The logic in gen-bootlin-toolchains was assuming all glibc toolchains
have RPC support, which is no longer true since glibc 2.32 has dropped
RPC support.
It turns out that gen-bootlin-toolchains already had some proper logic
that selects BR2_TOOLCHAIN_HAS_NATIVE_RPC depending on the presence of
BR2_TOOLCHAIN_EXTERNAL_INET_RPC in the toolchain fragment. As such
toolchain fragments have been fixed in https://toolchains.bootlin.com,
we can now rely on this to properly decide if the toolchain has RPC
support or not.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
(cherry picked from commit 804a9e1865)
[Peter: drop Makefile changes]
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
quazip requires cmake 3.15 since version 1.0 and
89e7c201f0818adc8224
The rationale for this requirement is that "default locations for the
install(TARGETS command based on the GNUInstallDirs package were only
added in 3.14" and "3.15 is not that much of a difference from 3.14 and
it introduced a lot of useful UI improvements.":
https://github.com/stachenov/quazip/issues/82
Fixes:
- http://autobuild.buildroot.org/results/5d848a46109aef448ea1d1b857a500d9461dc2d9
Note: we also have some patches to allow some packages to build with
cmake-3.10, and this will not be tenable over the long run.
Signed-off-by: Fabrice Fontaine <fontaine.fabrice@gmail.com>
[yann.morin.1998@free.fr: add the "note"]
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
When boot-qemu-image.py script was added, we wanted to run
each qemu defconfig in gitlab, so we expect that all qemu
defconfig generate the script start-qemu.sh in images
directory.
Don't make it a hard requirement even if we prefer to be
able to do a runtime test for each qemu defconfig.
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This commit adds a number of test cases to verify that the CPE_ID_*
variables are properly handled by the generic package infrastructure
and that the "make show-info" JSON output matches what we expect.
A total of 5 different example packages are used to exercise different
scenarios of CPE_ID_* variables usage.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Currently, when the version encoded in a CPE is '-', we assume all
versions are affected, but when it's '*' with no further range
information, we assume no version is affected.
This doesn't make sense, so instead, we handle '*' and '-' in the same
way. If there's no version information available in the CVE CPE ID, we
assume all versions are affected.
This increases quite a bit the number of CVEs and package affected:
- "total-cves": 302,
- "pkg-cves": 100,
+ "total-cves": 597,
+ "pkg-cves": 135,
For example, CVE-2007-4476 has a CPE ID of:
cpe:2.3🅰️gnu:tar:*:*:*:*:*:*:*:*
So it should be taken into account. In this specific case, it is
combined with an AND with CPE ID
cpe:2.3⭕suse:suse_linux:10:*:enterprise_server:*:*:*:*:* but since
we don't support this kind of matching, we'd better be on the safe
side, and report this CVE as affecting tar, do an analysis of the CVE
impact, and document it in TAR_IGNORE_CVES.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
We should not rely on host installed bison/flex for target code. This
ensures better reproducibility of generated code.
http://lists.busybox.net/pipermail/buildroot/2020-November/296786.html
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Baruch Siach <baruch@tkos.co.il>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Now that pkg-stats is able to generate its output based on the list of
packages enabled in the current configuration, cve-checker doesn't
serve any purpose.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
pkg-stats was initially a Buildroot maintenance oriented tool: it was
designed to examine all Buildroot packages and provide
statistics/details about them.
However, it turns out that a number of details provided by pkg-stats,
especially CVEs, are relevant also for Buildroot users, who would like
to check regularly if their specific Buildroot configuration is
affected by CVEs or not, and possibly check if all packages have
license information, license files, etc.
The cve-checker script was recently introduced to provide an output
relatively similar to pkg-stats, but focused on CVEs only.
But in fact, its main difference is on the set of packages that we
consider: pkg-stats considers all packages, while cve-checker uses
"make show-info" to only consider packages enabled in the current
configuration.
So, this commit introduces a -c option to pkg-stats, to tell pkg-stats
to generate its output based on the list of configured packages. -c is
mutually exclusive with the -p option (explicit list of packages) and
-n option (a number of packages, picked randomly).
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Currently, pkg-stats expects being executed from Buildroot's top-level
source directory. As we are going to extend pkg-stats to cover only
the packages available in the current configuration, it makes sense to
be able to run it from the output directory, which can be anywhere
compared to Buildroot's top-level directory.
This commit adjusts pkg-stats to this, by inferring all Buildroot
paths based on the location of the pkg-stats script itself.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
When running the TestInitSystemSystemdRwIfupdown test, the rootfs must
be in read-write mode. The commit log [1] introducing systemd tests say
so:
"basic systemd, read-write, network w/ ifupdown"
With systemd 246.5, the service systemd-update-done return an error code
when it can't write on the filesystem (/etc)
[1] 117835d5fc
[2] 8019995e9a
Fixes:
https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/830981813
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Fixes the following flake8 warnings:
support/testing/tests/core/test_selinux.py:21:1: E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
support/testing/tests/core/test_selinux.py:38:1: E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
support/testing/tests/core/test_selinux.py:51:1: E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
support/testing/tests/core/test_selinux.py:62:1: E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
support/testing/tests/core/test_selinux.py:65:14: E127 continuation line over-indented for visual indent
support/testing/tests/init/test_systemd_selinux.py:53:1: E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
support/testing/tests/init/test_systemd_selinux.py:64:1: E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
Interestingly, the "continuation line over-indented for visual indent"
shows up only once, while the same pattern is there at multiple places
in the file. We fix all places with that over-indentation pattern.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Extract from bug report:
"Code line 120 to line 128 is to check whether the patch containing
"rename from" and "rename to". But it directly use grep to find,
ignoring the patch may be a tar file or else. It can only work on patch
of textfile form."
Fixes:
- https://bugs.buildroot.org/show_bug.cgi?id=11931
Signed-off-by: Fabrice Fontaine <fontaine.fabrice@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
The 2020.08-1 release of Bootlin toolchains has brought support for 3
additional architecture variants, so let's support them.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
glibc toolchains must be disabled for static only configuration.
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Some externals may wish to provide custom init systems for tightly
integrated boot. This has been supported through the BR2_INIT_NONE,
however a downside to the BR2_INIT_NONE is it forces the custom init
system to use either skeleton-custom and roll a custom skeleton for
each target, or skeleton-init-none which isn't a complete skeleton.
Allowing br2-external to define custom BR2_INIT_* means they can now
safely 'select' the BR2_PACKAGE_SKELETON_INIT_*, and re-use any of the
skeletons in Buildroot, or one from a br2-external tree.
Signed-off-by: Brandon Maier <brandon.maier@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Today, the BR2_ROOTFS_SKELETON_CUSTOM is the only way to build a custom
skeleton. But it's limiting as users must provide a pre-built skeleton
for each target. Supporting a br2-external package allows users to build
up a skeleton and customize it with their own KConfig options.
Signed-off-by: Brandon Maier <brandon.maier@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
apply-patches currently blindly removes *.orig / .*.orig files as GNU patch
by default writes these as backup files when patches only apply with fuzz.
This is unfortunate as package sources may contain files ending in .orig as
well, breaking the build. Luckily GNU patch can be told to not write these
backup files using the --no-backup-if-mismatch option, so used that instead
of the .orig removal step.
--no-backup-if-mismatch is supported since GNU patch 2.3.8 (1997-06-17) and
busybox patch if built with CONFIG_DESKTOP, but E.G. isn't supported by the
BSD patch, so add logic to dependencies.sh to error out if patch doesn't
support the flag.
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Currently, we handle three kinds of tests: basic, defconfig, and
runtime, and we treat them totally independently ones from the others.
Except for the basic tests that are ignored when defconfig or runtime
tests are explicitly requested.
The basic tests are also run systematically on all our reference
branches: master, next (when it exists), and the maintenance branches:
YYYY.MM.x.
Furthermore, we can see that the conditions to run each set of tests
are very similar, with only the explicit queries differing by name.
Rework the script so that the conditions are expressed only once, and
each set of tests is decided for each condition. This makes it easier
to decide what tests should run under what conditions.
Using GitLab-CI's schedules, with a variable expressing the actual test
to run, would seem the obvious choice to trigger the pipelines. However,
a schedule is configured for a specific branch, which means we would
need one schedule per branch we want to build per test cases we want to
run, *and* that we update those schedules when we add/remove branches
(e.g. when we open/close 'next', or a maintenance branch). This is not
very nice, as it requires some manual tweaking and twiddling on the web
UI.
Instead, we resort to using triggers, that will be triggered from a
cronjob on some server. Using a cronjiob allows us to more easily manage
the branches we want to test and test cases we want to run, to more
easily spread the load over the week, etc...
Note: triggering a pipeline can be done with a simple curl invocation:
$ curl -X POST \
-F "token=${YOUR_TOKEN}" \
-F "ref=${BRANCH_TO_TEST}" \
-F "variables[BR_SCHEDULE_JOBS]=${TEST_TO_RUN}" \
"https://gitlab.com/api/v4/projects/${YOUR_PROJECT_ID}/trigger/pipeline"
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add tests to ensure the packages SELinux functionalities (being able to
select an extra SELinux module in the refpolicy, and being able to
provide a custom SELinux module) are working as expected.
We use a BR2_EXTERNAL folder, provided in the tests, to use a custom
SELinux enabled package.
Signed-off-by: Antoine Tenart <antoine.tenart@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add a test for BR2_PACKAGE_REFPOLICY_CUSTOM_GIT (which allows to select
a custom location for the SELinux refpolicy). The test uses the official
refpolicy as a test (we only want to test the functionality is working,
not that another refpolicy is correctly building; that is an user
problematic).
Signed-off-by: Antoine Tenart <antoine.tenart@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add a test for the BR2_REFPOLICY_EXTRA_MODULES_DIRS functionality (which
allows to provide custom SELinux modules).
Signed-off-by: Antoine Tenart <antoine.tenart@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This patch adds a test for the BR2_REFPOLICY_EXTRA_MODULES
functionality (which allows to select extra modules within the SELinux
refpolicy using Kconfig).
Signed-off-by: Antoine Tenart <antoine.tenart@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add a test called 'SELinuxSystemdSquashfs' which will perform the same
tests as the Ext4 version, but using a Squashfs filesystem. Thanks to
this, we'll have a test on a real only filesystem.
Signed-off-by: Antoine Tenart <antoine.tenart@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This adds a test called 'SELinuxSystemdExt4'. This test will build an
SELinux enabled image with systemd, boot it, and perform a few runtime
tests to check SELinux related capabilities.
Signed-off-by: Antoine Tenart <antoine.tenart@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Commit 9e4ffdc8cf modified the output of
'setlocalversion' so that the Buildroot version tag is included in the
output, the version part was added in Makefile.
Due to differences in behavior of the used git and Mercurial commands, this
caused different output for the Mercurial case, in BR2_VERSION_FULL and thus
/etc/os-release and 'make print-version'. Assuming the official Buildroot
releases are tagged and no project-specific tags are present, the output
after commit 9e4ffdc8cf is:
-hg<commit>
whereas it is expected to be something like:
2020.02.6-hg<commit>
Change the Mercurial case in setlocalversion to behave similar to git,
looking up the latest tag if the current revision is not itself tagged.
The number of commits after the latest tag is not added, unlike in git, as
this value is not commonly present in Mercurial output, and its added value
can be disputed in this context. Even one commit could bring a huge change
to the sources, so in order to interpret the number one has to look at the
repository anyhow, in which case the commit ID can just be used.
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Add a minimal s390x s13 autobuild configuration for the
internal toolchain with glibc.
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Alexander Egorenkov <egorenar@linux.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Commit a2830f0dad (support/gnuconfig: bump version) carried
spurious, uncommited local changes to config.sub, that were not
part of upstream commit d7a4dee7cc25e332b990d0a6d9f0ddd42cb33cf5.
Fix that by actually using the code as it is upstream.
Signed-off-by: Fabrice Fontaine <fontaine.fabrice@gmail.com>
[yann.morin.1998@free.fr:
- squash the revert and the new bump into this commit
- ammend commit log accordingly
]
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
When multiple conditions match simultaneously, even though that should
not happen in practice, we want the more "important" one to win over
the less "important" ones. For example, a tag is more important than a
branch name or a trigger.
Currently, the latest condition to match takes precendence over any
previous one, while we want the exact opposite.
Fix that with proper fallbacks in else-blocks.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Fixes issues with the triple on IBM s390x and Z machines.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Egorenkov <egorenar@linux.ibm.com>
[yann.morin.1998@free.fr: update both, using the update script]
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Add a new option that prints the (runtime) path of compiled .py files
when VERBOSE=1 is set.
Signed-off-by: Robin Jarry <robin.jarry@6wind.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
When generating a .pyc file, the original .py source file path is
encoded in it. It is used for various purposes: traceback generation,
.pyc file comparison with its .py source, and code inspection.
By default, the source path used when invoking compileall is encoded in
the .pyc file. Since we use paths relative to TARGET_DIR, we end up with
paths that are only valid when relative to '/' encoded in the installed
.pyc files on the target.
This breaks code inspection at runtime since the original source path
will be invalid unless the code is executed from '/'.
Unfortunately, compileall cannot be forced to use the proper path. It
was not written with cross-compilation usage in mind.
Rework the script to call py_compile.compile() directly with pertinent
options:
- The script now has a new --strip-root argument. This argument is
optional but will always be specified when compiling py files in
buildroot.
- All other (non-optional) arguments are folders in which all
"importable" .py files will be compiled to .pyc.
- Using --strip-root=$(TARGET_DIR), the future runtime path of each .py
file is computed and encoded into the compiled .pyc.
No need to change directory before running the script anymore.
The trickery used to handle error reporting was only applicable with
compileall. Since we implement our own "compileall", error reporting
becomes trivial.
Previously, we had a --force option to tell compileall.compiledir() to
forcibly recompile files if they had changed. Now, we would have to
handle it ourselves. It turns out to not be easy and would need us to
delve into the format of bytecompiled files to extract metadata and
compare it with the expected values, that being even dependent on the
python version being used (fortunately, only two for us: python 2.7 and
the latext 3.x).
Still, this is deemed too complex, and byte-compiling is pretty fast, so
much so that it should be eclipsed by the build duration anyway.
So we just drop support for --force, and instead we always byte-compile.
Signed-off-by: Julien Floret <julien.floret@6wind.com>
Signed-off-by: Robin Jarry <robin.jarry@6wind.com>
[yann.morin.1998@free.fr:
- always byte-compile
- drop --force
- expand commit log to state so and explain why
]
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Only run code when the script is executed directly (not imported).
Factorize command description by using the script's __doc__ variable.
Fix typo in --force help message.
Signed-off-by: Robin Jarry <robin.jarry@6wind.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Currently, the check of defconfigs is run for all branches, even those
that are pushed only to run runtime tests. This is very inconvenient.
In fact, we only want to check the defconfigs on standard branches, that
is master, next, and the maintenance branches.
This will also decrease drastically the number gitlab-ci minutes used
when one pushes their repo to gitlab.com, where the number of CI minutes
are now going to be pretty severely restricted.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Reviewed-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Note that those tests were so far ignored only when requesting a single
defconfig build, or a single runtime test build; everything else
was trigerring thoses tests.
However, it feels more natural that they are also ignored when all
defconfigs build. or all runtime tests, are explictly requested.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Reviewed-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Note that we do not propagate the existing comment, because it is
partially wrong; instead we just keep the per-condition comments.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Reviewed-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
When we build the defconfigs, we already check they are correct, so
there is no need to run the correctness check explicitly.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Acked-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Note that we do not propagate the existing comment, because it is
partially wrong; instead we just keep the per-condition comments.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Reviewed-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Currently, the image name and version are duplicated in the main
pipeline and the generated, child pipeline.
This is a condition for a future gaffe, so let's use the image from the
main pipeline when generating the child one.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Reviewed-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
This script is currently very crude, but we're going to extend it, at
which point it will be nicer to have functions, local variables, et al.
Introduce a main() in preparation of those future evolutions.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Reviewed-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Note that one is silenced, rather than fixed: we indeed need to import
after we add the local directory to the modules search path.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Move the code to run check-flake8 into the Makefile, like we have for
check-package, so that it is easy to run locally (and not wait for
someone to report a failure from their Gitlab pipelines).
Compared to the existing check from gitlab-ci.yml, the Makefile check
differs in this respect:
- don't explicitly find *.py files: they are supposed to also be found
as a result of running 'file' on them;
- use git ls-tree instead of find: this is supopsedly faster as it
uses the index rather than readdir();
- don't output the count of warnings or errors: the output is a single
integer, which is confusing when there are errors, and even more so
when there are no, when it is simply '0';
- don't sort: the output is already stable and independent from the
locale;
- don't report the number of processed files: this information is
rather useless, and getting a hold of it would be more challenging
in this new code.
Note: ideally, we would want to use --null, --zero, or similar options,
with utilities that generates or parses a files listing. While git
ls-tree and xargs do support it, it becomes a little bit tricky to use
the --print0 option of file, and then grep in that output (it is not
undoable, but would requires replacing grep+cut with some sed trickery).
Since we do not expect our scripts names to contain funky chars (like
\n or a colon), we just hand-wave away that issue (and the old code was
doing the same assumption too).
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Current X.org X server is incompatible with this driver.
We no longer support unmaintainted versions of X.org X server.
Signed-off-by: Bernd Kuhls <bernd.kuhls@t-online.de>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
When it was applied, commit 243d500f8d (support/testing: add openssh
runtime test) was amended to not provide a NIC to the emulated machine,
as the test did not require access to the outer world: it only uses the
lo interface. Also, there was a discrepancy between the NIC name in the
Buildroot configuration, and the drivers available in our default kernel
image, making the boot hang for a while whaiting for a NIC that would
never come.
However, that tweak was tested locally with a qmeu version more recent
than the one available in our buidroot/base Docker image. As a
consequence, that test fails to run in gitlab-ci.
Revert to using the old way of specifying no network: it works on
gitlab-ci, and qemu versions in standard distros still support it.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Drop the debug-level print as noticed by Titouan.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Titouan Christophe <titouan.christophe@railnova.eu>
This commit adds the new test cases generated automatically by the
bl-toolchains-gen script, to test the integration of the Bootlin
toolchains.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
https://toolchains.bootlin.com/ has been providing for a few years a
number of ready-to-use pre-built toolchains, for a wide range of
architectures (which it turns out, are all built using Buildroot).
While toolchains.bootlin.com provides Buildroot config fragments to
easily use those toolchains with Buildroot (see [0] for example), this
is not visible anywhere. So instead, we would like to add support for
these toolchains in Buildroot just like we have existing support for
Linaro, ARM, Synopsys, etc. toolchains.
[0] https://toolchains.bootlin.com/downloads/releases/toolchains/aarch64/fragments/aarch64--glibc--bleeding-edge-2020.02-2.frag
However, the number of toolchains provided by toolchains.bootlin.com
is really large, and they are regularly updated. Maintaining that
manually would be time consuming and error-prone. So instead, this
commit introduces a script that automatically generates:
- toolchain/toolchain-external/toolchain-external-bootlin/Config.in.options
- toolchain/toolchain-external/toolchain-external-bootlin/toolchain-external-bootlin.mk
- toolchain/toolchain-external/toolchain-external-bootlin/toolchain-external-bootlin.hash
- support/testing/tests/toolchain/test_external_bootlin.py
We create a single external toolchain package, with a Kconfig "choice"
as a sub-option to select the toolchain variant to be used. The script
contains a Python dict that provides the mapping between the
toolchains provided by toolchains.bootlin.com, and the architecture
options/variants they are applicable to.
The test cases allow to verify that the toolchain configuration is
correct, and that it is able to build a Busybox based system. It
doesn't do any runtime testing as such testing is already done by
toolchains.bootlin.com: the test cases here are only meant to verify
that the toolchain-external-bootlin package works as expected.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Reviewed-by: Titouan Christophe <titouan.christophe@railnova.eu>
Tested-by: Titouan Christophe <titouan.christophe@railnova.eu>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
This scripts takes as entry on stdin a JSON description of the package
used for a given configuration. This description is the one generated
by "make show-info".
The script generates the list of all the packages used and if they are
affected by a CVE. The output is either a JSON or an HTML file similar
to the one generated by pkg-stats.
Signed-off-by: Gregory CLEMENT <gregory.clement@bootlin.com>
Tested-by: Matthew Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>=
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
The affects method of the CVE uses the Package class defined in
pkg-stats. The purpose of migrating the CVE class outside of pkg-stats
was to be able to reuse it from other scripts. So let's remove the
Package dependency and only use the needed information.
Signed-off-by: Gregory CLEMENT <gregory.clement@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
In 2019, the JSON vulnerability feeds switched their schema from
version 1.0 to 1.1.
The main difference is the removal of the "affects" element that we
were using to check if a package was affected by a CVE.
This information is now available in the "configuration" element which
contains the cpeid as well as properties about the versions
affected. Instead of having a list of the versions affected, with
these properties, it is possible to have a range of versions.
Signed-off-by: Gregory CLEMENT <gregory.clement@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
In order to be able to use the CVE checking logic outside of
pkg-stats, move the CVE class in a module that can be used by other
scripts.
Signed-off-by: Gregory CLEMENT <gregory.clement@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Some CVE entries in the NVD database have version_value set to "-",
which seems to indicate that it applies to all versions of the
software project, or that they don't really know which versions are
affected, and which are not.
So, for the benefit of doubt, it seems more appropriate to consider
such CVEs as affecting our packages.
This makes the total number of CVEs affecting our next branch jump
from 141 CVEs to 658 CVEs, but that number will go back down once we
switch to the JSON 1.1 schema. Indeed, in the JSON 1.0 schema, there
are often cases where a version_value is set to "=" *and* specific
versions are set to.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
As we recently stopped testing the x86-64 Sourcery toolchain, it means
we no longer have any x86-64 glibc based toolchain in our
autobuilders. Since this is a pretty common configuration, it makes
sense to test it, which this commit does by adding a config fragment
to use the x86-64 glibc bleeding edge Bootlin toolchain.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
This toolchain uses an old gcc 6.2.0, and newer versions of the
toolchain are no longer publicly available. This old gcc 6.2.0 causes
build issues of Boost, which are unfixable without updating the
toolchain. As we're about to drop support for this toolchain entirely,
we must stop testing it in our autobuilder infrastructure.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Modeled after similar python packages.
However, this one is picky, and throws an exception when it
detects that it is not running on a Raspberry Pi. So we just
catch that exception and check this is what we expect.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Christian Stewart <christian@paral.in>
Cc: Michael Fischer <mf@go-sys.de>
Cc: Asaf Kahlon <asafka7@gmail.com>
Cc: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Cc: Ian Haylock <haylocki@yahoo.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This new runtime test is based on test_dropbear.py. The only required change
is to use "-oStrictHostKeyChecking=no" instead of "-y" to accept the new key.
Since the base test infra only provide a uClibc-ng toolchain, add a second
test using a glibc based internal toolchain.
For example, this allow to trigger the openssh 8.1p bug with glibc 2.31 [1].
[1] https://bugs.archlinux.org/task/65386
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@smile.fr>
yann.morin.1998@free.fr:
- deduplicate the whole test
- don't provide any NIC, we only need and use lo
- simplify post-build script (append with cat, don't munge with sed)
]
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
The TestExternalToolchain() base class implement a test checking if
the ELF interpreter that is advertised by Busybox really exists in the
rootfs. Of course, this only makes sense with ELF toolchains. Until
now, only ELF toolchains were tested, but we are going to use
TestExternalToolchain() with non-ELF toolchains as well, so let's make
this conditional.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
[yann.morin.1998@free.fr: strip() lines during readlines()]
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
The pkg-stats script now uses Python3 only constructs (the "async"
keyword) and therefore fails to pass the Python2 flake8 test.
Let's use the Python3 flake8 instead.
Fixes:
https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/681711009
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Reviewed-by: Titouan Christophe <titouan.christophe@railnova.eu>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Since commit 4a40d36f13
("support/testing: switch to Python 3 only") our runtime testing
infrastructure is Python 3.x only.
Therefore, it is no longer needed to have python-nose2 and
python-pexpect in the Docker container used to run our Gitlab CI jobs.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
support/scripts/pkg-stats now uses some Python 3.x only constructs
("async" and related keywords), so we must use the Python 3.x flake8.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This commit slightly improves the output of pkg-stats by showing the
progress of the upstream URL checks and latest version retrieval, on a
package basis:
Checking URL status
[0001/0062] curlpp
[0002/0062] cmocka
[0003/0062] snappy
[0004/0062] nload
[...]
[0060/0062] librtas
[0061/0062] libsilk
[0062/0062] jhead
Getting latest versions ...
[0001/0064] libglob
[0002/0064] perl-http-daemon
[0003/0064] shadowsocks-libev
[...]
[0061/0064] lua-flu
[0062/0064] python-aiohttp-security
[0063/0064] ljlinenoise
[0064/0064] matchbox-lib
Note that the above sample was run on 64 packages. Only 62 packages
appear for the URL status check, because packages that do not have any
URL in their Config.in file, or don't have any Config.in file at all,
are not checked and therefore not accounted.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This commit reworks the code that checks if the upstream URL of each
package (specified by its Config.in file) using the aiohttp
module. This makes the implementation much more elegant, and avoids
the problematic multiprocessing Pool which is causing issues in some
situations.
Suggested-by: Titouan Christophe <titouan.christophe@railnova.eu>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This commit reworks the code that retrieves the latest upstream
version of each package from release-monitoring.org using the aiohttp
module. This makes the implementation much more elegant, and avoids
the problematic multiprocessing Pool which is causing issues in some
situations.
Since we're now using some async functionality, the script is Python
3.x only, so the shebang is changed to make this clear.
Suggested-by: Titouan Christophe <titouan.christophe@railnova.eu>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This commit slightly improves the output of pkg-stats by showing the
progress of the upstream URL checks and latest version retrieval, on a
package basis:
Checking URL status
[0001/0062] curlpp
[0002/0062] cmocka
[0003/0062] snappy
[0004/0062] nload
[...]
[0060/0062] librtas
[0061/0062] libsilk
[0062/0062] jhead
Getting latest versions ...
[0001/0064] libglob
[0002/0064] perl-http-daemon
[0003/0064] shadowsocks-libev
[...]
[0061/0064] lua-flu
[0062/0064] python-aiohttp-security
[0063/0064] ljlinenoise
[0064/0064] matchbox-lib
Note that the above sample was run on 64 packages. Only 62 packages
appear for the URL status check, because packages that do not have any
URL in their Config.in file, or don't have any Config.in file at all,
are not checked and therefore not accounted.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This commit reworks the code that checks if the upstream URL of each
package (specified by its Config.in file) using the aiohttp
module. This makes the implementation much more elegant, and avoids
the problematic multiprocessing Pool which is causing issues in some
situations.
Suggested-by: Titouan Christophe <titouan.christophe@railnova.eu>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This commit reworks the code that retrieves the latest upstream
version of each package from release-monitoring.org using the aiohttp
module. This makes the implementation much more elegant, and avoids
the problematic multiprocessing Pool which is causing issues in some
situations.
Since we're now using some async functionality, the script is Python
3.x only, so the shebang is changed to make this clear.
Suggested-by: Titouan Christophe <titouan.christophe@railnova.eu>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Since the bump of ATF to 2.2 for the ATF Vexpress test case in commit
fc3d6a3ed0
("support/testing/tests/boot/test_atf: update U-Boot/ATF use in
TestATFVexpress"), DTC is now needed otherwise the build fails with:
make[2]: dtc: Command not found
Makefile:873: recipe for target 'build/juno/release/fdts/juno_tb_fw_config.dtb' failed
Fixes:
https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/674934470
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Remove patch that is no longer needed as of upstream commit
1c33be992e8120abd20add8021e4d91d226f5b6a which removed the old VM.
We need to add an exclusion rule for guile modules to check-bin-arch
as they appear as valid ELF binaries but with an architecture of
"None".
Signed-off-by: James Hilliard <james.hilliard1@gmail.com>
[Thomas:
- bump to 3.0.4
- rework how check-bin-arch excludes checking the Guile .go files]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Update our bleeding edge br-arm-internal-glibc defconfig to use the
latest version of gcc and binutils, so that we test these in the
autobuilders.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Since commit 0390777bfa (package/docker-engine: needs some kernel
options), docker-engine now automatically ensures the needed kernel options
are enabled, so drop the explicit options from the kernel config.
23:19:27 TestDockerCompose Starting
23:19:28 TestDockerCompose Building
00:14:41 TestDockerCompose Building done
00:15:30 TestDockerCompose Cleaning up
.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 1 test in 3362.784s
OK
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Since commit 4f8229653 (package/docker-engine: needs more runtime
dependencies), docker-engine now automatically pulls in cgroupfs-mount, so
drop the explicit handling of it in TestDockerCompose.
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
BR2_VERSION_FULL is currently defined as follows:
BR2_VERSION_FULL := $(BR2_VERSION)$(shell $(TOPDIR)/support/scripts/setlocalversion)
This BR2_VERSION_FULL value then gets used as the "VERSION" variable
in the /etc/os-release file.
The logic of "setlocalversion" is that if it is exactly on a tag, it
returns nothing.
If it is on a tag + a number of commits, then it returns only
-XYZ-gABC where XYZ is the number of commits since the last tag, and
ABC the git commit hash (these are extracted from git describe).
This output then gets concatenated to BR2_VERSION which gives
something like 2020.05 or 2020.05-00123-g5bc6a.
The issue is that when you're on a tag specific to your project, which
is not a Buildroot YYYY.MM tag, then the output of setlocalversion is
empty, and all you get as VERSION in os-release is $(BR2_VERSION)
which is not really nice. Worse, if you have another non-official
Buildroot tag between the last official Buildroot tag/version and
where you are, you will get $(BR2_VERSION)-XYZ-gABC, but XYZ will not
correspond to the number of commits since BR2_VERSION, but since the
last tag that "git describe" as found, which is clearly incorrect.
Here is an example: you're on master, "make print-version" (which
displays BR2_VERSION_FULL) will show:
$ make print-version
2020.08-git-00758-gc351877a6e
So far so good. Now, you create a tag say 5 commits "before" master,
and show BR2_VERSION_FULL again:
$ git tag -a -m "dummy tag" dummy-tag HEAD~5
$ make print-version
2020.08-git-00005-gc351877a6e
This makes you believe you are 5 commits above 2020.08, which is
absolutely wrong.
So this commit simplifies the logic of setlocalversion to simply
return what "git describe" provides, and not prepend $(BR2_VERSION) in
the main Makefile. Since official Buildroot tags match official
Buildroot version names, you get the same output when you're on an
official Buildroot tag, or some commits above a Buildroot tag. An in
other cases, you get a sensible output. The logic is also adjusted for
the Mercurial case.
In the above situation, with this commit applied, we get:
$ make print-version
dummy-tag-6-g6258cdddeb
(6 commits instead of 5 as we have this very commit applied, but at
least it's 6 commits on top of the dummy-tag)
Finally, if you're not using a version control system, setlocalversion
was already returning nothing, so in this case, the Makefile simply
sets BR2_VERSION_FULL to BR2_VERSION to preserve this behavior.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
The defconfig check has been introduced by the previous
patch before the building each defconfig but those builds
are done every week or more.
Checking if a defconfig is valid can be done on every
push in the repository since it take few seconds.
This would allow to detect as soon as possible a problem
in a defconfig and eventually avoid breaking the build
while build testing all defconfig.
Introduce a new job template ".defconfig_check" in
gitlab-ci.yml.in and modify the generate-gitlab-ci-yml
to create a job for each defconfig to run the test.
Although, we could have used only one job to do all
tests, using one job per defconfig allow to identify
easily in gitlab which defconfig is falling.
Tested:
https://gitlab.com/kubu93/buildroot/pipelines/138331069https://gitlab.com/kubu93/buildroot/pipelines/171223758
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Use the script added by the previous patch to check
generated config files.
Tested on gitlab:
https://gitlab.com/kubu93/buildroot/pipelines/137597966
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
For the same reason as for 50b747f212,
we need to check if the generated configuration file (.config)
contains all symbols present in the defconfig file.
If not there is an issue with the defconfig.
This script will be used in .gitlab-ci.yml.
Inspired by is_toolchain_usable() function from genrandconfig:
https://git.busybox.net/buildroot/tree/utils/genrandconfig?h=2020.02#n164
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
[yann.morin.1998@free.fr:
- strip defconfig lines when reading them
- use a generator to read the defconfig lines
- no need to strip() again when building the missing list
- testing the list directly, not its len()
- simply sys.exit(1) in the error condition
]
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Move to an external RISC-V 64 bit musl toolchain to ease the load
on the autobuilders.
Signed-off-by: Mark Corbin <mark@dibsco.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add a RISC-V 64-bit autobuild configuration for the internal
toolchain with uclibc.
Signed-off-by: Mark Corbin <mark@dibsco.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Since Gitlab 12.9, Gitlab allow to trigger child pipeline with generated configuration file.
See: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/35632
This allow us to stop updating the .gitlab-ci.yml file when a
new defconfig is added to Buildroot.
Remove check-gitlab-ci.yml job since it is now uneeded.
Remove .gitlab-ci.yml make target.
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
[ann.morin.1998@free.fr: manual: no longer needed to update at all]
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
As no package depends on the standalone cargo package, it can be
dropped.
Signed-off-by: Eric Le Bihan <eric.le.bihan.dev@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Patrick Havelange <patrick.havelange@essensium.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Reviewed-by: David Pierret <david.pierret@smile.fr>
Tested-by: David Pierret <david.pierret@smile.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Drop fix rpath patch which is no longer needed.
Drop g-ir-scanner/g-ir-compiler override patch which is now upstream.
Rebase remaining patches.
Meson now requires single quotes for cross-compilation.conf, replace
double quotes with single quotes.
Signed-off-by: James Hilliard <james.hilliard1@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This fixes the following flake8 warning:
support/scripts/pkg-stats:1005:9: E117 over-indented
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
With python 3, when a package has a version number x-y-z instead of
x.y.z, then the version returned by LooseVersion can't be compared
which raises a TypeError exception:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "./support/scripts/pkg-stats", line 1062, in <module>
__main__()
File "./support/scripts/pkg-stats", line 1051, in __main__
check_package_cves(args.nvd_path, {p.name: p for p in packages})
File "./support/scripts/pkg-stats", line 613, in check_package_cves
if pkg_name in packages and cve.affects(packages[pkg_name]):
File "./support/scripts/pkg-stats", line 386, in affects
return pkg_version <= cve_affected_version
File "/usr/lib64/python3.8/distutils/version.py", line 58, in __le__
c = self._cmp(other)
File "/usr/lib64/python3.8/distutils/version.py", line 337, in _cmp
if self.version < other.version:
TypeError: '<' not supported between instances of 'str' and 'int'
This patch handles this exception by adding a new return value when
the comparison can't be done. The code is adjusted to take of this
change. For now, a return value of CVE_UNKNOWN is handled the same way
as a CVE_DOESNT_AFFECT return value, but this can be improved later
on.
Signed-off-by: Gregory CLEMENT <gregory.clement@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Some packages requires support on the build machine to create gcc
plugins. This commit adds a blind option,
BR2_NEEDS_HOST_GCC_PLUGIN_SUPPORT, which such packages can
select. When this option is enabled, the logic in support/dependencies
verifies that everything needed on the build machine to build gcc
plugins is available.
Signed-off-by: Kamel Bouhara <kamel.bouhara@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Buildroot currently installs openjdk-bin to $(HOST_DIR)/ instead of the more
traditional (for java installations) $(HOST_DIR)/usr/lib/jvm.
As described in https://bugs.busybox.net/show_bug.cgi?id=13001
"Openjdk-bin provides it's own libfreetype.so and places it into
$(HOST_DIR)/lib/. This library causes build failures with the
host-xapp_mkfontscale package due to the overwritten libfreetype.so.
mkfontscale.o: In function `doDirectory':
mkfontscale.c:(.text+0x1a80): undefined reference to `FT_Get_BDF_Property'
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
Reproducing the error is done by repeating the following steps.
make host-freetype
make host-openjdk-bin
make host-xapp_mkfontscale"
There are two options for fixing this problem:
1) add host-freetype and host-lksctp-tools as dependencies to host-openjdk-bin
and then remove the provided libfreetype.so and libsctp.so libraries
in a post_extract_hook.
2) change the installation directory from $(HOST_DIR)/ to
$(HOST_DIR)/usr/lib/jvm just like the target OpenJDK package and
copy the entire source directories contents to the above location.
The second option provides the following advantages:
- the directory structure is consistent with how we handle the target OpenJDK.
- the HOST_OPENJDK_BIN_INSTALL_CMDS step is simplified.
- packages such as Maven require directories of which we are currently not
copying. These missing directories cause programs such as Maven to crash
when running with an error such as
"Can't read cryptographic policy directory: unlimited."
- does not miss any other libraries that solution 1 would not cope with
(e.g. libzip.so from host-libzip, or libnet.so from not-yet existing
host-libnet, or libsctp.so from not-yet existing host-lksctp-tools)
Because the second option is both simple, easier to implement, is low-impact,
and fixes the problems described above wholly, it is the best to implement.
To implement the above changes, we must also modify the following files in the
same patch to match the host's new directory paths:
- openjdk.mk
- openjdk-jni-test.mk
- openjdk-hello-world.mk
To avoid having to change all those packages in the future, expose two
new variables, HOST_OPENJDK_BIN_ROOT_DIR which contains the path where
the openjdk-bin was installed in, and JAVAC, which contains the path to
the javac compiler (modeled after the way the autoconf et al. variables
are set and exposed).
Tested with:
./support/testing/run-tests -o out -d dl tests.package.test_openjdk.TestOpenJdk
Fixes: https://bugs.busybox.net/show_bug.cgi?id=13001
Signed-off-by: Adam Duskett <Aduskett@gmail.com>
[yann.morin.1998@free.fr:
- introduce HOST_OPENJDK_BIN_ROOT_DIR and JAVAC
- expand and tweak the commit log
]
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Older versions of git store the absolute path of the submodules'
repository as stored in the super-project, e.g.:
$ cat some-submodule/.git
gitdir: /path/to/super-project/.git/modules/some-submodule
Obviously, this is not very reproducible.
More recent versions of git, however, store relative paths, which
de-facto makes it reproducible.
Fix older versions by replacing the absolute paths with relative ones.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
The error is misleading: it reports that no name was provided,
when in fact the external.desc file is missing.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>p
Reviewed-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
When a br2-external tree has an issue, e.g. a missing file, or does not
have a name, or the name uses invalid chars, we report that condition by
setting the variable BR2_EXTERNAL_ERROR.
That variable is defined in the script support/scripts/br2-external,
which outputs it on stdout, and checked by the Makefile.
Before d027cd75d0, stdout was explicitly redirected to the generated
.mk file, with exec >"${ofile}" as the Makefile and Kconfig
fragments were generated each with their own call to the script, and
the validation phase would emit the BR2_EXTERNAL_ERROR variable in the
Makefile fragment.
But with d027cd75d0, both the Makefile and Kconfig fragments were now
generated with a single call to the script, and as such the semantics of
the scripts changed, and only each of the actual generators, do_mk and
do_kconfig, had their out put redirected. Which left do_validate with
the default stdout. Which would emit BR2_EXTERNAL_ERROR on stdout.
In turn, the stdout of the script would be interpreted by as part of the
Makefile. But this does not end up very well when a br2-external tree
indeed has an error:
- missing a external.desc file:
Makefile:184: *** multiple target patterns. Stop.
- empty external.desc file:
Config.in:22: can't open file "output/.br2-external.in.paths"
So we must redirect the output of the validation step to the
Makefile fragment, so that the error message is correctly caught by the
top-level Makefile.
Note that we don't need to append in do_mk, and we can do an overwrite
redirection: if we go so far as to call do_mk, it means there was no
error, and thus the fragment is empty.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Reviewed-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
In commit ff9f778c66 (support/gnuconfig: update to 2019-05-28), we
forgot to update the README to reference the sha1 we're using, keeping
the old one from 2016...
Update it now.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
The commit 0f0649140f introduced a change
in the module name: utf8 -> lua-utf8.
The packages-file-list.txt show the change in the files intalled on the rootfs:
[lua-utf8 0.1.2-2 latest version]
lua-utf8,./usr/lib/luarocks/rocks-5.1/luautf8/0.1.2-2/doc/LICENSE
lua-utf8,./usr/lib/luarocks/rocks-5.1/luautf8/0.1.2-2/doc/README.md
lua-utf8,./usr/lib/luarocks/rocks-5.1/luautf8/0.1.2-2/luautf8-0.1.2-2.rockspec
lua-utf8,./usr/lib/luarocks/rocks-5.1/luautf8/0.1.2-2/rock_manifest
lua-utf8,./usr/lib/lua/5.1/lua-utf8.so
[lua-utf8 1.2-0 previous version]
lua-utf8,./usr/lib/luarocks/rocks-5.1/utf8/1.2-0/doc/README.md
lua-utf8,./usr/lib/luarocks/rocks-5.1/utf8/1.2-0/utf8-1.2-0.rockspec
lua-utf8,./usr/lib/luarocks/rocks-5.1/utf8/1.2-0/rock_manifest
lua-utf8,./usr/lib/lua/5.1/utf8.so
Fixes:
https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/526036036
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
As reported by a gitlab runtime test [1] and on the mailing list
[2], some runtime tests are failing on slow host machines when
the qemu-system-<arch> is missing on the host.
The boot-qemu-image.py script need to wait some time after
calling pexpect.spawn() in order to make sure that the qemu
process has been executed in start-qemu.sh.
If start-qemu.sh failed due to missing qemu-system binary
an exception will be thrown by child.expect() and should be
catched by the error handling (pexpect.EOF).
After spending a lot of time to investigate with Yann E. MORIN
[3]. It seems that short-lived child processes are a corner-case
that is not very correctly handled...
Without adding a sleep(1), child.expect() can trigger an
exception before setting the exitstatus of the spawned
process. This issue can be reproduced on a gitlab runner or
by adding "exit 1" in the first line of start-qemu.sh
(after the shebang).
There is even the same workaround in some pexpect examples [4].
Thanks to Yann for the help while investigating the issue.
Tested:
https://gitlab.com/kubu93/buildroot/pipelines/138472925
[1] https://gitlab.com/kubu93/buildroot/pipelines/135487475
[2] http://lists.busybox.net/pipermail/buildroot/2020-April/280037.html
[3] http://patchwork.ozlabs.org/project/buildroot/patch/20200418161023.1221799-1-romain.naour@gmail.com/
[4] https://github.com/pexpect/pexpect/blob/master/examples/ssh_tunnel.py#L80
Fixes:
https://gitlab.com/kubu93/buildroot/-/jobs/509053135
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
[yann.morin.1998@free.fr: reorder imports]
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
This script is intended to be used by gitlab CI to test at runtime Qemu
images generated by Buildroot's Qemu defconfigs.
This allows to troubleshoot different issues that may be associated with
defective builds by lanching a qemu machine, sending root password,
waiting for login shell and then perform a shutdown.
This script is inspired by toolchain builder [1] and the Buildroot
testing infrastructure.
The gitlab CI will call this script for each defconfig build but only
Qemu defconfig will be runtime tested, all others defconfig are ignored.
Some Qemu defconfig must be used with a specific Qemu version (fork)
that is not always available, so the script doesn't error out when it
can't spawn a missing command. That condition is anyway printed in the
log.
Finally, the script start Qemu like it's done for the Buildroot
testing infrastructure (using pexpect).
Note:
We noticed some timeout issues with pexpect when the Qemu machine is
powered off. That's because Qemu process doesn't stop even if the
system is halted (after "System halted"). So the script doesn't error
out when such timeout occure. The behaviour depends on the architecture
emulated by Qemu.
[1] https://github.com/bootlin/toolchains-builder/blob/master/build.sh
Signed-off-by: Jugurtha BELKALEM <jugurtha.belkalem@smile.fr>
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@smile.fr>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
When the 'nvd-path', 'json' and 'html' are used like this:
--html ~/foo
then the tilde expansion is properly done by the shell. However, when
they are used like this:
--html=~/foo
The shell doesn't do the tilde expansion, and pkg-stats doesn't do
it. This commit modifies pkg-stats to ensure that tilde expansion is
done when parsing the 'nvd-path', 'json' and 'html' arguments.
Signed-off-by: Heiko Thiery <heiko.thiery@gmail.com>
[Thomas: improve commit log]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
As of upstream commit 735eb608637e7bbab4082a541ac802cc919fec22,
available since version v20.1.1, support for Python 2.x has been
dropped, and Python >= 3.5 is required. So we make python-txaio depend
on python3, and remove the python2 test of python-txaio.
We also remove the python-six dependency which is no longer used by
txaio, since upstream commit 62b0e7eaa22769687df1de8f57374cb0a42bdc4d.
Signed-off-by: James Hilliard <james.hilliard1@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Upstream commit
c0223223f8,
which has been part of the releases since v20.1.2 has dropped support
for Python 2.x. So python-autobahn is now only available for Python
3.x.
We therefore remove the Python 2.x autobahn tests, and while at it,
drop the python-six dependency, which is no longer needed since
upstream commit
79bd2ba41b,
part of the releases since v20.1.3.
Signed-off-by: James Hilliard <james.hilliard1@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Currently, the build continue even if some symbols disapear from
the generated dot config file (.config).
This patch add a new check in order to stop the test if one
of the provided symbol is missing. This must be treated as error.
For example, if a symbol disapear due to new dependency constraints.
Inspired by is_toolchain_usable() function from genrandconfig:
https://git.busybox.net/buildroot/tree/utils/genrandconfig?h=2020.02#n164
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
TestPythonPackageBase.config provide already the basic uClibc toolchain.
So by adding the symbols for the linaro toolchain some warning are printed
at while loading the configuration:
.config:16:warning: override: reassigning to symbol BR2_TOOLCHAIN_EXTERNAL
.config:16:warning: override: BR2_TOOLCHAIN_EXTERNAL changes choice state
.config:17:warning: override: reassigning to symbol BR2_TARGET_ROOTFS_CPIO
.config:21:warning: override: BR2_TOOLCHAIN_EXTERNAL_LINARO_ARM changes choice state
So, some symbol disapear from the generated dot config (.config) leading
to an error due to a new check in the testsuite infra.
Since this test should use the Linaro toolchain, remove
TestPythonPackageBase.config add BR2_arm=y and disable the rootfs tar option.
While at it, re-order the options so that they appear in the same
order as they appear in a defconfig.
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Adam Duskett <Aduskett@gmail.com>
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Until now, the lxc test was using the ARM CodeSourcery 2014.05 armv5 toolchain.
But the recent systemd version bump to 245 added a toolchain dependency
on systemd package due to build issues with gcc < 5.0.
Before [1] the lxc test was failing to build with the ARM CodeSourcery 2014.05
toolchain. After [1], the test is faling at runtime since the
"BR2_INIT_SYSTEMD=y" symbol disapear from the dot config (.config) due to
the new toolchain dependency.
Fix this by using the same toolchain as for the systemd tests [2]
[1] 2196ee25ff
[2] b3d979c0d1
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
The BR2_GENERATE_LOCALE can only be used by uClibc based toolchains with the
internal toolchain backend [1].
The test_tmux is using a external uClibc toolchain, so the
"BR2_GENERATE_LOCALE="en_US.UTF-8"" line disapear from
the generated dot config (.config) leading to an error due to
a new check in the testsuite infra.
[1] https://git.buildroot.net/buildroot/commit/?id=bd0ffe2206fbd32baf7f4a1dc5fde81cfad70462
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
The BR2_TOOLCHAIN_EXTERNAL_LOCALE is only defined for uClibc based
custom external toolchains.
The test_glxinfo is using a glibc toolchain, so the
"# BR2_TOOLCHAIN_EXTERNAL_LOCALE is not set" line disapear from
the generated dot config (.config) leading to an error due to
a new check in the testsuite infra.
There is the same problem with:
BR2_TOOLCHAIN_EXTERNAL_HAS_THREADS_DEBUG=y
BR2_TOOLCHAIN_EXTERNAL_HAS_THREADS=y
BR2_TOOLCHAIN_EXTERNAL_HAS_THREADS_NPTL=y
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
The BR2_TOOLCHAIN_EXTERNAL_LOCALE is only defined for uClibc based
custom external toolchains.
The test_syslinux is using a glibc toolchain, so the
"# BR2_TOOLCHAIN_EXTERNAL_LOCALE is not set" line disapear from
the generated dot config (.config) leading to an error due to
a new check in the testsuite infra.
There is the same problem with:
BR2_TOOLCHAIN_EXTERNAL_HAS_THREADS_DEBUG=y
BR2_TOOLCHAIN_EXTERNAL_HAS_THREADS=y
BR2_TOOLCHAIN_EXTERNAL_HAS_THREADS_NPTL=y
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This commit adds four new tests for the syslinux bootloader:
- Building on x86, for legacy BIOS
- Building on x86, for EFI BIOS
- Building on x86-64, for legacy BIOS
- Building on x86-64, for EFI BIOS
Runtime testing in Qemu would certainly be possible, but is left as a
future addition to these tests.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Update the toolchain being used by the testsuite infra.
The new toolchain 2018.11-1 is based on gcc 8.2, uClibc-ng 1.0.30,
linux-headers 4.14 and binutils 2.31.1.
Enable BR2_TOOLCHAIN_HAS_THREADS_DEBUG that is now required.
The old toolchain 2017.05 is based on gcc 4.9, uClibc-ng 1.0.25,
linux-headers 3.10 and binutils 2.27.
Tested with gitlab
https://gitlab.com/kubu93/buildroot/pipelines/132376578
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Following commit eee96b0f0a that adds a
gcc patch for OpenRISC, the OpenRISC pre-built toolchain was
rebuilt. Let's use this new toolchain version for the autobuilders.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
make-4.3 shipped with a backward incompatible change in how sharp signs
are handled in macros. Previously, up to make 4.2, the sharp sign would
always start a comment, unless backslash-escaped, even in a macro or a
fucntion call.
Now, the sharp sign is no longer starting a comment when it appears
inside such a macro or function call. This behaviour was supposed to be
in force since 3.81, but was not; 4.3 fixed the code to match the doc.
As such, use of external toolchains is broken, as we use the sharp sign
in the copy_toolchain_sysroot macro, in shell variable expansion to
strip off any leading /: ${target\#/}.
Fix that by applying the workaround suggested in the release annoucement
[0], by using a variable to hold a sharp sign.
[0] https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/info-gnu/2020-01/msg00004.html
Signed-off-by: Yaroslav Syrytsia <me@ys.lc>
[yann.morin.1998@free.fr:
- move the SHARP_SIGN definition out of Makefile and into support/
- expand the commit log
]
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
The older version of flake8 on the autobuilders does not support typehints.
As such, flake8 throws the following error when scanning sample_gst1_python:
E999 SyntaxError: invalid syntax
Remove the typehinting from on_message to fix this issue.
Signed-off-by: Adam Duskett <Aduskett@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
The config is missing the following packages:
- BR2_PACKAGE_GST1_PLUGINS_BASE
This is needed for the videotestsrc plugin which provides
videotestsrc.
- BR2_PACKAGE_GST1_PLUGINS_BAD
This is needed for the debugutils plugin which provides
fakevideosink.
- BR2_PACKAGE_GST1_PLUGINS_BASE_PLUGIN_VIDEOTESTSRC
videotestsrcplugin used by the example pipeline.
- BR2_PACKAGE_GST1_PLUGINS_BAD_PLUGIN_DEBUGUTILS
fakevideosink plugin used by the example pipeline.
The sample was also amended to fix:
- no call to main.
- using autovideosink instead of fakevideosink. Using Fakevideoskink
is preferred because its primary purpose is for debugging and sample
pipelines. Autovideosink does not work because there is no video
output device.
- No function on_message. Without this function, the script fails
because of the missing function.
- The script sets the pipeline to Gst.State.EOS instead of
Gst.State.NULL which results in a failed pipeline state. When the
state is set to NULL, gstreamer automatically calls EOS. Manually
setting the pipeline state to EOS results in the following error:
Trying to dispose element sink, but it is in PLAYING instead of
the NULL state. You need to explicitly set elements to the NULL
state before dropping the final reference, to allow them to
clean up. A refcounting bug may also cause this problem in the
application or some element.
In addition, the default timeout is set too low and would result in a
test failure, this has been changed to 200 seconds.
These issues are now properly fixed, and the sample script passes.
Signed-off-by: Adam Duskett <Aduskett@gmail.com>
[yann.morin.1998@free.fr:
- meld the two patches together
- add the print() in the on_demand callback
]
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
This reverts commit 25033cfb86.
This perl package is deprecated and gives following recommendations while
building:
*** THIS IS NOT AN ERROR, JUST A MESSAGE FOR YOUR INFORMATION ***
Do you really need Crypt::SSLeay?
Starting with version 6.02 of LWP, https support was unbundled into
LWP::Protocol::https. This module specifies as one of its prerequisites
IO::Socket::SSL which is automatically used by LWP::UserAgent unless
this preference is overridden separately. IO::Socket::SSL is a more
complete implementation, and, crucially, it allows hostname
verification. Crypt::SSLeay does not support this. At this point,
Crypt::SSLeay is maintained to support existing software that already
depends on it.
However, it is possible that your software does not really depend on
Crypt::SSLeay, only on the ability of LWP::UserAgent class to
communicate with sites over SSL/TLS.
If are using version LWP 6.02 or later, and therefore have installed
LWP::Protocol::https and its dependencies, and do not explicitly use
Net::SSL before loading LWP::UserAgent, or override the default socket
class, you are probably using IO::Socket::SSL and do not really need
Crypt::SSLeay.
Before installing Crypt::SSLeay, you may want to try specifying a
dependency on LWP::Protocol::https.
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Fixes:
support/testing/tests/package/test_gst1_python.py:29:1: W391 blank line at end of file
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Fixes:
support/testing/tests/package/sample_python_gobject.py:5:1: E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
support/testing/tests/package/sample_python_gobject.py:8:7: E111 indentation is not a multiple of four
support/testing/tests/package/sample_python_gobject.py:11:1: E305 expected 2 blank lines after class or function definition, found 1
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Fixes the following flake8 warnings:
support/testing/tests/package/sample_gst1_python.py:5:1: F401 'time' imported but unused
support/testing/tests/package/sample_gst1_python.py:7:1: E402 module level import not at top of file
support/testing/tests/package/sample_gst1_python.py:21:12: W292 no newline at end of file
For the E402 warning, we add a "noqa" marker, as we really want the
gi.require_version() to be before.
There is still one remaining warning to be fixed:
support/testing/tests/package/sample_gst1_python.py:18:28: F821 undefined name 'on_message'
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
flake8 complains with:
support/scripts/pkg-stats:339:13: E722 do not use bare 'except'
Due to the construct:
try:
something
except:
print("some message")
raise
Which is in fact OK because the exception is re-raised. This issue is
discussed at https://github.com/PyCQA/pycodestyle/issues/703, and the
general agreement is that these "bare except" are OK, and should be
ignored from flake8 using a noqa statement.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
flake8 complains with:
pkg-stats:38:1: E402 module level import not at top of file
This is due to sys.path.append() being before the import from
getdeveloperlib, but we really need this sys.path.append() to be
before, so let's ignore this flake8 warning.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Currently, we build a complete AArch64 system, including a kernel. This
can take quite some time.
Switch to an armv7 system, which allows us to use one a prebuilt kernel,
thus significantly reducing the test time.
Signed-off-by: Adam Duskett <Aduskett@gmail.com>
[yann.morin.1998@free.fr:
- use a standalone config; don't inherit from TestPythonPackageBase
- use the default external toolchain (ARM, not Linaro)
- rewrite commit log
]
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
This test case runs a simple pipeline for 100 frames to ensure that
gst1-python works properly.
Signed-off-by: Adam Duskett <Aduskett@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
This commit updates all our toolchain configuration fragments for
pre-built Buildroot toolchains to use toolchains built with Buildroot
2020.02.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
The C program inside check-kernel-headers.sh has two checking mode: a
strict and a loose one.
In strict mode, we want the kernel headers version declared by the
user to match exactly the one of the toolchain.
In loose mode, we want the kernel headers version of the toolchain to
be greater than or equal to the one declared by the user: this is used
when we have a toolchain that has newer headers than the latest
version known by Buildroot.
However, in loose mode, we continue to show the "Incorrect kernel
headers version" message, even though we then return a zero error
code. This is very confusing: you see an error displayed on the
terminal, but the build goes on.
We fix that by first doing the loose check first, and returning 0 if
it succeeds. And then we move on with the strict check where we want
the version to be identical.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
This file was created by utils/scancpan while adding other packages but
apparently not yet added in the repo.
Assign this test case to Bernd in the DEVELOPERS file since he is
listed as the maintainer for this package.
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Added via utils/scancpan, adding a host dependency to perl-try-tiny and
target dependency to openssl.
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Dependency for perl-crypt-ssleay (added in subsequent commit).
Added via utils/scancpan, without changes.
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Other changes:
- Convert the package to a meson package.
- Remove 0001-add-PYTHON_INCLUDES-override.patch as it no longer applies.
- Add gobject-introspection as a dependency.
- Add the package under myself in the DEVELOPERS file.
Because gobject-introspection is now a dependency of python-gobject, the test
must be updated at the same time.
- Change TestPythonPy2Gobject to TestPythonPy3Gobject as
gobject-introspection requires python3.
- Refactor test_python_gobject.py to no longer inherit the
TestPythonPackageBase class, as this class uses a base config that does not
support gobject-introspection.
- Update sample_python_gobject to use Glib to find the path of sh.
Signed-off-by: Adam Duskett <Aduskett@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Two simple tests to ensure that openrc boots without any services crashing
with a read only and a read write filing system.
Signed-off-by: Adam Duskett <Aduskett@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Carlos Santos <unixmania@gmail.com>
[yann.morin.1998@free.fr: really check the init process]
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
If there is no infra set or infra is virtual the status is set to 'na'.
This is done for the follwing checks:
- license
- license-files
- hash
- hash-license
- patches
- version
Signed-off-by: Heiko Thiery <heiko.thiery@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This value can be used for later processing.
In the buildroot-stats application this is used to create links pointing
to the git repo of buildroot.
Signed-off-by: Heiko Thiery <heiko.thiery@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Unify the status check information. The status is stored in a tuple. The
first entry is the status that can be 'ok', 'warning' or 'error'. The
second entry is a verbose message.
The following checks are performed:
- url: status of the URL check
- license: status of the license presence check
- license-files: status of the license file check
- hash: status of the hash file presence check
- patches: status of the patches count check
- pkg-check: status of the check-package script result
- developers: status if a package has developers in the DEVELOPERS file
- version: status of the version check
With that status information the following variables are replaced:
has_license, has_license_files, has_hash, url_status
Signed-off-by: Heiko Thiery <heiko.thiery@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Use the function 'parse_developers' function from getdeveloperlib that
collect the information about the developers and the files they
maintain. Then set the maintainer(s) to each package.
Signed-off-by: Heiko Thiery <heiko.thiery@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Remove the patch_count attribute and use a class property instead.
Signed-off-by: Heiko Thiery <heiko.thiery@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This patch changes the type of the latest_version variable to a dict.
This is for better readability/usability of the data. With this the json
output is more descriptive in later processing of the json output.
Signed-off-by: Heiko Thiery <heiko.thiery@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
During the CVE checking phase, we can still see a huge amount of
Python processes (actually 128) running on the host, even though
the CVE step is entirely ran in the main thread.
These are actually the worker processes spawned to check for the
packages URL statuses and the latest versions from release-monitoring.
This is because of an issue in Python's multiprocessing implementation:
https://bugs.python.org/issue34172
The problem was already there before the CVE matching step was
introduced, but because pkg-stat was terminating right after the
release-monitoring step, it went unnoticed.
Also, do not hold a reference to the multiprocessing pool from
the Package class, as this is not needed.
Signed-off-by: Titouan Christophe <titouan.christophe@railnova.eu>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
In Python 3, the functions from the subprocess module return bytes
(and no longer strings as in Python 2), which must be decoded for
further text operations.
Now, pkg-stats can be run in Python 3.
Signed-off-by: Titouan Christophe <titouan.christophe@railnova.eu>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
It seems like throughout the series that the CVE pkg-stats support
went through, the support for ignoring CVEs in the per-package
<pkg>_IGNORE_CVES variable was forgotten.
Let's re-introduce this, which is now very simple thanks to the CVE
class, its .identifier() propertly and the .is_cve_ignored() method of
the Package class
Cc: Titouan Christophe <titouan.christophe@railnova.eu>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
With classpath removed, no packages select these symbols any more - So drop
them and their corresponding logic in dependencies.sh / genrandconfig.
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
During the CVE checking phase, we can still see a huge amount of
Python processes (actually 128) running on the host, even though
the CVE step is entirely ran in the main thread.
These are actually the worker processes spawned to check for the
packages URL statuses and the latest versions from release-monitoring.
This is because of an issue in Python's multiprocessing implementation:
https://bugs.python.org/issue34172
The problem was already there before the CVE matching step was
introduced, but because pkg-stat was terminating right after the
release-monitoring step, it went unnoticed.
Also, do not hold a reference to the multiprocessing pool from
the Package class, as this is not needed.
Signed-off-by: Titouan Christophe <titouan.christophe@railnova.eu>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
In Python 3, the functions from the subprocess module return bytes
(and no longer strings as in Python 2), which must be decoded for
further text operations.
Now, pkg-stats can be run in Python 3.
Signed-off-by: Titouan Christophe <titouan.christophe@railnova.eu>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
While investigating [1] one units failed due to missing kernel option
CONFIG_BINFMT_MISC needed by "proc-sys-fs-binfmt_misc.mount" service.
It's because the kernel support autofs4 but not MISC binaries.
Since the systemd test infra use the default defconfig (vexpress),
we need to provide a linux fragment to enable CONFIG_BINFMT_MISC.
[1] https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/454255917
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@smile.fr>
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
[yann.morin.1998@free.fr:
- move the kernel config with the others in conf/
]
Tested-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
The NVD files that are used to build the list of CVEs affecting
Buildroot packages are quite large (a few hundreds MB of json),
and cause the pkg-stats scripts to have a huge memory footprint
(a few GB with Python 2.7).
However, because we only need to iterate on CVE items one by one,
we can process them in streaming (ie decoding one CVE at a time
from the JSON representation). Because the json module from the
python standard library does not support such a mode of operation,
we switch to the third-party package ijson, which is compatible
with both Python 2 and Python3.
To run the script with these modifications, one should install
the ijson python package. This can be done with pip:
`pip install ijson`. On Debian based distributions, this can
also be done with the apt package manager:
`apt install python-ijson`.
Signed-off-by: Titouan Christophe <titouan.christophe@railnova.eu>
Reviewed-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Tested-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
The NVD files that are used to build the list of CVEs affecting
Buildroot packages are quite large (a few hundreds MB of json),
and cause the pkg-stats scripts to have a huge memory footprint
(a few GB with Python 2.7).
However, because we only need to iterate on CVE items one by one,
we can process them in streaming (ie decoding one CVE at a time
from the JSON representation). Because the json module from the
python standard library does not support such a mode of operation,
we switch to the third-party package ijson, which is compatible
with both Python 2 and Python3.
To run the script with these modifications, one should install
the ijson python package. This can be done with pip:
`pip install ijson`. On Debian based distributions, this can
also be done with the apt package manager:
`apt install python-ijson`.
Signed-off-by: Titouan Christophe <titouan.christophe@railnova.eu>
Reviewed-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Tested-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
It seems like throughout the series that the CVE pkg-stats support
went through, the support for ignoring CVEs in the per-package
<pkg>_IGNORE_CVES variable was forgotten.
Let's re-introduce this, which is now very simple thanks to the CVE
class, its .identifier() propertly and the .is_cve_ignored() method of
the Package class
Cc: Titouan Christophe <titouan.christophe@railnova.eu>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Reorder imports using the isort utility to fix a warning from pylint3:
wrong-import-order: standard import "import multiprocessing" should be
placed before "import nose2"
Signed-off-by: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
According to PEP8 empty sequences should be checked as booleans.
Fixes the following PEP8 warning:
Do not use `len(SEQUENCE)` to determine if a sequence is empty
Signed-off-by: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
This commit extends the pkg-stats script to grab information about the
CVEs affecting the Buildroot packages.
To do so, it downloads the NVD database from
https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/data-feeds in JSON format, and processes the
JSON file to determine which of our packages is affected by which
CVE. The information is then displayed in both the HTML output and the
JSON output of pkg-stats.
To use this feature, you have to pass the new --nvd-path option,
pointing to a writable directory where pkg-stats will store the NVD
database. If the local database is less than 24 hours old, it will not
re-download it. If it is more than 24 hours old, it will re-download
only the files that have really been updated by upstream NVD.
Packages can use the newly introduced <pkg>_IGNORE_CVES variable to
tell pkg-stats that some CVEs should be ignored: it can be because a
patch we have is fixing the CVE, or because the CVE doesn't apply in
our case.
>From an implementation point of view:
- A new class CVE implement most of the required functionalities:
- Downloading the yearly NVD files
- Reading and extracting relevant data from these files
- Matching Packages against a CVE
- The statistics are extended with the total number of CVEs, and the
total number of packages that have at least one CVE pending.
- The HTML output is extended with these new details. There are no
changes to the code generating the JSON output because the existing
code is smart enough to automatically expose the new information.
This development is a collective effort with Titouan Christophe
<titouan.christophe@railnova.eu> and Thomas De Schampheleire
<thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Titouan Christophe <titouan.christophe@railnova.eu>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Since [1], the GLX support is enabled by BR2_PACKAGE_MESA3D_OPENGL_GLX
symbol.
Since [2], only one swrast provider can be built.
Keep BR2_PACKAGE_MESA3D_DRI_DRIVER_SWRAST.
Fixes:
https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/400391349
[1] 5cb821d563
[2] 09a0a28507
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@smile.fr>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Most, but not all our C code follows the Linux kernel code style (as
documented in Documentation/process/coding-style.rst). Adjust the few
places doing differently:
- Braces:
..but the preferred way, as shown to us by the prophets Kernighan
and Ritchie, is to put the opening brace last on the line
- Spaces after keywords:
Use a space after (most) keywords
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
When Buildroot is released, it knows up to a certain kernel header
version, and no later. However, it is possible that an external
toolchain will be used, that uses headers newer than the latest version
Buildroot knows about.
This may also happen when testing a development, an rc-class, or a newly
released kernel, either in an external toolchain, or with an internal
toolchain with custom headers (same-as-kernel, custom version, custom
git, custom tarball).
In the current state, Buildroot would refuse to use such toolchains,
because the test is for strict equality.
We'd like to make that situation possible, but we also want the user not
to be lenient at the same time, and select the right headers version
when it is known.
So, we add a new Kconfig blind option that the latest kernel headers
version selects. This options is then used to decide whether we do a
strict or loose check of the kernel headers.
Suggested-by: Aaron Sierra <asierra@xes-inc.com>
Signed-off-by: Vincent Fazio <vfazio@xes-inc.com>
[yann.morin.1998@free.fr:
- only do a loose check for the latest version
- expand commit log
]
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Tested-by: Vincent Fazio <vfazio@xes-inc.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
This also adds the new tests to the gitlab CI configuration.
Signed-off-by: Titouan Christophe <titouan.christophe@railnova.eu>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
- Validates an archive can be installed and removed
- Builds an archives that uses postinst and prerm scripts
Signed-off-by: Matthew Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
The README file saved by legal-info does not mention the host package
variant of the saved material. Add them.
Signed-off-by: Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
The test-case for python-gitdb2 consists solely in verifying that the
module can indeed be imported.
However, flake8 errors out on unused imports. Furthermore, it also
errors about wildcard imports, as it can detect unused symbols.
Commit d8c86be9cd (support/testing: fix python-gitdb2 test) tried to
address this issue, by explicitly squelching the two errors, F401 and
F403.
While that works on recent distros, the image used by our docker
pipeline is laggign behind and the flake8 there only handles at most a
single error in the noqa list.
Do as is done with the other python samples, and just blindly ignore
all errors.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
In commit aee39cbf27 (arch/riscv: set the default float ABI based on
ISA extensions), the default ABI changed, so the config fragments used
by the autobuilders were adapated accordingly, in commit f89871e810
(support/config-fragments: fix br-riscv{32,64} toolchain fragments).
But now, we need to revert again, because the newer toolchains are now
using the default ABI again.
We do not really do a revert, though, because the original change was
right, and a revert would mean it was not.
Fixes:
http://autobuild.buildroot.org/results/b59/b593267fb9fc9a002b977e049b2a5389dbaded30/ (riscv32)
http://autobuild.buildroot.org/results/b42/b42a4b22b29f47d5c85be119b310f1dfb61112a1/ (riscv64)
... and so many others on various packages...
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Mark Corbin <mark.corbin@embecosm.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Simple bump of the toolchain components. For nios2, the toolchain now
has SSP support as well.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
[yann.morin.1998@free.fr:
- fix version it commit title
- mention SSP for nios2
]
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
To generate a reproducible archive from a svn repository mainly the same
aproach is done like for the archives from a git repository.
Signed-off-by: Heiko Thiery <heiko.thiery@gmail.com>
[yann.morin.1998@free.fr: get the date of the revision]
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
This adds a test case for python-avro, with a script that
performs a simple deserialization.
Signed-off-by: Titouan Christophe <titouan.christophe@railnova.eu>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cthe test-case for python-gitdb2 consists solely in verifying that the
module can indeed be imported.
However, flake8 errors out on unused imports. Furthermore, it also
errors about wildcard imports, as it can detect unused symbols.
Squelch those errors.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Now that we have the EXTRACTOR_PKG_DEPENDENCY.* variables available,
we can use them to implement extractor-system-dependency: if for a
given archive type, the corresponding EXTRACTOR_PKG_DEPENDENCY.<type>
variable is empty, then it means we need the corresponding extractor
tool to be provided by the system.
Following this, EXTRACTOR_DEPENDENCY_PRECHECKED_EXTENSIONS is no
longer used, so we can drop it from support/dependencies/.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Add a simple test case that imports the module.
Signed-off-by: Adam Duskett <Aduskett@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add a simple test case that imports the module and instantiates a new
SlidingWindowMapManager class.
Signed-off-by: Adam Duskett <Aduskett@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This reverts commit 6f35d96756.
Repeat after me: on the master branch you will not work. On the master
branch you will not work.
This definitely shouldn't have been pushed. Sorry about that.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Running "git fetch origin ${cset}:${cset}" to create a local ref
${cset} from the remote ref ${cset} causes Git to issue a warning like
the below, when the version is a full commit hash:
===
warning: refname '49eb4ecb1ef9879ebc6789a1bdb536ab2b1d9871' is ambiguous.
Git normally never creates a ref that ends with 40 hex characters
because it will be ignored when you just specify 40-hex. These refs
may be created by mistake. For example,
git switch -c $br $(git rev-parse ...)
where "$br" is somehow empty and a 40-hex ref is created. Please
examine these refs and maybe delete them. Turn this message off by
running "git config advice.objectNameWarning false"
===
This warning is very confusing for users, and is caused by the fact
that Git doesn't like our local ref name to look like a commit hash.
So, this commit proposes to fix the issue by having the local ref
named buildroot-${cset}, i.e
buildroot-${version-specified-by-the-package}.
The generated tarballs are exactly identical, nothing changes, it is
really just internally the local ref we are using to checkout the
correct version that is different. And it avoids the confusing
warning.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Commit c4e6d5c8be ("core: implement
per-package SDK and target") had a mistake on the regexp that is used
to match $(PER_PACKAGE_DIR)/<something>/, and due to this, the regexp
was never matched.
The + sign in [^/]+ which was suggested by Yann E. Morin during the
review of the per-package patch series (instead of [^/]*) needs to be
escaped to be taken into account correctly. Without this, the regexp
doesn't match, and the replacement is not done, causing:
(1) For the libtool fixup in pkg-generic.mk, the lack of replacement
causes libtool .la files to not be tweaked as expected, which it
turn causes build failures reported by the autobuilder.
(2) For the fix-rpath, the RPATH of host binaries in the SDK were not
correct.
Interestingly, we have the same regexp in
support/scripts/check-host-rpath, but here the + sign does not need to
be escaped.
Fixes:
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/d4d996f3923699e266afd40cc7180de0f7257d99/ (libsvg-cairo)
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/56330f86872f67a2ce328e09b4c7b12aa835a432/ (bind)
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/9e0fc42d2c9f856b92954b08019b83ce668ef289/ (ibrcommon)
and probably a number of other similar issues
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
This test comprises of four simple steps:
1: Start a new simple project called testsite.
2: Run ./manage.py migrate on the new testsite.
3: Run ./manage.py runserver 0.0.0.0:1234 & sleep 30
- The sleep 30 is necessary as it may take several seconds for
the django server to fully start.
4: Run netstat to ensure the server opened port 1234.
Signed-off-by: Adam Duskett <aduskett@greenlots.com>
[Thomas: use self.assertRunOk() when appropriate]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add a simple test case that imports the module.
Signed-off-by: Adam Duskett <Aduskett@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
This commit implements the core of the move to per-package SDK and
target directories. The main idea is that instead of having a global
output/host and output/target in which all packages install files, we
switch to per-package host and target directories, that only contain
their explicit dependencies.
There are two main benefits:
- Packages will now see only the dependencies they explicitly list in
their <pkg>_DEPENDENCIES variable, and the recursive dependencies
thereof.
- We can support top-level parallel build properly, because a package
only "sees" its own host directory and target directory, isolated
from the build of other packages that can happen in parallel.
It works as follows:
- A new output/per-package/ directory is created, which will contain
one sub-directory per package, and inside it, a "host" directory
and a "target" directory:
output/per-package/busybox/target
output/per-package/busybox/host
output/per-package/host-fakeroot/target
output/per-package/host-fakeroot/host
This output/per-package/ directory is PER_PACKAGE_DIR.
- The global TARGET_DIR and HOST_DIR variable now automatically point
to the per-package directory when PKG is defined. So whenever a
package references $(HOST_DIR) or $(TARGET_DIR) in its build
process, it effectively references the per-package host/target
directories. Note that STAGING_DIR is a sub-dir of HOST_DIR, so it
is handled as well.
- Of course, packages have dependencies, so those dependencies must
be installed in the per-package host and target directories. To do
so, we simply rsync (using hard links to save space and time) the
host and target directories of the direct dependencies of the
package to the current package host and target directories.
We only need to take care of direct dependencies (and not
recursively all dependencies), because we accumulate into those
per-package host and target directories the files installed by the
dependencies. Note that this only works because we make the
assumption that one package does *not* overwrite files installed by
another package.
This is done for "extract dependencies" at the beginning of the
extract step, and for "normal dependencies" at the beginning of the
configure step.
This is basically enough to make per-package SDK and target work. The
only gotcha is that at the end of the build, output/target and
output/host are empty, which means that:
- The filesystem image creation code cannot work.
- We don't have a SDK to build code outside of Buildroot.
In order to fix this, this commit extends the target-finalize step so
that it starts by populating output/target and output/host by
rsync-ing into them the target and host directories of all packages
listed in the $(PACKAGES) variable. It is necessary to do this
sequentially in the target-finalize step and not in each
package. Doing it in package installation means that it can be done in
parallel. In that case, there is a chance that two rsyncs are creating
the same hardlink or directory at the same time, which makes one of
them fail.
This change to per-package directories has an impact on the RPATH
built into the host binaries, as those RPATH now point to various
per-package host directories, and no longer to the global host
directory. We do not try to rewrite such RPATHs during the build as
having such RPATHs is perfectly fine, but we still need to handle two
fallouts from this change:
- The check-host-rpath script, which verifies at the end of each
package installation that it has the appropriate RPATH, is modified
to understand that a RPATH to $(PER_PACKAGE_DIR)/<pkg>/host/lib is
a correct RPAT.
- The fix-rpath script, which mungles the RPATH mainly for the SDK
preparation, is modified to rewrite the RPATH to not point to
per-package directories. Indeed the patchelf --make-rpath-relative
call only works if the RPATH points to the ROOTDIR passed as
argument, and this ROOTDIR is the global host directory. Rewriting
the RPATH to not point to per-package host directories prior to
this is an easy solution to this issue.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Fix these warnings:
E122 continuation line missing indentation or outdented
E127 continuation line over-indented for visual indent
E265 block comment should start with '# '
E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
F401 'pexpect' imported but unused
Fixes:
- https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/360824861
Signed-off-by: Pierre-Jean Texier <pjtexier@koncepto.io>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
The test starts a simple container with an iperf3 server.
The container is using the tini init system, with a shared rootfs.
An iperf3 client is started from the host to check that the container
is really up and running.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Havelange <patrick.havelange@essensium.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This method asserts that the given command ran successfully.
The goal is for it to be used by the different tests when needed.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Havelange <patrick.havelange@essensium.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This is required by wpewebkit and webkitgtk.
Signed-off-by: James Hilliard <james.hilliard1@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Adrian Perez de Castro <aperez@igalia.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Python 2.7 will not be maintained past 2020.
Many scripts on the tree are used during the build and should keep
Python 2 compatibility for a while.
This is not the case for the runtime test infra. It's meant to be run in
modern distros only, so it can safely switch to support Python 3 only.
An advantage of this approach is to have less scenarios to test in.
Otherwise every change to the test infra or runtime tests would need to
be tested against both versions of the interpreter, increasing the
effort of the developers, to ensure the compatibility to Python 2 was
not broken.
In order to accomplish the change to Python 3:
- change the shebang for run-tests;
- use Python 3 urllib as a drop-in replacement for Python 2 urllib2;
- when writing the downloaded binary files, explicitly open the output
file as binary;
- when subprocess is used to retrieve the text output from commands,
explicitly ask for text output. For this, use 'universal_newlines'
because 'text' was added only on Python 3.7;
- when pexpect is used to retrieve the text output from qemu or git,
explicitly ask for text output using 'encoding';
- the code using csv currently follows the example in the documentation
for the Python 2 module, change it to follow the example in the
documentation for the Python 3 module;
- fix the relative import for test_git.py to be Python 3 compliant.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Tested-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@smile.fr>
Tested-by: Nicolas Carrier <nicolas.carrier@orolia.com>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Carrier <nicolas.carrier@orolia.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
The test infra will soon be converted to Python 3 only.
So add the interpreter and also the Python 3 variant of modules nose2
and pexpect to the docker image used to run runtime tests.
Keep the Python 2 variant of those modules to allow a gradual
transition.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Carrier <nicolas.carrier@orolia.com>
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
genimage makes a full copy of the given rootpath to ${GENIMAGE_TMP}/root
so passing TARGET_DIR would be a waste of time and disk space. We don't
rely on genimage to build the rootfs image, just to insert a pre-built
one in the disk image.
Signed-off-by: Carlos Santos <unixmania@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Currently, we only require a gcc 4.4 version, which now is pretty old
(released in April 2009). This requirement is not even tested nowadays,
with our oldest autobuilder having a 4.7 version only.
And even then, 4.7 is still old enough that it prevents us from
upgrading some packages. For example cmake 3.10+ requires C++11
constructs that were only added in gcc 4.8 (when C++11 support was
finally completed in gcc).
So, update our requirements for gcc to at least 4.8.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
We no longer have anything that needs it during the build, so we don't
require it anymore.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Back a few years ago, when we were starting to think about top-level
parallel build, we were not sure how to deal with packages that
installed the same files, so we wanted to catch the situation to assess
how prevalent that was, before we decided what to do and how to address
it.
However, the trend nowadays is that packages will install in a
per-package target/ (and staging/ and host/), and the final directories
will be assembled in a reproducible (alphabetical) order, so if two
packages install the same file, the last one will win (as is currently
the case).
Besides, check-uniq-files reports loads of spurious errors when packages
get reinstalled (e.g. during development).
Finally, check-uniq-files is the only script called during the build,
that is written in python.
So, get rid of check-uniq-files.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Fixes https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/332656041
The recent bump of a number of python packages broke docker-compose, as
docker-compose specifies both minimum and maximum versions for (most of) its
dependencies:
Dependencies of docker-compse 1.20.1 (! = unmet):
cached-property: < 2 (currently 1.51)
docopt: < 0.7 (currently 0.6.2)
! pyyaml: < 4.0, patched to < 4.3 (currently 5.1.2)
requests: < 2.19, patched to < 3 (currently 2.22.0)
! texttable: < 0.10 (currently 1.6.2)
websocket-client: < 1.0 (currently 0.56.0)
! docker: < 4.0 (currently 4.1.0)
dockerpty: < 0.5 (currently 0.4.1)
six: < 2 (currently 1.12.0)
jsonschema: < 3 (currently 2.5.1)
enum34: < 2 (currently 1.1.6)
backports.ssl-match-hostname: >= 3.5 (currently 3.7.0.1)
ipaddress: >= 1.0.16 (currently 1.0.23)
To fix this, bump docker-compose to the most recent release (1.24.1). This
is unfortunately not enough, as our docker, pyyaml, requests and texttable
packages are too new, so add 3 patches from upstream to relax the version
checks of dependencies. Notice that patch 0003 is from
https://github.com/docker/compose/pull/6623 and has not been merged yet.
Discussions around the problem of these maximum versions of the dependencies
and the fact that all downstream users have to patch it is ongoing here:
https://github.com/docker/compose/issues/6756
docker-compose 1.24.1 added a requirement for ssh support in python-docker in:
7b82b2e8c7
So add a dependency for python-paramiko and update the toolchain dependency
for C++ (from python-paramiko -> python-cryptography) and adjust the
toolchain configuration of the runtime test to match.
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
There is no need for double grep, so choose a better regexp. Use &&
instead of ; between commands so the sequence of commands fail faster.
Break the last sequence of commands in 2 calls run() so the proper
return code can be tested for each.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
When selected, host-ccache is a dependency of almost all packages.
As such, it clutters the dependency graph uselessly.
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Reviewed-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
The POSIX specification defines a 'trap <action> EXIT' mechanism that is
useful to perform clean-up actions in shell scripts. A trap has two main
advantages over hand-crafted clean-up mechanisms:
- It runs even if the process is terminated by a SIGTERM.
- It runs even if the script stops due to a pipeline failure (set -e).
Now we can make the script to stop immediately if a compilation error
occurs, instead of letting it try to run an unexisting program.
This change may appear to be overkill but Buildroot is an open source
project and each piece of code is a potential learning tool for other
developments. We must strive to provide good examples.
Signed-off-by: Carlos Santos <unixmania@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin@orange.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Some installations mount /tmp with the 'noexec' option, which prevents
running the program generated there to check the kernel headers.
Avoid the problem by generating the program under $(BUILD_DIR), passed
as the first argument to check-kernel-headers.sh.
We could globally export a TMPDIR environment variable with some path
under $(BUILD_DIR) but such solution would be too intrusive, depriving
the user from the freedom to set TMPDIR at his will (or needs).
Fixes: https://bugs.busybox.net/show_bug.cgi?id=12241
Signed-off-by: Carlos Santos <unixmania@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Since commit aee39cbf27 ("arch/riscv:
set the default float ABI based on ISA extensions"), RISC-V 32/64 use
the lp32d/lp64d ABIs by default. But our pre-built external toolchains
were built with the LP32/LP64 ABI.
Building with lp32d/lp64d gcc flags, but a toolchain built with the
LP32/LP64 ABI causes a number of failures such as:
/home/mark/buildroot-test/instance-1/output/host/riscv64-buildroot-linux-gnu/sysroot/usr/include/gnu/stubs.h:11:11: fatal error: gnu/stubs-lp64d.h: No such file or directory
or:
/home/mark/buildroot-test/instance-1/output/host/opt/ext-toolchain/bin/../lib/gcc/riscv64-buildroot-linux-gnu/7.4.0/../../../../riscv64-buildroot-linux-gnu/bin/ld: /tmp/cc2BTtFE.o: can't link hard-float modules with soft-float modules
/home/mark/buildroot-test/instance-1/output/host/opt/ext-toolchain/bin/../lib/gcc/riscv64-buildroot-linux-gnu/7.4.0/../../../../riscv64-buildroot-linux-gnu/bin/ld: failed to merge target specific data of file /tmp/cc2BTtFE.o
So let's fix our config fragments to reflect the ABIs those toolchains
were built with.
Fixes:
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/a3959b0613cf561059483abc580b144be4817d1a/ (libsepol)
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/3db50d8a0a913413b2198d6c301419136d2d22a7/ (attr)
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/7780fada05b8440ae3e97618615624a6a2dac03f/ (libusb)
and many others
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Since release 18.12 binaries-marvell repository provides
common firmware supporting both A7K and A8K SoC families.
This commit bumps package version to 18.12 and removes
platform specific binary selections from Config.in.
Single firmware image suitable for both A7K and A8K
platforms is now specified in mk file explicitely.
Legacy handling is not needed, as configs which did have
the option set will continue to work without change.
Signed-off-by: Sergey Matyukevich <geomatsi@gmail.com>
[Arnout:
- Remove BINARIES_MARVELL_IMAGE entirely;
- Add remark about legacy handling;
- Remove the deprecated option from the defconfigs and test that use
it.]
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
The JSON::PP Perl module is used at build time by the webkitgtk and
wpewebkit packages.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Perez de Castro <aperez@igalia.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
As suggested by Baruch Siach, using "git rev-parse HEAD" is a lot
simpler than playing around with "git log" to just retrieve the commit
id corresponding to the current HEAD.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
pkg-stats extracts the Buildroot commit id from which the package
information was collected. However, when doing so, it always assumes
we're using the master branch, by running "git log master".
But in fact, pkg-stats can be run from any branch/tag, so it makes a
lot more sense to use "git log HEAD".
Cc: victor.huesca@bootlin.com
Cc: Baruch Siach <baruch@tkos.co.il>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Now that we can order packages from biggest to smallest, it makes sense
to assign the most aggressive colours to the biggest packages.
As such, reorder the current colours so that we have, in order:
- red-ish
- orange-ish
- yellow-ish
- purple-ish
- eggplant-ish (is that even a colour? :-] )
- some-indeterminate-blue-ish
- dark-green-ish
- light-green-ish
For the previous, smallest-first ordering, it does not matter much what
the ordering is: the actual colours are still somewhat-unpredictably
assigned to packages, depending on the cut-off limit...
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Currently, the packages are sorted smallest first, and biggest last
(with unknown and others second-to-last and last, resp.).
Add an option to invert the ordering (but keeping unknown and others at
their current positions).
This has the nice side effect that we can now control the colours
assigned to the biggest package(s), as the colours are cycled from the
first to the last. Currently, the biggest packages gets a redish colour,
which is appropriate, but the second gets a greenish one, which is not
as appropriate (but changing that can come later).
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
When dealing with embedded devices, storage is more often than not some
kind of flash device, on which the memory is usually counted as powers
of 1024 instead of powers of 1000. As such, people may prefer reports
using IEC prefixes [0] instead of the SI prefixes.
Add an option to that effect.
We use argparse's ability to use custom actions [1] [2], to provide a
set of options that act on a boolean, but has a single help entry and
internally ensures consistency of the settings. We could have been using
the more conventional store_true/store_false actions instead, but that
would have meant either two help entries, one for each set of options,
and/or some logic after parse_args() to check the validity of the
settings.
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_prefix
[1] https://docs.python.org/2/library/argparse.html#action
[2] https://docs.python.org/2/library/argparse.html#argparse.Action
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Currently, we group packages that contribute less then 1%, into the
"Other" category.
However, in some cases, there can be a lot of very comparatively small
packages, and they may not exceed this limit, and so only the "Others"
category would be displayed, which is not nice.
Conversely, if there are a lot of packages, most of which only so
slightly exceeding this limit, then we get all of them in the graph,
which is not nice either.
Add a way for the developers to pass a different cut-off limit. As for
the dependency graph which has BR2_GRAPH_DEPS_OPTS, add the environment
variable BR2_GRAPH_SIZE_OPTS to carry those extra option (in preparation
for more to come, later).
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
[Arnout:
- remove empty base class definition from Config;
- use parser.error instead of ValueError for invalid argument.]
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Currently, we forcibly report sizes in multiple of Kilobytes. In some
big configurations, the sizes of the system as a whole, as well as that
of individual packages, may exceed megabytes, and when some artistic
assets get used, even the gigabyte may get exceed.
These big sizes are not easy to read when expressed in kilobytes.
Additionally, some very small packages might have sizes below the
kilobyte (and when we can specify the cut-off grouping size, they may
get reported), and thus the size displayed for those would be 0 kB.
Add a helper function that can format a floating-point size into a
string with all the appropriate formatting:
- there are at least 3 meaningfull digits visible, i.e. we display
"3.14" or "10.4" instead of just "3" or "10", but for big number we
don't care about too many precision either, so we report "100" or
"1000", not "100.42" or "1000.27";
- the proper SI prefix is appended, if needed.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Currently, the "unknown" category may be reported anywhere, so it does
not really stand out when there are a lot of packages in the graph.
Move it towards the end, but right before the "other" category, so that
it is a bit more visible. Like for Others, don't report it if its size
is zero.
Also, make it title case (i.e. "Unknown" instead of "unknown").
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>