Redis gitignore was too aggressive since simply broken.
Jemalloc gitignore was too agressive because it is conceived to just
keep the files that allow to generate all the rest in development
environments (so for instance the "configure" file is excluded).
There was a bug in the previous version of this library that caused a
crash under the circumstances described in issue #901.
The newer version of the library appears to be fixed (I tested it
manually with valgrind and everything seems fine now).
For more information about this library please visit this web site:
http://www.inf.puc-rio.br/~roberto/struct/
It failed because of the way jemalloc was compiled (without passing the
right flags to make, but just to configure). Now the same set of flags
are also passed to the make command, fixing the issue.
This fixes issue #744
This version of hiredis merges modifications of the Redis fork with
latest changes in the hiredis repository.
The same version was pushed on the hiredis repository and will probably
merged into the master branch in short time.
In the commit upgrading jemalloc to version 3.0.0 I added the old
version of Jemalloc in the 'jemalloc.orig' directory for an error.
This commit removes the not useful version of jemalloc.
Remove unused variables. Instead of overriding non-standard variables
such as ARCH and PROF, use standard variables CFLAGS and LDFLAGS to
override Makefile settings. Move dependencies generated by `make dep` to
a separate file.
This change moves the build instructions for dependencies to a separate
Makefile in deps/. The ARCH environment variable is stored in a
.make-arch file in the same directory as the Makefile. The contents of
this file is read and compared to the current ARCH, and, on a mismatch
triggers rebuilding the entire source tree.
When file .make-arch exists and matches with ARCH from the environment,
the dependencies are assumed to already be built.
The new "clean" target only cleans the Redis source tree, not its
dependencies. To clear the dependencies as well, the "distclean" target
can be used.