We simply grep for "/usr". So no need for "-E" or "\/". Furthermore, in
the new grep versions this creates warnings.
As written in the grep-3.8 announcement:
Regular expressions with stray backslashes now cause warnings, as
their unspecified behavior can lead to unexpected results.
For example, '\a' and 'a' are not always equivalent
<https://bugs.gnu.org/39678>.
Fixes warnings in the form of:
grep: warning: stray \ before /
Signed-off-by: Nick Hainke <vincent@systemli.org>
(cherry picked from commit
a29d3bc48c40c6a2a93ae1806bea2ac26455cdbb)
[ fix conflict error ]
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
world:
-DISTRO_PKG_CONFIG:=$(shell which -a pkg-config | grep -E '\/usr' | head -n 1)
+DISTRO_PKG_CONFIG:=$(shell which -a pkg-config | grep '/usr' | head -n 1)
export PATH:=$(TOPDIR)/staging_dir/host/bin:$(PATH)
ifneq ($(OPENWRT_BUILD),1)