This commit adds the following options to the pkg-stats-new script:
-n, to specify a number of packages to parse instead of all packages
-p, to specify a list of packages (comma-separated) to parse instead
of all packages
These options are basically only useful when debugging/developing
this script, but they are very useful, because the script is rather
slow to run completely with all 2000+ packages, especially once
upstream versions will be fetched from release-monitoring.org.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Reviewed-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This commit adds a new version of the pkg-stats script, rewritten in
Python. It is for now implemented in a separate file called,
pkg-stats-new, in order to make the diff easily readable. A future
commit will rename it to pkg-stats.
Compared to the existing shell-based pkg-stats script, the
functionality and output is basically the same. The main difference is
that the output no longer goes to stdout, but to the file passed as
argument using the -o option. This allows stdout to be used for more
debugging related information.
The way the script works is that a first function get_pkglist()
returns a list of Package objects. Then, the function
package_init_make_info() uses 'make printvars' to gather information
about all packages, stored as class variables in the Package
class. Then, we iterate over all packages, and use various methods of
the Package class to retrieve all details about the package:
infrastructure, presence of hash file, presence of license
information, etc.
calculate_stats() then calculates global statistics (how packages have
license information, how packages have a hash file, etc.). Finally,
dump_html() produces the HTML output, using a number of sub-functions.
One improvement over the shell-based version is that we can use
regexps to exclude some .mk files. Thanks to this, we can exclude all
linux-ext-*.mk files, avoiding incorrect matches.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Reviewed-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
graph-depends currently spits out a graph in .dot format. However, as
part of the upcoming introduction of <pkg>-show-recursive-depends and
<pkg>-show-recursive-rdepends, we need graph-depends to be able to
display a flat list.
Signed-off-by: George Redivo <george.redivo@datacom.ind.br>
[Thomas:
- Rebase on top of graph-depends changes
- Do not display the package name itself in the list, only its
dependencies (or reverse dependencies)
- Display the result on a single line, instead of one package per
line, in order to match what <pkg>-show-depends and
<pkg>-show-rdepends are doing today.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
This will be useful for the upcoming recursive show-depends and
show-rdepends features.
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Reviewed-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Instead of hardcoded sys.stderr.write() calls. No functional change, but
allows us to easily implement a quiet option.
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Reviewed-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
The graph-depends was not very consistent in colors vs. colours: some
parts were using colours, some parts were using colors.
Let's settle on the US spelling, colors.
This change the user-visble option --colours to --colors, but it is
unlikely that a lot of users customize the colors through
BR2_GRAPH_DEPS_OPTS, so this user interface change is considered
reasonable.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
The graph-depends script had no main() function, and the main code was
actually spread between the function definitions, which was a real
mess.
This commit moves the global code into a main() function, which allows
to more easily follow the flow of the script. The argument parsing
code is moved into a parse_args() function.
Most of the global variables are removed, and are instead passed as
argument when appropriate. This has the side-effect that the
print_pkg_deps() function takes a lot of argument, but this is
considered better than tons of global variables.
The global variables that are removed are: max_depth, transitive,
mode, root_colour, target_colour, host_colour, outfile, dict_deps,
dict_version, stop_list, exclude_list, arrow_dir.
The root_colour/target_colour/host_colour variables are entirely
removed, and instead a single colours array is passed, and it's the
function using the colors that actually uses the different entries in
the array.
The way the print_attrs() function determines if we're display the
root node is not is changed. Instead of relying on the package name
and the mode (which requires passing the root package name, and the
mode), it relies on the depth: when the depth is 0, we're at the root
node.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Currently, when a filename contains characters not representable in the
user's locale, we fail hard, especially when the host python is python3.
This is because python2 and python3 handle encoding/decoding strings
differently, with python3 presumable doing the right thing, but it
breaks on some systems, while python2 presumable does the wrong thing,
but it works everywhere. (Just joking, obviously...)
Part of the issue being that the csv reader in python2 is broken with
UTF8.
We fix the issue by ditching the csv reader, and simply read the file in
binary mode, manually partitioning the lines on the first comma.
Then, we use the binary-encoded (really, un-encoded) package names and
filenames as values and keys, respectively.
Finally, for each filename or package we need to print, we try to decode
them with the defaults for the user settings, but catch any decoding
exception and fall back to dumping the raw, binary values. Which codec
is used by default differs between Python version, but in all cases
something sane is printed at least.
Thanks a lot to Arnout for the live help doing this patch. :-)
Reported-by: Jaap Crezee <jaap@jcz.nl>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Jaap Crezee <jaap@jcz.nl>
[Arnout: commit log improvement]
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
When using a merged /usr, the kernel module path is really
/usr/lib/modules, as /lib is a symlink to usr/lib .
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Reviewed-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Some packages (mostly, out-of-tree) may want to install binary blobs for
another architecture, outside the locations we currently exclude, like
in /opt or whatever...
Add support in check-bin-arch to accept any arbitrary location, that
individual package can each request to excude from the check, when they
are installed.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Using {} in format strings is only supported in sufficiently recent
Python versions. Python 2.6 doesn't support this, and only format
strings with numbered arguments: {0}, {1}, etc.
Python 2.7:
$ python -c 'print("foo {}".format(12))'
foo 12
$ python -c 'print("foo {0}".format(12))'
foo 12
Python 2.6:
$ python -c 'print("foo {}".format(12))'
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
ValueError: zero length field name in format
$ python -c 'print("foo {0}".format(12))'
foo 12
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Acked-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
The script check-bin-arch fails as follows on a config for PowerPC e6500
(64-bit CPU) with BR2_ARCH="powerpc" (32-bit userland desired):
ERROR: architecture for "/lib/modules/..../lib/libcrc32c.ko"
is "PowerPC64", should be "PowerPC"
This situation is perfectly acceptable: the kernel is 64-bit and so are its
modules, even though userland is 32-bit.
To keep check-bin-arch and its caller simple, just skip /lib/modules/
entirely, like is done for /lib/firmware and some others.
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Fix these warnings:
E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
E305 expected 2 blank lines after class or function definition, found 1
E713 test for membership should be 'not in'
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Fix these warnings:
E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
E305 expected 2 blank lines after class or function definition, found 1
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Reviewed-by: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Fix these warnings:
E201 whitespace after '['
E202 whitespace before ']'
E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
E305 expected 2 blank lines after class or function definition, found 1
Ignore these warnings:
E402 module level import not at top of file
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Fix these warnings:
E128 continuation line under-indented for visual indent
E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
E305 expected 2 blank lines after class or function definition, found 1
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Fix these warnings:
E122 continuation line missing indentation or outdented
E127 continuation line over-indented for visual indent
E128 continuation line under-indented for visual indent
E202 whitespace before ']'
E221 multiple spaces before operator
E225 missing whitespace around operator
E231 missing whitespace after ','
E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
E305 expected 2 blank lines after class or function definition, found 1
E502 the backslash is redundant between brackets
E713 test for membership should be 'not in'
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Make sure that the pie charts produced by 'graph-build' and 'graph-size'
targets are sorted on the size of each piece of the pie. Otherwise, making
visual analysis is difficult, as one needs to look at the legends of each
piece and do the sorting manually in their head.
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
This merges the next branch accumulated during the 2017.11 release
cycle back into the master branch.
A few conflicts had to be resolved:
- In the DEVELOPERS file, because Fabrice Fontaine was added as a
developer for libupnp in master, and for libupnp18 in
next. Resolution is simple: add him for both.
- linux/Config.in, because we updated the 4.13.x release used by
default in master, while we moved to 4.14 in next. Resolution: use
4.14.
- package/libupnp/libupnp.hash: a hash for the license file was added
in master, while the package was bumped into next. Resolution: keep
the hash for the license file, and keep the hash for the newest
version of libupnp.
- package/linux-headers/Config.in.host: default version of the kernel
headers for 4.13 was bumped to the latest 4.13.x in master, but was
changed to 4.14 in next. Resolution: use 4.14.
- package/samba4/: samba was bumped to 4.6.11 in master for security
reasons, but was bumped to 4.7.3 in next. Resolution: keep 4.7.3.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Some packages (ex: skeleton-init-systemd) have a zero size so we cannot
divide by the package size. In that case make their percent zero
explicitly and avoid a ZeroDivisionError exception.
Signed-off-by: Andrey Yurovsky <yurovsky@gmail.com>
Acked-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Currently, we do nothing about packages that touch the same file: given
a specific configuration, the result is reproducible (even though it
might not be what the user expected) because the build order is
guaranteed.
However, when we later introduce top-level parallel build, we will no
longer be able to guarantee a build order, by the mere way of it being
parallel. Reconciliating all those modified files will be impossible to
do automatically. The only way will be to refuse such situations.
As a preliminary step, introduce a helper script that detects files that
are being moified by two or more packages, and reports them and the
impacted packages, at the end of the build.
The list being reported at the end of the build will make it prominently
visible in autobuilder results, so we can assess the problem, if any.
Later on, calling that helper script can be done right after the package
installation step, to bail out early.
Thanks Arnout for the pythonist way to write default dictionaries! ;-)
Note: doing it in python rather than a shell script is impressively
faster: where the shell script takes ~1.2s on a minimalist build, the
python script only takes ~0.015s, that is about 80 times faster.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Cc: Baruch Siach <baruch@tkos.co.il>
Cc: Peter Seiderer <ps.report@gmx.net>
[Thomas: rename script without .py extension.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
We sanity-check the host executables that they have a correct RPATH
pointing to the host libraries.
This is currently done by looking for all files in $(HOST_DIR) that
match the 'ELF executable' pattern (a bit more complex, but that's
idea).
However, when an executable is built with -fPIE of -fpie, it no longer
appears to be an 'ELF executable', but it rather looks like an 'ELF
sheard object' (like if it were an library.
So, we miss those files.
It turns out that the problem is a real one, because quite a few
mainline distros, expecially those based on Debian for example, have
already switched to generating PIE code by default, and thus we miss on
a whole class of systems..
We fix that by simply looking if we can find an ELF interpreter in each
file. If we there is one, this is an ELF executable; if not, it may be
anything else: we don't care (not even about ELF libraries).
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Patches with renames apply properly with patch >= 2.7, but not with
older patch versions. Since "git format-patch" by default generates
patches with renames, Buildroot developers often don't realize that
their patches will not apply properly on build machines that have
patch < 2.7. In order to prevent such a situation from happening
again, this commit adds some logic in apply-patches.sh to refuse
applying patches that contain renames.
Note that just searching for '^rename' is not sufficient, since the
patch commit message may contain the words "rename from" or "rename to"
as well. Therefore, the grep expression is made as accurate as possible,
checking both.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Reviewed-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
[Arnout: spaces instead of tabs (suggested by Yann);
extend commit message.]
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Commit c96b8675ea
("support/scripts/check-bin-arch: ignore symbolic links") was bogus,
because it tested ${f}, which is the relative path of the file inside
${TARGET_DIR}, so we end up testing if ${f} on the system is a
symbolic link.
This commit fixes that by testing ${TARGET_DIR}/${f}.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Since commit da32b49f00
("instrumentation: extend packages-file-list.txt with symlinks and
directories"), the packages-file-list.txt also contains symbolic
links. Therefore, check-bin-arch is now also checking symbolic links.
However, symbolic links in $(TARGET_DIR) can have absolute path as
targets, such as:
$ ls -l output/target/sbin/ifdown
lrwxrwxrwx 1 thomas thomas 10 Sep 3 15:55 output/target/sbin/ifdown -> /sbin/ifup
Therefore, we are now potentially checking a host binary, which
obviously makes check-bin-arch fail.
This commit changes check-bin-arch to ignore symbolic links. Indeed,
we have two cases:
- The symbolic link really points to something that will in the
rootfs (such as /sbin/ifup above). In this case, /sbin/ifup will be
checked separately by check-bin-arch.
- The symbolic link doesn't point to something that will be in the
rootfs, and that is not a problem from the perspective of
check-bin-arch, which checks the architecture of target binaries.
Fixes:
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/16d384a0183d477646ac7692feb65f00dde7d068/
(vim)
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/50429c0f63a8befff9e20899327b9a8d754d99be/
(ifupdown)
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/1db65973e782bfa61abcbccd3501bfd235f77288/
(gawk)
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
This commit introduces the script "fix-rpath" able to scan a tree,
detect ELF files, check their RPATH and fix it in a proper way.
The RPATH fixup is done by the patchelf utility using the option
"--make-rpath-relative <root-directory>".
Signed-off-by: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Grandegger <wg@grandegger.com>
Acked-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
This file is not a package per-se, it includes other .mk files that
are packages.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
The waf package infrastructure was not known by the pkg-stats script,
so let's add it.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
With 2000+ packages it's not trivial to identify i.e.:
- all packages that don't have a hash file;
- all packages that have patches;
- all packages that have code style warnings;
User experience can be improved by dynamically sorting the resulting
table.
There is an open-source solution that does that in the client-side and
requires minimal changes to our script: sorttable.js. The script is
MIT licensed as stated in its website.
Also add a hint to the user that the table can be sorted.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Now all packages have been updated to install things in $(HOST_DIR)/lib
instead of $(HOST_DIR)/usr/lib, there should no longer be any reason
to have $(HOST_DIR)/usr/lib in the RPATH, so we don't allow it any more.
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Wolfgang Grandegger <wg@grandegger.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Since $(HOST_DIR)/usr/{bin,sbin} are now symlinks to
$(HOST_DIR)/{bin,sbin}, it makes no sense to check them - they are
already covered.
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Reviewed-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@smile.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
This is a step towards eliminating $(HOST_DIR)/usr. It allows us to
convert all packages installing things into $(HOST_DIR)/usr/lib without
affecting the rest.
To allow compatibility with packages that still use $(HOST_DIR)/usr as
the prefix, create a symlink from usr/lib to ../lib.
Note that the symlink creation will break when $(HOST_DIR)/usr/lib
already exists as a directory, i.e. when rebuilding in an existing
output directory. This is necessary: if we don't break it now, the
following commits (which remove the usr part from various variables)
_will_ break it.
At the same time as creating this symlink, we also have to update the
check-host-rpath script to accept both $(HOST_DIR)/usr/lib and
$(HOST_DIR)/lib, because depending on how the package derives the
path, it may be different.
Since there are some dependency chains that involve $(STAGING_DIR),
$(STAGING_DIR) may in fact be created before $(HOST_DIR). Since
$(STAGING_DIR) is a subdirectory of $(HOST_DIR), it is possible that the
newly added rule for $(HOST_DIR) never triggers. To make sure that the
rule does trigger, add an order-only dependency from $(STAGING_DIR) to
$(HOST_DIR).
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Reviewed-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@smile.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
By default, cut prints the entire line if the specified delimiter is not
present at all:
$ printf "foo bar" | cut -d' ' -f2
bar
$ printf "foobar" | cut -d' ' -f2
foobar
In setlocalversion, cut is presented with the output of 'hg id' which has
the format:
"<revision> <tags-if-any>"
If the current revision is not tagged, the output of 'hg id' does not
contain the delimiter (space), cut prints the entire string, and
setlocalversion thinks the version is the tag.
As setlocalversion does not print anything for tagged versions, there is no
output overall, and no correct indication of the mercurial revision.
Fix by passing the extra cut option '--only-delimited', which suppresses
output if no delimiter is found.
This problem likely went unnoticed for so long, because the tag 'tip' (i.e.
most recent revision of the branch) is treated specially: in this case the
mercurial revision _is_ printed, i.e. the situation is treated as
'untagged'.
The problem is only seen when you are _not_ at the most recent revision in
your branch.
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
"$ORIGIN/../../usr/lib" is also a valid RPATH for binaries in
"$hostdir/usr/bin". After RPATH sanitation, all RPATH
directories start with "$ORIGIN".
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Grandegger <wg@grandegger.com>
Acked-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Tested-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
After some discussion, we found out that "tools" has the four first
letters identical to the "toolchain" subfolder, which makes it a bit
unpractical with tab-completion. So, this commit renames "tools" to
"utils", which is more tab-completion-friendly.
This has been discussed with Arnout and Yann.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Move it to the top-level tools/ directory, so that it is easier to
find for users.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Move it to the top-level tools/ directory, so that it is easier to
find for users.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: "François Perrad" <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Move it to the top-level tools/ directory, so that it is easier to
find for users.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <patrickdepinguin@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Move it to the top-level tools/ directory, so that it is easier to
find for users.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Move it to the top-level tools/ directory, so that it is easier to
find for users.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Move it to the top-level tools/ directory, so that it is easier to
find for users.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
This commit fixes a problem where it was not possible to replace
/etc/shadow with a symlink to a e.g. a user partition where the
shadow file is placed. This is required, e.g. for systems where the
rootfs is mounted read-only but users should still be able to be
added. Thus, if within an filesystem overlay setup a user tries
to replace /etc/shadow with a symlink to the real file on a user
partition a buildroot build stops with an error message because
sed is called on the symlink instead of following the symlink.
This commit fixes this shortcoming.
Signed-off-by: Jens Maus <mail@jens-maus.de>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
The API v0 is shutdown.
see https://bugs.busybox.net/show_bug.cgi?id=9951
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
When called from BR2_ROOTFS_POST_IMAGE_SCRIPT, this script
ends up with following error:
Error: Missing argument
This is because, an extra positional argument is also passed
along with BR2_ROOTFS_POST_SCRIPT_ARGS. genimage.sh didn't
have support to parse positional and optional arguments
together.
Signed-off-by: Abhimanyu Vishwakarma <Abhimanyu.V@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Tested-by: Rahul Bedarkar <rahulbedarkar89@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Currently the check-package script uses many files in the same
directory. This commit keeps the main script in support/scripts/ and
moves the rest into a subdirectory.
The modules were previously prefixed to make it easy to identify which
script they belong to. This is no longer needed when using a
subdirectory, so the prefix is removed.
Note: if this commit is checked out and the script is run, and later on
a previous version is checked out, the file
support/scripts/checkpackagelib/__init__.pyc needs to be manually
removed to prevent Python interpreter to look for checkpackagelib
package when only the checkpackagelib module is available.
Reported-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
The toolchain name was calculated in main() for reporting to the user,
and again in build_one() for creating the build directory. Calculate
it only once, in main(), and pass the build directory as an argument
to build_one().
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
This allows the page at http://autobuild.buildroot.net/stats/ to show
how many warnings returned by check-package affect each package.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Warn when help text is larger than 72 columns, see [1].
Warn for wrongly indented attributes, see [1].
Warn when the convention of attributes order is not followed, see [2].
[1] http://nightly.buildroot.org/#writing-rules-config-in
[2] http://nightly.buildroot.org/#_config_files
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Check each hash entry (see [1]) and warn when:
- it does not have three fields;
- its type is unknown;
- its length does not match its type;
- the name of the file contains a directory component.
[1] http://nightly.buildroot.org/#adding-packages-hash
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <patrickdepinguin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Create 3 new check functions to warn when:
- there are consecutive empty lines in the file, see [1];
- the last line of the file is empty, see [2];
- there are lines with trailing whitespace, see [3].
Apply these functions to Config.*, *.mk and *.hash, but not for *.patch
files since they can contain any of these and still be valid.
[1] http://patchwork.ozlabs.org/patch/682660/
[2] http://patchwork.ozlabs.org/patch/643288/
[3] http://patchwork.ozlabs.org/patch/398984/
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Create the infra to check the style of new packages before submitting.
The overall function of the script is described inside a txt file.
It is designed to process the actual files and NOT the patch files
generated by git format-patch.
Also add the first check function, to warn if a file (Config.*, *.mk,
*.hash, *.patch) has no newline at the last line of the file, see [1].
Basic usage for simple packages:
support/scripts/check-package -vvv package/newpackage/*
Basic usage for packages with subdirs:
support/scripts/check-package -vvv $(find package/newpackage/ -type f)
See "checkpackage" in [2].
[1] http://patchwork.ozlabs.org/patch/631129/
[2] http://elinux.org/Buildroot#Todo_list
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <patrickdepinguin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <patrickdepinguin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
This script is a wrapper for the genimage tool used by most boards.
The board postimage script can now call this script instead of invoking
genimage command themselves.
Signed-off-by: Etienne Phelip <etienne.phelip@savoirfairelinux.com>
Reviewed-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Unextected error in the br2-external script are properly caught, but
they are not reported properly, and we end up in either of two
situations:
- the .br2-external.mk file is not generated, in which case make will
try to find a rule to generate it (because the 'include' directive
tries to generate missing files);
- the .br-external.mk file is generated but does not contain the error
variable, and thus the build might not get interrupted.
We fix that by using a trap on the pseudo ERR signal, to emit the error
variable on unexpected errors.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
In commit 2f6c5e513c
("support/check-bin-arch: fix for filenames with spaces"), Yann
adjuste the check-bin-arch script to properly handle filenames with
spaces.
However, he also did a subtle change of the regexp that extracts the
path of the files. It was:
"/^${package},(.+)$/!d; s//\1/;"
and Yann changed it to:
"/^${package},\.(.+)$/!d; s//\1/;"
So the file paths used to start with a dot (like "./usr/share/foo"),
and now they no longer start with a dot (like "/usr/share/foo"). While
this modification is good and makes sense, the match for
/lib/firmware/ was not adjusted accordingly, and the follow-up patch
also ignoring /usr/share was not adjusted as well.
This commit fixes those /lib/firmware/ and /usr/share/ special cases,
which will fix:
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/76a1475f4cdedb80426fb022ef2e644aa5625660/
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
pkgutil.py is also part of Python itself. Placing pkgutil.py as is
in a folder with other scripts that require original pkgutil will
break them. This is the case with scanpypi. So rename pkgutil.py
to brpkgutil.py to avoid naming collision.
Fixes: https://bugs.busybox.net/show_bug.cgi?id=9766
Signed-off-by: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
/usr/share normally should not contain binaries executable for the
target platform. However, it might contain ELF binaries for other
platforms, such as firmware files installed by Qemu or
pru-software-support.
Instead of special-casing each package, let's simply ignore /usr/share.
Fixes:
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/6f3fea9f6adaef1573fbb0dd6903b5d99e470610/
(pru-software-support)
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/fe8892bc22a03299fc41e30bfea5e42166838f88/
(qemu)
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Acked-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Filenames with spaces will break the current for loop.
Fix that by using a while-read loop, fed with the list of files on
stdin, using process substitution.
Reported-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
By default, compile_dir() relies on the modification time to know if a
python file has to be built again. However in some circumstances (when
doing reproducible builds), modification times are not reliable. Thus,
this patch adds a way to force the rebuild of all python sources.
Signed-off-by: Jérôme Pouiller <jezz@sysmic.org>
Reviewed-by: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
As shown recently by the firejail example, it is easy to miss that a
package builds and installs binaries without actually cross-compiling
them: they are built for the host architecture instead of the target
architecture.
This commit adds a small helper script, check-bin-arch, called as a
GLOBAL_INSTRUMENTATION_HOOKS at the end of the target installation of
each package, to verify that the files installed by this package have
been built for the correct architecture.
Being called as a GLOBAL_INSTRUMENTATION_HOOKS allows the build to error
out right after the installation of the faulty package, and therefore
get autobuilder error detection properly assigned to this specific
package.
Example output with the firejail package enabled, when building for an
ARM target:
ERROR: architecture for ./usr/lib/firejail/libconnect.so is Advanced Micro Devices X86-64, should be ARM
ERROR: architecture for ./usr/bin/firejail is Advanced Micro Devices X86-64, should be ARM
ERROR: architecture for ./usr/lib/firejail/libtrace.so is Advanced Micro Devices X86-64, should be ARM
ERROR: architecture for ./usr/lib/firejail/libtracelog.so is Advanced Micro Devices X86-64, should be ARM
ERROR: architecture for ./usr/lib/firejail/ftee is Advanced Micro Devices X86-64, should be ARM
ERROR: architecture for ./usr/lib/firejail/faudit is Advanced Micro Devices X86-64, should be ARM
ERROR: architecture for ./usr/bin/firemon is Advanced Micro Devices X86-64, should be ARM
ERROR: architecture for ./usr/bin/firecfg is Advanced Micro Devices X86-64, should be ARM
Many thanks to Yann E. Morin and Arnout Vandecappelle for their reviews
and suggestions.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
As of the version 3.6.0 compile_dir() call will treat its 'quiet'
argument as a full blown integer rather than a boolean value and perform
integer comparison operations such as '<' or '>='.
To account for that convert ReportProblem type to be a true derivative
of built-in int() and override all of int's rich comparison operators in
order to be able to "sniff" for PyCompileError in all possible use-cases
The integer value ReportProblem pretends to be is teremined by class
variable VALUE which is set to 1.
Signed-off-by: Andrey Smirnov <andrew.smirnov@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Tested-by: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
The LINES variable is automatically set by bash to represent the number
of lines in the terminal. That variable can be set when the shell
receives SIGWINCH.
If the shell does receive SIGWINCH after our LINES array is filled, the
content of the array is mangled.
Rename the variable to avoid that.
Fixes#9456
Reported-by: George Y. <georgebrmz@oss3d.com>
Reported-by: Paul Stewart <paulstewartis@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <patrickdepinguin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Requested-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Use comm(1) to check that all our config options are properly set in the
resulting configuration, rather than our canned and fragile code.
Reported-by: Cam Hutchison <camh@xdna.net>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Reported-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Sometimes, it interesting to have a global overview of whether the
package builds at all or not, rather than test on all toolchains.
Add an option that allows testing on a limited set of randomly choosen
toolchains.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <patrickdepinguin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
When a build is skipped, store the lines from the config snippet, that
are missing in the resulting configuration, in a file in the build
directory, for the user to inspect.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <patrickdepinguin@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net>
Tested-by: Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
This script helps in testing that a package builds fine on a wide range
of architectures and toolchains: BE/LE, 32/64-bit, musl/glibc/uclibc...
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
[yann.morin.1998@free.fr:
- completely rewrite the script from Thomas, with help from Luca
]
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <patrickdepinguin@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net>
Reviewed-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Tested-by: Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net>
Acked-by: Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
This change adds inode tracking to the size-stats script so that hard
links don't cause files to be double counted. This has a significant
effect on the size computation for some packages. For example, git has
around a dozen hard links to a large file. Before this change, git would
weigh in at about 170 MB with the total filesystem size reported as
175 MB. The actual rootfs.ext2 size was around 16 MB. With the change,
the git package registers at 10.5 MB with a total filesystem size of
15.8 MB.
Signed-off-by: Frank Hunleth <fhunleth@troodon-software.com>
Acked-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
The use of a 'rule' variable that can contain 'show-depends' or
'show-rdepends' is not logical if get_depends is considered as a reusable
function from various scripts. The name of these rules are too much an
implementation detail.
Therefore, split the existing get_depends into two separate functions
get_depends and get_rdepends, while keeping code duplication to a minimum.
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Functions to obtain the version and dependencies of a package from Python
can be useful for several scripts. Extract this logic out of graph-depends
into pkgutil.py.
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
[Thomas: remove shebang from pkgutil.py, noticed by Yann E. Morin.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Function get_depends was recently changed to support both normal
dependencies as reverse dependencies, via a global variable 'rule' that
equals 'show-depends' or 'show-rdepends'.
As a subsequent function will extract this function get_depends to a
separate file, the use of globals is problematic.
Instead, pass the global as an argument.
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Fixes#9576
When the path to a br2-external tree is relative, make enters an endless
recursive loop (paths elided for brevity):
$ make BR2_EXTERNAL=.. foo_defconfig
make[1]: stat: ../configs/../configs/../configs[...]/toto_defconfig: Filename too long
make[1]: *** No rule to make target '../configs/../configs/../configs[...]/toto_defconfig',
needed by '../configs/../configs/../configs[...]/toto_defconfig'. Stop.
Makefile:79: recipe for target '_all' failed
make: *** [_all] Error 2
It is a bit complex to understand the actual technical reason for this
never-ending expansion; it seems it happens in the code generated by the
percent_defconfig macro. Not sure why, though...
But the root cause is the relative path.
Just use absolute, canonical paths to br2-external trees. Always.
[Peter: add bugzilla reference]
Reported-by: outtierbert@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Many (100+) packages supported by buildroot contain old configure
scripts (or build them from old versions of autotools) that are unable
to determine how to link shared libraries on powerpc64 and
powerpc64le. This causes that test to erroneously fail on toolchains
that are not "bi-endian" (which is the case for toolchains built by
buildroot), which causes configure to build static libraries instead
of dynamic ones. Although these builds succeed, they tend to cause
linker failures in binaries later linked against them.
Because affected configure files can be discovered automatically, this
patch introduces a hook (enabled only when building for powerpc64 and
powerpc64le) that uses a script to scan and fix each package.
Signed-off-by: Sam Bobroff <sam.bobroff@au1.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Currently, the br2-external script uses bash-4's associative arrays.
However, some oldish enterprise-class distros like RHEL5 still use
bash-3.1 which lacks associative arrays.
We restore compatibility with those oldish distros using 'eval' to
emulate associative arrays, as suggested by Arnout.
Reported-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <patrickdepinguin@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Max Filippov <jcmvbkbc@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Tested-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Python3 complains about missing parentheses.
$ ./support/scripts/get-developers
File "./support/scripts/get-developers", line 45
print f
^
SyntaxError: Missing parentheses in call to 'print'
Signed-off-by: Gaël PORTAY <gael.portay@savoirfairelinux.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
This adds an ev3dev Linux drivers extension that provides Linux kernel
drivers for LEGO MINDSTORMS EV3 from the ev3dev project.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@lechnology.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Now that we can dump the reverse dependencies of a package, add the
ability to graph those.
It does not make sense to do a full reverse graph, as it would be
semantically equivalent to the direct graph. So we only provide a
per-package reverse graph.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Current type for 'patches' argument is str. It supposed to only
contain names of files.
If we specify FileType as type, then we don't need to open file ourself
and it allows script to read patch from standard input as well.
e.g.
$ git show -1 | ./support/scripts/get-developers -
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Rahul Bedarkar <rahul.bedarkar@imgtec.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Output of get-developers script in our manual uses --cc for developers,
but actual output of get-developers script uses --to. This patch makes
code consistent with documentation, by using --cc for developers.
Signed-off-by: Rahul Bedarkar <rahul.bedarkar@imgtec.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
To be noted: that link will only be valid once we have a released
manual. In the meantime, it's accessible on the nightly manual:
http://nightly.buildroot.org/#br2-external-converting
Reported-by: Benoît Allard <benoit.allard@greenbone.net>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Benoît Allard <benoit.allard@greenbone.net>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Now that we support multiple br2-external trees, BR2_EXTERNAL is no
longer exported in the environment.
This means that post-build scripts in a br2-external tree can no longer
find their own files (well, they could re-invent the path by stripping
their known-relative path, but that'd be ugly, especially since we can
very well provide it).
Export the path for each br2-external trees as environment variables.
Do so for the description as well, as a courtesy.
Also, re-order variable definitions to be more logical: first, purely
internal variables, then exported variables.
Reported-by: Benoît Allard <benoit.allard@greenbone.net>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Benoît Allard <benoit.allard@greenbone.net>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Currently, we only support at most one br2-external tree. Being able
to use more than one br2-external tree can be very useful.
A use-case would be for having a br2-external to contain the basic
packages, basic board defconfigs and board files, provided by one team
responsible for the "board-bringup", while other teams consume that
br2-external as a base, and complements it each with their own set of
packages, defconfigs and extra board files.
Another use-case would be for third-parties to provide their own
Buildroot packaging in a br2-external tree, along-side the archives for
their stuff.
Finally, another use-case is to be able to add FLOSS packages in a
br2-external tree, and proprietary packages in another. This allows
to not touch the Buildroot tree at all, and still be able to get in
compliance by providing only that br2-external tree(s) that contains
FLOSS packages, leaving aside the br2-external tree(s) with the
proprietary bits.
What we do is to treat BR2_EXTERNAL as a colon-separated (space-
separated also work, and we use that internally) list of paths, on which
we iterate to construct:
- the list of all br2-external names, BR2_EXTERNAL_NAMES,
- the per-br2-external tree BR2_EXTERNAL_$(NAME) variables, which
point each to the actual location of the corresponding tree,
- the list of paths to all the external.mk files, BR2_EXTERNAL_MKS,
- the space-separated list of absolute paths to the external trees,
BR2_EXTERNAL_DIRS.
Once we have all those variables, we replace references to BR2_EXTERNAL
with either one of those.
This cascades into how we display the list of defconfigs, so that it is
easy to see what br2-external tree provides what defconfigs. As
suggested by Arnout, tweak the comment from "User-provided configs" to
"External configs", on the assumption that some br2-external trees could
be provided by vendors, so not necessarily user-provided. Ditto the menu
in Kconfig, changed from "User-provided options" to "External options".
Now, when more than one br2-external tree is used, each gets its own
sub-menu in the "User-provided options" menu. The sub-menu is labelled
with that br2-external tree's name and the sub-menu's first item is a
comment with the path to that br2-external tree.
If there's only one br2-external tree, then there is no sub-menu; there
is a single comment that contains the name and path to the br2-external
tree.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Romain Naour <romain.naour@openwide.fr>
Cc: Julien CORJON <corjon.j@ecagroup.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
This unique NAME is used to construct a per br2-external tree variable,
BR2_EXTERNAL_$(NAME)_PATH, which contains the path to the br2-external
tree.
This variable is available both from Kconfig (set in the Kconfig
snippet) and from the .mk files.
Also, display the NAME and its path as a comment in the menuconfig.
This will ultimately allow us to support multiple br2-external trees at
once, with that NAME (and thus BR2_EXTERNAL_$(NAME)) uniquely defining
which br2-external tree is being used.
The obvious outcome is that BR2_EXTERNAL should now no longer be used to
refer to the files in the br2-external tree; that location is now known
from the BR2_EXTERNAL_$(NAME)_PATH variable instead. This means we no
longer need to expose, and must stop from from exposing BR2_EXTERNAL as
a Kconfig variable.
Finally, this also fixes a latent bug in the pkg-generic infra, where we
would so far always refer to BR2_EXTERNAL (even if not set) to filter
the names of packages (to decide whether they are a bootloader, a
toolchain or a simple package).
Note: since the variables in the Makefile and in Kconfig are named the
same, the one we computed early on in the Makefile will be overridden by
the one in .config when we have it. Thus, even though they are set to
the same raw value, the one from .config is quoted and, being included
later in the Makefile, will take precedence, so we just re-include the
generated Makefile fragment a third time before includeing the
br2-external's Makefiles. That's unfortunate, but there is no easy way
around that as we do want the two variables to be named the same in
Makefile and Kconfig (and we can't ask the user to un-quote that variable
himself either), hence this little dirty triple-inclusion trick.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Romain Naour <romain.naour@openwide.fr>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
A br2-external tree must provide external.mk and Config.in.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Romain Naour <romain.naour@openwide.fr>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Currently, we treat the case where we have no br2-external tree
(BR2_EXTERNAL is empty) differently from the case where we do have one
(BR2_EXTERNAL is not empty).
There is now no reason to treat those two cases differently:
- the kconfig snippet is always generated appropriately (i.e. it would
include the br2-external tree if set, or include nothing otherwise);
- we no longer have a dummy br-external tree either.
Also, the Makefile code to handle BR2_EXTERNAL is currently quite
readable if at least a little bit tricky.
However, when we're going to add support for using multiple br2-external
trees simultaneously, this code would need to get much, much more complex.
To keep the Makefile (rather) simple, offload all of the handling of
BR2_EXTERNAL to the recently added br2-external helper script.
However, because of Makefiles idiosyncracies, we can't use a rule to
generate that Makefile fragment.
Instead, we use $(shell ...) to call the helper script, and include the
fragment twice: once before the $(shell ...) so we can grab a previously
defined BR2_EXTERNAL value, a second time to use the one passed on the
command line, if any.
Furthermore, we can't error out (e.g. on non-existent br2-external tree)
directly from the fragment or we'd get that error on subsequent calls,
with no chance to override it even from command line.
Instead, we use a variable in which we store the error, set it to empty
before the second inclusion, so that only the one newly generated, if
any, is taken into account.
Since we know the script will always be called from Makefile context
first, we know validation will occur in Makefile context first. So we
can assume that, if there is an error, it will be detected in Makefile
context. Consequently, if the script is called to generate the kconfig
fragment, validation has already occured, and there should be no error.
So we change the error function to generate Makefile code, so that
errors are caught as explained above.
Lastly, when the value of BR2_EXTERNAL changes, we want to 'forget'
about the previous value of the BR2_EXTERNAL_MK variable, especially in
the case where BR2_EXTERNAL is now set to empty, so that we do not try
to include it later. That's why we first generate empty version of
BR2_EXTERNAL_MK, and then assign it the new value, if any.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Romain Naour <romain.naour@openwide.fr>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Now that we generate a kconfig snippet, we can conditionally include the
BR2_EXTERNAL's Config.in only when BR2_EXTERNAL is supplied by the user,
which means our empty/dummy Config.in is no needed.
As for external.mk, we can also include it only when BR2_EXTERNAL is
supplied by the user, which means our empty/dummy external.mk is no
longer needed.
Ditch both of those files, and:
- only generate actual content in the Kconfig snippet when we actually
do have a BR2_EXTERNAL provided by the user (i.e. BR2_EXTERNAL is not
empty);
- add a variable that contains the path to the external.mk provided by
the user, or empty if none, and include the path set in that variable
(make can 'include' nothing without any problem! ;-) )
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Romain Naour <romain.naour@openwide.fr>
Cc: Julien CORJON <corjon.j@ecagroup.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Move the inclusion of br2-external's Config.in to the generated kconfig
snippet.
This will ultimately allow us to use more than one br2-external tree.
Offload the "User-provided options" menu to the generated Kconfig
snippet. We can also move the definition of the Kconfig-version of
BR2_EXTERNAL into this snippet.
We introduce an extra check that was not present in the previous code,
to check that we do have permission on that directory. Prevciously, it
was handled as a side effect of not being able to cd into there, but it
is cleaner to check it expressly.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Romain Naour <romain.naour@openwide.fr>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
This script, and its companion library, is more-or-less Buildroot's
equivalent to the kernel get_maintainer.pl script: it allows to get the
list of developers to whom a set of patches should be sent to.
To do so, it first relies on a text file, named DEVELOPERS, at the root
of the Buildroot source tree (added in a followup commit) to list the
developers and the files they are interested in. The DEVELOPERS file's
format is simple:
N: Firstname Lastname <email>
F: path/to/file
F: path/to/another/file
This allows to associate developers with the files they are looking
after, be they related to a package, a defconfig, a filesystem image, a
package infrastructure, the documentation, or anything else.
When a directory is given, the tool assumes that the developer handles
all files and subdirectories in this directory. For example
"package/qt5/" can be used for the developers looking after all the Qt5
packages.
Conventional shell patterns can be used, so "package/python-*" can be
used for the developers who want to look after all packages matching
"python-*".
A few files are recognized specially:
- .mk files are parsed, and if they contain $(eval
$(<something>-package)), the developer is assumed to be looking after
the corresponding package. This way, autobuilder failures for this
package can be reported directly to this developer.
- arch/Config.in.<arch> files are recognized as "the developer is
looking after the <arch> architecture". In this case, get-developer
parses the arch/Config.in.<arch> to get the list of possible BR2_ARCH
values. This way, autobuilder failures for this package can be
reported directly to this developer.
- pkg/pkg-<infra>.mk are recognized as "the developer is looking after
the <infra> package infrastructure. In this case, any patch that adds
or touches a .mk file that uses this infrastructure will be sent to
this developer.
Examples of usage:
$ ./support/scripts/get-developers 0001-ffmpeg-fix-bfin-build.patch
git send-email--to buildroot@buildroot.org --to "Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net>" --to "Bernd Kuhls <bernd.kuhls@t-online.de>"
$ ./support/scripts/get-developers -p imx-lib
Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Gary Bisson <gary.bisson@boundarydevices.com>
$ ./support/scripts/get-developers -a bfin
Waldemar Brodkorb <wbx@openadk.org>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Reviewed-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
We currently have four lists of packages in the manual:
- the non-virtual target packages,
- the virtual target packages,
- the host packages,
- the deprecated features.
Those list take more than half of the manual. They do not serve much
purpose except to show off.
After the recent discussion on the list [0], remove them all.
We can now get rid of our biggish and complex generating script (and its
companion library kconfiglib).
[0] http://lists.busybox.net/pipermail/buildroot/2016-September/171199.html
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
The size-stats script fails when the usb_modeswitch_data is enabled,
because this package installs files that contain commas in their
name. However, the size-stats script also uses comma as a separator for
its CSV files, causing a "ValueError: too many values to unpack" in:
pkg, fpath = l.split(",")
Fix this by splitting only the two fields that need to be split.
The bug was reported by Matthias <porto.rio@gmx.net>, who also suggested
a fix.
Fixes bug #9136.
Reported-by: Matthias <porto.rio@gmx.net>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Since efl update to 1.15 version, the efl package is a "real"
Buildroot package. It doesn't contain any subdirectories anymore.
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
As reported by Sébastien Szymanski [1], the apply-patches script
doesn't stop if a tar command can't extract an archive.
Use "set -e" to exit immediately if a command return an error.
Be sure to ignore any expected error: when we check if a patch to be
applied has the same basename as an already applied patch, the grep
would fail when no such patch was already applied. We should not fail
in this case.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Sébastien Szymanski <sebastien.szymanski@armadeus.com>
Cc: Romain Naour <romain.naour@openwide.fr>
Reviewed-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
As reported by Sébastien Szymanski [1], the apply-patches script
doesn't stop if a tar command can't extract an archive.
Use "set -e" to exit immediately if a command return an error.
[1] http://patchwork.ozlabs.org/patch/626196
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Sébastien Szymanski <sebastien.szymanski@armadeus.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
[Thomas:
- add comment in scancpan about the version dependency, suggested by
Yann E. Morin.
- add comment in perl.mk about the need to sync any version change with
scancpan, also suggested by Yann E. Morin.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
sha256 checksum will be computed locally either by scanpypi at package
creation or by hand by package updates. Define this checksum as
'computed locally' so that one doesn't need to change this comment by
package updates. Also put comments for both md5 and sha256 in one line.
Signed-off-by: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Make sure a help text is terminated with a full stop.
Signed-off-by: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
In most cases Python's package dependencies found in setup.py are
runtime dependencies and hence don't need to be mentioned in *.mk
file.
Also add '# runtime' tag to select statements in Config.in.
__create_mk_requirements() itself is left for future uses (cffi backend
handling etc.).
Signed-off-by: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Patches we save can come from various locations:
- bundled with Buildroot
- downloaded
- from one or more global-patch-dir
It is possible that two patches lying into different locations have the
same basename, like so (first is bundled, second is from an hypothetical
global-patch-dir):
package/foo/0001-fix-Makefile.patch
/path/to/my/patches/foo/0001-fix-Makefile.patch
In that case, when running legal-info, we'd save only the second patch,
overwriting the first. That would be problematic, because:
- either the second patch depends on the first, and thus would no longer
apply (this is easy to detect, though),
- or the second patch does not depend on the first, and the compliance
delivery will not be complete (this is much harder to detect).
We fix that by checking that no two patches have the same same basename.
If we find that the basename of the patch to be applied collides with
that of a previously applied patch, we error out and report the duplicate.
The unfortunate side-effect is that existing setups will now break in
that situation, but that's a minor, corner-case issue that is easily
fixed.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Reviewed-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
[Thomas: adjust coding style, fix minor typos in the commit log.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Currently, we only store the filename of the applied patches.
However, we are soon to want to install those patches in the legal-info
directory, so we'll have to know where those patches come from.
Instead of duplicating the logic to find the patches (bundled,
downloaded, from a global patch dir...), just store the full path to
each of those patches so we can retrieve them more easily later on.
Also always create the list-file, even if empty, so that we need not
test for its existence before reading it.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net>
Reviewed-by: Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net>
[Tested only with patches in the Buildroot sources]
Tested-by: Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net>
Reviewed-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
[Thomas: used $PWD instead of $(pwd), as suggested by Arnout.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
A utility for creating python package from the python package index.
It fetches packages info from http://pypi.python.org and generates
corresponding packages files.
Signed-off-by: Denis THULIN <denis.thulin@openwide.fr>
Tested-by: Carlos Santos <casantos@datacom.ind.br>
Signed-off-by: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
[Thomas: minor tweaks.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Currently, each python package (be it the python interpreter package
itself or external python modules) is responsible for compiling its
.py into .pyc files. Unfortunately, this is not ideal as some packages
only install .py files without compiling them into .pyc files. In this
case, if the Buildroot configuration specifies to keep only the .pyc
files, the .py files are removed and lost.
To address this, this commit changes the logic by making the
compilation of .pyc files a global operation: the python interpreter
packages register a target finalize hook that is in charge of
compiling all installed .py files.
The *.pyc generation on a per package basis is disabled in the
python-package infrastructure by passing the "--no-compile" option to
setup.py.
The *.pyc generation for the Python interpreter internal modules is
disabled through --disable-pyc-build configure option.
A small helper script is used to perform the compilation, the purpose
of this script is to abort the compilation process if one of the .py
file cannot be compiled. It has been provided by Samuel Martin and
integrated into this commit.
Signed-off-by: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Cc: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
[Thomas:
- rework for python 3.5
- integrate Samuel proposal that allows to detect compilation
failures.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Reviewed-by: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
The graph-build-time help text currently looks like this:
usage: graph-build-time [-h] [--type GRAPH_TYPE] [--order GRAPH_ORDER]
[--alternate-colors] [--input OUTPUT] --output OUTPUT
Obviously, naming the parameter for --input as OUTPUT is not a very
good idea, so this commit fixes that to name it "INPUT", as expected.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
When preparing the legal-info, the source archives are copied in the
legal-info/ output directory. When the archives are big, it can take
quite a bit of time and unnecessarily uses disk space. When the
legal-info output directory is on the same filesystem as the BR2_DL_DIR,
we can easily reduce copy time and disk usage by just using hardlins
instead of copying. However, the BR2_DL_DIR may be on a different
filesystem, so we must fallback to copying in this case
Introduce a helper script that copies a source file into a destination
directory, by first attempting to hard-link, and falling back to a
plain copy in case the hardlink fails.
In case the destination already exists, it is forcibly removed first, to
avoid clobering any existing target file (and especially any hardlink to
it), since cp -f does not remove the destination file, but clobbers it.
In some situations, it will be necessary that the destination file is
named differently than the source, so if a third argument is specified,
it is treated as the basename of the destination file.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net>
Reviewed-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
At least syslinux is installing stuff in HOST_DIR/sbin.
Cc: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Make graph-depends script opening the output file in text mode since
only ascii characters will be written.
This change fixes the following error occuring when the default host
python interpreter is python3:
make: Entering directory '/opt/buildroot'
Getting targets
Getting dependencies for ['toolchain-external', 'toolchain', 'busybox', ...]
Getting dependencies for ['host-python3', 'host-pkgconf', 'host-gettext', ...]
Getting dependencies for ['host-libxml2', 'host-swig', 'host-m4', ...]
Getting version for ['toolchain-external', 'toolchain', 'busybox', ...]
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/opt/buildroot/support/scripts/graph-depends", line 425, in <module>
outfile.write("digraph G {\n")
TypeError: a bytes-like object is required, not 'str'
Makefile:807: recipe for target 'graph-depends' failed
make[1]: *** [graph-depends] Error 1
Makefile:84: recipe for target '_all' failed
make: *** [_all] Error 2
make: Leaving directory '/opt/buildroot'
While with python2, adding 'b' to the openning mode has no effect on
Linux (c.f. [2]), the above error is expected with python3 (c.f. [1]).
Therefore, just open the outfile in default (i.e. text) mode.
[1] https://docs.python.org/3/library/functions.html#open
[2] https://docs.python.org/2/library/functions.html#open
Signed-off-by: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Currently, these flags are recursively propagated. This behavior is
not expected by users, because it can cause dependencies explosively.
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Currently, without the flag -recommend, scancpan takes as dependency
only one which has the relationship "requires"; this mode works fine.
And, with the flag -recommend, scancpan takes all ones (ie. with
relationship "requires" or "recommends") in the same way; this mode
never works fine, because it is too simplistic.
With this commit, the "not required" dependencies are handled as
optional BR package or skipped if a cyclic dependency is detected.
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Just like the --stop-on and --exclude options allow to stop on or
exclude virtual packages from the list by passing the "virtual" magic
value, this commit extends the graph-depends logic to support a "host"
magic value for --stop-on and --exclude. This will allow to draw the
graph by stopping on host packages, or by excluding host packages.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Tested-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
[Thomas: minor code beautification suggested by Yann E. Morin.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
The condition to determine if a virtual package should be excluded
from the list due to "virtual" being passed in --exclude is under a
loop iterating over each entry of the exclude_list, but it doesn't use
the iterator of this list.
Indeed, the condition contains:
"virtual" in exclude_list
which checks automatically if "virtual" was passed in the list. Due to
this, there is no need for this check to be within the "for p in
exclude_list" iteration. This commit fixes that by moving the check
outside of the loop.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Tested-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Acked-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Add an option to graph-depends to only do the dependency checks and not
generate the dot program.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Currently, if there is a circular dependency in the packages, the
graph-depends script just errors out with a Python RuntimeError which is
not caught, resulting in a very-long backtrace which does not provide
any hint as what the real issue is (even if "RuntimeError: maximum
recursion depth exceeded" is a pretty good hint at it).
We fix that by recursing the dependency chain of each package, until we
either end up with a package with no dependency, or with a package
already seen along the current dependency chain.
We need to introduce a new function, check_circular_deps(), because we
can't re-use the existing ones:
- remove_mandatory_deps() does not iterate,
- remove_transitive_deps() does iterate, but we do not call it for the
top-level package if it is not 'all'
- it does not make sense to use those functions anyway, as they were
not designed to _check_ but to _act_ on the dependency chain.
Since we've had time-related issues in the past, we do not want to
introduce yet another time-hog, so here are timings with the circular
dependency check:
$ time python -m cProfile -s cumtime support/scripts/graph-depends
[...]
28352654 function calls (20323050 primitive calls) in 87.292 seconds
Ordered by: cumulative time
ncalls tottime percall cumtime percall filename:lineno(function)
1 0.012 0.012 87.292 87.292 graph-depends:24(<module>)
21 0.000 0.000 73.685 3.509 subprocess.py:473(_eintr_retry_call)
7 0.000 0.000 73.655 10.522 subprocess.py:768(communicate)
7 73.653 10.522 73.653 10.522 {method 'read' of 'file' objects}
5/1 0.027 0.005 43.488 43.488 graph-depends:164(get_all_depends)
5 0.003 0.001 43.458 8.692 graph-depends:135(get_depends)
1 0.001 0.001 25.712 25.712 graph-depends:98(get_version)
1 0.001 0.001 13.457 13.457 graph-depends:337(remove_extra_deps)
1717 1.672 0.001 13.050 0.008 graph-depends:290(remove_transitive_deps)
9784086/2672326 5.079 0.000 11.363 0.000 graph-depends:274(is_dep)
2883343/1980154 2.650 0.000 6.942 0.000 graph-depends:262(is_dep_uncached)
1 0.000 0.000 4.529 4.529 graph-depends:121(get_targets)
2883343 1.123 0.000 1.851 0.000 graph-depends:246(is_dep_cache_insert)
9784086 1.783 0.000 1.783 0.000 graph-depends:255(is_dep_cache_lookup)
2881580 0.728 0.000 0.728 0.000 {method 'update' of 'dict' objects}
1 0.001 0.001 0.405 0.405 graph-depends:311(check_circular_deps)
12264/1717 0.290 0.000 0.404 0.000 graph-depends:312(recurse)
[...]
real 1m27.371s
user 1m15.075s
sys 0m12.673s
The cumulative time spent in check_circular_deps is just below 0.5s,
which is largely less than 1% of the total run time.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Currently, graph-depends outputs the dotfile program to stdout, and uses
stderr to trace the dependencies it is currently looking for.
Redirection was done because the output was directly piped into the dot
program to generate the final PDF/SVG/... dependency graph, but that
meant that an error in the graph-depends script was never caught
(because shell pipes only return the final command exit status, and an
empty dot program is perfectly valid so dot would not complain).
Add an option to tell graph-depends where to store the generated dot
program, and keep stdout as the default if not specified.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
[Thomas: rename metavar from DOT_FILE to OUT_FILE for consistency with
the rest of the new option naming.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Leverage the CSV files produces by size-stats (make graph-size) to allow
for a comparison of rootfs size between two different buildroot
compilations.
The script takes the file-size CSV files of two compilations as input, and
produces a textual report of the differences per package.
Using the -d/--detail flag, the report will show the file size changes
instead of package size changes.
The -t/--threshold option allows to ignore file size differences smaller
or equal than the given threshold (in bytes).
Example output is:
Size difference per package (bytes), threshold = 0
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-8192 busybox
228572 added dmalloc
301584 added jq
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
521964 TOTAL
or with detailed view:
Size difference per file (bytes), threshold = 0
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-8192 bin/busybox
18152 added usr/bin/jq
39252 added usr/bin/dmalloc
46968 added usr/lib/libdmalloc.so
47288 added usr/lib/libdmallocxx.so
47316 added usr/lib/libdmallocth.so
47748 added usr/lib/libdmallocthcxx.so
283432 added usr/lib/libjq.so.1.0.4
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
521964 TOTAL
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
It hasn't been updated since it was added in 2008, and nowadays things kind
of stuff should be handled with genimage.
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
The apply-patches.sh script was using a mix of tabs and spaces, and
some three-space indentation. Normalize everything to four-space
indentation.
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
A copy/paste error in the ArgumentParser() constructor call disclosed
the fact that the author of the script has shamefully based his work
on the existing graph-build-time script. This commit fixes this
mistake, therefore hiding in a better way how size-stats was
vampirized from graph-build-time.
Reported-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <patrickdepinguin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
For large configurations, the execution time of
remove_transitive_deps() becomes really high, due to the number of
nested loops + the is_dep() function being recursive.
For an allyespackageconfig, the remove_extra_deps() function takes 334
seconds to execute, and the overall time to generate the .dot file is
6 minutes and 39 seconds. Here is a timing of the different
graph-depends steps and the overall execution time:
Getting dependencies: 42.5735 seconds
Turn deps into a dict: 0.0023 seconds
Remove extra deps: 334.1542 seconds
Get version: 22.4919 seconds
Generate .dot: 0.0197 seconds
real 6m39.289s
user 6m16.644s
sys 0m8.792s
By adding a very simple cache for the results of is_dep(), we bring
down the execution time of the "Remove extra deps" step from 334
seconds to just 4 seconds, reducing the overall execution time to 1
minutes and 10 seconds:
Getting dependencies: 42.9546 seconds
Turn deps into a dict: 0.0025 seconds
Remove extra deps: 4.9643 seconds
Get version: 22.1865 seconds
Generate .dot: 0.0207 seconds
real 1m10.201s
user 0m47.716s
sys 0m7.948s
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Tested-by: Gustavo Zacarias <gustavo.zacarias@free-electrons.com>
[yann.morin.1998@free.fr:
- rename is_dep() to is_dep_uncached(), keep existig code as-is
- add is_dep() as a cached-version of is_dep_uncached()
- use constructs more conform with 2to3
- use exceptions (EAFP) rather than check-before-use (LBYL) to be more
pythonist; that even decreases the duration yet a little bit more!
]
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
A series file for quilt has a valid syntax of:
fixes/autoconf.diff -p1
fixes/doc-html-local-css.diff -p1
fixes/gnu-inline.diff -p1
However, with the current way that a series file is handled, it will
error out because the -p1 is tried as a file. This is because in the
for loop that iterates the files, we only look for comment lines. Then
each line is used within a bash for loop which uses spaces a
delimiter. In order to fix this, we should only use the string that
comes before a space in the series file.
Note that the format allows for any arbitrary depth to the -pN field.
But since we'll have only one package with -pN fields, and all will be
-p1, we for now always assume -p1. This will have to be fixed whenever
we get a package with other values.
Signed-off-by: Ryan Barnett <ryanbarnett3@gmail.com>
[yann.morin.1998@free.fr: expand comment about the format of a series
file and how we interpret it]
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
CC: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Despite the comment saying so, the trailing '/' in the host directory is
not removed. Note however that it is properly removed from extracted
RPATH tags.
This is not visible when the host directory is our default $(O)/host
location, but breaks for user-supplied external host directory, when
the user leaves a trailing slash in the path.
Fix that.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@uclibc.org>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
When we build our host programs, and they depend on a host library we
also build, we want to ensure that program actually uses that library at
runtime, and not the one from the system.
We currently ensure that in two ways:
- we add a RPATH tag that points to our host library directory,
- we export LD_LIBRARY_PATH to point to that same directory.
With these two in place, we're pretty much confident that our host
libraries will be used by our host programs.
However, it turns our that not all the host programs we build end up
with an RPATH tag:
- some packages do not use our $(HOST_LDFLAGS)
- some packages' build system are oblivious to those LDFLAGS
In this case, there are two situations:
- the program is not linked to one of our host libraries: it in fact
does not need an RPATH tag [0]
- the program actually uses one of our host libraries: in that case it
should have had an RPATH tag pointing to the host directory.
For libraries, they only need an RPATH if they depend on another library
that is not installed in the standard library path. However, any system
library will already be in the standard library path, and any library we
install ourselves is in $(HOST_DIR)/usr/lib so already in RPATH.
We add a new support script that checks that all ELF executables have
a proper DT_RPATH (or DT_RUNPATH) tag when they link to our host
libraries, and reports those file that are missing an RPATH. If a file
missing an RPATH is an executable, the script aborts; if only libraries
are are missing an RPATH, the script does not abort.
[0] Except if it were to dlopen() it, of course, but the only program
I'm aware of that does that is openssl, and it has a correct RPATH tag.
[Peter: reworded as suggested by Arnout, fix HOT_DIR typo in comment]
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@uclibc.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
When a series file exists, we should use every file mentioned in it,
not just the ones ending with .patch or .diff. Also, there's no need
to uncompress anything if it's mentioned in a series file (the tools
that manipulate series files don't support compressed patches).
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Doug Kehn <rdkehn@yahoo.com>
Tested-by: Doug Kehn <rdkehn@yahoo.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
'quiet' variable is set and exported, but it is not used. We can safely
remove it.
This variable is inherited from the Makefile of the Linux kernel, and
is not used in Buildroot.
In support/scripts/mkmakefile, 'quiet' value is checked, but the test
is always true ('quiet' is never set to silent_), so the test can be
removed as well.
Signed-off-by: Cédric Marie <cedric.marie@openmailbox.org>
Reviewed-by: "James Knight" <james.d.knight@live.com>
Reviewed-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
add this heuristic when no specific license file is found
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
The format of the users table files is non trivial, so it is sometimes
handy to add comments explaining the syntax (or simply the reason for
the user) inline in the files.
Ignore empty lines and comment lines prefixed with '#' similar to shell
or makedevs files.
Packages that defined no user (the vast majority) would cause an empty
line to be present in the internal users table, hence the reason we
skipped empty usernames. Now that we ignore empty lines, we no longer
need to check for empty usernames.
Reported-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@uclibc.org>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@uclibc.org>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
This new script uses the data collected by the step_pkg_size
instrumentation hook to generate a pie chart of the size contribution
of each package to the target root filesystem, and two CSV files with
statistics about the package size and file size. To achieve this, it
looks at each file in $(TARGET_DIR), and using the
packages-file-list.txt information collected by the step_pkg_size
hook, it determines to which package the file belongs. It is therefore
able to give the size installed by each package.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Tested-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
the perl dependency of cpan module is no longer generated by scancpan,
but added at the infrastructure level
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
When a module is native or depends of a native module, it must be
disabled for static builds via its Config.in
We detect native modules by looking at the filenames listed in the
MANIFEST. If there is a file which looks like it contains code that
much be compiled (e.g. .c, .h and so on...), then we exclude that
module (and its dependencies) from static builds.
That's what we tried to do so far, but failed when there was a
comment on the same line as the filename in the manifest, like so:
foo-bar.c # Bla bla bla
Fix that by detecting either endof-line (as currently done) or
end-of-string.
For an example of failed build of perl-html-parser, see
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/128/128671dfa23d843698a63220c2fac1f44e1d5845/
[Thomas: use better commit log proposed by Yann E. Morin.]
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
with Perl 5.22, Module-Build is no longer a core module
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Since commit 5f117c3 (webkit: mark as deprecated), generation of the
manual has been broken.
This is because that commit added a deprecated dependency on a
prompt-less symbol, BR2_PACKAGE_WEBKIT_ARCH_SUPPORTS. However, the
generation script does not check that a symbol has a prompt before
it attempts to add it to the deprecated list. So, we end up with
traceback:
Writing the virtual-packages list in:
/home/ymorin/dev/buildroot/O/build/docs/manual/virtual-package-list.txt
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/home/ymorin/dev/buildroot/buildroot/support/scripts/gen-manual-lists.py", line 510, in <module>
buildroot.print_list(list_name, dry_run=args.dry_run, output=output)
File "/home/ymorin/dev/buildroot/buildroot/support/scripts/gen-manual-lists.py", line 466, in print_list
item_label=item_label)
File "/home/ymorin/dev/buildroot/buildroot/support/scripts/gen-manual-lists.py", line 126, in format_asciidoc_table
enable_choice=enable_choice))
File "/home/ymorin/dev/buildroot/buildroot/support/scripts/gen-manual-lists.py", line 350, in _format_symbol_prompt_location
return "| {0:<40} <| {1}\n".format(get_label_func(symbol),
File "/home/ymorin/dev/buildroot/buildroot/support/scripts/gen-manual-lists.py", line 458, in <lambda>
get_label = lambda x: self._get_symbol_label(x, mark_depr)
File "/home/ymorin/dev/buildroot/buildroot/support/scripts/gen-manual-lists.py", line 313, in _get_symbol_label
label = symbol.get_prompts()[0]
IndexError: list index out of range
However, we can not use the existing _is_deprecated filter function to
filter out symbols without prompts, because this function is also used
to add a '(deprecated)' tag in the man package list (not that it would
not work, but it does not seem /right/). Furthermore, it could also be
used (but is currently not) to build the list of virtual packages, which
do not have a prompt.
So, introduce a filter function, aptly named _is_deprecated_feature(),
to be used as the filter to find deprecated feature, and keep the
existing _is_deprecated() that can be used in any context to decide
whether a symbol is deprecated or not.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Gustavo Zacarias <gustavo@zacarias.com.ar>
Acked-by: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
underscore is not allowed in BR package name.
this problem was found with the Perl module DB_File
which must give the BR package perl-db-file.
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Commit 971faf8 (Makefile: fix out-of-tree builds with multiple targets
with 'all') renamed the default target to '_all' to avoid name-clashing.
In doing so, I forgot to also fix the instance in the .PHONY rule.
Fix that now.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
skeleton being a mandatory dependency, we don't want all our packages to
have a link back to that node, the graph would be awful.
Signed-off-by: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Small optimization so we don't have another 'make' level (caused by the
umask fix) when running the generated makefile.
Signed-off-by: Guido Martínez <guido@vanguardiasur.com.ar>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Kconfiglib now runs as either Python 2 or Python 3.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <ulfalizer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
These weren't available when gen-manual-lists.py was first written.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <ulfalizer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Buildroot doesn't use $srctree from what I could tell.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <ulfalizer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Corresponds to a95f477 in https://github.com/ulfalizer/Kconfiglib.
Fixes:
- Unset user values when loading a zero-byte .config. (5e54e2c)
- Ignore indented .config assignments. (f8a7510)
- Do not require $srctree to be set for non-kernel projects. (d56e9c1)
- Allow digits in $-references to symbols. (ecacdd5)
- Add Symbol.is_allnoconfig_y(). (deaa624)
- Fix small output issue with Comments inside Choices.
Also adds Python 3 support and has a lot of internal cleanup and
optimization.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <ulfalizer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
The following allows a user definition to specify that a created user
entry should not have a password value set. Original implementation
allowed a user definition to provide a password value of "=" (no quotes)
to generate a crypt-encoded empty string value. In some cases, it may be
desired to have no value specified for a user's password. By using a
value "-" for a password, no value will be set in the shadow value.
An example when this can be used is when logging into a terminal.
Logging into a session with an encoded empty password will prompt a user
to enter a password since it does not know the password is empty. If the
password field blank, a login session will not prompt for a password.
Signed-off-by: James Knight <james.knight@rockwellcollins.com>
Acked-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
For clarity, this commit renames the TARGETS variable to the more
meaningful PACKAGES variable. Indeed, only packages (handled by one of
the package infrastructures) should be listed in this variable, and
not other random non-package targets.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
[Thomas: fix issues noticed by Arnout:
- Rewrap the linux/Config.in paragraph
- Revert the "is a toolchain dependency" -> "has a toolchain
dependency" change from pkg-generic.mk, as the original was
correct.]
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Like for --stop-on, make --exclude recognise the keyword 'virtual',
to stop on virtual packages (as explained in the help...).
Reported-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Similar to --stop-on, but also omits the package from the graph.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Francois Perrad <fperrad@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Francois Perrad <fperrad@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Add a new option to graph-depends, that users can set to stop the graph
on a specific (set of) package(s).
This accepts any actual package name, or the 'virtual' keyword to stop
on virtual packages.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Francois Perrad <fperrad@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
The current error messages are a bit terse, and do not provide all the
required information.
Expand them to provide more context.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Tom Elliott <tommygunsster@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Most of targets listed in TARGET_EXCEPTIONS these days are long
gone, so why still keep them?
Most of those targets were removed in this commit:
http://git.buildroot.net/buildroot/commit/?id=02b88600312554bf166f6cfd71f7f2ede783096a
Signed-off-by: Alexey Brodkin <abrodkin@synopsys.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
virtual packages are found by their version,
so we retrieve the version of all packages
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Tested-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Tested-by: Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Since a while, the semantic of BR2_PREFER_STATIC_LIB has been changed
from "prefer static libraries when possible" to "use only static
libraries". The former semantic didn't make much sense, since the user
had absolutely no control/idea of which package would use static
libraries, and which packages would not. Therefore, for quite some
time, we have been starting to enforce that BR2_PREFER_STATIC_LIB
should really build everything with static libraries.
As a consequence, this patch renames BR2_PREFER_STATIC_LIB to
BR2_STATIC_LIBS, and adjust the Config.in option accordingly.
This also helps preparing the addition of other options to select
shared, shared+static or just static.
Note that we have verified that this commit can be reproduced by
simply doing a global rename of BR2_PREFER_STATIC_LIB to
BR2_STATIC_LIBS plus adding BR2_PREFER_STATIC_LIB to Config.in.legacy.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Dependencies from metacpan comes as a list of modules which is
transformed in a list of distribution for BR. Different modules could
be included in the same distribution, so duplication is possible.
This can for example be seen with the HTTP-Daemon module, which would
get two times the dependencies on HTTP-Message without this commit.
[Thomas: slightly extend commit log.]
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
module could be removed of the core,
so check if the module is currently in the core,
but not if the module was once time included in the core.
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
retrieve MD5 and SHA256 from metacpan.org, and store them in the hash
file for each package.
[Thomas: remove the odd indentation of the filename for the md5 hash
lines in the hash file.]
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Not all systems have /bin/bash (e.g. NixOS[1] doesn't). Buildroot
already uses /usr/bin/env shebangs for other interpreters (perl,
python), so why not bash?
This changes only the shebangs used by Buildroot itself; stuff installed
to the target system is left unchanged.
With this applied I can run Buildroot unmodified on NixOS.
[1]: http://nixos.org/
Signed-off-by: Bjørn Forsman <bjorn.forsman@gmail.com>
Acked-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
The make "-s" option is used to enable the "Silent operation" so if that
option is used don't print anything as far as there isn't any error.
Add the "-s" option to "apply-patches.sh" to enable silent operation.
[Peter: use the existing QUIET variable]
Signed-off-by: Fabio Porcedda <fabio.porcedda@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Let mkusers create groups alone, useful for supplementary permissions in
udev/systemd for example where users can be added to later at runtime.
Use a magic string "-" to signal that user creation should be skipped.
Signed-off-by: Gustavo Zacarias <gustavo@zacarias.com.ar>
Acked-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
As discussed during the Buildroot meeting, this commit extends the
pkg-stats script to include statistics about the number of packages
having vs. not having the hash file.
As of today, we have 104 packages with the hash file, and 1274
packages without.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Currently the graph-build-time script prints a python exception if a
needed module cannot be imported. Catch the exception and tell the user
which packages are missing, as we do for other missing dependencies.
Signed-off-by: Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
This instruction in the middle of 'import' lines looks very strange.
Also, it was not obvious to me what the 'Agg' backend is.
Both things are actually correct, but it took a while to find out why.
So clarify with a comment to save someone else's time.
[Peter: fix s/soe/some/ typo]
Signed-off-by: Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net>
Cc: Sascha Arthur <sascha.arthur@gmail.com>
Cc: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net>
Acked-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Perl modules can have three different types of dependencies:
- configure/build time dependency which becomes host dependency
- runtime dependency which becomes target dependency
- test time dependency which is useless in a cross-compiling context like BR
Before this patch, test time dependencies are handled like runtime
dependencies.
After this patch, test time dependencies are ignored by default. The
newly added -test option allows to add them anyway if needed.
[Thomas: reword commit log using Francois proposal.]
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
mktemp --tmpdir is not available on older Redhat RHEL5 machines. The
alternative that has the same behavior is 'mktemp -t'.
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de.schampheleire@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
The gconv libraries are used to translate between different character sets
('charsets', even 'csets' sometimes). Some packages need them to present
text to the user (eg. XBMC Gotham).
In (e)glibc they are implemented by the internal implemenation of iconv,
called gconv, and are provided as dlopen-able libraries.
Note that some gconv modules need extra libraries (shared by more than
one gconv module), so we must, when adding a subset of modules, scan the
installed modules in search of the missing libraries.
[Thomas: add general explanation in expunge-gconv-modules and fix
coding style.]
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Bernd Kuhls <bernd.kuhls@t-online.de>
Signed-off-by: Bernd Kuhls <bernd.kuhls@t-online.de>
Cc: Eric Limpens <limpens@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
In English, unlike in French, almost all usages of the word 'information'
are uncountable, meaning that 'informations' is invalid.
This patch fixes this typo throughout the tree, except in CHANGES and
docs/news.html (historic text).
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de.schampheleire@gmail.com>
Acked-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
When searching for virtual package providers, there's no need to
handle legacy symbols at all, so just bail out early.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
No need to pass as argument to a function, members of the class it's in.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
- typo in comment
- remove trailing space in _HOST_DEPENCENCIES when no dependency
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
This commit improves the scancpan script to automatically populate the
LICENSE_FILES variable using informations available in the Perl
package MANIFEST file.
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Perl extensions are loaded at runtime with dlopen(), so it does not
make sense to even build extensions that are written in C when
BR2_PREFER_STATIC_LIB is enabled. A Perl module written in C or with a
dependency on a module written in C is not available when doing a
static build.
Therefore, this commit adapts the scancpan script to automatically
generate a dependency on !BR2_PREFER_STATIC_LIB when the Perl module
would not work in a static-only configuration.
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
- remove trailing space after perl when it's the only dependency
- license: substitution of perl name by BR name
- add a tabulation before source
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Reviewed-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
This patch is the result of 2to3.
Signed-off-by: Vivien Didelot <vivien.didelot@savoirfairelinux.com>
Acked-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Tested-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
It hides any error messages reported by make.
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Acked-by: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
The graph-depends script calls make. If the outer make was called
recursively, or if it was called with '-C <somedir>', then the
environment will contain "MAKEFLAGS=w --". Therefore, the recursive
make prints 'Entering' and 'Leaving' messages, which clobbers the
output for dot.
To avoid this, add "--no-print-directory" to the recursive make
arguments. Since we require GNU make 3.81, we can be sure that this
option is available.
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Tested-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Acked-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
This patch is the result of 2to3.
In addition, universal_newlines=True is added to the Popen calls. In
python3, this makes sure that the output is decoded so that we get a
string instead of a buffer object.
Cc: Vivien Didelot <vivien.didelot@savoirfairelinux.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Reviewed-by: Vivien Didelot <vivien.didelot@savoirfairelinux.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
The transitive dependencies make the graphs barely readable for large
configs, with a large number of packages.
So, just switch to not drawing the transitive dependencies by default.
By popular demand... ;-)
[Peter: reword]
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc; Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Currently, the symlinks in the generated filesystems will have the
UID of the user running the build, because 'chown' does not change
the ownership of symlinks, by default.
Although the implications are limited, some may not want that UID
to leak in the generated filesystems.
So, use 'chown -h' so even symlinks get properly chowned.
Reported-by: Angelo Dureghello <angelo@barix.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <patrickdepinguin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Generate an asciidoc table that can be included in the manual, that
lists the existing virtual packages, the corresponding symbols, and
their providers (and sub-options thereof).
The core of this change is the addition of a new formatter for virtual
packages. This formatter is a bit tricky, as it has to catter for a
bunch of corner cases:
- provider is not a package, but is sub-options of a package
- such a sub-option may be itself 'select'-ed by one or more
other sub-options
- legacy packages should not be considered as a provider
Those cases are real:
- sub-options of mesa3d provide EGL or GLES
- selected sub-options of mesa3d provide GL
- udev is a legacy package, but it provides udev
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Currently, we can generate two different tables of packages:
- a single-column table with the symbols' prompts,
- a two-column table with the symbols' prompts and locations in the
menuconfig.
For virtual packages, this is not enough, since we will have to display
more columns, with different content:
- the virtual package name (but such symbols do not have a prompt)
- the symbol name
- the providers for the virtual package
So, instead of having a single function that knows how to generate any
table, introduce a formatter function that is passed as argument to,
and called by format_asciidoc_table(). Such formatter functions are
responsible for providing:
- the layout of the table (number of columns, column arrangement),
- the formatted header line,
- a formatted line for a symbol.
What the formatter should ouput depends on its arguments:
- if none are passed, the layout is returned,
- if the header label is passed, it returns the formatted header line,
- otherwise, it returns the formatted line for a symbol.
Two formatter functions are introduced in this changeset, to replace the
current 'sub_menu' feature:
- _format_symbol_prompt() to display a one-column table with only the
symbols' prompts,
- _format_symbol_prompt_location() to display a two-column table with
the symbols' prompts and locations.
This will help us to later introduce a new formatter to generate a table
for virtual packages.
[Thanks to Samuel for his pythonistic help!]
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
When generating the package lists, the responsibility to decide what is
actually a package symbol is currently split between the _is_package(),
the get_symbol_subset() and the format_asciidoc_table() functions.
The two latter functions check that an item is really a symbol, and that
is has a prompt.
While this is currently correct for real packages, this will no longer
be the case when we also generate a list of virtual packages, since they
do not have a prompt.
Move the responsibility to verify that a symbol is indeed a package symbol
to _is_package(), so it's all in one place, and makes it easier to change
for virtual packages.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
If a package has both a 'real' and a 'virtual' definition, consider it
is a virtual package and do not display it in the generated package list.
This is the case for jpeg and cryptodev, that are virtual packages, but
also real (but empty) packages used to provide a prompt to enable/disable
a choice to select an implementation. In this case, we do not want to
list the virtual packages, but only their implementations.
So, consider packages that are both real and virtual as virtual packages.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Prepare to tell apart real packages from virtual packages.
Currently, the code implicitly recognises only real packages, and
discards virtual packages, because of the heuristic used to recognise
whether a symbol is a package:
- for real package:
- symbols : BR2_PACKAGE_FOO
- .mk files: foo.mk
- for virtual packages:
- symbols : BR2_PACKAGE_HAS_FOO
- .mk files: foo.mk
The current heuristic is to check for each symbol if a corresponding .mk
file exists, by stripping 'BR2_PACKAGE_' from the beginning of the symbol,
converting the result to lowercase, and checking if a .mk file exists.
So, as a side effect, it completely misses the virtual packages [*], which
is pretty nice since we get a list with only real packages that the user
can indeed select and see in the menuconfig.
[*] Except for 'cryptodev' and 'jpeg' which are both virtual packages and
normal packages. Except they are not normal packages, they are used to
display a choice of the implementation to use. This case will be fixed in
follow-up patches.
Since we'll soon need to also output the table of virtual packages, we
need to teach the _is_package() function to recognise them as well.
This patch is the first step into that direction: it introduces a new
function _is_real_package() that is just a wrapper to _is_package(), which
gains a new parameter, being the type of packages to filter on.
No behavioural change is made in this patch, it is just a preparatory
patch.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Move to a function the code generating the package name from a
symbol's name, to avoid code duplication.
This is not used currently, but will be in a subsequent patch.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
This is ugly, since Python does not have enum constructs, so by moving
the 'type' of the constant ('MODE' here) to the beginning, we get an
artificial 'namespace' for the constants.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Although unnecessary (we already have initialisation via the parser),
initialise the 'transitive' option, and document it at the same time.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Add some comment as well, enhance help text.
[thanks to Samuel for the hints to make it even more pythonic]
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Merge the redundant-dependencies elimination into the newly introduced
transitive-dependencies elimination.
This makes the code cleaner and much shorter, because:
- the ('all',pkg) redundant dependency is in fact a transitive
dependency, and we now have code to deal with that
- the (pkg,'toolchain') dependency is easy enough to deal with that
having a separate function for that is overkill
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Currently, all the dependencies of a package are drawn on the dependency
graph, including transitive dependencies (e.g. A->B->C and A->C).
For very big graphs, with lots of packages with lots of dependencies, the
dependency graph can be very dense, and transitive dependencies are
cluttering the graph.
In some cases, only getting the "build-order" dependencies is enough (e.g.
to see what impact a package rebuild would have).
Add a new environment variable to disable drawing transitive dependencies.
Basically, it would turn this graph:
pkg1 ---> pkg2 ---> pkg3 -------------------.
|\__________/ \ \
|\____________________ \ \
| \ \ \
`-> pkg4 ---> pkg5 ---> pkg6 ---> pkg7 ---> pkg8
\__________/
into that graph:
pkg1 ---> pkg2 ---> pkg3 -----------.
| \
`-> pkg4 ---> pkg5 ---> pkg6 ---> pkg7 ---> pkg8
[Thanks to Samuel for the parser hints]
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Do not use the same colors for toolchain, host and target packages.
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
[yann.morin.1998@free.fr rephrase commit log]
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
in order to avoid spurious diff when updating packages
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Remove some spaces before tabs and add the empty line at end of file.
Signed-off-by: Fabio Porcedda <fabio.porcedda@gmail.com>
Cc: Jerzy Grzegorek <jerzy.grzegorek@trzebnica.net>
Cc: Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Acked-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
As Samuel said:
In Python, None is a singleton, and it is recommended to use "is" or
"is not" for testing them [1].
[1] http://legacy.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/#programming-recommendations
Reported-by: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Some magic numbers obtained with trial-and-error and successive
iterations, to eventually get a nice graph.
[Thomas: remove excessive spaces in expressions.]
Reported-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Al packages depend on 'toolchain'. Currently, 'graph-depends' graphs this
dependency. The resulting graph is thus cluttered with less-than-useful
information.
Instead, do not graph the 'toolchain' dependency for any package, save
for the fake 'all' package. The graph is now a bit more readable.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Currently, the complete dependency chain of a package is used to
generate the dependency graph. When this dependency chain is long,
the generated graph becomes almost unreadable.
However, it is often sufficient to get the first few levels of
dependency of a package.
Add a new variable BR2_GRAPH_DEPTH, that the user can set to limit
the depth of the dependency list.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Currently, we are using a crude, ad-hoc parsing of argv[].
This is a limiting factor to adding new options.
Use argparse instead, and introduce a single argument for now:
--package, -p PACKAGE
In the (near) future, we'll be able to add more option arguments,
such as depth-limiting for big graphs.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Old toolchains, with old gcc that do not support -print-sysroot, break the
kernel-headers version check script: it fails to find the sysroot of the
toolchain, and thus ends up including the host's linux/version.h.
Most of the time, this will break early, since the host's kernel headers
will not match the toolchain settings.
But it can happen that the check is succesful, although the configuration
of the toolchain is wrong:
- the custom toolchain has kernel headers vX.Y
- the user selected vX.Z (Z!=Y)
- the host has headers vX.Y
In this case, the check passes OK, but the build of some packages later on
will break (which is exactly what those _AT_LEAST_XXX options were added to
avoid).
Fix that by passing the sysroot to the check script, instead of the cross
compiler.
We get the sysroot as thus:
- for custom toolchains, we use the macro toolchain_find_sysroot. We can
do that, because we already have a complete sysroot with libc.a at that
time.
- for internal toolchain using a custom kernel headers version, we just
use $(STAGING_DIR). We can't use the macro as for custom toolchains
above, because at the time we install the kernel headers, we do not yet
have a complete sysroot with a libc.a. But we can just use
$(STAGING_DIR), since we're only interested in the kernel headers.
For all other types of toolchains, we already have the _AT_LEAST_XXX options
properly set, so we need not add a check in this case.
Fixes:
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/f33/f331a6eff0b0b93c73af52db3a6b43e4e598577e/http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/a57/a5797c025bec50c10efdcff74945aab4021d05e4/
[...]
[Thanks to Thomas for pointing out the toolchain_find_sysroot macro!]
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Instead of creating a temporary files with a dubious scheme, use mktemp,
which purpose is exactly that: creating temporary files
Reported-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Since we introduced the _AT_LEAST_XXX for the kernel headers, people
using pre-built custom toolchain now have to specify the version of
the kernel headers their custom toolchain uses.
So, when we detect that there is a mismatch between the selection in
the menuconfig, and the actual version of the headers, we currently
only bail out with a terse message "Incorrect selection of kernel
headers".
This could be confusing some, and getting the version of the headers
used by the toolchain is not trivial (well, it's very easy, but not
trivial.)
This patch changes the way we report the error by moving the message
into the test-code, and by printing the expected and actual versions
of the kernel headers.
BUT! To get this pretty error message, we need to run the
test-program, so we can not use the cross-toolchain, we have to use
the native one.
BUT! The native one has its own linux/version.h header, so we can not
simply include it.
So, we ask the cross-compiler where its default sysroot is, and use
that to then force-feed the cross linux/version.h to the native
toolchain.
[Thomas: augment commit log with a message provided by Yann, fix
coding style to not have spaces after opening parenthesis and before
closing parenthesis, reformatted the message "Incorrect selection..."
to make it fit on one line.]
Reported-by: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
When adding a new user (or a new group), we would get warnings, like:
[...]/support/scripts/mkusers: line 145: [: too many arguments
This is because we're checking if a UID (or a GID) is already defined,
and/or is different from the requested one, both checks in the same
test.
Of course, if a UID (or a GID) is not defined, it does not have a value,
so we can not compare it to an integer.
Fix that by splitting the test in two, so the second is only executed if
the first is sucessful.
Reported-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
This fixes the spurious "[: too many arguments" errors from mkusers.
Signed-off-by: Philip Paeps <philip@paeps.cx>
Acked-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Ensure the kernel headers version used in the custom external toolchain,
or the manually-specified kernel headers version, matches exactly the one
selected by the user.
We do not care about the patch-level, since headers are not supposed to
change between patchlevels. This applies only to kernels >= 3.0, but
those are actually the ones we do care about; we treat all 2.6.x kernels
as being a single version, since we do not support any 2.6 kernels for
packages with kernel-dependant features.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <patrickdepinguin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
To make the naming consistent (all user-visible options should be
prefixed with BR2_).
An entry is added to Makefile.legacy to warn users who have set
BUILDROOT_CONFIG but not BR2_CONFIG.
Still export BUILDROOT_CONFIG but pointing to some phony value, to
make sure that scripts that still use it fail in a predictable way.
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Tested-by: Jérémy Rosen <jeremy.rosen@openwide.fr>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
scan_patchdir is called recursively. For this to work properly, the
variable path which is set to $1 at the very beginning must be local not
global.
A test case is to set BR2_GLOBAL_PATCH_DIR to 'mypatches' and having the
following tree in the buildroot root:
$ find mypatches/
mypatches/
mypatches/busybox
mypatches/busybox/subdir.patch
mypatches/busybox/subdir.patch/busybox-0001-abc.patch
mypatches/busybox/busybox-0002-def.patch
mypatches/busybox/asubdir.patch
mypatches/busybox/asubdir.patch/busybox-0003-xyz.patch
When running 'make busybox-dirclean busybox-patch' originally, you'd get:
Applying busybox-0003-xyz.patch using patch:
Applying busybox-0002-def.patch using patch:
Error: missing patch file
mypatches/busybox/asubdir.patch/busybox-0002-def.patch
While with this fix:
Applying busybox-0003-xyz.patch using patch:
Applying busybox-0002-def.patch using patch:
Applying busybox-0001-abc.patch using patch:
This fixes bug #6434 (https://bugs.busybox.net/show_bug.cgi?id=6434)
Signed-off-by: Daniel Mentz <daniel@exxm.de>
[Thomas: update commit message with test case]
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de.schampheleire@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
the initial implementation assumes that when a version found in
buildroot is different from the one in the X11 release, it
requires an upgrade. even though this is most likely the case, it
could be a downgrade too, and it's probably worth highlighting
such cases when it (rarely) happens.
LooseVersion from distutils is doing the low level job of sorting
version numbers represented in strings...
[Thomas & Thomas:
- do not count packages more recent in Buildroot than in the latest
X.org release as to be downgraded. If we have more recent version,
it's generally for a good reason, so we want to keep them as
is. Such packages are counted as "nothing to do", but for
information, we indicate that there are "More recent"
- also remove the "nothing to do" action indicator. It used to be a
simple dash, which was not really useful.
]
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Dechesne <ndec13@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de.schampheleire@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
In order to keep better track of when a feature got deprecated, and hence
when it can be removed, a new set of symbols BR2_DEPRECATED_SINCE_xxxx_xx is
introduced. These symbols are automatically selected when BR2_DEPRECATED is
selected, and thus are transparent to the user.
A deprecated feature will no longer depend on BR2_DEPRECATED directly, but
rather on the appropriate BR2_DEPRECATED_SINCE_xxxx_xx. If that symbol does
not yet exist, it has to be created in Config.in.
When removing a deprecated feature, one should also check whether this was
the last feature using the BR2_DEPRECATED_SINCE_xxxx_xx symbol, in which
case the latter can be removed from Config.in.
A followup patch will make sure the overview is added to the list of
deprecated features in the manual, so that a buildroot core developer can
easily determine which features to remove in a given development cycle.
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de.schampheleire@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
PDF files can not be easily embedded in other documents (eg. ODT, or HTML).
Add support for generating PNG graphs, by setting the GRAPH_OUT=pdf|png on
the command line:
make GRAPH_OUT=png graph-build graph-depends
The default is still to generate PDF graphs.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
This script generates graphs of packages build time, from the timing
data generated by Buildroot in the $(O)/build-time.log file.
Example usage:
./support/scripts/graph-build-time \
--type=histogram --input=$(O)/build-time.log --output=foobar.pdf
Three graph types are available :
* histogram, which creates an histogram of the build time for each
package, decomposed by each step (extract, patch, configure,
etc.). The order in which the packages are shown is
configurable: by package name, by build order, or by duration
order. See the --order option.
* pie-packages, which creates a pie chart of the build time of
each package (without decomposition in steps). Packages that
contributed to less than 1% of the overall build time are all
grouped together in an "Other" entry.
* pie-steps, which creates a pie chart of the time spent globally
on each step (extract, patch, configure, etc...)
The default is to generate an histogram ordered by package name.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
[yann.morin.1998@free.fr: adapt to the format of the step-hooks build-time.log,
add sort order by name, default to name-ordered histogram, use our colours
for pie-charts, add alternate color-scheme, add short-options, add
--input/-i]
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
This patch fixes an issue that occurs during the manual build process
which will occur when BR2_EXTERNAL is introduced.
During the package list generation, the python script using kconfiglib
module reads and parses the Config.in files. So, symbols, including
environment variables, got expanded and/or resolved. In
kconfiglib.py, this patch fixes the regex that did not allow to use
numbers in the environment variable names, so '$BR2_EXTERNAL' got
wrongly expanded like it was '${BR}2_EXTERNAL':
<snip>
>>> Updating the manual lists...
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/opt/buildroot/master/support/scripts/gen-manual-lists.py", line 375, in <module>
buildroot = Buildroot()
File "/opt/buildroot/master/support/scripts/gen-manual-lists.py", line 216, in __init__
self.root_config))
File "/opt/buildroot/master/support/scripts/kconfiglib.py", line 214, in __init__
self.top_block = self._parse_file(filename, None, None, None)
File "/opt/src/buildroot/master/support/scripts/kconfiglib.py", line 919, in _parse_file
return self._parse_block(line_feeder, None, parent, deps, visible_if_deps, res)
File "/opt/buildroot/master/support/scripts/kconfiglib.py", line 1114, in _parse_block
self.base_dir))
IOError: /opt/buildroot/master/Config.in:490: sourced file "$BR2_EXTERNAL/Config.in" (expands to
"2_EXTERNAL/Config.in") not found. Perhaps base_dir
(argument to Config.__init__(), currently
"/opt/buildroot/master") is set to the wrong value.
docs/manual/manual.mk:2: recipe for target 'manual-update-lists' failed
make: *** [manual-update-lists] Error 1
</snip>
Reported-by: Ryan Barnett <rjbarnet@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Tested-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Acked-by: Ryan Barnett <rjbarnet@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Python saves a pre-compiled support/scripts/kconfiglib.pyc file
side-to-side with the corresponding .py file.
This does not work if the Buildroot source tree is read-only (but
this is not an error for Python, which keep going OK).
But this may cause issues for out-of-tree builds in case the same
Buildroot source tree is shared by many builds.
Also, 'make clean' currently does not clean this file, and out-of-tree
builds can remove it either, at the risk of causing issues for other
out-of-tree builds running at the same time.
Just tell Python not to generate .pyc files:
- call the script via python, don't use the sha-bang
- thus, make the script non-executable, and remove the sha-bang
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
This patch fixes typos in the 'encode_password' function calls.
Signed-off-by: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>