Commit c4e6d5c8be ("core: implement
per-package SDK and target") had a mistake on the regexp that is used
to match $(PER_PACKAGE_DIR)/<something>/, and due to this, the regexp
was never matched.
The + sign in [^/]+ which was suggested by Yann E. Morin during the
review of the per-package patch series (instead of [^/]*) needs to be
escaped to be taken into account correctly. Without this, the regexp
doesn't match, and the replacement is not done, causing:
(1) For the libtool fixup in pkg-generic.mk, the lack of replacement
causes libtool .la files to not be tweaked as expected, which it
turn causes build failures reported by the autobuilder.
(2) For the fix-rpath, the RPATH of host binaries in the SDK were not
correct.
Interestingly, we have the same regexp in
support/scripts/check-host-rpath, but here the + sign does not need to
be escaped.
Fixes:
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/d4d996f3923699e266afd40cc7180de0f7257d99/ (libsvg-cairo)
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/56330f86872f67a2ce328e09b4c7b12aa835a432/ (bind)
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/9e0fc42d2c9f856b92954b08019b83ce668ef289/ (ibrcommon)
and probably a number of other similar issues
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
This test comprises of four simple steps:
1: Start a new simple project called testsite.
2: Run ./manage.py migrate on the new testsite.
3: Run ./manage.py runserver 0.0.0.0:1234 & sleep 30
- The sleep 30 is necessary as it may take several seconds for
the django server to fully start.
4: Run netstat to ensure the server opened port 1234.
Signed-off-by: Adam Duskett <aduskett@greenlots.com>
[Thomas: use self.assertRunOk() when appropriate]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add a simple test case that imports the module.
Signed-off-by: Adam Duskett <Aduskett@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
This commit implements the core of the move to per-package SDK and
target directories. The main idea is that instead of having a global
output/host and output/target in which all packages install files, we
switch to per-package host and target directories, that only contain
their explicit dependencies.
There are two main benefits:
- Packages will now see only the dependencies they explicitly list in
their <pkg>_DEPENDENCIES variable, and the recursive dependencies
thereof.
- We can support top-level parallel build properly, because a package
only "sees" its own host directory and target directory, isolated
from the build of other packages that can happen in parallel.
It works as follows:
- A new output/per-package/ directory is created, which will contain
one sub-directory per package, and inside it, a "host" directory
and a "target" directory:
output/per-package/busybox/target
output/per-package/busybox/host
output/per-package/host-fakeroot/target
output/per-package/host-fakeroot/host
This output/per-package/ directory is PER_PACKAGE_DIR.
- The global TARGET_DIR and HOST_DIR variable now automatically point
to the per-package directory when PKG is defined. So whenever a
package references $(HOST_DIR) or $(TARGET_DIR) in its build
process, it effectively references the per-package host/target
directories. Note that STAGING_DIR is a sub-dir of HOST_DIR, so it
is handled as well.
- Of course, packages have dependencies, so those dependencies must
be installed in the per-package host and target directories. To do
so, we simply rsync (using hard links to save space and time) the
host and target directories of the direct dependencies of the
package to the current package host and target directories.
We only need to take care of direct dependencies (and not
recursively all dependencies), because we accumulate into those
per-package host and target directories the files installed by the
dependencies. Note that this only works because we make the
assumption that one package does *not* overwrite files installed by
another package.
This is done for "extract dependencies" at the beginning of the
extract step, and for "normal dependencies" at the beginning of the
configure step.
This is basically enough to make per-package SDK and target work. The
only gotcha is that at the end of the build, output/target and
output/host are empty, which means that:
- The filesystem image creation code cannot work.
- We don't have a SDK to build code outside of Buildroot.
In order to fix this, this commit extends the target-finalize step so
that it starts by populating output/target and output/host by
rsync-ing into them the target and host directories of all packages
listed in the $(PACKAGES) variable. It is necessary to do this
sequentially in the target-finalize step and not in each
package. Doing it in package installation means that it can be done in
parallel. In that case, there is a chance that two rsyncs are creating
the same hardlink or directory at the same time, which makes one of
them fail.
This change to per-package directories has an impact on the RPATH
built into the host binaries, as those RPATH now point to various
per-package host directories, and no longer to the global host
directory. We do not try to rewrite such RPATHs during the build as
having such RPATHs is perfectly fine, but we still need to handle two
fallouts from this change:
- The check-host-rpath script, which verifies at the end of each
package installation that it has the appropriate RPATH, is modified
to understand that a RPATH to $(PER_PACKAGE_DIR)/<pkg>/host/lib is
a correct RPAT.
- The fix-rpath script, which mungles the RPATH mainly for the SDK
preparation, is modified to rewrite the RPATH to not point to
per-package directories. Indeed the patchelf --make-rpath-relative
call only works if the RPATH points to the ROOTDIR passed as
argument, and this ROOTDIR is the global host directory. Rewriting
the RPATH to not point to per-package host directories prior to
this is an easy solution to this issue.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Fix these warnings:
E122 continuation line missing indentation or outdented
E127 continuation line over-indented for visual indent
E265 block comment should start with '# '
E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
F401 'pexpect' imported but unused
Fixes:
- https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/360824861
Signed-off-by: Pierre-Jean Texier <pjtexier@koncepto.io>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
The test starts a simple container with an iperf3 server.
The container is using the tini init system, with a shared rootfs.
An iperf3 client is started from the host to check that the container
is really up and running.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Havelange <patrick.havelange@essensium.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This method asserts that the given command ran successfully.
The goal is for it to be used by the different tests when needed.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Havelange <patrick.havelange@essensium.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This is required by wpewebkit and webkitgtk.
Signed-off-by: James Hilliard <james.hilliard1@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Adrian Perez de Castro <aperez@igalia.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Python 2.7 will not be maintained past 2020.
Many scripts on the tree are used during the build and should keep
Python 2 compatibility for a while.
This is not the case for the runtime test infra. It's meant to be run in
modern distros only, so it can safely switch to support Python 3 only.
An advantage of this approach is to have less scenarios to test in.
Otherwise every change to the test infra or runtime tests would need to
be tested against both versions of the interpreter, increasing the
effort of the developers, to ensure the compatibility to Python 2 was
not broken.
In order to accomplish the change to Python 3:
- change the shebang for run-tests;
- use Python 3 urllib as a drop-in replacement for Python 2 urllib2;
- when writing the downloaded binary files, explicitly open the output
file as binary;
- when subprocess is used to retrieve the text output from commands,
explicitly ask for text output. For this, use 'universal_newlines'
because 'text' was added only on Python 3.7;
- when pexpect is used to retrieve the text output from qemu or git,
explicitly ask for text output using 'encoding';
- the code using csv currently follows the example in the documentation
for the Python 2 module, change it to follow the example in the
documentation for the Python 3 module;
- fix the relative import for test_git.py to be Python 3 compliant.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Tested-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@smile.fr>
Tested-by: Nicolas Carrier <nicolas.carrier@orolia.com>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Carrier <nicolas.carrier@orolia.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
The test infra will soon be converted to Python 3 only.
So add the interpreter and also the Python 3 variant of modules nose2
and pexpect to the docker image used to run runtime tests.
Keep the Python 2 variant of those modules to allow a gradual
transition.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Carrier <nicolas.carrier@orolia.com>
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
genimage makes a full copy of the given rootpath to ${GENIMAGE_TMP}/root
so passing TARGET_DIR would be a waste of time and disk space. We don't
rely on genimage to build the rootfs image, just to insert a pre-built
one in the disk image.
Signed-off-by: Carlos Santos <unixmania@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Currently, we only require a gcc 4.4 version, which now is pretty old
(released in April 2009). This requirement is not even tested nowadays,
with our oldest autobuilder having a 4.7 version only.
And even then, 4.7 is still old enough that it prevents us from
upgrading some packages. For example cmake 3.10+ requires C++11
constructs that were only added in gcc 4.8 (when C++11 support was
finally completed in gcc).
So, update our requirements for gcc to at least 4.8.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
We no longer have anything that needs it during the build, so we don't
require it anymore.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Back a few years ago, when we were starting to think about top-level
parallel build, we were not sure how to deal with packages that
installed the same files, so we wanted to catch the situation to assess
how prevalent that was, before we decided what to do and how to address
it.
However, the trend nowadays is that packages will install in a
per-package target/ (and staging/ and host/), and the final directories
will be assembled in a reproducible (alphabetical) order, so if two
packages install the same file, the last one will win (as is currently
the case).
Besides, check-uniq-files reports loads of spurious errors when packages
get reinstalled (e.g. during development).
Finally, check-uniq-files is the only script called during the build,
that is written in python.
So, get rid of check-uniq-files.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Fixes https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/332656041
The recent bump of a number of python packages broke docker-compose, as
docker-compose specifies both minimum and maximum versions for (most of) its
dependencies:
Dependencies of docker-compse 1.20.1 (! = unmet):
cached-property: < 2 (currently 1.51)
docopt: < 0.7 (currently 0.6.2)
! pyyaml: < 4.0, patched to < 4.3 (currently 5.1.2)
requests: < 2.19, patched to < 3 (currently 2.22.0)
! texttable: < 0.10 (currently 1.6.2)
websocket-client: < 1.0 (currently 0.56.0)
! docker: < 4.0 (currently 4.1.0)
dockerpty: < 0.5 (currently 0.4.1)
six: < 2 (currently 1.12.0)
jsonschema: < 3 (currently 2.5.1)
enum34: < 2 (currently 1.1.6)
backports.ssl-match-hostname: >= 3.5 (currently 3.7.0.1)
ipaddress: >= 1.0.16 (currently 1.0.23)
To fix this, bump docker-compose to the most recent release (1.24.1). This
is unfortunately not enough, as our docker, pyyaml, requests and texttable
packages are too new, so add 3 patches from upstream to relax the version
checks of dependencies. Notice that patch 0003 is from
https://github.com/docker/compose/pull/6623 and has not been merged yet.
Discussions around the problem of these maximum versions of the dependencies
and the fact that all downstream users have to patch it is ongoing here:
https://github.com/docker/compose/issues/6756
docker-compose 1.24.1 added a requirement for ssh support in python-docker in:
7b82b2e8c7
So add a dependency for python-paramiko and update the toolchain dependency
for C++ (from python-paramiko -> python-cryptography) and adjust the
toolchain configuration of the runtime test to match.
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
There is no need for double grep, so choose a better regexp. Use &&
instead of ; between commands so the sequence of commands fail faster.
Break the last sequence of commands in 2 calls run() so the proper
return code can be tested for each.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
When selected, host-ccache is a dependency of almost all packages.
As such, it clutters the dependency graph uselessly.
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Reviewed-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
The POSIX specification defines a 'trap <action> EXIT' mechanism that is
useful to perform clean-up actions in shell scripts. A trap has two main
advantages over hand-crafted clean-up mechanisms:
- It runs even if the process is terminated by a SIGTERM.
- It runs even if the script stops due to a pipeline failure (set -e).
Now we can make the script to stop immediately if a compilation error
occurs, instead of letting it try to run an unexisting program.
This change may appear to be overkill but Buildroot is an open source
project and each piece of code is a potential learning tool for other
developments. We must strive to provide good examples.
Signed-off-by: Carlos Santos <unixmania@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin@orange.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Some installations mount /tmp with the 'noexec' option, which prevents
running the program generated there to check the kernel headers.
Avoid the problem by generating the program under $(BUILD_DIR), passed
as the first argument to check-kernel-headers.sh.
We could globally export a TMPDIR environment variable with some path
under $(BUILD_DIR) but such solution would be too intrusive, depriving
the user from the freedom to set TMPDIR at his will (or needs).
Fixes: https://bugs.busybox.net/show_bug.cgi?id=12241
Signed-off-by: Carlos Santos <unixmania@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Since commit aee39cbf27 ("arch/riscv:
set the default float ABI based on ISA extensions"), RISC-V 32/64 use
the lp32d/lp64d ABIs by default. But our pre-built external toolchains
were built with the LP32/LP64 ABI.
Building with lp32d/lp64d gcc flags, but a toolchain built with the
LP32/LP64 ABI causes a number of failures such as:
/home/mark/buildroot-test/instance-1/output/host/riscv64-buildroot-linux-gnu/sysroot/usr/include/gnu/stubs.h:11:11: fatal error: gnu/stubs-lp64d.h: No such file or directory
or:
/home/mark/buildroot-test/instance-1/output/host/opt/ext-toolchain/bin/../lib/gcc/riscv64-buildroot-linux-gnu/7.4.0/../../../../riscv64-buildroot-linux-gnu/bin/ld: /tmp/cc2BTtFE.o: can't link hard-float modules with soft-float modules
/home/mark/buildroot-test/instance-1/output/host/opt/ext-toolchain/bin/../lib/gcc/riscv64-buildroot-linux-gnu/7.4.0/../../../../riscv64-buildroot-linux-gnu/bin/ld: failed to merge target specific data of file /tmp/cc2BTtFE.o
So let's fix our config fragments to reflect the ABIs those toolchains
were built with.
Fixes:
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/a3959b0613cf561059483abc580b144be4817d1a/ (libsepol)
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/3db50d8a0a913413b2198d6c301419136d2d22a7/ (attr)
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/7780fada05b8440ae3e97618615624a6a2dac03f/ (libusb)
and many others
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Since release 18.12 binaries-marvell repository provides
common firmware supporting both A7K and A8K SoC families.
This commit bumps package version to 18.12 and removes
platform specific binary selections from Config.in.
Single firmware image suitable for both A7K and A8K
platforms is now specified in mk file explicitely.
Legacy handling is not needed, as configs which did have
the option set will continue to work without change.
Signed-off-by: Sergey Matyukevich <geomatsi@gmail.com>
[Arnout:
- Remove BINARIES_MARVELL_IMAGE entirely;
- Add remark about legacy handling;
- Remove the deprecated option from the defconfigs and test that use
it.]
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
The JSON::PP Perl module is used at build time by the webkitgtk and
wpewebkit packages.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Perez de Castro <aperez@igalia.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
As suggested by Baruch Siach, using "git rev-parse HEAD" is a lot
simpler than playing around with "git log" to just retrieve the commit
id corresponding to the current HEAD.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
pkg-stats extracts the Buildroot commit id from which the package
information was collected. However, when doing so, it always assumes
we're using the master branch, by running "git log master".
But in fact, pkg-stats can be run from any branch/tag, so it makes a
lot more sense to use "git log HEAD".
Cc: victor.huesca@bootlin.com
Cc: Baruch Siach <baruch@tkos.co.il>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Now that we can order packages from biggest to smallest, it makes sense
to assign the most aggressive colours to the biggest packages.
As such, reorder the current colours so that we have, in order:
- red-ish
- orange-ish
- yellow-ish
- purple-ish
- eggplant-ish (is that even a colour? :-] )
- some-indeterminate-blue-ish
- dark-green-ish
- light-green-ish
For the previous, smallest-first ordering, it does not matter much what
the ordering is: the actual colours are still somewhat-unpredictably
assigned to packages, depending on the cut-off limit...
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Currently, the packages are sorted smallest first, and biggest last
(with unknown and others second-to-last and last, resp.).
Add an option to invert the ordering (but keeping unknown and others at
their current positions).
This has the nice side effect that we can now control the colours
assigned to the biggest package(s), as the colours are cycled from the
first to the last. Currently, the biggest packages gets a redish colour,
which is appropriate, but the second gets a greenish one, which is not
as appropriate (but changing that can come later).
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
When dealing with embedded devices, storage is more often than not some
kind of flash device, on which the memory is usually counted as powers
of 1024 instead of powers of 1000. As such, people may prefer reports
using IEC prefixes [0] instead of the SI prefixes.
Add an option to that effect.
We use argparse's ability to use custom actions [1] [2], to provide a
set of options that act on a boolean, but has a single help entry and
internally ensures consistency of the settings. We could have been using
the more conventional store_true/store_false actions instead, but that
would have meant either two help entries, one for each set of options,
and/or some logic after parse_args() to check the validity of the
settings.
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_prefix
[1] https://docs.python.org/2/library/argparse.html#action
[2] https://docs.python.org/2/library/argparse.html#argparse.Action
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Currently, we group packages that contribute less then 1%, into the
"Other" category.
However, in some cases, there can be a lot of very comparatively small
packages, and they may not exceed this limit, and so only the "Others"
category would be displayed, which is not nice.
Conversely, if there are a lot of packages, most of which only so
slightly exceeding this limit, then we get all of them in the graph,
which is not nice either.
Add a way for the developers to pass a different cut-off limit. As for
the dependency graph which has BR2_GRAPH_DEPS_OPTS, add the environment
variable BR2_GRAPH_SIZE_OPTS to carry those extra option (in preparation
for more to come, later).
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
[Arnout:
- remove empty base class definition from Config;
- use parser.error instead of ValueError for invalid argument.]
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Currently, we forcibly report sizes in multiple of Kilobytes. In some
big configurations, the sizes of the system as a whole, as well as that
of individual packages, may exceed megabytes, and when some artistic
assets get used, even the gigabyte may get exceed.
These big sizes are not easy to read when expressed in kilobytes.
Additionally, some very small packages might have sizes below the
kilobyte (and when we can specify the cut-off grouping size, they may
get reported), and thus the size displayed for those would be 0 kB.
Add a helper function that can format a floating-point size into a
string with all the appropriate formatting:
- there are at least 3 meaningfull digits visible, i.e. we display
"3.14" or "10.4" instead of just "3" or "10", but for big number we
don't care about too many precision either, so we report "100" or
"1000", not "100.42" or "1000.27";
- the proper SI prefix is appended, if needed.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Currently, the "unknown" category may be reported anywhere, so it does
not really stand out when there are a lot of packages in the graph.
Move it towards the end, but right before the "other" category, so that
it is a bit more visible. Like for Others, don't report it if its size
is zero.
Also, make it title case (i.e. "Unknown" instead of "unknown").
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
It is nicer overall to have a main() function, like all our other
scripts tend to have too.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
There are three E501 warnings returned by flake8, when run locally,
because we enforce a local 80-char limit, but that are not reported by
the gitlab-ci jobs because only a 132-char limit is required there.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Add support to test that the root passowrd is working as expected.
- Buildtime test: Check the hash present in the generated '/etc/shadow'.
- Runtime test: Build an armv7 image and try to login with a password.
Signed-off-by: Victor Huesca <victor.huesca@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Currently many test cases call subprocess.check_output on their own.
Factor out that code to an infra method so the call get standardized.
This will be handful when switching the test infra to use Python 3.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
The python-cbor sample script to be run on the target dumps a binary
variable to the target stdout. This is done for debug purposes-only, in
the case the test on test infra fails.
This non-utf-8 is currently silently ignored by the Emulator class /
pexpect.spawn from the test infra because the infra uses Python 2, that
in turn do not differentiate between string and byte data.
Make the code Python3-friendly (Python 3 in the host) by doing the right
thing and encoding the data before printing it.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Do the same as other fs tests and minimally check the ubi image before
booting.
The call to 'file' was already there, but the output wasn't tested for
some unknown reason. Add the assert for the output of the command.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Newer versions of perl-io-socket-ssl require entropy.
Switch to use armv5 builtin kernel that already provides entropy for all
perl tests.
Fixes:
https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/269139402
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Newer versions of lua-http require entropy.
Switch to use armv5 builtin kernel that already provides entropy for all
lua tests.
Fixes:
https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/269139374https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/269139376
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Since version 19.3.3, python-autobahn assumes that when CPython is used
msgpack will be used as well [1]. But it still allows the user to
override this behavior by setting an environment variable [2] to use
umsgpack.
Make the test to explicitly use umsgpack since it is part of the minimal
config (python-crossbar selects python-u-msgpack).
Fixes:
https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/269139430
[1] ea019b8042
[2] fe70ceebe0
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Newer versions of python-treq display a warning at runtime when
service_identity is not installed:
"Without the service_identity module, Twisted can perform only
rudimentary TLS client hostname verification."
This warning message confuses the test that looks for another string in
stdout. Make the test ignore other messages while still expecting
"Connection refused".
Fixes:
https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/269139449https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/269139450
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Since "2467822c85 package/checksec: bump to version 2.1.0" the hardening
tests fail because upstream slightly changed the way the script is
called.
According to README.md: "- All options now require `--$option=$value`
instead of `--$option $value`"
Instead of just replacing '--output json' with '--output=json' take into
account that upstream also changed the usage example to show --format
instead of --output. Both options do exactly the same, but following the
usage example seems to be more future-proof.
Upstream also improved the json output. Now when a file is passed as
parameter, the json has the file name as the main key, instead of the
string "file". Adjust the test cases accordingly.
Fixes:
tests.core.test_hardening.TestFortifyConserv
tests.core.test_hardening.TestFortifyNone
tests.core.test_hardening.TestRelro
tests.core.test_hardening.TestRelroPartial
tests.core.test_hardening.TestSspNone
tests.core.test_hardening.TestSspStrong
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Fabrice Fontaine <fontaine.fabrice@gmail.com>
Cc: Matt Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Prior to b3ba26150d
("toolchain/toolchain-external/toolchain-external-custom: be more
flexible on gcc version"), the default gcc version selected by
Buildroot for custom external toolchain was affected by the
BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_xyz definitions.
Since BR2_riscv selects BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_7, gcc 7.x was the
default gcc version assumed to be used in a custom RISC-V external
toolchain, so our config snippets for RISC-V toolchains were correct.
With b3ba26150d applied, the default gcc
version assumed for custom external toolchains is the latest one
(currently gcc 9.x), while our RISC-V toolchains use gcc 7.x. So we
now need to explicitly give the gcc version used by our RISC-V
toolchains, otherwise the build fails with:
Incorrect selection of gcc version: expected 9.x, got 7.4.0
Fixes:
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/b872befe1adec2633b9cbcc49bc0eb7619f606c2/
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Similar to toolchains and jpeg, we now offer a way for br2-external
trees to provide their openssl implementation, which gets included in
the openssl choice.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Vadim Kochan <vadim4j@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Similar to toolchains, we now offer a way for br2-external trees to
provide their libjpeg implementation, which gets included in the jpeg
choice.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Vadim Kochan <vadim4j@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Since we have a choice for the pre-configured pre-built toolchains,
there is no possbility for a br2-external to provide its own. The
only solution so far for defconfigs in br2-external trees is to use
BR2_TOOLCHAIN_EXTERNAL_CUSTOM and define all the bits by itself...
This is not so convemient, so offer a way for br2-external trees to
provide such pre-configured toolchains.
To allow for this, we now scan each br2-external tree and look for a
specific file, provides.toolchains.in. We generate a kconfig file that
sources each such file, and that generated file is sourced from within
the toolchain choice, thus making the toolchains from a br2-external
tree possible and available in the same location as the ones known to
Buildroot:
Toolchain --->
Toolchain type (External toolchain) --->
Toolchain --->
(X) Arm ARM 2019.03
( ) Linaro ARM 2018.05
( ) Custom toolchain
*** Toolchains from my-br2-ext-tree: ***
( ) My custom ARM toolchain
*** Toolchains from another-br2-ext-tree: ***
( ) Another custom ARM toolchain
( ) A third custom ARM toolchain
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Vadim Kochan <vadim4j@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Currently, the kconfig part contains two things: the kconfig option
with the paths to br2-external trees, and the kconfig menus for the
br2-external trees.
When we want to include more kconfig files from the br2-external tree
(e.g. to get definitions for pre-built toolchains), we will need to
have the paths defined earlier, so they can be used from the br2-external
tree to include files earlier than the existing menus.
Split the generated kconfig file in two: one to define the paths, which
gets included early in our main Config.in, and one to actually define
the existing menus, which still gets included at the same place they
currently are.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Vadim Kochan <vadim4j@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
We currently redirect the output of each helper function. This was nice
as long as we were generating single .mk and .in fragments.
But we are soon to need more .in fragments.
So, do the redirection inside the .in helpers.
We do not (currently) need to generate more than one .mk fragment, but
for consistency, do the redirection in the .mk helper too.
Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Vadim Kochan <vadim4j@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
When we introduced support for multiple br2-external trees, we
introduced two files, one on the Makefile side, needed very early,
and one on the kconfig side, needed later in the configuration
process. We naturally introduced a two-step generation, as it looked
like the simplest and most obvious way.
But now, we are on the verge of generating more files on the kconfig
side, and it does not make sense to add even more steps to generate
them.
And even better yet, we can generate both the Makefile-side and
kconfig-side files at the same time, in fact.
Make it so.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Vadim Kochan <vadim4j@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
We do not usually provide help for our internal scripts. Besides, such
help has a tendency to bitrot pretty quickly anyway.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Vadim Kochan <vadim4j@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Commit b14b02698 (core/br2-external: restore compatibility with old
distros) switched to using 'eval' to emulate associative arrays, for
those distros too old to have bash-4+.
In so doing, it forgot to declare the new local variables in the
respective helper functions.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Vadim Kochan <vadim4j@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Some packages test for CMAKE_SYSTEM explicitly[1]
CMAKE_SYSTEM is comprised of CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME and CMAKE_SYSTEM_VERSION.
It defaults to CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME if CMAKE_SYSTEM_VERSION is not set[2]
At the point CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME is set to "Linux" CMAKE_SYSTEM is already
constructed. Setting it explicitly ensures that it is the correct value.
This is because we do set CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME twice, in fact:
- first in toolchainfile.cmake, so that we tell cmake to use the
"Buildroot" platform,
- second, in the Buildroot.cmake platform definition itself, so that
we eventually behave like the Linux platform.
We also set CMAKE_SYSTEM_VERSION to 1, and so the real CMAKE_SYSTEM
value should be set to Linux-1 if we were to follow the documentation to
the letter.
However, for Linux, the version does not matter, and in some situations
may even be harmful (that was reported in one of the commits that
introduce Buildroot.cmake and toolchainfile.cmake).
[1] Fluidsynth 0cd44d00e1/CMakeLists.txt (L80)
[2] https://cmake.org/cmake/help/git-master/variable/CMAKE_SYSTEM.html#variable:CMAKE_SYSTEM
Signed-off-by: Frank Vanbever <frank.vanbever@mind.be>
Acked-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
[Peter: update commit message with description from Yann]
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Check external.mk is ignored only when in the root path of a
br2-external.
Add a file called external.mk as a fixture to be used by the test case.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
[Arnout: wrap at 80 columns]
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Check the basic usage for check-package.
It can be called using either absolute path, relative path or from PATH.
Files to be checked can be passed with either absolute path or relative
path (also including files in the current directory).
Also check it ignores some special files when checking intree files,
i.e. package/pkg-generic.mk, while still generating warnings for out-of-tree
files when called with -b.
In order to allow the later, add an empty line to the Config.in in the
br2-external being tested so the script does generate a warning.
Catches bug #11271.
More tests can be added later, for example compatibility to Python 3.
Suggested-by: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
[Arnout: wrap at 80 columns where appropriate; merge into a single
class.]
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Currently run-tests must be called from the Buildroot top directory.
Derive the top directory from the script path, so run-tests can be called from
any path.
As a consequence the test infra will always test the repo it belongs to.
Suggested-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Use the new builtin armv5 4.19 kernel to test atop.
The atop package cannot be tested using BASIC_TOOLCHAIN_CONFIG because
it needs kernel headers >= 3.14. So use an updated version of it,
copying the config fragment from
support/config-fragments/autobuild/br-arm-full.config
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Use the new builtin kernel 4.19 with VirtIORNG to provide entropy to
test syslog-ng.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
More and more packages being tested by the test infra, e.g. syslog-ng,
need entropy at startup, usually reading from /dev/random.
Some test cases can also depend on a kernel version newer than the
builtin ones already provided by the test infra:
- 3.11.0 for armv5;
- 4.0.0 for armv7.
Add a new builtin kernel to be used by such test cases.
Add it for armv5 so most test cases that switch to use this kernel can
keep using BASIC_TOOLCHAIN_CONFIG.
Use the same kernel version and kernel config as qemu_arm_versatile plus
HW_RANDOM_VIRTIO for VirtIORNG to be usable.
Copy the actual binary file from the syslog-ng runtime test at current
master @ 29e1cb8884.
Since there is already a 'kernel-versatile' file on autobuild.buildroot.net
and we must keep it with this name for reproducibility purposes, create a
simple naming convention for newer builtin kernel images and dtb files:
kernel-<defconfig>-<kernel_series_version>
<dtb_name>-<kernel_series_version>.dtb
Pass '-device virtio-rng-pci' to qemu when this kernel is used.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Cc: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
[Peter: use this new kernel instead of the old builtin/armv5 kernel]
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
In commit a589325405
("support/config-fragments/autobuild: rename br-riscv64-musl config"),
the RISC-V 64-bit musl toolchain config snippet was renamed, but the
toolchain.csv file was not updated accordingly.
Due to this, utils/genrandconfig was no longer able to generate any
configuration.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
We do not have any configuration that tests the very bleeding edge gcc
and binutils versions, so let's change br-arm-internal-glibc to use
the latest version of gcc (9.x right now) and binutils (2.32 right
now). The idea is that this defconfig should be updated to the latest
version of gcc and binutils when their version is bumped.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
All toolchains have been rebuilt with Buildroot 2019.05.1. A number of
toolchains are now using Linux headers 5.1 instead of 4.19, because
5.1 is now the default version.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
For internal toolchains, we have a policy of naming the files with
"internal", to clearly distinguish them from external toolchain
configurations.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Lua has a builtin lsyslog module, so let's test this one as well.
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Add a RISC-V 64-bit autobuild configuration for the internal
toolchain with musl.
Signed-off-by: Mark Corbin <mark.corbin@embecosm.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Recent versions of syslog-ng need some entropy on startup.
So use VirtIORNG to provide it. In order to accomplish this:
- build the kernel containing the driver;
- pass '-device virtio-rng-pci' to qemu.
Use the same kernel version and kernel config as qemu_arm_versatile.
It already has PCI enabled but it does not have HW_RANDOM_VIRTIO, so add
a defconfig fragment to enable the drivers.
Fixes:
https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/259856394
At the same time, fix a typo (missing '#') that resulted in the
generation of root.tar. This file is not used in the test.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
the module std.normalize is no longer a dependency
Signed-off-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
The major bottleneck in pkg-stats is the time spent waiting for
answers from remote servers. Two functions involve such communication
with remote servers:
- 'check_package_urls' which checks that each package upstream website
is up, it is efficient due to the use of process-pools thanks to
Matt Weber.
- 'check_package_latest_version' which fetches the latest package
version from release-monitoring, it uses a http-pool but runs
sequentially.
This patch extends the use of process-pools to 'check_latest_version'.
Due to some limitations of multiprocess callbacks, this patch loses
the overall progress of packages in favour of just the current package
name.
Runtimes for this function are ~3m vs ~25m for the linear version.
Tested on an i7 7500U (2/4 cores/threads @3.5GHz) with 15ms ping.
Note: There have already been work trying to parallelize this function
using threads but there were a failure on some configurations [1].
This implementation rely on a dedicated module already in use on this
script, so it's unlikely to see failure with this version.
[1] http://lists.busybox.net/pipermail/buildroot/2018-March/215368.html
Signed-off-by: Victor Huesca <victor.huesca@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Fixes:
- blank space before ':'
- unused 'o' variable left from a previous patch
- bad continuous alignment
Signed-off-by: Victor Huesca <victor.huesca@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
The pkg-stats calls 3 times `make` to get a bunch of variables. These
variables can be obtained in only one make invocation. This patch
replaces the three calls by just one and adjusts the parsing logic
accordingly.
Note: another option suggested by Arnout would be to run `make
show-info` that produces a json with the necessary variables. This
would avoid the duplicated effort done in pkg-stats and pkg-utils and
allow to add other infos to pkg-stats like dependencies, reversed
dependencies or if the package is virtual.
In order to use this method, the following changes are required in
pkg-generic's show-info:
- include license_files;
- have an option to run it on *all* packages, not just the selected
ones.
This patch take the simplest approach of only factorizing the make
calls as it requires less changes.
Signed-off-by: Victor Huesca <victor.huesca@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Since it's used only for the HTML output, and all other functions used
for HTML output are prefixed by dump_html, let's do so for
dump_gen_info() as well by renaming it to dump_html_gen_info().
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
The 'dump_html' and 'dump_json' both include commit infos as well as the
current date. It make more sense to retrieve these information once.
This patch simply does this factorization.
Signed-off-by: Victor Huesca <victor.huesca@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Pkg-stats is a great script that get a lot of interesting info from
buildroot packages. Unfortunately it is currently designed to output a
static HTML page only. While this is great to include on the
buildroot's website, the HTML is not designed to be easily parsable and
thus it is difficult to reuse it in other scripts.
This patch provide a new option to output a JSON file in addition to the
HTML one.
The old 'output' option has been renamed to 'html' to distinguish from
the new 'json' option.
Signed-off-by: Victor Huesca <victor.huesca@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Move the mutual exculsion of the '-n' and '-p' options to be part of the
parser instead of being checked in main.
Signed-off-by: Victor Huesca <victor.huesca@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This test case builds a native library and ensures a Java class can load
and interact with the native library. The test also verifies Java code
can make system calls via the native library.
Signed-off-by: Daniel J. Leach <dleach@belcan.com>
Acked-by: Matthew Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Tested-by: Adam Duskett <aduskett@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
By default, Qemu emulates a system with 128 MB of RAM. This is not
sufficient for some test cases we have, such as TestPerlDBDmysql,
where the initramfs is quite large. Therefore, this commit extends the
RAM size emulated by Qemu to 256 MB.
Fixes:
https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/237108668
Thanks to Arnout for the analysis of the issue.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Acked-by: Francois Perrad <francois.perrad@gadz.org>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
'.' should be at the end of the sentence, not the beginning of a new
line.
Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@metanate.com>
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This update includes support for the C-SKY architecture.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Acked-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Modify config.sub so that it knows about the C-SKY
architecture. Without this, all autotools projects fail to build on
C-SKY.
Signed-off-by: Guo Ren <ren_guo@c-sky.com>
[Thomas: improved commit log]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
4 out of 5 packages who are not using autotools but needed their
gnuconfig files updated were not complying with the recommandation in
support/gnuconfig/README.buildroot. The fifth package was converted to
be like the others: use UPDATE_CONFIG_HOOK as a <pkg>_POST_PATCH_HOOKS
rather than calling the CONFIG_UPDATE macro directly.
Now that all packages are consistent, update the README.buildroot file
to match the reality.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Modify config.sub so that it knows about the C-SKY
architecture. Without this, all autotools projects fail to build on
C-SKY.
Signed-off-by: Guo Ren <ren_guo@c-sky.com>
[Thomas: improved commit log]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
/lib/grub is already ignored, so add /usr/lib/grub to support
BR2_ROOTFS_MERGED_USR.
Signed-off-by: Alex Xu <alex_y_xu@yahoo.ca>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Since commit 6ebaef3818
("package/python-ipython: bump to version 7.4.0"), ipython is no
longer available for Python 2.x, as it requires Python 3.x.
However, the corresponding test case that was testing iPython under
Python 2.x was not removed at the same time, causing a failure of
TestIPythonPy2 test. Let's drop the test that is no longer relevant.
Fixes:
https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/210208754
Cc: Fabrice Fontaine <fontaine.fabrice@gmail.com>
Cc: Andrey Smirnov <andrew.smirnov@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add hint about which package needs to be installed to provide IA32 libs
support for the host when it is needed.
Signed-off-by: Vadim Kochan <vadim4j@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Currently, we extract the dependency graph from the aptly named but
ad-hoc show-dependency-graph rule.
We now have a better solution to report package information, with
show-info.
Since show-dependency-graph never went into a release so far, and
show-info does provide the same (and more), switch to using show-info.
Thanks to Adam for suggesting the coding style to have a readable code
that is not ugly but still pleases flake8. Thanks to Arnout for
suggesting the use of dict.get() to further simplify the code.
Note: we do not use the reverse_dependencies field because it only
contains those packages that have a kconfig option, so we'd miss most
host packages.
Reported-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <patrickdepinguin@gmail.com>
Cc: Adam Duskett <aduskett@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Add a helper macro that, from a space-separated list of items, returns a
comma-separated list of the quoted items.
This will be useful when we need to generate lists in JSON, later...
Code suggested by Thomas P.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <patrickdepinguin@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Previously, the flake8 script didn't help us to detect when Python
scripts were incorrectly wrapped. Now, however, it does report such
errors.
Fix one such an error now.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
[Arnout: give commit message a more positive tone]
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
This test allow to check if the xserver with GLX is working properly.
This is a basic test but it allow to trigger the current bug reported
by [1].
To test if the glxinfo test is working, you can change "-display :0" by
"-display :1" in the glxinfo command line.
[1] https://bugs.buildroot.org/show_bug.cgi?id=11591
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@smile.fr>
Signed-off-by: Youssef Harmouch <youssef.harmouch@smile.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
There is no need to break the "\n" sequence using "%sn". We can just
escape it. Note: the escaping backslash needs to be escaped too,
because the shell will process the string before printf gets to see it.
Signed-off-by: Markus Mayer <mmayer@broadcom.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Now that we can get the whole dependency tree from make, use it to
speed up things considerably.
So far, we had three functions to get the dependencies information:
get_depends(), get_rdepends(), and, somehow unrelated, get_version().
Because of the way %-show-{,r}depends works, getting the dependency tree
was expensive, the three functions all took a set of packages for which
to get the dependencies, in an attempt to limit the time it took to get
that tree, but we still had to call these functions iteratively, until
they returned no new dependency. This was pretty costly.
Now, getting the tree is much, much less costly, and we can get the
whole tree as cheaply as we previously got only the first-level
dependencies.
Furthermore, we can now also get the version information at the same
time, and that also brings in whether the package is virtual or not,
target or host.
So, we drop all three helper functions, and replace them with a single
one that returns all that information in one go: full dependency trees
(direct and reverse), per-package type, and per-package version.
Note: since commit 2d29fd96a (pkg-virtual: remove VERSION/SOURCE),
virtual packages are no longer reported as having a 'virtual' version,
so have since been displayed as regular packages in the graphs. Although
noone complained, this patch incidentally restores the initial
behaviour, and virtual packages are now correctly displayed as such
again.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <patrickdepinguin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
We we simplify the dependency graph, we try to remove so-called
mandatory dependencies from each package, and for each mandatory that
was thus removed, reattach it to the root-package of the graph.
This was made so that mandatory dependencies (which are dependencies of
all packages, or at least of a lot of packages) do not clutter the
dependency graph, but that they are still shown in the graph, as
dependencies of the root package.
However, these mandatory dependencies are only _direct_ dependencies.
As such, it does not make sense to reattach a mandatory dependency when
doing a reverse graph. Worse, it can actually be incorrect.
For example, 'skeleton' is a mandatory dependency, and as such is
removed from all packages. But when doing a reverse graph, skeleton is
now in the dependency chain of, e.g. skeleton-init-none; it should then
not be removed.
In short: the notion of mandatory dependencies does not make sense in
the case of a reverse graph.
Consequently, skip over the mandatory dependency removal when doing a
reverse graph.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
When host-gzip is needed, it is a mandatory dependency of all packages.
As such, drawing the dependency lines toward host-gzip would uselessly
clutter the graph.
So, like for the skeleton, host-skeleton, and host-tar, we cut the
dependency chains toward host-gzip.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
When host-tar is needed, it is a mandatory dependency of all packages.
As such, drawing the dependency lines toward host-tar would uselessly
clutter the graph.
So, like for the skeleton and host-skeleton, we cut the dependency chains
toward host-tar.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
host-skeleton is a dependency of almost all packages, except a very few.
As such, it clutters the dependency graph uselessly.
Do with it as we do for the skeleton: cut the dependency chains.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Some times, multiple dependency graphs for a set of packages (mostly
the application-level packages for the project) are included in reports
(e.g. delivery notes). Repeating the mandatory dependencies on all
those graphs is useless and clutters the important dependencies.
When we had only two such mandatory dependencies (toolchain, skeleton),
it was manageable to list them as manual exclusions:
-x toolchain -x skeleton
But we now have quite a few such dependencies, and it becomes a bit more
cumbersome to manage, not counting the ones we may add in the future.
Add an option to exclude all those mandatory dependencies, to generate
neat graphs.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
The current graph-depends implementation filters out a number of
"mandatory" dependencies that all packages have: dependency on
"toolchain" and dependency on "skeleton".
Despite this filtering, in full graph dependencies, "toolchain" and
"skeleton" are still shown, because they are target packages, and
therefore appear in the result of "make show-targets". Thanks to this,
they will be visible as dependencies of the "ALL" node, which is the
root of the dependency tree.
However, as we are going to introduce host-skeleton as a "mandatory
dependency" to be filtered out, this is no longer going to work.
This commit adjusts the remove_extra_deps() function to ensure that
when a mandatory dependency is removed, this dependency exists between
the root of the dependency tree and the mandatory dependency.
This issue was noticed by Yann E. Morin, and this commit provides a
different implementation than what Yann proposed in
https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/patch/910453/.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
[yann.morin.1998@free.fr:
- list mandatory deps before removing them
- fix flake8 warnings
]
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This test is a simple "Hello, World" integration test of the OpenJDK
package.
It compiles the Java app on the host, then runs it on an emulated
AARCH64 target and verifies "Hello, World" is printed.
Signed-off-by: Adam Duskett <Aduskett@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Since version 2.29, glibc requires python 3.4 or later to build the
GNU C Library [1].
We add a new check to verify the version of python3 interpreter
installed on the host. If no suitable python3 interpreter is found,
define BR2_PYTHON3_HOST_DEPENDENCY to add host-python3 in package
dependencies when needed.
[1] https://www.sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2019-01/msg00723.html
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Adam Duskett <aduskett@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Adam Duskett <aduskett@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
[Thomas: drop not so useful comment in the .mk file, as suggested by
Yann E. Morin.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This reverts commit 81771cfcdc.
The download of sha1 of a special ref currently works or not depending
on the git client version in use.
With git version 2.11.0 (present in the docker image) it does not work.
With git version 2.17.1 it works.
For the sake of reproducibility, remove this part of the TestGitRefs
test case until some code gets added to the download infra to handle
sha1 of a special ref for any git client version.
Fixes:
https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/158295269
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
gerbera package in version 1.3 unfortunately now requires CMake >= 3.8
for C++17 macros:
b5fd39f30f
So we need to bump our requirement from 3.1 to 3.8. If the host doesn't
have a CMake >= 3.8, Buildroot will build its own host-cmake package.
Also drop patch that relax cmake requirement on json-for-modern-cpp
Fixes:
- http://autobuild.buildroot.org/results/6405647b47b132ff5d0d211b92d407322d52d507
Signed-off-by: Fabrice Fontaine <fontaine.fabrice@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
This commit replaces the two RISC-V configurations used for the
autobuilders to use pre-built external toolchains rather than internal
toolchains. This saves quite a bit of build time in the autobuilders,
and also allows people to reproduce build issues in a much more
efficient way, since rebuilding the toolchain is not needed.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Mark Corbin <mark.corbin@embecosm.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
All toolchains have been rebuilt with Buildroot 2019.02-rc1.
Changes:
- Toolchains that were using no-longer maintained kernel headers
versions have been changed to use a variety of newer kernel headers
versions (4.4, 4.9 or 4.14).
- Since gcc 7.x is now the default in Buildroot, most toolchains that
simply use the default gcc version use 7.x instead of 6.x.
- br-arm-cortex-a9-glibc uses gcc 8.x, binutils 2.31 and kernel
headers 4.20
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
runc (which is a reverse dependency of docker-engine) is about to gain a
!uclibc dependency, so move to a glibc toolchain instead.
There are currently no prebuilt x86_64 / core2 / glibc toolchains available,
so instead use the internal toolchain backend to build one.
While we are at it, drop the infra.basetest.BASIC_TOOLCHAIN_CONFIG
reference, as that ARM toolchain configuration doesn't make any sense for
this x86-64 based test.
add docker / docker-compose tests
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Fixes the following flake8 warnings:
support/scripts/pkg-stats:34:2: W605 invalid escape sequence '\$'
support/scripts/pkg-stats:34:4: W605 invalid escape sequence '\('
support/scripts/pkg-stats:34:11: W605 invalid escape sequence '\$'
support/scripts/pkg-stats:34:13: W605 invalid escape sequence '\('
support/scripts/pkg-stats:34:32: W605 invalid escape sequence '\)'
support/scripts/pkg-stats:34:34: W605 invalid escape sequence '\)'
support/scripts/pkg-stats:35:2: W605 invalid escape sequence '\s'
support/scripts/pkg-stats:35:14: W605 invalid escape sequence '\S'
support/scripts/pkg-stats:35:17: W605 invalid escape sequence '\s'
support/scripts/pkg-stats:42:1: E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
support/scripts/pkg-stats:587:133: E501 line too long (157 > 132 characters)
Note that the "invalid escape sequence" errors work because Python
leaves the \ in place if it doesn't recognise the escape sequence. But
it's better practice to use a raw string for regular expressions.
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Introduce support/scripts/check-merged-usr.sh, a script that check if a
given path complies to the merged /usr requirements:
/
/bin -> usr/bin
/lib -> usr/lib
/sbin -> usr/sbin
/usr/bin/
/usr/lib/
/usr/sbin/
Use this script in skeleton-custom.mk instead of a bunch of variables
filled by $(shell ...) macros. The same script will be used to check
rootfs overlays, in a forthcoming change.
Signed-off-by: Carlos Santos <casantos@datacom.ind.br>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
This commit adds fetching the latest upstream version of each package
from release-monitoring.org.
The fetching process first tries to use the package mappings of the
"Buildroot" distribution [1]. This mapping mechanism allows to tell
release-monitoring.org what is the name of a package in a given
distribution/build-system. For example, the package xutil_util-macros
in Buildroot is named xorg-util-macros on release-monitoring.org. This
mapping can be seen in the section "Mappings" of
https://release-monitoring.org/project/15037/.
If there is no mapping, then it does a regular search, and within the
search results, looks for a package whose name matches the Buildroot
name.
Even though fetching from release-monitoring.org is a bit slow, using
multiprocessing.Pool has proven to not be reliable, with some requests
ending up with an exception. So we keep a serialized approach, but
with a single HTTPSConnectionPool() for all queries. Long term, we
hope to be able to use a database dump of release-monitoring.org
instead.
From an output point of view, the latest version column:
- Is green when the version in Buildroot matches the latest upstream
version
- Is orange when the latest upstream version is unknown because the
package was not found on release-monitoring.org
- Is red when the version in Buildroot doesn't match the latest
upstream version. Note that we are not doing anything smart here:
we are just testing if the strings are equal or not.
- The cell contains the link to the project on release-monitoring.org
if found.
- The cell indicates if the match was done using a distro mapping, or
through a regular search.
[1] https://release-monitoring.org/distro/Buildroot/
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Tested-by: Matthew Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Replace all YAML anchors with the new "extends" keyword because it is
more readable and more flexible (it works across configuration files
combined with the new "include" keyword).
Readability is more meaningful in .gitlab-ci.yml.in.
In the part of .gitlab-ci.yml that is auto-generated by 'make
.gitlab-ci.yml' keep the keyword in the same line of the job name.
So instead of this:
zynqmp_zcu106_defconfig:
extends: .defconfig
tests.boot.test_atf.TestATFAllwinner:
extends: .runtime_test
Use this:
zynqmp_zcu106_defconfig: { extends: .defconfig }
tests.boot.test_atf.TestATFAllwinner: { extends: .runtime_test }
Do this to to keep .gitlab-ci.yml easier to be post-processed by a
script.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Add a special ref to the static repo and check on the git refs test case
the download of a git package:
- with the sha1 of a special ref as version;
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@datacom.ind.br>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
[Arnout: change to use the sha1 of a special ref instead of the name]
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Add a tag to the static repo and check on the git refs test case the
download of a git package:
- with the name of a tag as version;
- with the sha1 of a tag itself as version;
- with the partial sha1 of a tag itself as version;
- with the sha1 of a commit pointed by a tag as version;
- with the partial sha1 of a commit pointed by a tag as version;
- with the sha1 of a commit reachable only by a tag as version;
- with the partial sha1 of a commit reachable only by a tag as version.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@datacom.ind.br>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Tested-by: Matthew Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Enables the test to use the new non-emulator base class which takes
significantly less test time.
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@datacom.ind.br>
Signed-off-by: Matthew Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
The git tests don't need to do a full build, they only need to do a
configure and download and/or legal-info. More tests of that type will
be added in the future. Therefore, we want to have a test base class
that doesn't automatically do a full build in the setUp().
Add this new class as a superclass of the existing BRTest class, so we
don't need to update existing tests. Only the code in run-tests that
iterates over all subclasses of BRTest has to be adapted to use
BRConfigTest instead.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@datacom.ind.br>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Matthew Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Add two submodules as static repos, add a branch to the main static repo
and check on the git refs test case the download of a git package:
- repo with submodule but without support in the package;
- repo with recursive submodules with support in the package.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@datacom.ind.br>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
[Arnout: remove handling of inconsistent tarball hashes - that's an
actual bug that should be fixed]
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Build for x86-64 as public containers in general are only available for
x86-64. Docker needs a number of kernel options enabled, so use a custom
kernel config based on the qemu one.
Docker needs entropy at startup, so enable the virtio-rng-pci device to
expose entropy to the guest. The default RAM amount (128M) is not enough to
run docker / docker-compose, so bump to 512MB.
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthew Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
The scp download helper is broken when the server URL starts with 'scp://'.
Such prefix is used in two situations:
1. to let FOO_SITE point to an scp location without explicitly having to set
'FOO_SITE_METHOD = scp'
2. when BR2_PRIMARY_SITE or BR2_BACKUP_SITE points to an scp location. In
this case, there is no equivalent of 'SITE_METHOD'.
Strip out the scheme prefix, similarly to how the 'file' download helper
does it. That helper has the same cases as above.
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
The password is used in multiple places, so add a constant for it instead of
hardcoding it multiple times.
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Add a branch to the static repo and check on the git refs test case the
download of a git package:
- with a sha1 reachable by a branch name, but not pointed by it, as
version. This is the most common use case for git refs in the tree;
- with a partial sha1 of a commit reachable by a branch as version;
- with a sha1 of the commit head of a branch as version;
- with a partial sha1 of the commit head of a branch as version;
Enforce the download always occurs by removing the BR2_DL_DIR used for
the tarballs generated by the git download infra.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@datacom.ind.br>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Tested-by: Matthew Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
setlocalversion will use 'hg id' to determine whether or not the current
revision is tagged. If there is no tag, the Mercurial revision is printed,
otherwise nothing is printed.
The problem is that the user may have custom configuration settings (in
their ~/.hgrc file or similar) that changes the output of 'hg id' in a way
that the script does not expect. In such cases, the Mercurial revision may
not be printed or printed incorrectly.
It is good practice to ignore the user environment when calling Mercurial
commands from a well-defined script, by setting the environment variable
HGRCPATH to the empty string. See also 'hg help environment'.
In the particular case of Nokia, a custom extension adds dynamic tags in the
repository, i.e. tags that are stored in a file external to the repository
and only visible when the extension is active. These tags should not
influence the behavior of setlocalversion as they are not official Buildroot
tags, i.e. even if a revision is tagged, the Mercurial revision should still
be printed.
Note that this still does not solve the problem where an organization adds
_real_ tags in their Buildroot repository. For example, there might be a
moving tag 'last-validated' or tags indicating in which product release that
Buildroot revision was used. In these cases, setlocalversion will still not
behave as expected, i.e. show the Mercurial revision.
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
When Buildroot is stored in a Mercurial repository on a branch other than
'default' ('master' in git terms), setlocalversion (used to populate
/etc/os-release) will incorrectly think that this is a tagged version and
will NOT print out the revision hash.
This is due to the fact that the output of 'hg id' is assumed to be
"<revision> <tags-if-any>"
but when on a branch it actually is:
"<revision> (<branch>) <tags-if-any>"
To let setlocalversion receive the output it expects, explicitly ask 'hg id'
to retrieve only the revision hash and any tags, ommitting any branch
information.
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
All upcoming tests for git refs will rely on the return code of make to
determine whether a git ref can be downloaded or not and also to
determine whether the downloaded content is correct (all of this taking
advantage of the check-hash mechanism already in place for git
packages).
So to avoid false results i.e. in the case the check-hash mechanism
become broken in the master branch, add some sanity checks before the
actual test of download git refs.
Add the minimum test case for git refs containing only sanity checks.
Reuse the commit in the static repo.
Add a br2-external with two packages to check that:
- trying to download an invalid sha1 generates an error;
- downloading a valid sha1 that contains unexpected content generates
an error.
In order to ease the maintenance and review, each upcoming patch adding
checks to this test case will add at same time the commits to the static
repo, the equivalent packages to the br2-external and code to the test
case.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@datacom.ind.br>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Tested-by: Matthew Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Add one test case to ensure the hash is checked for git packages:
- correct hash;
- wrong hash;
- no hash file.
Add required infra:
- a GitRemote class, that can start a git server in the host machine to
emulate a remote git server under the control of the test;
- a new base class, called GitTestBase, that inherits from BRTest and
must be subclassed by all git test cases.
Its setUp() method takes care of configuring the build with a
br2-external, avoiding to hit http://sources.buildroot.net by using
an empty BR2_BACKUP_SITE. It also avoids downloading not
pre-installed dependencies (i.e. lzip) every time by calling 'make
dependencies' using the common dl directory, and it instantiates the
GitRemote object.
Besides the Python scripts, add some fixtures used during the tests:
- a br2-external (git-hash) with one package for each part of the test
case;
- a static git bare repo (repo.git) to be served using GitRemote class.
Neither the br2-external nor the check hash functionalities are the
subject of these tests per se, so for simplicity limit the check to the
error codes and don't look for the messages in the log.
Thanks to Arnout for the hint about how to add a bare repo to test.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@datacom.ind.br>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Tested-by: Matthew Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
[Arnout: split long line; reorder imports to satisfy flake8]
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
This commit adds a config option which will force buildroot to
build all host dependencies even if they are already present on the
host system. This may be a desirable option if different hosts are
used to build the same source. In this case, some packages will be
built on one host that are not built on another. This is problematic
if build source archives are cached afterwards for offline builds.
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Signed-off-by: Bryce Ferguson <bryce.ferguson@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Matt Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
[Peter: reword, drop exit 1, reshuffle]
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
The color for 'extract' is very similar to the one for 'install-images'.
Both are cyan-like.
Replace the former by a pale blue to make all colors sufficiently distinct.
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Tested-by: Matthew Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Total build time also involves download. Getting a visibility on the impact
of that step can be important for users/admins, e.g. to evaluate different
methods of BR2_PRIMARY_SITE.
Colors used are some kind of purple (primary scheme) and light orange
(alternate scheme).
Signed-off-by: Mathias De Maré <mathias.de_mare@nokia.com>
[ThomasDS: rebase and update colors to avoid confusion]
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Tested-by: Matthew Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Older distributions such as CentOS6 come with python2.6, which causes build
failures in packages such as host-libglib2 because they require python2.7 and
above.
host-libglib2 will produce the error message:
/bin/sh: python2.7: command not found
Python2.7 is a hard-coded value in configure.ac. If one changes the value to
just "python," the following stack trace is produced:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "./gdbus-2.0/codegen/gdbus-codegen.in", line 55, in <module>
self.outfile.write(LICENSE_STR.format(config.VERSION))
ValueError : sys.exit(codegen_main.codegen_main())
zero length field name in format
Instead of supporting an ancient version of Python that had its support ended
in October os 2013, it would be more pragmatic only to support Python2.7 and
above.
Luckily; CentOS6 has the centos-release-scl repository, which allows users to
install python2.7, and Debian 8 comes with Python2.7 already, making this patch
relatively low impact.
Signed-off-by: Adam Duskett <Aduskett@gmail.com>
[Peter: only look at major.minor to handle x.y.z with z < 10]
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Some upcoming test cases can use one or more br2-external trees as
fixtures that provide packages used only in runtime tests.
Add support for br2-external into the BRTest class. Any test case can
then provide a list of paths for being used as br2-external trees
during the build of the image to test.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@datacom.ind.br>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Matt Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel J. Leach <dleach@belcan.com>
Signed-off-by: Adam Duskett <Aduskett@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Matthew Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
[Thomas: use named argument for make_extra_opts.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Make the builder able to call 'VAR1=1 make VAR2=2 target'.
Allow sending extra parameters to be added to the end of make command
line. Uses for these purposes:
- to configure a br2-external, using the 'BR2_EXTERNAL="dir" variable.
- to specify a make target, such as 'foo-source.'
Allow adding variables to the environment when calling make.
These added variables allow a user to override default values from BuildRoot,
such as 'BR2_DL_DIR="dl"'.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@datacom.ind.br>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Matt Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel J. Leach <dleach@belcan.com>
Signed-off-by: Adam Duskett <Aduskett@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
As suggested by Arnout Vandecappelle, let's document the
elf_needs_rpath() and check_elf_has_rpath() functions, before we make
them a bit more complicated with per-package directory support.
Suggested-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
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>
In 36568732e4, we expanded toolchain.cmake to also define the value for
CMAKE_SYSTEM_VERSION, as the cmake documentation states that it must be
manually defined when doing cross-compilation [0]:
When the CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME variable is set explicitly to enable
cross compiling then the value of CMAKE_SYSTEM_VERSION must also
be set explicitly to specify the target system version.
However, the fix in 36568732e4 uses the version of the kernel headers,
assuming that would be the oldest kernel we could run on. Yet, this is
not the case, because glibc (for example) has fallbacks to support
running on kernels older than the headers it was built against.
The cmake official wiki [1] additionally states:
* CMAKE_SYSTEM_VERSION : optional, version of your target system, not
used very much.
Folllowed a little bit below, by:
* CMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE : absolute or relative path to a cmake script
which sets up all the toolchain related variables mentioned above
For instance for crosscompiling from Linux to Embedded Linux on PowerPC
this file could look like this:
# this one is important
SET(CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME Linux)
#this one not so much
SET(CMAKE_SYSTEM_VERSION 1)
[...]
Furthermore, using the kernel headers version can be a bit misleading (as
it really looks like is is the correct version to use when it is not),
while it is obvious that 1 is not really the output of `uname -r` and
thus is definitely not misleading.
Finally, random searches [2] about CMAKE_SYSTEM_VERSION, mostly only
turns up issues related with Windows, Mac-OS, and to a lesser extent,
Android (where it is forcibly set to 1), with issues realted to running
under just Linux (as opposed to Adnroid) mostly non-existent.
Consequently, we revert to using the value that is suggested in the
cmake WiKi, i.e. 1, and which is basically what we also used as a
workaround in the azure-iot-sdk-c paclkage up until d300b1d3b1.
A case were we will need to have a real kernel version, is if we one day
have a cmake-based pacakge that builds and installs a kernel module [3],
because it will need the _running_ kernel version to install it in
/lib/modules/VERSION/, but in that case it will anyway most probably
not be the headers version.
[0] https://cmake.org/cmake/help/v3.8/variable/CMAKE_SYSTEM_VERSION.html
[1] https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/community/wikis/doc/cmake/CrossCompiling
[2] https://duckduckgo.com/?q=CMAKE_SYSTEM_VERSION
[3] https://stackoverflow.com/questions/38205745/cmake-system-version-not-updated-for-new-kernel
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Quoting the CMake documentation:
When the CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME variable is set explicitly to enable cross
compiling then the value of CMAKE_SYSTEM_VERSION must also be set
explicitly to specify the target system version.
Thus, we should also set CMAKE_SYSTEM_VERSION in toolchainfile.cmake. It
is supposed to be set to the value of `uname -r` on the target. We don't
have that exact value available (unless we build the kernel), but the
value of BR2_TOOLCHAIN_HEADERS_AT_LEAST contains the (minimum) version
of the kernel it will run on, so it should be OK for all practical
purposes.
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Samuel Martin <s.martin49@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add a minimal RISC-V 32-bit autobuild configuration for the
internal toolchain with glibc.
Signed-off-by: Mark Corbin <mark.corbin@embecosm.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This enables a riscv32 system to be built with a Buildroot generated
toolchain (gcc >= 7.x, binutils >= 2.30, glibc only).
This requires a custom version of glibc 2.26 from the riscv-glibc
repository. Note that there are no tags in this repository, so the
glibc version just consists of the 40 character commit id string.
Thanks to Fabrice Bellard for pointing me towards the 32-bit glibc
repository and for providing the necessary patch to get it to build.
Signed-off-by: Mark Corbin <mark.corbin@embecosm.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
scp download is broken, because scp is called without filename argument and
only the server is specified. The call is:
scp <server> <outputfile>
but should be:
scp <server>/<filename> <outputfile>
Instead of assuming '-u' lists a full URL including filename (which it is
not), align with the wget helper where -u is the server URL and -f gives the
filename.
With this commit, an scp download can work if FOO_SITE_METHOD is explicitly
set to 'scp' and the server does not have a scheme prefix 'scp://'.
The next commit will handle the case where a scheme prefix is present.
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
[Thomas: s/URL/URI/, as noticed by Yann.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
GitLab has severe limitations imposed to triggers.
Using a variable in a regexp is not allowed:
| only:
| - /-$CI_JOB_NAME$/
| - /-\$CI_JOB_NAME$/
| - /-%CI_JOB_NAME%$/
Using the key 'variables' always lead to an AND with 'refs', so:
| only:
| refs:
| - branches
| - tags
| variables:
| - $CI_JOB_NAME == $CI_COMMIT_REF_NAME
would make the push of a tag not to trigger all jobs anymore.
Inheritance is used only for the second level of keys, so:
|.runtime_test: &runtime_test
| only:
| - tags
|tests.package.test_python_txaio.TestPythonPy2Txaio:
| <<: *runtime_test
| only:
| - /-TestPythonPy2Txaio$/
would override the entire key 'only', making the push of a tag not to
trigger all jobs anymore.
So, in order to have a trigger per job and still allow the push of a tag
to trigger all jobs (all this in a follow up patch), the regexp for each
job must be hardcoded in the .gitlab-ci.yml and also the inherited
values for key 'only' must be repeated for every job.
This is not a big issue, .gitlab-ci.yml is already automatically
generated from a template and there will be no need to hand-editing it
when jobs are added or removed.
Since the logic to generate the yaml file from the template will become
more complex, move the commands from the main Makefile to a script.
Using Python or other advanced scripting language for that script would
be the most versatile solution, but that would bring another dependency
on the host machine, pyyaml if Python is used. So every developer that
needs to run 'make .gitlab-ci.yml' and also the docker image used in the
GitLab pipelines would need to have pyyaml pre-installed.
Instead of adding the mentioned dependency, keep using a bash script.
While moving the commands to the script:
- mimic the behavior of the previous make target and fail on any
command that fails, by using 'set -e';
- break the original lines in one command per line, making the diff for
any patch to be applied to this file to look nicer;
- keep the script as simple as possible, without functions, just a
script that executes from the top to bottom;
- do not perform validations on the input parameters, any command that
fails already makes the script to fail;
- do not add an usage message, the script is not intended to be called
directly.
This patch does not change functionality.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
[Thomas: make the script output on stdout rather than take the output
file name as second argument.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Since commit 38de434123 ("download: fix file:// BR2_PRIMARY_SITE
(download cache)"), the urlencode option is no longer passed to the
download backend, because we use ${backend} instead of
${backend_urlencode}.
We must get the urlencode information from backend_urlencode.
Signed-off-by: Damien Thébault <damien.thebault@vitec.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
[Thomas: rework commit log]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Having a docstring in the test_run() method clutters the "run-tests
-l" output:
test_run (tests.package.test_python_crossbar.TestPythonPy3Crossbar)
Test a python package. ... ok
[...]
test_run (tests.package.test_python_pexpect.TestPythonPy2Pexpect)
Test a python package. ... ok
test_run (tests.package.test_python_pexpect.TestPythonPy3Pexpect)
Test a python package. ... ok
test_run (tests.package.test_python_twisted.TestPythonPy2Twisted)
Test a python package. ... ok
test_run (tests.package.test_python_twisted.TestPythonPy3Twisted)
Test a python package. ... ok
test_run (tests.package.test_python_pynacl.TestPythonPy2Pynacl)
Test a python package. ... ok
test_run (tests.package.test_python_pynacl.TestPythonPy3Pynacl)
Test a python package. ... ok
So let's simply drop this docstring that is not particularly useful.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
This array will be re-used in another function in a follow-up commit,
so it makes sense to factor it out.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
The remove_extra_deps() function removes dependencies that we are not
interested in seeing in the dependency graph. It does this for all
packages, except the 'all' package, which on full dependency graphs is
the root of the tree.
However, this doesn't take into account package-specific dependency
graphs (i.e make <pkg>-graph-depends) where the root is not 'all', but
'<pkg>'. Due to this, dependencies on "mandatory deps" were not
visible at all, i.e the toolchain package (and its dependencies) and
the skeleton package (and its dependencies) were not displayed in
package-specific dependency graphs.
To fix this, we use the existing rootpkg variable instead of
hardcoding 'all'.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Currently, we avoid drawing the dependencies that we call 'target
exceptions', becasue they initially were returned by 'show-targets',
when they in fact were not really packages and thus should not be on
the graph.
However, those two exceptions have no longer been reported in the output
of show-targets since we merged very old initial top-level parallel
build way back in 2014, with commit a24877586a (Makefile: add support
for top-level parallel make), where they had been converted into purely
internal rules.
4 years have passed, we can now drop those exceptions from the
graph-depends script.
This concludes the cleanup initiated three years ago with commit
0b32791f00 (graph-depends: remove absent targets from
TARGET_EXCEPTIONS).
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add an option to install grub2 support tools to the target.
In the context of Buildroot, some useful target tools provided are
grub2-editenv, grub2-reboot, which provide means to manage the grub2,
environment, boot order, and others.
Signed-off-by: Erico Nunes <nunes.erico@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Inside the check_elf_has_rpath(), we check if the host binary has a
correct RPATH, which should be either an absolute path to
$(HOST_DIR)/lib, or a relative path using $ORIGIN. Those two
conditions are checked in a single statements, but as we are going to
add a third condition, let's split this up a bit:
- If we have a RPATH to $(HOST_DIR)/lib -> we're good, return 0
- If we have a RPATH to $ORIGIN/../lib -> we're good, return 0
- Otherwise, we will exit the loop, and return 1
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>
Recently, some hash mismatch have been reported, both by users as well
as autobuilder failures, about tarballs generated from git repositories.
This turned out to be caused by users having the 'gzip' command somehow
aliased to 'pigz' (which stand for: parallel implementation of gzip,
which takes advantage of multi-processor system to parallelise the
compression).
Unfortunately, the output of pigz-compressed archives differ from that
of gzip (even though they *are* valid gzip-compressed streams).
Add a dependency check that ensures that gzip is not pigz. If that is
the case, define a conditional dependency to host-gzip, that is used as
a download dependency for packages that will generate compressed files,
i.e. cvs, git, and svn.
Fixes:
http://autobuild.buildroot.org/results/330/3308271fc641cadb59dbf1b5ee529a84f79e6d5c/
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Marcin Niestrój <m.niestroj@grinn-global.com>
Cc: Erico Nunes <nunes.erico@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Currently, when we detect that tar is BSD-tar, we fake an unsupported
version (major, minor) and rely on the version check to reject BSD-tar.
There is no reason to use such shenanigans, when we can simply reject it
from the onset.
Simplify the logic:
- use positive logic in the condition
- directly exit in error
Also, comment that case like the other cases are commented.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Graphviz' dot utility does not like nodes which names does not start
with an ^[[:alpha:]], i.e. 18xx-ti-utils would cause grievance:
Warning: syntax ambiguity - badly delimited number '18x' in line 4 [...]/graph-depends.dot splits into two tokens
Warning: syntax ambiguity - badly delimited number '18x' in line 5 [...]/graph-depends.dot splits into two tokens
Warning: syntax ambiguity - badly delimited number '18x' in line 6 [...]/graph-depends.dot splits into two tokens
Warning: syntax ambiguity - badly delimited number '18x' in line 7 [...]/graph-depends.dot splits into two tokens
Prefix nodes with an underscore to fix that.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
We are using empty CONFIG_PREFIX_. This results in false positive match
for comment lines when merging config fragments.
To avoid false positive reports, we use separate sed expressions and
address comment lines explicitly.
This is actually is in the Linux kernel mainline (v4.20-rc2):
6bbe4385d035c6fac56f840a59861a0310ce137b
("kconfig: merge_config: avoid false positive matches from comment lines")
Signed-off-by: Nasser Afshin <Afshin.Nasser@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Petr Vorel <petr.vorel@gmail.com>
Acked-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This patch allows us to define config prefix with CONFIG_ environment
variable.
By setting the proper config prefix, we will have proper 'redundant
configuration warnings' when we use '-r -m' options.
This is actually already in mainline for v4.20-rc1:
2cd3faf87d2d8f6123adf34741b9a7b98828a76f
("merge_config.sh: Allow to define config prefix")
Signed-off-by: Nasser Afshin <afshin.nasser@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Petr Vorel <petr.vorel@gmail.com>
Acked-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add a simple test case to check the basic usage, storing a dict into a
file and then retrieving the dict from the file.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Use a simple script to check the basic usage. The target has no https
server, so a connection from in the target to localhost must not
succeed.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add a simple test case to check the basic usage by calling 'ls' and
checking the output.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add a simple test case that imports the module.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add a simple test case to check the basic usage, storing a dict into a
file and then retrieving the dict from the file.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add a simple test case that minimally uses the module.
Add haveged to the target to generate enough entropy so pynacl ->
libsodium don't hang waiting for /dev/random.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add a simple test case to check the basic usage. Call 'login' and try
wrong user/password, expecting the 'Login incorrect' message.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add a simple test case that creates a hash for a password and verifies
it against an incorrect and a correct password.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add a simple test case to check the basic usage by creating a class with
two constants.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Use a simple script to check the basic usage. Since this package
provides command line arguments, override run_sample_scripts to call the
script with arguments and check the expected output.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add a simple test case to check the basic usage, storing a dict into a
file and then retrieving the dict from the file.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add a simple test case to check the basic usage by checking the
corresponding representation of a 12-bit decimal number in hex, binary
and integer.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Use a minimal script to check the basic usage by creating and using a
small state machine.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Use a minimal script to check the basic usage creating a class with 2
attributes.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Use a simple script to check the basic usage. Since this package
provides command line arguments, override run_sample_scripts to call the
script with arguments and check the expected output.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Since commit "2927f412be support/testing: standardize defconfig
fragments style" all other test cases use the same style for defconfig
fragments:
- start after a backslash;
- be declared as a multi-line string literal;
- be indented one level more than the variable that contains it.
Do the same here for consistency.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Matt Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Fixes:
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/e29/e293aadc692d2ed337881ef2172ddf66a60bc05c/
And many more.
Install as 'host-make' rather than just 'make', as that otherwise confuses a
number of packages when they invoke recursive / sub-make. The internal job
control logic of GNU make is version dependant, so mixing versions may lead
to issues like:
make[1]: Entering directory `/home/peko/autobuild/instance-0/output/build/boa-0.94.14rc21'
(cd src && make -w --jobserver-fds=5,6 -j)
make: unrecognized option '--jobserver-fds=5,6'
With this rename, only packages explicitly opting in for our host-make
(using the BR2_MAKE / BR2_MAKE_HOST_DEPENDENCY logic) will use it.
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
This test invokes "crossbar version" command, that checks all
dependencies found in setup.py files and prints some system related
information.
Add haveged to the target to generate enough entropy so crossbar ->
pynacl -> libsodium don't hang waiting for /dev/random.
Signed-off-by: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
[Ricardo: move test script to a separate file, remove Python 2 variant,
add haveged to target to add entropy and avoid hanging]
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Move the test script to be run on the target from inline in the test
case to a separate file.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Asaf Kahlon <asafka7@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Move the test scripts to be run on the target from inline in the test
case to a separate file.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Asaf Kahlon <asafka7@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Move the test script to be run on the target from inline in the test
case to a separate file.
Get the base defconfig fragment from the immediate parent class and not
directly from TestPythonBase because it is the correct way of doing
this. This way the base class TestPythonTwisted could even be placed in
a separate file.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Asaf Kahlon <asafka7@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Move the test script to be run on the target from inline in the test
case to a separate file.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Asaf Kahlon <asafka7@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Move the test script to be run on the target from inline in the test
case to a separate file.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Asaf Kahlon <asafka7@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Move the test script to be run on the target from inline in the test
case to a separate file.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Asaf Kahlon <asafka7@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Test cases for python packages are very similar among each other: run a
simple script in the target that minimally tests the package.
So create a new helper class named TestPythonPackageBase that holds all
the logic to run a script on the target.
TestPythonPackageBase adds in build time one or more sample scripts to
be run on the target. The test case for the python package must
explicitly list them in the "sample_scripts" property. The test case
then automatically logins to the target, checks the scripts are really
in the rootfs (it calls "md5sum" instead of "ls" or "test" in an attempt
to make the logfile more friendly, since someone analysing a failure can
easily check the expected script was executed) and then calls the python
interpreter passing the sample script as parameter.
An optional property "timeout" exists for the case the sample script
needs more time to run than the default timeout from the test infra
(currently 5 seconds).
A simple test case for a package that only supports Python 2 will look
like this:
|from tests.package.test_python import TestPythonPackageBase
|
|
|class TestPythonPy2<Package>(TestPythonPackageBase):
| __test__ = True
| config = TestPythonPackageBase.config + \
| """
| BR2_PACKAGE_PYTHON=y
| BR2_PACKAGE_PYTHON_<PACKAGE>=y
| """
| sample_scripts = ["tests/package/sample_python_<package>.py"]
| timeout = 15
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Asaf Kahlon <asafka7@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Since 118534fe54 (fs: use a common tarball as base for the other
filesystems), the filesystem creation is split in two steps, using an
intermediate tarball to carry the generic, common finalisations to the
per-filesystem finalisation and image creation.
However, this intermediate tarball causes an issue with capabilities:
they are entirely missing in the generated filesystems.
Capabilities are stored in the extended attribute security.capability,
which tar by default will not store/restore, unless explicitly told to,
e.g. with --xattrs-include='*', which we don't pass.
Now, passing this option when creating and extracting the intermediate
tarball, both done under fakeroot, will cause fakeroot to report an
invalid filetype for files with capabilities. mksquashfs would report
such unknown files as a warning, while mkfs.ext2 would fail (with a
similar error message), e.g.:
File [...]/usr/sbin/getcap has unrecognised filetype 0, ignoring
This is due to a poor interaction between tar and fakeroot; running as
root the exact same commands we run under fakeroot, works as expected.
Unfortunately, short of fixing fakeroot (which would first require
understanding the problem in there), we don't have much options.
The intermediate tarball was made to avoid redoing the same actions over
and over again for each filesystem to build. However, most of the time,
only one or two such filesystems would be enabled [0], and those actions
are usually pretty lightweight. So, using an intermediate tarball does
not provide a big optimisation.
The main reason to introduce the intermediate tarball, however, is that
it allows to postpone per-filesystem finalisations to be applied only
for the corresponding filesystem, not for all of them.
So, we get rid of the intermediate tarball, and simply move all of the
code to run under fakeroot to the per-filesystem fakeroot script.
Instead of extracting the intermediate tarball, we just rsync the
original target/ directory, and apply the filesystem finalisations on
that copy. The only thing still done in the rootfs-common step is to
generate the intermediate files (users file, devices file) that are used
in the fakeroot script.
Fixes: https://bugs.busybox.net/show_bug.cgi?id=11216
Note: an alternate solution would have been to keep the intermediate
tarball to keep most of the common finalisations, and move only the
permissions to each filesystem, but that was getting a bit more complex
and changed the ordering of permissions and post-fakeroot scripts. Once
we bite the bullet of having some common finalisation done in each
filesystem, it's easier to just move all of them.
[0] Most probsably, users would enable the real filesystem to put on
their device, plus the 'tar' filesystem, to be able to easily inspect
the content on their development machine.
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 Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
This commit fixes the following flake8 warnings:
support/testing/tests/fs/test_f2fs.py:6:1: E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
support/testing/tests/fs/test_f2fs.py:12:1: E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
support/testing/tests/fs/test_f2fs.py:38:23: E225 missing whitespace around operator
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Suppose we use Makefile wrapper and build some project out of
buildroot tree (O=...). A command like "make
busybox-all-external-deps" will output the string "uname 022 && make
..." to stdout before the usefull information. It pollutes stdout. At
the same time if we use the same command in the buildroot source-tree
then we don't get the additional output. This patch makes wrapper
silent by default. People who prefer to see more verbose output can
use V=1.
Signed-off-by: Serj Kalichev <serj.kalichev@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Commit 6eacea5ae0 accidentally removed these changes in merge_config.sh:
0f56304521 ("merge_config.sh: create temporary files in /tmp")
28fac3973b ("merge_config.sh: add br2-external support")
Changes were lost because commits just changed files, but didn't add patches.
Therefore not only restore our changes, but also add (updated) patches.
Missing 0f56304521 caused breaking merge_config.sh when used in out of
tree build:
$ make -C buildroot O=$PWD/output defconfig
...
$ cd output
$ echo 'BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_HOSTNAME="test"' > test.frag
$ ../buildroot/support/kconfig/merge_config.sh .config test.frag
Using .config as base
Merging test.frag
umask 0022 && make -C /home/test/buildroot O=/home/test/output/. alldefconfig
GEN /home/test/output/Makefile
*** Can't read seed configuration "./.tmp.config.qIcpASpUyh"!
make[1]: *** [Makefile:925: alldefconfig] Error 1
make: *** [Makefile:16: _all] Error 2
Fixes: 6eacea5ae0 support/kconfig: bump to kconfig from Linux 4.17-rc2
Signed-off-by: Petr Vorel <petr.vorel@gmail.com>
Reported-by: Erico Nunes <nunes.erico@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
which was specified, but not added during last update.
Fixes: 6eacea5ae0 ("support/kconfig: bump to kconfig from Linux 4.17-rc2")
Signed-off-by: Petr Vorel <petr.vorel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Resolves:
support/testing/tests/core/test_hardening.py:25:42: E231 missing whitespace after ','
Signed-off-by: Matthew Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add a minimal RISC-V 64-bit autobuild configuration for the
internal toolchain with glibc.
Signed-off-by: Mark Corbin <mark.corbin@embecosm.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Catch the commonly used options of SSP, Relro, and fortify.
Using the package targets of busybox and lighttpd. This
can easily be expanded to a larger list.
Signed-off-by: Matthew Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
This test case uses a too old U-Boot version, which is affected by the
infamous libfdt header conflict issue. We update U-Boot and ATF to
what is used in the current version of
solidrun_macchiatobin_mainline_defconfig, for which the problem no
longer exists.
Fixes:
https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/107860312
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
This test case uses a too old U-Boot version, which is affected by the
infamous libfdt header conflict issue. Let's update to U-Boot 2017.11,
which is used by our current bananapi_m64_defconfig that was the
inspiration for this test case.
Fixes:
https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/107860310
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Use a minimal script to listen to a port and check using netstat.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Asaf Kahlon <asafka7@gmail.com>
Cc: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Reviewed-by: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
[Thomas: increase the delay after starting the Twisted server, as 5
seconds was not enough for Python 3.x configurations.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add a simple test case that imports the module and asserts a version
string for a fake package is generated.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Asaf Kahlon <asafka7@gmail.com>
Cc: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Reviewed-by: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add a simple test case that imports the module.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Asaf Kahlon <asafka7@gmail.com>
Cc: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Reviewed-by: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add a simple test case that imports the module to use with twisted in
Python 2 and with asyncio in Python 3.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Asaf Kahlon <asafka7@gmail.com>
Cc: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Reviewed-by: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add a simple test case that imports the module.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Asaf Kahlon <asafka7@gmail.com>
Cc: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Reviewed-by: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Currently, the timestamps that we keep in build-time.log use a
second-level precision. However, as we are going to introduce a new
type of graph to draw the time line of a build, this precision is
going to be insufficient, as a number of steps are so short that they
are not even one second long, and generally the rounding to the second
gives a not so great looking graph.
Therefore, we add to the timestamps the nanoseconds using the %N date
specifier. A milli-second precision would have been sufficient, but %N
is all what date(1) provides at the sub-second level.
Since this is changing the format of the build-time.log file, this
commit adjusts the support/scripts/graph-build-time script
accordingly, to account for the floating point numbers that we have as
timestamps.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Acked-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Adds a pool of worker threads to accelerate connection testing.
~7.5MB and 2% CPU per thread on a Intel i5-3230M CPU @ 2.60GHz.
Runtime is ~3min in parallel vs ~15min.
CC: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthew Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Reviewed-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
- Adds support to check if a package has a URL and if that URL
is valid by doing a header request.
- Reports this information as part of the generated html output
The URL data is currently gathered from the URL string provided
in the Kconfig help sections for each package.
This check helps ensure the URLs are valid and can be used
for other scripting purposes as the product's home site/URL.
CPE XML generation is an example of a case that could use this
product URL as part of an automated update generation script.
CC: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Matt Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Reviewed-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
When the function add_one_group is called on an existing group,
make sure the members of this group are not removed in the process of
deleting then re-adding the group.
Signed-off-by: Johan Oudinet <johan.oudinet@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
[Thomas: add curly braces when referencing ${members}, as suggested by
Yann.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This file uses leading spaces, not TABs.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
The host make program is already checked by dependencies.sh but we
want to check the version number even if Buildroot is able to use
GNU make >= 3.81 but some packages may require a more recent version.
For example, since version 2.28 [1], glibc requires GNU Make >= 4.0.
For packages requiring make >= 4.0, the package makefile must use:
<PKG>_DEPENDENCIES = $(BR2_MAKE_HOST_DEPENDENCY) ...
<PKG>_MAKE = $(BR2_MAKE)
BR2_MAKE1 is also available if needed.
[1] https://www.sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2018-08/msg00003.html
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Baruch Siach <baruch@tkos.co.il>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Tested-by: Matt Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
[Thomas: remove extraction of "bugfix" part of the version, since it's
not used anywhere.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
wget is the only downloader currently usable with BR2_PRIMARY_SITE, and that
doesn't work at all for file:// URLs. The symptoms are these:
support/download/dl-wrapper -c '2.4.47' -d '/PATH/build/sw/source/attr' -D '/PATH/build/sw/source' -f 'attr-2.4.47.src.tar.gz' -H 'package/attr//attr.hash' -n 'attr-2.4.47' -N 'attr' -o '/PATH/build/sw/source/attr/attr-2.4.47.src.tar.gz' -u file\|urlencode+file:///NFS/buildroot_dl_cache/attr -u file\|urlencode+file:///NFS/buildroot_dl_cache -u http+http://download.savannah.gnu.org/releases/attr -u http\|urlencode+http://sources.buildroot.net/attr -u http\|urlencode+http://sources.buildroot.net --
file:///NFS/buildroot_dl_cache/attr/attr-2.4.47.src.tar.gz: Unsupported scheme `file'.
ERROR: attr-2.4.47.src.tar.gz has wrong sha256 hash:
ERROR: expected: 25772f653ac5b2e3ceeb89df50e4688891e21f723c460636548971652af0a859
ERROR: got : e3b0c44298fc1c149afbf4c8996fb92427ae41e4649b934ca495991b7852b855
ERROR: Incomplete download, or man-in-the-middle (MITM) attack
In the case of custom Linux kernel versions, this is fatal, because there isn't
necessarily a hash file to indicate that wget's empty tarball is wrong.
This seems to have been broken by commit c8ef0c03b0, because:
1. BR2_PRIMARY_SITE always appends "urlencode" (package/pkg-download.mk)
2. Anything with the "|urlencode" suffix in $uri will end up using wget due to
the backend case wildcarding.
3. The wget backend rejects file:/// URLs ("unsupported scheme"), and we end up
with an empty .tar.gz file in the downloads directory.
Fix that by shell-extracting the backend name from the left of "|". I'm not
positive if all URLs will have a "|", so this code only looks for a "|" left of
the "+".
Signed-off-by: Hollis Blanchard <hollis_blanchard@mentor.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Tested-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This patch updates the vagrant box to ubuntu bionic 64 and switches back
to the official ubuntu image cause the issues with the official image
are now solved.
Signed-off-by: Angelo Compagnucci <angelo@amarulasolutions.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
While integrating proxy support in builder.py, a log flush
was left in the code. This commit cleans/removes that code.
Signed-off-by: Matthew Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Allow builder.py to inherit the system proxy settings from
the env if they are present.
Signed-off-by: Matthew Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Reviewed-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
The download wrapper is a purely internal helper, and is not supposed to
be callable manually. No need to offer some help.
Besides, the help text was way out-dated.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
With cmake packages, we are only using TARGET_LDFLAGS for executables
and not for shared libraries.
This patch adds CMAKE_SHARED_LINKER_FLAGS and
CMAKE_MODULE_LINKER_FLAGS to the cmake toolchain file so that
buildroot TARGET_LDFLAGS are used for shared and module libraries.
Signed-off-by: Damien Thébault <damien.thebault@vitec.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add the i686 package list to install when using pre-built 32 bits
binaries with a redhat/fedora host distribution (glibc.i686 and
zlib.i686).
Signed-off-by: David De Grave (Essensium/Mind) <david.degrave@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
All pre-built Buildroot toolchains have been rebuilt with Buildroot
2018.05, so this commit updates the corresponding configuration
fragments to make sure the autobuilders use the new toolchains.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Currently, we install flake8 and its dependencies via pip. We
tried to be reproducible by pinning the version of those python
packages, but we did forget quite a few of them, and thus some
dependencies for flake8 are installed as uncontrolled versions.
Furthermore, before we install flake8 and its dependencies, we
forcibly update pip, setuptools, and wheels packages to their
latest versions. This explicitly breaks reproducibility.
While we could enforce a specific version of all those packages
and still grab them from PyPI, we can simply grab them from the
distribution-provided packages instead.
Since we're using a pinned version of stretch, this already
guarantees we'll reproducibly get the same versions over and
over again. Besides, we just need to list flake8 as a package to
install to automatically get all its dependencies (again, in a
reproducible way).
This has the slight unfortunate drawback of downgrading flake8
to version 3.2.1, from version 3.5.0, as well as downgrading a
few of flake8's dependencies, as noticed by Ricardo:
http://lists.busybox.net/pipermail/buildroot/2018-May/222376.html
However, as Ricardo said, there isn't "any serious limitation of
this old version, the release notes for a version in the between
mentions 'Dramatically improve the performance' but we have a
limited number of scripts and running on Gitlab for all of them
still takes less than 5 minutes".
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
As suggested in the docker best practices [0], order the package list
alphabetically, and list only one package per line.
This will be much usefull later, we need to update the list of installed
packages, like adding new ones for example.
[0] https://docs.docker.com/develop/develop-images/dockerfile_best-practices/#sort-multi-line-arguments
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Fix three issues with code style in our test infra:
- 'print' is now a function,
- exceptions need to be caught-assigned with the 'as' keyword,
- old-style "%s"%() formatting is deprecated.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
[Thomas: drop indices in format strings.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
'+' is a valid character in a url. The current dl-wrapper gets the
URI scheme by dropping everything after the last '+' character, with
the intension of finding 'git' from e.g. 'git+https://uri'.
If a uri has a '+' anywhere in it, it ends up using too much of the
string as a scheme, and fails to match the handler properly.
An example of where this form of URI is used is when using deploy tokens
in gitlab. It uses a form like https://<username>:<password>@gitlab.com/<group>/<repo.git>
where username for deploy token is of the form 'gitlab+deploy-token-<number>'.
Use the %% operator to search backwards until the last '+' character when
dropping the rest of the string as we know that the first '+'
in the string should be the scheme.
Signed-off-by: Robert Beckett <bbeckett@netvu.org.uk>
Acked-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
In commit 7517aef4d (support/docker: limit the number of layers),
we reduced the number of layers by coalescing multiple RUN commands
into less commands.
In doing so, we especially coalesced "apt-get update" with "apt-get
install".
However, the distribution we used is a pinned version of stretch, so
we know that running apt-get update will always yield the same apt
database.
If we split the two apt-get commands, then we can re-use any local
intermediate image when we need to update the list of packages to
install; this helps quite a bit when testing the docker files over
and over again, with just slight variants in the packages list.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Reviewed-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Use Python 3 style print calls, in order to make pkg-stats Python 3
compliant.
Signed-off-by: Matthew Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Reviewed-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@datacom.ind.br>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Since the rework of the download infrastructure, the "file" download
helper gets passed an URL that starts with file://, but forgets to
strip it before passing it to "cp", causing a failure as the "cp"
program isn't prepared for file paths starting with file://. This is
fixed by stripping the file:// at the beginning of the URL.
In addition, the path passed to cp lacked a slash between the
directory path and the filename part of the url. This is fixed by
adding a slash at the appropriate places.
Fixes the following build failure when the "file" download method is
used:
cp: cannot stat 'file:///home/angelo/DEV/TOOLCHAINSarmv7-eabihf--glibc--bleeding-edge-2017.11-1.tar.bz2': No such file or directory
Signed-off-by: Angelo Compagnucci <angelo@amarulasolutions.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
A person on IRC reported a build failure with the util-linux package,
looking like this:
for I in uname26 linux32 linux64 ; do \
cd /home/aep/consulting/chargery/tracker/output/target/usr/bin && ln -sf setarch $I ; \
done
[...]
/bin/sh: line 1: ./ln: cannot execute binary file: Exec format error
/bin/sh: line 1: ./ln: cannot execute binary file: Exec format error
/bin/sh: line 1: ./ln: cannot execute binary file: Exec format error
The issue was an empty path in the PATH variable, which means "current
working directory", causing a "ln" binary built by util-linux for the
target to be used instead of the system-provided "ln".
We already check a number of things in the PATH and LD_LIBRARY_PATH
variables in support/dependencies/dependencies.sh, but we were not
checking that PATH did not contain an empty path.
This commit fixes that and takes this opportunity to simplify the test
code for PATH and LD_LIBRARY_PATH.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
[Thomas: improve commit log.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
We currently attempt a shallow clone, as tentative to save bandwidth and
download time.
However, now that we keep the git tree as a cache, it may happen that we
need to checkout an earlier commit, and that would not be present with a
shallow clone.
Furthermore, the shallow fetch is already really broken, and just
happens to work by chance. Consider the following actions, which are
basically what happens today:
mkdir git
git init git
cd git
git remote add origin https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git
git fetch origin --depth 1 v4.17-rc1
if ! git fetch origin v4.17-rc1:v4.17-rc1 ; then
echo "warning"
fi
git checkout v4.17-rc1
The checkout succeeds just because of the git-fetch in the if-condition,
which is initially there to fetch the special refs from github PRs, or
gerrit reviews. That fails, but we just print a warning. If we were to
ever remove support for special refs, then the checkout would fail.
The whole purpose of the git cache is to actually save bandwidth and
download time, but in the long run. For one-offs, people would
preferably use a wget download (e.g. with the github macro) instead of
a git clone.
We switch to always doing a full clone. It is more correct, and pays off
in the long run...
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
When a git tree has had sub-dir <-> sub-module conversions, or has had
submodules added or removed over the course of time, checking out a
changeset across those conversions/additions/removals may leave
untracked files, or may fail because of a conflict of type.
So, before we checkout the new changeset, we forcibly remove the
submodules. The new set of submodules, if any, will be restored later.
Ideally, we would use a native git command: git submodule deinit --all.
However, that was only introduced in git 1.8.3 which, while not being
recent by modern standards, is still too old for some enterprise-grade
distributions (RHEL6 only has git-1.7.1).
So, instead, we just use git submodule foreach, to rm -rf the submodules
directory.
Again, we would ideally use 'cd $toplevel && rm -rf $path', but
$toplevel was only introduced in git 1.7.2. $path has always been there.
So, instead, we just cd back one level, and remove the basename of the
directory.
Eventually, we need to get rid of now-empty and untracked directories,
that were parents of a removed submodule. For example. ./foo/bar/ was a
submodule, so ./foo/bar/ was removed, which left ./foo/ around.
Yet again, recent-ish git versions would have removed it during the
forced checkout, but old-ish versions (e.g. 1.7.1) do not remove it with
the forced checkout.
Instead we rely on the already used forced-forced clean of directories,
untracked, and ignored content, to really get rid of extra stuff we are
not interested in.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Reviewed-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Force the checkout to ignore and throw away any local changes. This
allows recovering from a previous partial checkout (e.g. killed by
the user, or by a CI job...)
git checkout -f has been supported since the inception of git, so we
can use it without any second thought.
Also do a forced-forced clean, to really get rid of all untracked stuff.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Reviewed-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
In some cases, the repository may be in a state we can't automatically
recover from, especially since we must still support oldish git versions
that do not provide the necessary commands or options thereof.
As a last-ditch recovery, delete the repository and recreate the cache
from scratch.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Check that the given cset is indeed something we can checkout. If not,
then exit early.
This will be useful when a later commit will trap any failing git
command to try to recover the repository by doing a clone from scratch:
when the cset is not a commit, it does not mean the repository is broken
or what, and re-cloning from scratch would not help, so no need to trash
a good cache.
Reported-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Reviewed-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
That way, we can pushd earlier, which will help with last-ditch recovery
in a followup commit.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Reviewed-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
We really want the user not to use our git cache manually, or their
changes (committed or not) may eventually get lost.
So, add a warning file, not unlike the one we put in the target/
directory, to warn the user not to use the git tree.
Ideally, we would have carried this file in support/misc/, but the git
backend does not have access to it: the working directory is somewhere
unknown, and TOPDIR is not exported in the environment.
So, we have to carry it in-line in the backend instead.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Reviewed-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
When the run-time tests to build rust and rust-bin packages are run via Docker,
the $USER environment variable is not set, which makes cargo fail when
initializing the test project.
So add it to make cargo happy.
Signed-off-by: Eric Le Bihan <eric.le.bihan.dev@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This script causes a large number of flake8 warnings, is rarely used
(but even never used), and is going to be replaced at some point by
the improved pkg-stats that will give details about the upstream
version available for all packages, not just X.org packages.
Therefore, let's drop the xorg-release script in order to silence all
those flake8 warnings:
support/scripts/xorg-release:36:1: E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
support/scripts/xorg-release:58:27: E201 whitespace after '{'
support/scripts/xorg-release:58:44: E203 whitespace before ':'
support/scripts/xorg-release:58:54: E202 whitespace before '}'
support/scripts/xorg-release:63:1: E305 expected 2 blank lines after class or function definition, found 1
support/scripts/xorg-release:64:15: E261 at least two spaces before inline comment
support/scripts/xorg-release:67:32: E261 at least two spaces before inline comment
support/scripts/xorg-release:86:1: E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
support/scripts/xorg-release:95:1: E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
support/scripts/xorg-release:107:1: E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
support/scripts/xorg-release:115:20: W601 .has_key() is deprecated, use 'in'
support/scripts/xorg-release:123:34: E201 whitespace after '{'
support/scripts/xorg-release:124:46: E203 whitespace before ':'
support/scripts/xorg-release:124:50: E202 whitespace before '}'
support/scripts/xorg-release:127:1: E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
support/scripts/xorg-release:141:15: W601 .has_key() is deprecated, use 'in'
support/scripts/xorg-release:146:21: W601 .has_key() is deprecated, use 'in'
support/scripts/xorg-release:176:1: E305 expected 2 blank lines after class or function definition, found 1
support/scripts/xorg-release:180:1: W391 blank line at end of file
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Acked-by: Bernd Kuhls <bernd.kuhls@t-online.de>
Tested-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
The version of the ARM Trusted Firmware from Marvell was a Git branch,
not a Git commit, leading to unreproducible results. So let's use a
Git commit instead, which is the latest available from the branch that
was previously used.
More specifically, this branch has recently seen a fix that is needed
for ATF to build properly with recent gcc versions:
c96ec59f8b
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This test case currently fails to build with:
./build/juno/release/bl1/context_mgmt.o: In function `cm_prepare_el3_exit':
context_mgmt.c:(.text.cm_prepare_el3_exit+0x54): undefined reference to `cm_set_next_context'
context_mgmt.c:(.text.cm_prepare_el3_exit+0x54): relocation truncated to fit: R_AARCH64_JUMP26 against undefined symbol `cm_set_next_context'
This issue has been fixed upstream in commit
10c252c14b7f446c0b49ef1aafbd5d37804577dd, available since v1.3. So
while we bump, let's bump to the latest version of ATF, v1.5.
Fixes:
https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/64360659
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Since commit 5563a1c6a4
("support/check-uniq-files: support weird locales and filenames"), the
'csv' Python module is no longer used by the check-uniq-files.
Due to this, flake8 complains with:
support/scripts/check-uniq-files:4:1: F401 'csv' imported but unused
Fix this by dropping the useless csv import.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This commit updates all the pre-built Buildroot toolchains, which have
all been rebuilt with Buildroot as of commit 046c5e2. The initial
motivation for this update is that an upcoming bump of procps-ng uses
fopencookie(), which has only been introduced in musl 1.1.19, which
itself started being used in Buildroot after the 2018.02 release.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Older versions of tar (e.g. 1.27.1) incorrectly interpret the escaping
of the regexp separator, and generate broken tarballs.
For example, given the following transform expression:
--transform="s/^\.\//squashfs-e38956b92f738518c29734399629e7cdb33072d3\//"
the resulting paths in the generated tarball would be:
squashfs-e38956b92f738518c29734399629e7cdb33072d3\/
i.e. a directory which last character is indeed a '\'.
We fix that by using a separator which is very unlikely to occur in a
filename.
Fixes:
http://autobuild.buildroot.org/results/742/7427f34e5c9f6d043b0fe6ad2c66cc0f31d2b24f/
and probably a slew of others as well...
Take this opportunity to fix indentation on the following line
(leading spaces, not TABs).
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Check:
- the daemon is started;
- a message is collected;
- the daemon does not issue a warning message on startup.
When the .conf file version does not match the package version a warning
message shows up on serial on every boot. This message is generated by
syslog-ng before it is running, so it is not logged to
/var/log/messages. So in order to test the message is generated, restart
the server. It makes the message appears on /var/log/messages (since the
server is already running) where its existence can be easily tested
using grep.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@datacom.ind.br>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
The different versions of git will behave in different ways when
fetching remote references, as summarised by the table below:
| ancient git | new git
--------------------------------------------------------------------
git fetch | fetch all refs but tags | fetches all refs but tags
git fetch -t | fetches only tags | fetch all refs and tags
(git-fetch may still fetch tags, but only if reachable from a branch)
So, to cover all the bases, we do a simple fetch, to be sure we have
branches, followed by the existing fetch -t, to get extra tags.
Fixes:
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/0a2/0a238a7f55ea56c33b639ad03ed5796143426889/build-end.log
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 Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
There are cases where a repository might be broken, e.g. when a previous
operation was killed or otherwise failed unexpectedly.
We fix that by always initialising the repository, as suggested by
Ricardo. git-init is safe on an otherwise-healthy repository:
Running git init in an existing repository is safe. It will not
overwrite things that are already there. [...]
Using git-init will just ensure that we have the strictly required files
to form a sane tree. Any blob that is still missing would get fetched
later on.
Reported-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
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: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Acked-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
git always look directories up until it finds a repository. In case
the git cache is broken, it may no longer be identified as a repository,
and git will look higher in the directories until it finds one.
In the default conditions, this would be Buildroot's own git tree
(because DL_DIR is a subdir of Buildroot), but in some situations may
very well be any repository the user has Buildroot in, like a
br2-external tree...
So, we force git to use our git cache and never look elsewhere, as
Suggested by Ricardo.
Use GIT_DIR, as it has been there for ages now, while --git-dir was
only introduced later (even if most distros ship an later version),
as suggested by Arnout.
Also fix the one call to git that was not using the wrapper.
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: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Acked-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
In preparation for the removal of the Blackfin architecture, drop the
autobuilder toolchain configuration that was testing Blackfin.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
${raw_name} is never defined in dl-wrapper, and therefore the value
passed to the -N option is always empty. This causes a problem for the
'cvs' backend, which uses the value of this option as the CVS module
to be downloaded.
If the name of the CVS module is omitted, all the CVS modules from
that CVS repository are downloaded, which creates a tarball with a lot
more contents, and the actual useful contents in a sub-directory,
obviously breaking patches that should be applied, and the entire
build process that follows.
Fixes:
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/fcee0e3d7eeeb373313b1794092c729b1b052348/
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.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@bootlin.com>
When calling the backend-specific helper scripts, the remaining
options are in ${@}. However, in order to let the helper script know
that those remaining options should not be parsed, but instead passed
as-is to the download tool, they must be separated from the main
options by "--".
Without this, packages that use <pkg>_DL_OPTS, such as the
amd-catalyst package, cannot download their tarball anymore.
Fixes:
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/de818f6e4c8e63d5e8a49c445d10c34eccc40410/
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.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@bootlin.com>
The /lib/firmware directory contains random firmware for various
devices. It happens that some of them might be or appear to be ELF
files, but they shouldn't be checked by fix-rpath. For example, one of
the Qualcomm VPU firmware file appears to be an ELF file, but patchelf
isn't happy about it:
$ ./output/host/bin/patchelf --print-rpath output/target/lib/firmware/qcom/venus-4.2/venus.b00
patchelf: patchelf.cc:387: void ElfFile<Elf_Ehdr, Elf_Phdr, Elf_Shdr, Elf_Addr, Elf_Off, Elf_Dyn, Elf_Sym>::parse() [with Elf_Ehdr = Elf32_Ehdr; Elf_Phdr = Elf32_Phdr; Elf_Shdr = Elf32_Shdr; Elf_Addr = unsigned int; Elf_Off = unsigned int; Elf_Dyn = Elf32_Dyn; Elf_Sym = Elf32_Sym]: Assertion `shstrtabIndex < shdrs.size()' failed.
Aborted (core dumped)
Even though patchelf definitely shouldn't crash, it anyway doesn't
make sense to check ELF files in /lib/firmware, so let's exclude this
directory from our check.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Acked-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
In case the git backend gets killed right in-between it finished
initialising the repository, but before it could add the remote,
we'd end up with a repository without the 'origin' remote, so we
would not be able to change its URL.
Another case that may happen (like in the build failure, below),
is that the repository was initialised with a previous version
of Buildroot, before the commit e17719264b (download/git: don't
require too-recent git) was applied, and that trepository was
still lying around...
Fixes:
http://autobuild.buildroot.org/results/25a/25aae054634368fadb265b97ebe4dda809deff6f/
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
git has supported -C only since 1.8.5, and some distros have not yet
caught up after more than 4 years...
Fall back to entering the directory.
Fixes:
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/35f9f7a4adc6c2cad741079e4afdf1408c94703b
Reported-by: André Hentschel <nerv@dawncrow.de>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: André Hentschel <nerv@dawncrow.de>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
When a package contains a relative symlink which first component is '..'
(thus pointing one directory higher), for example package 'meh' contains
this symlink:
foo/bar -> ../buz
then it would be stored as 'meh-version./buz' because of the
transform-name pattern replacement.
Fix it to only match the leading './'.
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: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Since c8ef0c03b0 (download: put most of the infra in dl-wrapper), the
backend for local files is now named after the scheme, which is 'file'
for a local file.
>From the same commit on, the directory part and the basename are now
passed separately, to let the backend reconstruct the full path when it
needs to do so, which is the case for the 'file' backend too.
Finaly, ff559846fd (support/download: Add support to pass options
directly to downloaders) introduced a nasty error, as it made use of
"${@}" when calling its internal function. Revert that mess now...
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Commit "6d938bcb52 download: git: introduce cache feature" introduced a
typo that makes the tarball to contain files without the package
basename:
$ tar -tvf good-a238b1dfcd825d47d834af3c5223417c8411d90d.tar.gz
-rw-r--r-- 0/0 8 2017-10-14 02:10 ./file
Historically, all tarballs are generated with the basename:
$ tar -tvf good-a238b1dfcd825d47d834af3c5223417c8411d90d.tar.gz
-rw-r--r-- 0/0 8 2017-10-14 02:10 good-a238b1dfcd825d47d834af3c5223417c8411d90d/file
The hashes in the tree were calculated with the basename.
In the most common scenario, after the download ends the tarball is
generated, the hash mismatches and the download mechanism falls back to
use the tarball from http://sources.buildroot.net .
The problem can be reproduced by forcing the download of any git package
PKG that has a hash file to check against:
$ make defconfig
$ ./utils/config --set-str BR2_BACKUP_SITE ""
$ BR2_DL_DIR=$(mktemp -d) make PKG-dirclean PKG-source
Fix the typo so the basename is really added to the files, that was
clearly the intention of the code.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
This commit adds a new column in the HTML output containing the
current version of a package in Buildroot. As such, it isn't terribly
useful, but combined with the latest upstream version added in a
follow-up commit, it will become very useful.
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 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>
When the BR2_DL_DIR is a mountpoint (presumably shared between various
machine, or mounted from the local host when running in a VM), it is
possible that it does not support hardlinks (e.g. samba, or the VMWare
VMFS, etc...).
If the hardlink fails, fallback to copying the file. As a last resort,
if that also fails, eventually fallback to doing the download.
Note: this means that the dl-wrapper is no longer atomic-safe: the code
suffers of a TOCTTOU condition: the file may be created in-between the
check and the moment we try to ln/cp it. Fortunately, the dl-wrapper is
now run under an flock, so we're still safe. If we eventually go for a
more fine-grained implementation, we'll have to be careful then.
Reported-by: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Now we keep the git clone that we download and generates our tarball
from there.
The main goal here is that if you change the version of a package (say
Linux), instead of cloning all over again, you will simply 'git fetch'
from the repo the missing objects, then generates the tarball again.
This should speed the 'source' part of the build significantly.
The drawback is that the DL_DIR will grow much larger; but time is more
important than disk space nowadays.
Signed-off-by: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
For existing setups, the global donload directory may have a lot of the
required archives, so look into there before attempting a download.
We simply hard-link them if found there and not in the new per-package
loaction. Then we resume the existing procedure (which means the new
hardlink will get removed if it happened to not match the hash).
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
The infrastructure needs to give the 'dl_dir' to the dl-wrapper which in its
turn needs to give it to the helper. It will only be used by the 'git'
helper as of now.
Signed-off-by: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Fixes:
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/b18/b187e64a61918f17f69588e2355a03286bc5808e
tar 1.27 subtly changed the tar format when a GNU long link entry is added
(which is done for path elements > 100 characters). The code used to set
the permission mode of the link entry to 0:
header = start_private_header ("././@LongLink", size, time (NULL));
FILL (header->header.mtime, '0');
FILL (header->header.mode, '0');
FILL (header->header.uid, '0');
FILL (header->header.gid, '0');
FILL (header->header.devmajor, 0);
FILL (header->header.devminor, 0);
This got dropped in 1.27 by commit df7b55a8f6354e3 (Fix some problems with
negative and out-of-range integers), so the settings from
start_private_header() are used directly - Which are:
TIME_TO_CHARS (t < 0 ? 0 : min (t, MAX_OCTAL_VAL (header->header.mtime)),
header->header.mtime);
MODE_TO_CHARS (S_IFREG|S_IRUSR|S_IWUSR|S_IRGRP|S_IROTH, header->header.mode);
UID_TO_CHARS (0, header->header.uid);
GID_TO_CHARS (0, header->header.gid);
The end result is that tar >= 1.27 sets mode to 644.
The consequence of this is that we create different tar files when long path
names are encountered (which often happens when a package downloads a
specific sha1 from a git repo) depending on the host tar version used,
causing hash mismatches.
As a workaround, bump our minimum tar version to 1.27. It would be nicer to
only do this if we have packages from bzr/git/hg enabled, but that is an
exercise for later.
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Acked-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
The goal here is to simplify the infrastructure by putting most of the
code in the dl-wrapper as it is easier to implement and to read.
Most of the functions were common already, this patch finalizes it by
making the pkg-download.mk pass all the parameters needed to the
dl-wrapper which in turn will pass everything to every backend.
The backend will then cherry-pick what it needs from these arguments
and act accordingly.
It eases the transition to the addition of a sub directory per package
in the DL_DIR, and later on, a git cache.
[Peter: drop ';' in BR_NO_CHECK_HASH_FOR in DOWNLOAD macro and swap cd/rm
-rf as mentioned by Yann, fix typos]
Signed-off-by: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net>
Reviewed-by: Luca Ceresoli <luca@lucaceresoli.net>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Currently all download helpers accepts the local output file, the remote
locations, the changesets and so on... as positional arguments.
This was well and nice when that's was all we needed.
But then we added an option to quiesce their verbosity, and that was
shoehorned with a trivial getopts, still keeping all the existing
positional arguments as... positional arguments.
Adding yet more options while keeping positional arguments will not be
very easy, even if we do not envision any new option in the foreseeable
future (but 640K ought to be enough for everyone, remember? ;-) ).
Change all helpers to accept a set of generic options (-q for quiet and
-o for the output file) as well as helper-specific options (like -r for
the repository, -c for a changeset...).
Maxime:
Changed -R to -r for recurse (only for the git backend)
Changed -r to -u for URI (for all backend)
Change -R to -c for cset (for CVS and SVN backend)
Add the export of the BR_BACKEND_DL_GETOPTS so all the backend wrapper
can use the same option easily
Now all the backends use the same common options.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Reviewed-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.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>
Some test cases don't use a full build as setup, so split the build()
method into configure() and build().
It allows a test case to perform configuration at the setup stage and
the build inside the test itself.
Call this new method just before build in the BRTest base class, to keep
the current behavior for existing test cases.
This change will be needed when adding a common class to test the git
download infra.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@datacom.ind.br>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Use an empty environment when calling make, but import PATH so the
buildroot tree under test can find binaries from the host machine.
Since environment variables are now ignored, move the handling of
BR2_DL_DIR to the defconfig to keep the current precedence of -d:
BR2_DL_DIR | -d DIR | test downloads | BR downloads
------------+----------+------------------+--------------
unset | unset | [error] | [error]
unset | set | in $(DIR) | in $(DIR)
set | unset | in $(BR2_DL_DIR) | in $(BR2_DL_DIR)
set | set | in $(DIR) | in $(DIR)
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This commit reorganizes the toolchain-configs.csv so that the first
toolchains are a subset of "useful" toolchains to be tested by
contributors to validate a package. This subset is the one that will
be used by default by test-pkg.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
In the situation where the hash is missing from the hash file, the
dl-wrapper downloads the file again and again until the developer
specifies the hash to complete the download step.
To avoid this situation, the freshly-downloaded file is not removed
anymore after a successful download.
After this change, the behaviour is as follows:
- Hash file doesn't exist, or file is in BR_NO_CHECK_HASH_FOR
=> always succeeds.
- Hash file exists, but file is not present
=> file is NOT removed, build is terminated immediately (i.e.
secondary site is not tried).
- Hash file exists, file is present, but hash mismatch
=> file is removed, secondary site is tried.
=> If all primary/secondary site downloads or hash checks fail, the
build is terminated.
Signed-off-by: Gaël PORTAY <gael.portay@savoirfairelinux.com>
[Arnout: extend commit log]
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Currently, some packages may register hooks to be run just before and
just after the generic tarball image is generated, because they need to
prepare the filesystem for read-only or read-write operation.
However, this means that, if any of the hooks or the image generation
fails, the target directory is left in a dangling, inconsistent state.
We fix that by doing a copy of target/, run the hooks on that copy,
generate the generic tarball image out of that, and get rid of the copy.
This way, we can guarantee consistency of the target directory, and we
can even ditch support for post-fs hooks (those that restore target/).
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: 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>
Commit c868095681 ("toolchain: fix
detection of SSP support") fixed the SSP check so that it does the
correct thing for nios2 toolchains. While this commit fixed the
description of the Sourcery NIOSII toolchain, it didn't fix the
description for the autobuilders of the br-nios2-glibc toolchain,
causing some build failures. This commit adjusts br-nios2-glibc.config
to indicate that the toolchain doesn't have SSP support.
Fixes:
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/6c44e328b7bffd8474d29d5bdf1ea109ec15f4ad/
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Now that DEPENDENCIES_HOST_PREREQ is no longer used anywhere, we can
kill it.
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>
This moves the host-ccache dependency handling from
DEPENDENCIES_HOST_PREREQ to a proper package dependency. When
BR2_CCACHE=y, we add host-ccache as a regular dependency of all
packages except:
- The extractor packages host-tar, host-xz and host-lzip
- host-ccache itself
- host-skeleton, because all packages depend on it
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Tested-by: Matt Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
This moves the host-lzip dependency handling from
DEPENDENCY_HOST_PREREQ to an extract dependency.
To achieve that, check-host-lzip.mk fills in the
BR2_LZIP_HOST_DEPENDENCY with host-lzip if building a host-lzip is
needed. The name BR2_LZIP_HOST_DEPENDENCY has been chosen because it
matches the name BR2_CMAKE_HOST_DEPENDENCY already used in
check-host-cmake.mk.
The BR2_LZIP_HOST_DEPENDENCY is added to all packages, except:
- host-lzip, because we would otherwise depend on ourself.
- host-tar, because lzip itself is delivered as a tarball, so we need
to have host-lzip depend on host-tar, and not host-tar depend on
host-lzip
- host-skeleton, because we need to have host-lzip depend on
host-skeleton, and not the opposite.
We also mutually exclude host-lzip and host-xz from dependending on
each other, to avoid a circular dependency.
In addition, we modify lzip.mk to explicitly build host-lzip without
ccache. We generally took the approach of building host-ccache *after*
all the extractors have been built.
[Peter: fix s/host-tar/host-lzip/ typo, fix s/xz/lzip/ typo]
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>
This moves the host-xz dependency handling from
DEPENDENCY_HOST_PREREQ to an extract dependency.
To achieve that, check-host-xz.mk fills in the
BR2_XZ_HOST_DEPENDENCY with host-xz if building a host-xz is
needed. The name BR2_XZ_HOST_DEPENDENCY has been chosen because it
matches the name BR2_CMAKE_HOST_DEPENDENCY already used in
check-host-cmake.mk.
The BR2_XZ_HOST_DEPENDENCY is added to all packages, except:
- host-xz, because we would otherwise depend on ourself.
- host-tar, because xz itself is delivered as a tarball, so we need
to have host-xz depend on host-tar, and not host-tar depend on
host-xz
- host-skeleton, because we need to have host-xz depend on
host-skeleton, and not the opposite.
In addition, we modify xz.mk to explicitly build host-xz without
ccache. We generally took the approach of building host-ccache *after*
all the extractors have been built.
[Peter: fix s/host-tar/host-xz/ typo]
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>
This moves the host-tar dependency handling from
DEPENDENCY_HOST_PREREQ to an extract dependency.
To achieve that, check-host-tar.mk fills in the
BR2_TAR_HOST_DEPENDENCY variable with host-tar if building a host-tar
is needed. The name BR2_TAR_HOST_DEPENDENCY has been chosen because it
matches the name BR2_CMAKE_HOST_DEPENDENCY already used in
check-host-cmake.mk.
The BR2_TAR_HOST_DEPENDENCY is added to all packages, except host-tar
itself (obviously) and host-skeleton, because we depend on
host-skeleton to install host-tar properly in HOST_DIR.
In addition, we modify tar.mk to explicitly build host-tar without
ccache: since ccache source code is available as a tarball, ccache
will obviously depend on host-tar if the system tar is insufficient.
Finally, to make things really clean, we also add
$(BR2_TAR_HOST_DEPENDENCY) to the dependencies of the tar filesystem
format, since it requires tar, so we'd better make sure we have a
suitable tar.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Tested-by: Matt Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Use the latest version of the tool because it is actively maintained.
But use a fixed version of the tool and its dependencies to get stable
results. It can be manually bumped from time to time.
Before installing any Python packages, ensure pip, setuptools, and wheel
are up to date as recommended in the docs [1].
[1] https://packaging.python.org/tutorials/installing-packages/
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Acked-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
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>
Recent systemd bump has broken DBus dameon and DBus applications can no
longer find the daemon. So we want to catch those kind of failures
early.
We also want to check that the system as a whole is stable: no unit
should be failed.
Finally, ensure that we can read the jounrnal, even when we are doing our
tricks on read-only systems.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Its use has been globbed into the more generic
BR2_NEEDS_HOST_UTF8_LOCALE option now.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Cc: Julius Kriukas <julius@kriukas.lt>
Cc: Christian Stewart <kidovate@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Although the UTF-8 locales in mainstream distributions all are suffixed
with just 'utf8', the nomenclature is a bit ambiguous with the way they
are to be specified with the various LC_* variables, suffixed there with
'UTF-8'.
Also, POSIX, ISO, and IEC do not enforce any specific suffix in LC_*
variables:
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap08.html#tag_08_02
"""
If the locale value has the form:
language[_territory][.codeset]
it refers to an implementation-provided locale, where settings of
language, territory, and codeset are implementation-defined.
"""
To avoid any confusion, use a regexp that is a bit more lax when
matching locales.
Also, quote the regexp, so that the '?' and '$' are not interpreted by
the shell.
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>
The script support/scripts/check-uniq-files uses the argparse Python
module. In most recent Python versions (starting with 2.7), the
argparse module is part of the standard library, and we already check
for the availability of Python in
support/dependencies/dependencies.sh.
However, when running on an ancient distribution with Python 2.6, the
argparse module is not part of the Python standard library, but
available as an external module. Without this module, the build fails,
because check-uniq-files, which is used in target-finalize, fails to
run.
To avoid this failure, this commit adds a check in
support/dependencies/dependencies.sh to verify that the argparse
module is available.
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>
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>
When BR2_REPRODUCIBLE is enabled or host uses non UTF-8 capable locale
building systemd fails with an error:
[1/1080] Generating systemd.bg.catalog with a meson_exe.py custom command.
FAILED: catalog/systemd.bg.catalog
/buildroot/output/host/bin/python3 /buildroot/output/host/bin/meson --internal exe /buildroot/output/build/systemd-236/build/meson-private/meson_exe_sed_232a0623cc7ce2cd67ec72ed784b76307102ed76.dat
Warning: You are using 'ANSI_X3.4-1968' which is not a Unicode-compatible locale.
You might see errors if you use UTF-8 strings as filenames, as strings, or as file contents.
Please switch to a UTF-8 locale for your platform.
...
UnicodeDecodeError: 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0xd0 in position 1079: ordinal not in range(128)
package/pkg-generic.mk:247: recipe for target '/buildroot/output/build/systemd-236/.stamp_built' failed
make: *** [/buildroot/output/build/systemd-236/.stamp_built] Error 1
This patch changes default host system locale from C to C.UTF-8 when
building systemd package to fix this issue. It also introduces
BR2_NEEDS_HOST_C_UTF8_LOCALE flag that checks if this locale is available on
the host system. If locale is not available error message is show and build
process is stopped.
Signed-off-by: Julius Kriukas <julius@kriukas.lt>
[Thomas: use C.UTF-8 instead of en_US.UTF-8.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Tar 1.30 changed the --numeric-owner output for filenames > 100 characters,
leading to hash mismatches for the tar archives we create ourselves from
git. This is really a fix for a bug in earlier tar versions regarding
deterministic output, so it is unlikely to be reverted in later versions.
For more details, see:
http://lists.busybox.net/pipermail/buildroot/2018-January/211222.html
To work around this issue, blacklist tar 1.30+ similar to how we do it for
pre-1.17 versions so Buildroot falls back to building host-tar.
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
host-{cmake,lzip,xz} needs host-tar to extract their source code tarball, so
we need to ensure that host-tar gets added to DEPENDENCIES_HOST_PREREQ
before these in case they are both needed, otherwise the tools will fail to
extract.
With the upcoming change to blacklist modern tar versions this situation is
likely to trigger more often.
The real solution to this issue is the <foo>_EXTRACT_DEPENDENCIES rework,
but that series is a bit too intrusive to add this close to 2018.02, so
therefore this hack.
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Weber <matthew.weber@rockwellcollins.com>
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>
Currently 'run-tests -l' is broken. It breaks 'make .gitlab-ci.yml' that
in turn breaks the job in GitLab.
TestRustBase is not a test case by itself, so it can't have a method
with the name starting with "test_" otherwise nose2 assumes it is a test
case.
Move the test_run method from the base class to the derived classes.
While at it, update .gitlab-ci.yml with the new test cases.
Fixes:
https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/52000035
Reported-by: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Eric Le Bihan <eric.le.bihan.dev@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Reviewed-by: Yegor Yefremov <yegorslists@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Some packages build C++ 32bits host-tools and need the g++-multilib to
be installed on the build machine. As example, qt5webengine builds a C++
host-tool when target is 32bits.
Add the check for g++-multilib to the dependencies script; and update
the Dockerfile to install g++-multilib package.
Signed-off-by: Gaël PORTAY <gael.portay@savoirfairelinux.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
While we have several defconfigs building internal toolchains with
uClibc, we don't have any building internal toolchain with glibc and
musl. However, having such defconfigs is nice when we bump the C
library version, in order to immediately get feedback on build
failures.
Note that while the ARC internal defconfig uses glibc, it uses the
special ARC glibc version, so it doesn't test version bumps of the
upstream glibc C library.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
To test the support for the Rust language, the following tests are added:
- building Rust compiler and Cargo from source.
- installing a pre-built Rust compiler and building Cargo from source.
For each test, a Rust test program is built and installed in the root file
system of a ARM vexpress QEMU system. The test is declared OK if the program can
be run properly from the test system.
Signed-off-by: Eric Le Bihan <eric.le.bihan.dev@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Currently, we refer to the latest version of the image, which means we
can't guarantee any reproducibility. Also, it measn we can't have a
separate images for the maintenance branches (especially the LTS) and
master.
Update the comment in the Dockerfile to create and push tagged images.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Since we're now using a specific base image tag, we need to also use a
specific, stable repository to get additional packages from for this
image.
As such, use the Debian snapshot that matches the base image.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Currently, we are using debian:stable, which is subject to change with
time, as new stable versions of Debian are released/updated.
Use the latest tagged stable release, stretch-20171210 as of today, as
the base distribution to use.
This will ease reproducible builds in the future.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
This image is not built very often, and when it is, it is important to
see what's going on, so don't be silent when installing packages from
the distro, and since that can take a bit of time it thus serves as
progress report...
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
The official documentation [0] suggests limiting the number of layers
generated from a dockerfile. A layer is created for each RUN (and COPY
and ADD) command. But we are only ever interested in the final image,
so the intermediate layers are useless to us.
Limit the number of RUN commands to limit the number of generated
layers.
[0] https://docs.docker.com/develop/develop-images/dockerfile_best-practices/#minimize-the-number-of-layers
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: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Fix these warnings:
E122 continuation line missing indentation or outdented
E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
F401 'os' imported but unused
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>
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>
Pass BR2_EXTERNAL value via -e option.
This will prevent merge_config.sh from silently eating any symbols defined in
external trees on a clean buildroot tree invocation.
Signed-off-by: Ilya Kuzmich <ilya.kuzmich@gmail.com>
Acked-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Currently, only post-build and post-image scripts were tested, each with
their own test-script.
The two test-scripts only differ in the name of the log file they
create, and it is based on the name of the script, so it is easy to
share the script.
This allows us to easily re-use it for testing post-fakeroot scripts.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Buildroot's "make nconfig" command stopped working a while ago on
Gentoo systems. Running the command would result in a crash.
The issue is caused by lxdialog's cflags which are also used to build
nconfig; It would detect *ncursesw* and turn on WIDECHAR support --
but the Makefile would still link to plain *ncurses* while building
nconfig (which was built without WIDECHAR support).
This would cause a crash after using *wattrset* on a WINDOW instance.
WIDECHAR *wattrset* would try to set the _color member in the WINDOW
struct which does not exist in the NON-WIDECHAR ncurses instance. It
would end up clobbering data outside the struct (usually _line entries).
An upstream patch fixes the issue, so we're applying it to Buildroot's
kconfig.
Signed-off-by: Guillermo A. Amaral <g@maral.me>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Currently, our jobs on the gitlab-ci infra are running as root, which is
problematic for two reasons:
- this is not the usual way Buildroot is built;
- it may miss issues where running as non-root is problematic.
So, complement our Dockerfile with directives to add a new user and run
everything as that user, as demonstrated by this build job:
https://gitlab.com/ymorin/buildroot-ci/-/jobs/46929562
Additional, enforce an UTF-8 locale while running.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
BR2_TOOLCHAIN_BUILDROOT_INET_IPV6 has been removed with the commit [1].
Since this option is still in br-powerpc-internal-full config-fragment,
the powerpc configuration is droped by autobuild-run script:
WARN: toolchain can't be used
Missing: BR2_TOOLCHAIN_BUILDROOT_INET_IPV6=y
[Sat, 06 Jan 2018 03:03:43] WARN: failed to generate configuration
[1] 4bcacfd2c0
Signed-off-by: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Commit 4932c8a7cc introduced the
core-dependencies target to make sure that the dependencies.sh script
runs before we attempt to compile any host tool, so that the absence of
a compiler is properly detected. However, this relied on the
left-to-right evaluation of dependencies. This will no longer be true
when we enable top-level parallel build.
Fix this by letting DEPENDENCIES_HOST_PREREQ depend on
core-dependencies.
Note that it is not possible to remove the
dependencies <- core-dependencies. Indeed, it is possible that
DEPENDENCIES_HOST_PREREQ is completely empty, and in that case we still
need to check core-dependencies.
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
dependencies.sh uses HOSTCC_NOCCACHE directly, and this variable is
exported from the top-level Makefile, so there is no need to pass
HOSTCC to it. HOSTCC is not used at all in dependencies.sh.
Thus, we also no longer need to apply the HOSTCC override for
core-dependencies. The core-depencies rule doesn't use HOSTCC or
HOSTCXX.
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
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>
It needs mkzftree from zisofs-tools, so we add a dependency to it, and
we call that one explicitly (to avoid using the one from the host in
PATH).
It also needs the the uncompressed kernel image, but because it is
already in target/ so it gets compressed by mkzftree. We have two
options:
- compress everything but the kernel image,
- compress everything, kernel included, and recopy it later.
We choose the latter, because it is the simplest solution. So, we always
define the kernel-copy hook, but only register it when needed.
Finally, it needs a kernel with support for transparent
(de)compression, so we update the existing test config.
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>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
[Thomas: really set the transparent compression option, take into
account the renaming of the option.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
The Marvell U-Boot needs DTC to build, so the test case fails to build
on systems where dtc isn't available. We add
BR2_TARGET_UBOOT_NEEDS_DTC=y to make sure that we build our own DTC.
Fixes:
https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/44126707
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
These new tests only do build tests, but allow to quickly verify that
the ATF/U-Boot combinations for vexpress, Allwinner and Marvell
platforms all continue to build properly.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.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>
Instead of overriding the _svn command and injecting --non-interactive,
change the default value of BR2_SVN to include this flag so the end user
can choose not to use the flag.
This change helps users behind corporate system rules which may not
allow them to locally cache credentials and require interactive mode.
Signed-off-by: Sam Voss <sam.voss@rockwellcollins.com>
[Originally implemented by]
CC: "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 is needed to get the autobuilders to use a toolchain that
includes the fix merged in 9d544feb8a
("fwup: fix for ARC toolchain").
In addition, this new toolchain version also fixes for real the RPATH
issue that should have been fixed by
f90f28a6df, but wasn't done properly.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
All Buildroot pre-built toolchains have been rebuilt with Buildroot
2017.11-rc1, so that they have the latest version of
glibc/musl/uClibc, and also the latest gcc/binutils updates.
Specifically, this will fix the build failures on Blackfin that were
due to the missing accept4() support:
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/8b5a72dd7cde685f6f68f46aeee8b1b60c96d559/
(openobex)
http://autobuild.buildroot.net/results/b19dd9ed29944d7f79c6f824669e3baaa0bb045a/
(libiio)
In terms of changes to the toolchains:
- AArch64 glibc toolchain changed to use 4.4 kernel headers instead
of 4.1, in order to increase the variety of kernel header versions
being tested.
- Most configurations now use 4.13 kernel headers instead of 4.12
(except the configurations that were explicitly using an older
kernel headers version)
- The mips64 n64 configuration is changed from using gcc 4.9 to gcc
5, since another ARM configuration already tests gcc 4.9.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Fixes:
http://autobuild.buildroot.org/results/2af/2af7412846c576089f8596857ab8c81ac31c1bed/
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: André Hentschel <nerv@dawncrow.de>
Reviewed-by: André Hentschel <nerv@dawncrow.de>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Currently, HOSTCC and HOSTCXX are set to their _NOCACHE variants in the
'dependencies' target. This is needed because at that time, ccache is
not built yet - host-ccache is one of the dependencies. However, because
this override is only specified for the 'dependencies' target (and
thereby gets inherited by its dependencies), the override is only
applied when the package is reached through the 'dependencies' target.
This is not the case when one of DEPENDENCIES_HOST_PREREQ is built
directly from the command line, e.g. when doing 'make host-ccache'. So
in that case, ccache will be built with ccache... which fails of
course.
To fix this, directly apply the override to the DEPENCIES_HOST_PREREQ
targets.
Note that this only fixes the issue for 'make host-ccache', NOT for
e.g. 'make host-ccache-configure'.
Signed-off-by: Alfredo Alvarez Fernandez <alfredo.alvarez_fernandez@nokia.com>
[Arnout: improve commit message]
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
glibc is now supported for ARC so let's kick-start autobuilders
with glibc toolchain for ARC HS.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Brodkin <abrodkin@synopsys.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>
The Linux 4.0 kernel doesn't build with gcc 6.x, which is used since
the toolchain update in commit
193dfffa83 ("support/testing: use more
recent toolchains"). So let's update to Linux 4.11 instead (like the
existing Qemu x86 defconfig does), and update the kernel configuration
file accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
With the hard disk crash of autobuild.b.o, we lost old toolchains, so
use the latest toolchains, which have been restored.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Currently, the download directory, when specified with the -d option, is
only used to store the files downloaded by the testing infra, not those
downloaded by Buildroot.
So, we end up with this situation:
BR2_DL_DIR | -d DIR | test downloads | BR downloads
------------+----------+------------------+--------------
unset | unset | [error] | [error]
unset | set | in $(DIR) | in $(TOP_DIR)/dl
set | unset | in $(BR2_DL_DIR) | in $(BR2_DL_DIR)
set | set | in $(DIR) | in $(BR2_DL_DIR)
This is not very consistent.
We change the behaviour so that the value of -d always takes precedence,
and is used by Buildroot as well, giving this new behaviour:
BR2_DL_DIR | -d DIR | test downloads | BR downloads
------------+----------+------------------+--------------
unset | unset | [error] | [error]
unset | set | in $(DIR) | in $(DIR)
set | unset | in $(BR2_DL_DIR) | in $(BR2_DL_DIR)
set | set | in $(DIR) | in $(DIR)
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>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Fix typo 'selectes' -> 'selects'.
Additionally, change 'will exclude' to 'excludes' to align with 'selects'.
Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Fix the remaining code style warnings from flake8:
- properly indent continuation lines;
- use proper code to test a parameter is not None.
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Fix the trivial warnings from flake8:
- remove modules imported but unused;
- use 2 lines before class or module level method;
- remove blank line at end of file.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Acked-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Change all defconfig fragments to take advantage of
"cf3cd4388a support/tests: allow properly indented config fragment".
Make each defconfig fragment:
- start after a backslash;
- be declared as a multi-line string literal;
- be indented one level more than the variable that contains it.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Acked-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
Move the strip out of leading spaces in defconfig fragments from the
BRTest class to the Builder class. It actually postpones the strip out,
consequentially allowing test cases to post-process the defconfig in
their own __init__ before calling the __init__ method from BRTest.
Moving this code to the Builder class also allows any new test class
that inherits from BRTest to reuse the same code even if the new class
overrides the setUp method.
At same time, prepend a newline to the jlevel handling otherwise it
would stop working for defconfig fragments that don't end in a newline.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
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>
grub is no longer maintained: it is stuck at version 0.97 with huge
patches that have no opportunity to be applied upstream, as upstream
has even renamed it grub-legacy.
Besides, it no longer builds correctly with recent binutils versions,
and even the huge patches we could grab from Debian do not help the
slightest.
Since upstream really considers it dead, and there are at least two
alternatives (grub2 and syslinux), just remove grub.
Add a legacy entry.
Remove the test cases as well.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
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>