsoft project for cloud-based client-server communication in native code using a modern asynchronous C++ API design. This project aims to help C++ developers connect to and interact with services.
conan - Conan - The open-source C and C++ package manager
neuronika - Tensors and dynamic neural networks in pure Rust.
Ease - Ease is a Build System for C++ that strive to acheive simplicity. There is no dependancies, no installation you drop off Ease.hpp in your project and can start writing a build function. The build function will be called and the build will start according to the return value of this function.
std-simd - std::experimental::simd for GCC [ISO/IEC TS 19570:2018]