569db40574
The structure of the buildroot manual is not always clear. There is a large number of chapters, and some chapters seem to overlap. The distinction between general usage and developer information is not always clear. This patch restructures the manual into four large parts: - getting started - user guide - developer guide - appendix Except for the names of these parts, the section names are not yet changed. Content-wise there are no changes yet either. This will be handled in subsequent patches. In order to achieve the introduction of a new level 'parts' above 'chapters', the section indicators (=, ==, ===, ...) of several sections have to be moved one level down. Additionally, the leveloffset indication to asciidoc has to be removed. Finally, to maintain more or less the same level of detail in the table of contents, the toc.section.depth attribute is reduced as well. Note that for some sections, less detail is visible now. Signed-off-by: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de.schampheleire@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
206 lines
9.3 KiB
Plaintext
206 lines
9.3 KiB
Plaintext
// -*- mode:doc; -*-
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// vim: set syntax=asciidoc:
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== Frequently Asked Questions & Troubleshooting
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[[faq-boot-hang-after-starting]]
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=== The boot hangs after 'Starting network...'
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If the boot process seems to hang after the following messages
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(messages not necessarily exactly similar, depending on the list of
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packages selected):
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------------------------
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Freeing init memory: 3972K
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Initializing random number generator... done.
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Starting network...
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Starting dropbear sshd: generating rsa key... generating dsa key... OK
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------------------------
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then it means that your system is running, but didn't start a shell on
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the serial console. In order to have the system start a shell on your
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serial console, you have to go into the Buildroot configuration, in
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+System configuration+, modify +Run a getty (login prompt) after boot+
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and set the appropriate port and baud rate in the +getty options+
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submenu. This will automatically tune the +/etc/inittab+ file of the
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generated system so that a shell starts on the correct serial port.
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[[faq-no-compiler-on-target]]
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=== Why is there no compiler on the target?
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It has been decided that support for the _native compiler on the
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target_ would be stopped from the Buildroot-2012.11 release because:
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* this feature was neither maintained nor tested, and often broken;
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* this feature was only available for Buildroot toolchains;
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* Buildroot mostly targets _small_ or _very small_ target hardware
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with limited resource onboard (CPU, ram, mass-storage), for which
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compiling does not make much sense.
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If you need a compiler on your target anyway, then Buildroot is not
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suitable for your purpose. In such case, you need a _real
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distribution_ and you should opt for something like:
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* http://www.openembedded.org[openembedded]
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* https://www.yoctoproject.org[yocto]
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* http://www.emdebian.org[emdebian]
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* https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Architectures[Fedora]
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* http://en.opensuse.org/Portal:ARM[openSUSE ARM]
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* http://archlinuxarm.org[Arch Linux ARM]
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* ...
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[[faq-no-dev-files-on-target]]
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=== Why are there no development files on the target?
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Since there is no compiler available on the target (see
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xref:faq-no-compiler-on-target[]), it does not make sense to waste
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space with headers or static libraries.
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Therefore, those files are always removed from the target since the
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Buildroot-2012.11 release.
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[[faq-no-doc-on-target]]
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=== Why is there no documentation on the target?
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Because Buildroot mostly targets _small_ or _very small_ target
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hardware with limited resource onboard (CPU, ram, mass-storage), it
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does not make sense to waste space with the documentation data.
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If you need documentation data on your target anyway, then Buildroot
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is not suitable for your purpose, and you should look for a _real
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distribution_ (see: xref:faq-no-compiler-on-target[]).
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[[faq-why-not-visible-package]]
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=== Why are some packages not visible in the Buildroot config menu?
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If a package exists in the Buildroot tree and does not appear in the
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config menu, this most likely means that some of the package's
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dependencies are not met.
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To know more about the dependencies of a package, search for the
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package symbol in the config menu (see xref:make-tips[]).
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Then, you may have to recursively enable several options (which
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correspond to the unmet dependencies) to finally be able to select
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the package.
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If the package is not visible due to some unmet toolchain options,
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then you should certainly run a full rebuild (see xref:make-tips[] for
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more explanations).
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[[faq-why-not-use-target-as-chroot]]
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=== Why not use the target directory as a chroot directory?
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There are plenty of reasons to *not* use the target directory a chroot
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one, among these:
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* file ownerships, modes and permissions are not correctly set in the
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target directory;
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* device nodes are not created in the target directory.
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For these reasons, commands run through chroot, using the target
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directory as the new root, will most likely fail.
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If you want to run the target filesystem inside a chroot, or as an NFS
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root, then use the tarball image generated in +images/+ and extract it
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as root.
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[[faq-no-binary-packages]]
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=== Why doesn't Buildroot generate binary packages (.deb, .ipkg...)?
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One feature that is often discussed on the Buildroot list is the
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general topic of "package management". To summarize, the idea
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would be to add some tracking of which Buildroot package installs
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what files, with the goals of:
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* being able to remove files installed by a package when this package
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gets unselected from the menuconfig;
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* being able to generate binary packages (ipk or other format) that
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can be installed on the target without re-generating a new root
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filesystem image.
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In general, most people think it is easy to do: just track which package
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installed what and remove it when the package is unselected. However, it
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is much more complicated than that:
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* It is not only about the +target/+ directory, but also the sysroot in
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+host/usr/<tuple>/sysroot+ and the +host/+ directory itself. All files
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installed in those directories by various packages must be tracked.
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* When a package is unselected from the configuration, it is not
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sufficient to remove just the files it installed. One must also
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remove all its reverse dependencies (i.e. packages relying on it)
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and rebuild all those packages. For example, package A depends
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optionally on the OpenSSL library. Both are selected, and Buildroot
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is built. Package A is built with crypto support using OpenSSL.
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Later on, OpenSSL gets unselected from the configuration, but
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package A remains (since OpenSSL is an optional dependency, this
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is possible.) If only OpenSSL files are removed, then the files
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installed by package A are broken: they use a library that is no
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longer present on the target. Although this is technically doable,
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it adds a lot of complexity to Buildroot, which goes against the
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simplicity we try to stick to.
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* In addition to the previous problem, there is the case where the
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optional dependency is not even known to Buildroot. For example,
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package A in version 1.0 never used OpenSSL, but in version 2.0 it
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automatically uses OpenSSL if available. If the Buildroot .mk file
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hasn't been updated to take this into account, then package A will
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not be part of the reverse dependencies of OpenSSL and will not be
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removed and rebuilt when OpenSSL is removed. For sure, the .mk file
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of package A should be fixed to mention this optional dependency,
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but in the mean time, you can have non-reproducible behaviors.
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* The request is to also allow changes in the menuconfig to be
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applied on the output directory without having to rebuild
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everything from scratch. However, this is very difficult to achieve
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in a reliable way: what happens when the suboptions of a package
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are changed (we would have to detect this, and rebuild the package
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from scratch and potentially all its reverse dependencies), what
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happens if toolchain options are changed, etc. At the moment, what
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Buildroot does is clear and simple so its behaviour is very
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reliable and it is easy to support users. If configuration changes
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done in menuconfig are applied after the next make, then it has to
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work correctly and properly in all situations, and not have some
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bizarre corner cases. The risk is to get bug reports like "I have
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enabled package A, B and C, then ran make, then disabled package
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C and enabled package D and ran make, then re-enabled package C
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and enabled package E and then there is a build failure". Or worse
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"I did some configuration, then built, then did some changes,
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built, some more changes, built, some more changes, built, and now
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it fails, but I don't remember all the changes I did and in which
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order". This will be impossible to support.
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For all these reasons, the conclusion is that adding tracking of
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installed files to remove them when the package is unselected, or to
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generate a repository of binary packages, is something that is very
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hard to achieve reliably and will add a lot of complexity.
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On this matter, the Buildroot developers make this position statement:
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* Buildroot strives to make it easy to generate a root filesystem (hence
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the name, by the way.) That is what we want to make Buildroot good at:
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building root filesystems.
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* Buildroot is not meant to be a distribution (or rather, a distribution
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generator.) It is the opinion of most Buildroot developers that this
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is not a goal we should pursue. We believe that there are other tools
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better suited to generate a distro than Buildroot is. For example,
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http://openembedded.org/[Open Embedded], or https://openwrt.org/[openWRT],
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are such tools.
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* We prefer to push Buildroot in a direction that makes it easy (or even
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easier) to generate complete root filesystems. This is what makes
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Buildroot stands out in the crowd (among other things, of course!)
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* We believe that for most embedded Linux systems, binary packages are
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not necessary, and potentially harmful. When binary packages are
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used, it means that the system can be partially upgraded, which
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creates an enormous number of possible combinations of package
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versions that should be tested before doing the upgrade on the
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embedded device. On the other hand, by doing complete system
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upgrades by upgrading the entire root filesystem image at once,
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the image deployed to the embedded system is guaranteed to really
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be the one that has been tested and validated.
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