For example, to cross-compile from my OS X laptop for Raspberry Pi, you would
do something like:
$ make binary BINARYNAME=node-v`python tools/getnodeversion.py`-linux-arm-pi \
DESTCPU=arm CONFIG_FLAGS="--dest-os=linux"
- Improved styling of download links.
- index.html#download now redirects to /download/
- Added missing hyphens, and added the missing "and 64-bit" for the Mac
Installer.
This target compiles node with "/" as the prefix and installs into a directory
like: "node-v0.8.6-darwin-x86_64". Then it creates a gzipped-tarball of that
directory, called something like: "node-v0.8.6-darwin-x86_64.tar.gz".
The old installer was a JS script, which didn't work if node had been
cross-compiled for another architecture. Replace it with a python script.
Fixes#3807.
Make configure start gyp with the same python interpreter that is used to
run configure itself.
Fixes an issue where configure fails with a SyntaxError because the user
has multiple python binaries on his $PATH and the default one is too old.
In practice, it's not important to lint tests. We lint src/
and lib/, which is where we're more prone to make mistakes that
affect real-world situations in subtle ways, and where more
changes are made that ought to be kept in a consistent style.
Tests are a mess anyways, and no one cares.
This puts all images in doc/images/ and references them via
http://nodejs.org/images/.
Any complaints about copyright usage etc. can thus be node/joyent's
problem, rather than the problem of a downstream distribution channel.
Conflicts:
Makefile