Previously the vlc-ubuntu-focal
image was used to build snap.
In order to be able to update snap to core22, ubuntu focal can is no longer be
the base distribution for snap packaging. This introduces a new docker image
vlc-snap
which can be upgraded when the requirements for Snapcraft are
updated.
Marvin Scholz (2ec45fa9) at 13 Mar 09:57
wasm-emscripten: update emscripten SDK to 3.1.55
Upgrades the toolchain to clang 19 since our last image version.
Upgrades the toolchain to clang 19 since our last image version.
Upgrades the toolchain to clang 19 since our last image version.
Qt Network uses OpenSSL to make "https://" connections. By default it does not link to OpenSSL, but requires the presence of the header files.
It appears that on Debian there are no separate packages for the headers and the libs themselves, so we have to install libssl-dev
instead.
Merged, thanks. Available as tag 20240226203953
.
Yeah, as long as it's in the same RUN
line, it shouldn't add extra layers to the image at least.
For reference: The riscv64 stuff needs to be separate from the previous command because of dependency conflicts (meta packages).
Having the aarch64 stuff separate makes it a little bit more readable? Doesn't really matter.
Marvin Scholz (128481fe) at 26 Feb 20:39
dav1d-debian-unstable: Add an aarch64 cross compiler and sysroot
This allows testing aarch64 builds with QEMU, in order to test all the latest CPU extensions that the regular hardware doesn't support.
CC @another
This allows testing aarch64 builds with QEMU, in order to test all the latest CPU extensions that the regular hardware doesn't support.
CC @another
Actually we already have multiple here anyway…
Any reason this has to be another invocation of apt-get
instead of just adding to the already present one in the line above?
I have no strong preference here but generally we just have one big list of packages in most Dockerfiles (or two if like here we need different apt-get arguments).
LGTM
This allows testing aarch64 builds with QEMU, in order to test all the latest CPU extensions that the regular hardware doesn't support.
CC @another
I think so.
Is this ready to merge?