02302d2153
This is basically the same change as in 0515fe4566
("Makefile: pass host PKG_CONFIG_PATH at "make menuconfig" time"). That
commit made sure to pass host PKG_CONFIG_PATH when invoking Buildroot's
own menuconfig program. This change ensures that the same is true for
third party menuconfig programs (i.e. Linux, uClibc and Busybox).
This unbreaks "make {linux,uclibc}-menuconfig" for host platforms which
rely on PKG_CONFIG_PATH to find .pc files (e.g. NixOS). (When Busybox
updates to a more recent Kconfig snapshot, one that uses pkg-config to
find ncurses, "make busybox-menuconfig" will also start working.)
Tested on Ubuntu and NixOS:
$ make qemu_arm_versatile_defconfig
$ make linux-menuconfig
$ make
Signed-off-by: Bjørn Forsman <bjorn.forsman@gmail.com>
Acked-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
237 lines
10 KiB
Makefile
237 lines
10 KiB
Makefile
################################################################################
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# Kconfig package infrastructure
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#
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# This file implements an infrastructure that eases development of
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# package .mk files for packages that use kconfig for configuration files.
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# It is based on the generic-package infrastructure, and inherits all of its
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# features.
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#
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# See the Buildroot documentation for details on the usage of this
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# infrastructure.
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#
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################################################################################
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################################################################################
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# inner-kconfig-package -- generates the make targets needed to support a
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# kconfig package
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#
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# argument 1 is the lowercase package name
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# argument 2 is the uppercase package name, including a HOST_ prefix
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# for host packages
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# argument 3 is the uppercase package name, without the HOST_ prefix
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# for host packages
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# argument 4 is the type (target or host)
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################################################################################
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define inner-kconfig-package
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# Call the generic package infrastructure to generate the necessary
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# make targets.
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# Note: this must be done _before_ attempting to use $$($(2)_DIR) in a
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# dependency expression
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$(call inner-generic-package,$(1),$(2),$(3),$(4))
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# Default values
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$(2)_KCONFIG_EDITORS ?= menuconfig
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$(2)_KCONFIG_OPTS ?=
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$(2)_KCONFIG_FIXUP_CMDS ?=
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$(2)_KCONFIG_FRAGMENT_FILES ?=
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# The config file as well as the fragments could be in-tree, so before
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# depending on them the package should be extracted (and patched) first.
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#
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# Since those files only have a order-only dependency, make would treat
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# any missing one as a "force" target:
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# https://www.gnu.org/software/make/manual/make.html#Force-Targets
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# and would forcibly any rule that depend on those files, causing a
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# rebuild of the kernel each time make is called.
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#
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# So, we provide a recipe that checks all of those files exist, to
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# overcome that standard make behaviour.
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#
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$$($(2)_KCONFIG_FILE) $$($(2)_KCONFIG_FRAGMENT_FILES): | $(1)-patch
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for f in $$($(2)_KCONFIG_FILE) $$($(2)_KCONFIG_FRAGMENT_FILES); do \
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if [ ! -f "$$$${f}" ]; then \
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printf "Kconfig fragment '%s' for '%s' does not exist\n" "$$$${f}" "$(1)"; \
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exit 1; \
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fi; \
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done
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$(2)_KCONFIG_MAKE = \
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$$($(2)_MAKE_ENV) $$(MAKE) -C $$($(2)_DIR) $$($(2)_KCONFIG_OPTS)
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# $(2)_KCONFIG_MAKE may already rely on shell expansion. As the $() syntax
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# of the shell conflicts with Make's own syntax, this means that backticks
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# are used with those shell constructs. Unfortunately, the backtick syntax
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# does not nest, and we need to use Make instead of the shell to handle
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# conditions.
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# A recursively expanded variable is necessary, to be sure that the shell
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# command is called when the rule is processed during the build and not
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# when the rule is created when parsing all packages.
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$(2)_KCONFIG_RULES = \
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$$(shell $$($(2)_KCONFIG_MAKE) -pn config 2>/dev/null | \
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sed 's/^\([_0-9a-zA-Z]*config\):.*/\1/ p; d')
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# The correct way to regenerate a .config file is to use 'make olddefconfig'.
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# For historical reasons, the target name is 'oldnoconfig' between Linux kernel
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# versions 2.6.36 and 3.6, and remains as an alias in later versions.
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# In older versions, and in some other projects that use kconfig, the target is
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# not supported at all, and we use 'yes "" | make oldconfig' as a fallback
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# only, as this can fail in complex cases.
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define $(2)_REGEN_DOT_CONFIG
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$$(if $$(filter olddefconfig,$$($(2)_KCONFIG_RULES)),
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$$(Q)$$($(2)_KCONFIG_MAKE) olddefconfig,
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$$(if $$(filter oldnoconfig,$$($(2)_KCONFIG_RULES)),
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$$(Q)$$($(2)_KCONFIG_MAKE) oldnoconfig,
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$$(Q)(yes "" | $$($(2)_KCONFIG_MAKE) oldconfig)))
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endef
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# The specified source configuration file and any additional configuration file
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# fragments are merged together to .config, after the package has been patched.
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# Since the file could be a defconfig file it needs to be expanded to a
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# full .config first.
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$$($(2)_DIR)/.config: $$($(2)_KCONFIG_FILE) $$($(2)_KCONFIG_FRAGMENT_FILES)
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$$(Q)$$(if $$($(2)_KCONFIG_DEFCONFIG), \
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$$($(2)_KCONFIG_MAKE) $$($(2)_KCONFIG_DEFCONFIG), \
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cp $$($(2)_KCONFIG_FILE) $$(@))
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$$(Q)support/kconfig/merge_config.sh -m -O $$(@D) \
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$$(@) $$($(2)_KCONFIG_FRAGMENT_FILES)
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$$($(2)_REGEN_DOT_CONFIG)
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# If _KCONFIG_FILE or _KCONFIG_FRAGMENT_FILES exists, this dependency is
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# already implied, but if we only have a _KCONFIG_DEFCONFIG we have to add
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# it explicitly. It doesn't hurt to always have it though.
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$$($(2)_DIR)/.config: | $(1)-patch
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# In order to get a usable, consistent configuration, some fixup may be needed.
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# The exact rules are specified by the package .mk file.
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define $(2)_FIXUP_DOT_CONFIG
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$$($(2)_KCONFIG_FIXUP_CMDS)
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$$($(2)_REGEN_DOT_CONFIG)
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$$(Q)touch $$($(2)_DIR)/.stamp_kconfig_fixup_done
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endef
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$$($(2)_DIR)/.stamp_kconfig_fixup_done: $$($(2)_DIR)/.config
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$$($(2)_FIXUP_DOT_CONFIG)
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# Before running configure, the configuration file should be present and fixed
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$$($(2)_TARGET_CONFIGURE): $$($(2)_DIR)/.stamp_kconfig_fixup_done
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# Only enable the foo-*config targets when the package is actually enabled.
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# Note: the variable $(2)_KCONFIG_VAR is not related to the kconfig
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# infrastructure, but defined by pkg-generic.mk. The generic infrastructure is
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# already called above, so we can effectively use this variable.
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ifeq ($$($$($(2)_KCONFIG_VAR)),y)
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ifeq ($$(BR_BUILDING),y)
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# Either FOO_KCONFIG_FILE or FOO_KCONFIG_DEFCONFIG is required...
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ifeq ($$(or $$($(2)_KCONFIG_FILE),$$($(2)_KCONFIG_DEFCONFIG)),)
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$$(error Internal error: no value specified for $(2)_KCONFIG_FILE or $(2)_KCONFIG_DEFCONFIG)
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endif
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# ... but not both:
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ifneq ($$(and $$($(2)_KCONFIG_FILE),$$($(2)_KCONFIG_DEFCONFIG)),)
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$$(error Internal error: $(2)_KCONFIG_FILE and $(2)_KCONFIG_DEFCONFIG are mutually exclusive but both are defined)
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endif
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endif
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# For the configurators, we do want to use the system-provided host
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# tools, not the ones we build. This is particularly true for
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# pkg-config; if we use our pkg-config (from host-pkgconf), then it
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# would not look for the .pc from the host, but we do need them,
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# especially to find ncurses, GTK+, Qt (resp. for menuconfig and
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# nconfig, gconfig, xconfig).
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# So we simply remove our PATH and PKG_CONFIG_* variables.
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$(2)_CONFIGURATOR_MAKE_ENV = \
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$$(filter-out PATH=% PKG_CONFIG=% PKG_CONFIG_SYSROOT_DIR=% PKG_CONFIG_LIBDIR=%,$$($(2)_MAKE_ENV)) \
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PKG_CONFIG_PATH="$(HOST_PKG_CONFIG_PATH)"
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# Configuration editors (menuconfig, ...)
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#
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# We need to apply the configuration fixups right after a configuration
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# editor exits, so that it is possible to save the configuration right
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# after exiting an editor, and so the user always sees a .config file
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# that is clean wrt. our requirements.
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#
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# Because commands in $(1)_FIXUP_KCONFIG are probably using $(@D), we
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# need to have a valid @D set. But, because the configurators rules are
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# not real files and do not contain the path to the package build dir,
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# @D would be just '.' in this case. So, we use an intermediate rule
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# with a stamp-like file which path is in the package build dir, so we
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# end up having a valid @D.
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#
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$$(addprefix $(1)-,$$($(2)_KCONFIG_EDITORS)): $(1)-%: $$($(2)_DIR)/.kconfig_editor_%
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$$($(2)_DIR)/.kconfig_editor_%: $$($(2)_DIR)/.stamp_kconfig_fixup_done
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$$($(2)_CONFIGURATOR_MAKE_ENV) $$(MAKE) -C $$($(2)_DIR) \
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$$($(2)_KCONFIG_OPTS) $$(*)
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rm -f $$($(2)_DIR)/.stamp_{kconfig_fixup_done,configured,built}
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rm -f $$($(2)_DIR)/.stamp_{target,staging,images}_installed
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$$($(2)_FIXUP_DOT_CONFIG)
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# Saving back the configuration
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#
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# Ideally, that should directly depend on $$($(2)_DIR)/.stamp_kconfig_fixup_done,
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# but that breaks the use-case in PR-8156 (from a clean tree):
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# make menuconfig <- enable kernel, use an in-tree defconfig, save and exit
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# make linux-menuconfig <- enable/disable whatever option, save and exit
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# make menuconfig <- change to use a custom defconfig file, set a path, save and exit
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# make linux-update-config <- should save to the new custom defconfig file
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#
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# Because of that use-case, saving the configuration can *not* directly
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# depend on the stamp file, because it itself depends on the .config,
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# which in turn depends on the (newly-set an non-existent) custom
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# defconfig file.
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#
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# Instead, we use an PHONY rule that will catch that situation.
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#
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$(1)-check-configuration-done:
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@if [ ! -f $$($(2)_DIR)/.stamp_kconfig_fixup_done ]; then \
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echo "$(1) is not yet configured"; \
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exit 1; \
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fi
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$(1)-savedefconfig: $(1)-check-configuration-done
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$$($(2)_MAKE_ENV) $$(MAKE) -C $$($(2)_DIR) \
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$$($(2)_KCONFIG_OPTS) savedefconfig
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# Target to copy back the configuration to the source configuration file
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# Even though we could use 'cp --preserve-timestamps' here, the separate
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# cp and 'touch --reference' is used for symmetry with $(1)-update-defconfig.
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$(1)-update-config: $(1)-check-configuration-done
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@$$(if $$($(2)_KCONFIG_FRAGMENT_FILES), \
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echo "Unable to perform $(1)-update-config when fragment files are set"; exit 1)
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@$$(if $$($(2)_KCONFIG_DEFCONFIG), \
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echo "Unable to perform $(1)-update-config when using a defconfig rule"; exit 1)
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cp -f $$($(2)_DIR)/.config $$($(2)_KCONFIG_FILE)
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touch --reference $$($(2)_DIR)/.config $$($(2)_KCONFIG_FILE)
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# Note: make sure the timestamp of the stored configuration is not newer than
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# the .config to avoid a useless rebuild. Note that, contrary to
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# $(1)-update-config, the reference for 'touch' is _not_ the file from which
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# we copy.
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$(1)-update-defconfig: $(1)-savedefconfig
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@$$(if $$($(2)_KCONFIG_FRAGMENT_FILES), \
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echo "Unable to perform $(1)-update-defconfig when fragment files are set"; exit 1)
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@$$(if $$($(2)_KCONFIG_DEFCONFIG), \
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echo "Unable to perform $(1)-update-defconfig when using a defconfig rule"; exit 1)
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cp -f $$($(2)_DIR)/defconfig $$($(2)_KCONFIG_FILE)
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touch --reference $$($(2)_DIR)/.config $$($(2)_KCONFIG_FILE)
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endif # package enabled
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.PHONY: \
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$(1)-update-config \
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$(1)-update-defconfig \
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$(1)-savedefconfig \
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$(1)-check-configuration-done \
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$$($(2)_DIR)/.kconfig_editor_% \
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$$(addprefix $(1)-,$$($(2)_KCONFIG_EDITORS))
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endef # inner-kconfig-package
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################################################################################
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# kconfig-package -- the target generator macro for kconfig packages
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################################################################################
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kconfig-package = $(call inner-kconfig-package,$(pkgname),$(call UPPERCASE,$(pkgname)),$(call UPPERCASE,$(pkgname)),target)
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