After calling the cap_init(3) function Casper will fork from it's original
process, using pdfork(2). Forking from a process has a lot of advantages:
1. We have the same cwd as the original process.
2. The same uid, gid and groups.
3. The same MAC labels.
4. The same descriptor table.
5. The same routing table.
6. The same umask.
7. The same cpuset(1).
From now services are also in form of libraries.
We also removed libcapsicum at all and converts existing program using Casper
to new architecture.
Discussed with: pjd, jonathan, ed, drysdale@google.com, emaste
Partially reviewed by: drysdale@google.com, bdrewery
Approved by: pjd (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4277
architectures we do not provide upstream pkg(8) packages.
This is not tied to anything as-is, and likely will break
your system if used (based on experience with testing with
powerpc).
There is an overwhelming amount of evil happening here,
so until the issues are fixed, it will not be tied into the
'packages' target.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
While functionally expected to be a no-op on big-iron hardware,
embedded hardware (arm, mips) do not have a GENERIC kernel, so
the KERNCONF value must be included in the package to avoid
conflicting packages for the default kernel (RPI-B versus RPI2,
for example).
While here, correct the kernel name in the metadata.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Replace `make regress` (legacy test make target) and `make test` (incomplete
test make target added with the FreeBSD test suite) with make check as it's
consistent with other open source projects.
`make check` defaults to running tests from `.OBJDIR`, but can be overridden
with the `CHECKDIR` variable.
Add `make checkworld` target to simplify running the FreeBSD test suite from
`TESTSBASE` (i.e. the top-level tests directory), similar to buildworld.
Document `make check` and `make checkworld` in build(7).
Other minor changes:
- Rename intermediate file (`Kyuafile.auto`) to `Kyuafile` to simplify
`make check`.
- Remove terse warnings attached to `beforetest`/`aftertest`.
- Add kyua binary check to check target in suite.test.mk; error out if it's
not found
The MFC is [partly] contingent on other build related changes being MFCed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4406
MFC after: 2 months
X-MFC to: stable/10
Relnotes: yes
Reviewed by: bdrewery, Evan Cramer <eccramer@gmail.com>
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
One of the major pain points with how this was implemented
is the requirement of in-tree, hard-coded <name>.ucl, as
well as <name>-<suffix>.ucl where <suffix> can be lib32,
profile, development, debug, or any combination of the four.
This created significant overhead when adding new packages
and any of the files in any of the combinations were missing.
Instead of test(1)-ing if the <packagename>.ucl file exists,
hand off to a script to figure out what the final ucl file
name should be before invoking pkg(8).
The default behavior is 'template.ucl' is used as a fallback.
This affects only the userland packages, as the kernel code
is already smart enough to handle these variations.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Only 'installworld' needs to be protected and only when not using
-DNO_ROOT, which implies not installing to / and not needing the
lib dependency protections.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
and kernel are staged before invoking the 'create-<foo>-packages'
targets.
Include PKG_VERSION value in the 'create-{world,kernel}-packages'
targets so the value is not redefined when packaging the kernel,
which otherwise results in inconsistent and confusing package
version results.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
with -DNO_ROOT to create the METALOG mtree(8) file.
Separate the default STAGEDIR for world (WSTAGEDIR) and kernel
(KSTAGEDIR).
Fix the 'create-kernel-packages' target to work properly.
Evaluate if 'kernel' is set when invoking mtree-to-plist.awk,
which splits the kernel and kernel.debug into separate plist
files.
Fix METALOG creation when building/packaging multiple kernels.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
to pkg(8) commands.
Move the resulting packages outside STAGEDIR to minimize
pollution.
When invoking 'pkg create', include the ABI in the REPODIR
path so the correct hierarchy is created for cross-builds.
Move the STAGEDIR and REPODIR declarations above the targets
that use them to keep things cleaner, and move the packages
target.
Include '-o ABIFILE=DESTDIR/bin/sh' in pkg(8) invocations in
the create-kernel-packages target.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
r288829 states that lex requires the latest m4, but was not always building it.
Move lex to the same logic as m4 since they are closely tied now.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Reported by: Slawa Olhovchenkov <slw@zxy.spb.ru>
- Rework MANIFEST generation and parsing via bsdinstall(8).
- Allow selecting debugging distribution sets during install.
- Rework bsdinstall(8) to fetch remote debug distribution sets
when they are not available on the local install medium.
- Allow selecting additional non-GENERIC kernels during install.
At present, GENERIC is still required, and installed by default.
Tested with: head@r293203
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
not set. The 'stageworld' target is invoked with -DNO_ROOT, so the
metalog file(s) will be created regardless.
This matches the behavior of 'create-world-packages'.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This retains the original behavior of release-related targets, which
assume 'buildworld' and 'buildkernel' have already happened.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Instead of using which(1) to look for doxygen, look for it in <LOCALBASE>/bin .
$PATH gets mangled by make buildenv, etc so it's better to just be explicit
about the path if someone uses that for instance.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4406 (part of a larger diff)
Reviewed by: emaste, Evan Cramer <eccramer@gmail.com>
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
It does not properly import PATH; the PATH is reset by included profile
files on startup which breaks the biggest feature of buildenv (using
sysrooted cc from WORLDTMP)
Spotted by: smh, kib
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
RISC-V is a new ISA designed to support computer research and education, and
is now become a standard open architecture for industry implementations.
This is a minimal set of changes required to run 'make kernel-toolchain'
using external (GNU) toolchain.
The FreeBSD/RISC-V project home: https://wiki.freebsd.org/riscv.
Reviewed by: andrew, bdrewery, emaste, imp
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Sponsored by: HEIF5
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4445
- Don't bother looking up REVISION/BRANCH/etc from release/, or the
CPUTYPE check, as these are not used for makeman and wastes time. The also
invokes auto.obj.mk after I reverted auto.obj.mk ignoring -V in r291312.
- Don't modify CC or PATH when WITH_CCACHE_BUILD or WITH_META_MODE is enabled
as it leads to bsd.compiler.mk errors.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This is to fix 'make all' causing it to recurse on both 'all' and 'buildconfig'
due to 'buildconfig' being in ALL_SUBDIR_TARGETS and being a dependency of
'all'.
This now adds all of the '*includes', '*files' targets as subdir targets,
allowing them to recurse.
This also removes the need for some 'realinstall' hacks in bsd.subdir.mk since
it no longer recurses; only 'install' will recurse and call the proper
'beforeinstall', 'realinstall', and 'afterinstall' in each sub-directory.
This fixes 'make includes' and 'make files' to not be a rerolled ${MAKE}
sub-shell but to rather just recurse on 'inclues' and 'files'. This avoids
various issues such as the one fixed in r289462. As such revert Makefile.inc1
back to using 'includes' which avoids an extra tree walk and parallelizes
the includes phases better.
Makefile.inc1 includes a guard so that 'make all' will not use SUBDIR_PARALLEL,
added in r289438. This is so users do not get a probably broken build if they
run 'make all' from the top-level. Before the change in this commit, the
workaround for 'make everything' was 'par-all' which would depend on 'all' and
cause a proper parallel recursion. Now that will not work so a new
_PARALLEL_SUBUDIR_OK is used to allow it.
This is still part of an effort to combine bsd.(files|incs|confs).mk and move
some of its logic out of bsd.subdir.mk, as attempted in r289282 and reverted in
r289331. This commit fixes the problems found there which was mostly double
recursing during 'includes' which would recurse on itself and 'buildincludes'
and 'installincludes', all in parallel. The logic is still in bsd.subdir.mk
for now.
I've been cautious about this commit but have experienced no breakage on the
tree except for the 'par-all' case which was already a hack. If something foo
is depending on something bar that should recurse, it is very likely that the
foo target is being recursed on already meaning that bar will still effectively
recurse once sub-directories call foo.
Discussed on: arch@
MFC after: never
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
installed as "kernel". This is relevant for packaging of the kernel when
not wanting a default "kernel.txz".
Submitted by: Russell Cattelan <cattelan@thebarn.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Obtained from: OneFS
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Say it with me, "I will not chain commands with && in Makefiles"
This was originally fixed and explained quite well by bde@ in r36074. The
initial bmake integration caused 'set -e' to stop being used which lead to
r252419. Later 'set -e' expectations were fixed with bmake in r254980.
Because of the && here, errors would be ignored when building in parallel and
a dependency failed. Such as bootstrap-tools since it builds everything in
parallel. If any tool failed in obj/depend/all, it would just ignore the error
and continue to build. This later would result in cascaded errors that only
confused the real issue. This could also cause commands after the failed
command to still execute, leading to more confusion.
This should be fine if the command is in a sub-shell such as: (cmd1 && cmd2)
This reverts r252419.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
- Add a kvaddr_type to represent kernel virtual addresses instead of
unsigned long.
- Add a struct kvm_nlist which is a stripped down version of struct nlist
that uses kvaddr_t for n_value.
- Add a kvm_native() routine that returns true if an open kvm descriptor
is for a native kernel and memory image.
- Add a kvm_open2() function similar to kvm_openfiles(). It drops the
unused 'swapfile' argument and adds a new function pointer argument for
a symbol resolving function. Native kernels still use _fdnlist() from
libc to resolve symbols if a resolver function is not supplied, but cross
kernels require a resolver.
- Add a kvm_nlist2() function similar to kvm_nlist() except that it uses
struct kvm_nlist instead of struct nlist.
- Add a kvm_read2() function similar to kvm_read() except that it uses
kvaddr_t instead of unsigned long for the kernel virtual address.
- Add a new kvm_arch switch of routines needed by a vmcore backend.
Each backend is responsible for implementing kvm_read2() for a given
vmcore format.
- Use libelf to read headers from ELF kernels and cores (except for
powerpc cores).
- Add internal helper routines for the common page offset hash table used
by the minidump backends.
- Port all of the existing kvm backends to implement a kvm_arch switch and
to be cross-friendly by using private constants instead of ones that
vary by platform (e.g. PAGE_SIZE). Static assertions are present when
a given backend is compiled natively to ensure the private constants
match the real ones.
- Enable all of the existing vmcore backends on all platforms. This means
that libkvm on any platform should be able to perform KVA translation
and read data from a vmcore of any platform.
Tested on: amd64, i386, sparc64 (marius)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3341
The bootstrap-tools are supposed to be host tools, which in most cases, use
host headers and libraries. As such, directly including the src tree's headers
for libmd here causes the need to link libmd in since it will be built with
the new symbols (which /usr/lib/libmd.so) won't have unless it is new enough.
During the target build in buildworld the target headers are staged into
WORLDTMP and used via --sysroot, allowing the target xinstall to be built with
the new/target libmd.
The .PATH here was also not doing anything since xinstall does not use libmd
source files.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
MFC after: 2 weeks
This simplifies the logic to always try removing the objdir if it exists
and to fallback on a 'cleandir' if no objdir exists. The reasoning for
this is to avoid rm -rf src/* (r126024)
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
MFC after: 2 weeks
This leads the way for fixing cross-build cleanup, and eventually replacing
'cleandir' with it during the build.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
MFC after: 2 weeks
ccache is mostly beneficial for frequent builds where -DNO_CLEAN is not
used to achieve a safe pseudo-incremental build. This is explained in
more detail upstream [1] [2]. It incurs about a 20%-28% hit to populate the
cache, but with a full cache saves 30-50% in build times. When combined with
the WITH_FAST_DEPEND feature it saves up to 65% since ccache does cache the
resulting dependency file, which it does not do when using mkdep(1)/'CC
-E'. Stats are provided at the end of this message.
This removes the need to modify /etc/make.conf with the CC:= and CXX:=
lines which conflicted with external compiler support [3] (causing the
bootstrap compiler to not be built which lead to obscure failures [4]),
incorrectly invoked ccache in various stages, required CCACHE_CPP2 to avoid
Clang errors with parenthesis, and did not work with META_MODE.
The option name was picked to match the existing option in ports. This
feature is available for both in-src and out-of-src builds that use
/usr/share/mk.
Linking, assembly compiles, and pre-processing avoid using ccache since it is
only overhead. ccache does nothing special in these modes, although there is
no harm in calling it for them.
CCACHE_COMPILERCHECK is set to 'content' when using the in-tree bootstrap
compiler to hash the content of the compiler binary to determine if it
should be a cache miss. For external compilers the 'mtime' option is used
as it is more efficient and likely to be correct. Future work may optimize the
'content' check using the same checks as whether a bootstrap compiler is needed
to be built.
The CCACHE_CPP2 pessimization is currently default in our devel/ccache
port due to Clang requiring it. Clang's -Wparentheses-equality,
-Wtautological-compare, and -Wself-assign warnings do not mix well with
compiling already-pre-processed code that may have expanded macros that
trigger the warnings. GCC has so far not had this issue so it is allowed to
disable the CCACHE_CPP2 default in our port.
Sharing a cache between multiple checkouts, or systems, is explained in
the ccache manual. Sharing a cache over NFS would likely not be worth
it, but syncing cache directories between systems may be useful for an
organization. There is also a memcached backend available [5]. Due to using
an object directory outside of the source directory though you will need to
ensure that both are in the same prefix and all users use the same layout. A
possible working layout is as follows:
Source: /some/prefix/src1
Source: /some/prefix/src2
Source: /some/prefix/src3
Objdir: /some/prefix/obj
Environment: CCACHE_BASEDIR='${SRCTOP:H}' MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX='${SRCTOP:H}/obj'
This will use src*/../obj as the MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX and tells ccache to replace
all absolute paths to be relative. Using something like this is required due
to -I and -o flags containing both SRC and OBJDIR absolute paths that ccache
adds into its hash for the object without CCACHE_BASEDIR.
distcc can be hooked into by setting CCACHE_PREFIX=/usr/local/bin/distcc.
I have not personally tested this and assume it will not mix well with
using the bootstrap compiler.
The cache from buildworld can be reused in a subdir by first running
'make buildenv' (from r290424).
Note that the cache is currently different depending on whether -j is
used or not due to ccache enabling -fdiagnostics-color automatically if
stderr is a TTY, which bmake only does if not using -j.
The system I used for testing was:
WITNESS
Build options: -j20 WITH_LLDB=yes WITH_DEBUG_FILES=yes WITH_CCACHE_BUILD=yes
DISK: ZFS 3-way mirror with very slow disks using SSD l2arc/log.
The arc was fully populated with src tree files and ccache objects.
RAM: 76GiB
CPU: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU L5520 @2.27GHz
2 package(s) x 4 core(s) x 2 SMT threads = hw.ncpu=16
The WITH_FAST_DEPEND feature was used for comparison here as well to show
the dramatic time savings with a full cache.
buildworld:
x buildworld-before
+ buildworld-ccache-empty
* buildworld-ccache-full
% buildworld-ccache-full-fastdep
# buildworld-fastdep
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|% * # +|
|% * # +|
|% * # xxx +|
| |A |
| A|
| A |
|A |
| A |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
N Min Max Median Avg Stddev
x 3 3744.13 3794.31 3752.25 3763.5633 26.935139
+ 3 4519 4525.04 4520.73 4521.59 3.1104823
Difference at 95.0% confidence
758.027 +/- 43.4565
20.1412% +/- 1.15466%
(Student's t, pooled s = 19.1726)
* 3 1823.08 1827.2 1825.62 1825.3 2.0785572
Difference at 95.0% confidence
-1938.26 +/- 43.298
-51.5007% +/- 1.15045%
(Student's t, pooled s = 19.1026)
% 3 1266.96 1279.37 1270.47 1272.2667 6.3971113
Difference at 95.0% confidence
-2491.3 +/- 44.3704
-66.1952% +/- 1.17895%
(Student's t, pooled s = 19.5758)
# 3 3153.34 3155.16 3154.2 3154.2333 0.91045776
Difference at 95.0% confidence
-609.33 +/- 43.1943
-16.1902% +/- 1.1477%
(Student's t, pooled s = 19.0569)
buildkernel:
x buildkernel-before
+ buildkernel-ccache-empty
* buildkernel-ccache-empty-fastdep
% buildkernel-ccache-full
# buildkernel-ccache-full-fastdep
@ buildkernel-fastdep
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|# @ % * |
|# @ % * x + |
|# @ % * xx ++|
| MA |
| MA|
| A |
| A |
|A |
| A |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
N Min Max Median Avg Stddev
x 3 571.57 573.94 571.79 572.43333 1.3094401
+ 3 727.97 731.91 728.06 729.31333 2.2492295
Difference at 95.0% confidence
156.88 +/- 4.17129
27.4058% +/- 0.728695%
(Student's t, pooled s = 1.84034)
* 3 527.1 528.29 528.08 527.82333 0.63516402
Difference at 95.0% confidence
-44.61 +/- 2.33254
-7.79305% +/- 0.407478%
(Student's t, pooled s = 1.02909)
% 3 400.4 401.05 400.62 400.69 0.3306055
Difference at 95.0% confidence
-171.743 +/- 2.16453
-30.0023% +/- 0.378128%
(Student's t, pooled s = 0.954969)
# 3 201.94 203.34 202.28 202.52 0.73020545
Difference at 95.0% confidence
-369.913 +/- 2.40293
-64.6212% +/- 0.419774%
(Student's t, pooled s = 1.06015)
@ 3 369.12 370.57 369.3 369.66333 0.79033748
Difference at 95.0% confidence
-202.77 +/- 2.45131
-35.4225% +/- 0.428227%
(Student's t, pooled s = 1.0815)
[1] https://ccache.samba.org/performance.html
[2] http://www.mail-archive.com/ccache@lists.samba.org/msg00576.html
[3] https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3484
[5] https://github.com/jrosdahl/ccache/pull/30
PR: 182944 [4]
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Relnotes: yes
ZSH considers CPUTYPE a magic variable that will be the output of 'uname -m'
even if already set in environment when starting up.
The CPUTYPE?= check in Makefile.inc1 and supporting overriding CPUTYPE
manually in the buildenv shell make automatic workarounds too tricky
here. ZSH should really respect variables set in the environment before
trashing them.
X-MFC-With: r290423
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Also pass BUILDENV=1 into the sub-shell to allow modifying PS1 in .profile such
as:
if [ -n "${BUILDENV}" ]; then
PS1="(buildenv) ${PS1}"
fi
SHELL defaults to 'sh' in share/mk/sys.mk, but is typically passed down by
the shell invoking make as well. Rather than forcing all 'buildenv' users
to use plain /bin/sh, let them use their favorite shell.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Discussed with: imp
Move CROSS_TOOLS stuff to top of file (before bsd.compiler.mk) so that
decisions made by bsd.compiler.mk can properly affect the defaults in
src.opts.mk. Move that to after bsd.compiler.mk. Add a comment about
why we include bsd.compiler.mk here despite the fact that src.opts.mk
currently does too. Also remove bsd.arch.inc.mk that's been OBE.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4087
libopenbsd is an internal library which
to bring in compatibility stuff from OpenBSD.
This will allow us to bring in more
OpenBSD utilities into the FreeBSD base system.
We similarly use libnetbsd for bringing in stuff from NetBSD.
Reviewed by: bapt
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4078
CXXFLAGS to sub-makes.
The bad passing also causes bsd.dep.mk's logic to selectively pull only some
flags from C[XX]FLAGS to not apply which can be seen with '-L' being passed to
mkdep when using an external compiler.
Now it can be used to effectively "build in a subdir". It will use the
'cross-tools', 'libraries', and 'includes' phases of 'buildworld' to properly
setup a WORLDTMP to use. Then it will build 'everything' only in the
listed SUBDIR_OVERRIDE directories. It is still required to list custom
library directories in LOCAL_LIB_DIRS if SUBDIR_OVERRIDE is something
that contains libraries outside of the normal area (such as
SUBDIR_OVERRIDE=contrib/ofed needing LOCAL_LIB_DIRS=contrib/ofed/usr.lib)
Without these changes, SUBDIR_OVERRIDE with buildworld was broken or hit
obscure failures due to missing libraries, includes, or cross compiler.
SUBDIR_OVERRIDE with 'make <target that is not buildworld>' will continue to
work as it did before although its usefulness is questionable.
With a fully populated WORLDTMP, building with a SUBDIR_OVERRIDE with
-DNO_CLEAN only takes a few minutes to start building the target
directories. This is still much better than building unneeded things via
'everything' when testing small subset changes. A BUILDFAST or
SKIPWORLDTMP might make sense for this as well.
- Add in '_worldtmp' as we still need to create WORLDTMP as later targets,
such as '_libraries' and '_includes' use it. This probably was avoiding
calling '_worldtmp' to not remove WORLDTMP for debugging purposes, but
-DNO_CLEAN can be used for that.
- '_legacy' must be included since '_build-tools' uses -legacy.
The SUBDIR_OVERRIDE change came in r95509, while -legacy being part
of build-tools came in r113136.
- 'bootstrap-tools' is still skipped as this feature is not for
upgrades.
- Fix buildworld combined with SUBDIR_OVERRIDE not installing all includes.
The original change for SUBDIR_OVERRIDE in r95509 kept '_includes'
and '_libraries' as building everything possible as the SUBDIR_OVERRIDE
could need anything from them. However in r96462 the real 'includes'
target was changed from manual sub-makes to just recursing 'includes'
on SUBDIR, thus not all includes have been installed into WORLDTMP since then
when combined with 'buildworld'.
This is not done unless calling 'make buildworld' as it would be
unexpected to have it go into all directories when doing 'make
SUBDIR_OVERRIDE=mydir includes'.
- Also need to build the cross-compiler so it is used with --sysroot.
If this is burdensome then telling the build to use the local compiler
as an external compiler (thus using a proper --sysroot to WORLDTMP) is
possible by setting CC=/usr/bin/cc, CXX=/usr/bin/c++, etc.
- Don't build the lib32 distribution with SUBDIR_OVERRIDE in buildworld
since it won't contain anything related to SUBDIR_OVERRIDE. Testing
of the lib32 build can be done with 'make build32'.
- Document these changes in build.7
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
MFC after: 2 weeks
Extend OptionalObsoleteFiles.inc to delete all lib32 files when MK_LIB32 is
set to no on a system that previously had lib32 libraries installed.
Also, to prevent "make delete-old-dirs" from always deleting lib32 directories
after an installworld, move the lib32 subtree to its own mtree file that only
gets applied when MK_LIB32=yes.
Test: Ran "make delete-old" and "make delete-old-libs" on a system that never
had MK_LIB32 enabled, and on a system where MK_LIB32 was enabled and later
disabled. Did this both on amd64 and powerpc64.
Test: Ran "make tinderbox" without errors.
Reviewed by: emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3923
This has been handled since r228158 made MK_CTF dependent on MK_CDDL
in share/mk/bsd.opts.mk.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
The 'includes' target is currently a pseudo target in bsd.subdir.mk that
does 'cd ${.CURDIR} && ${MAKE} buildincludes && ${MAKE} installincludes',
versus all over targets that just recurse.
In Makefile.inc1 the older duplicated bsd.subdir.mk logic for calling
'includes' was being executed in each subdir directly, meaning 'cd lib && make
includes' became 'cd lib && make buildincludes && make installincludes'. Now
that the bsd.subdir.mk logic is used it is calling 'make buildincludes && make
installincludes' from the top-level which pulls in the PATH=<default path>
from /Makefile.
The sub-make logic for 'includes' in bsd.subdir.mk was attempted to be removed
in r289282 but turned out to be wrong. I have a working version now but
it is not yet ready for commit. So for now in Makefile.inc1 split out
'includes' to 'buildincludes' and 'installincludes' which will avoid the
problem.
MFC after: 2 weeks
X-MFC-With: r289438
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
sub-makes.
Some of the world phases that used plain '${MAKE} -f Makefile.inc1' were not
passing this variable along which caused them to look it up again. By
using bmake's .export we can remove it from all of the other environment
lines.
Add a comment about the usage for VERSION for ctfmerge.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
We pass BOOTSTRAPPING=${OSRELDATE} to some of the sub-makes. Rather than
chase every ${MAKE} invokation, just export it as bmake lets us.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Back in r30113, the 'par-*' targets were added to parallelize portions of
the build in a very similar fashion as the SUBDIR_PARALLEL feature used in
r263778. Calling a target without 'par-' (for 'parallel') resulted in the
standard bsd.subdir.mk handling without parallelization. Given we have
SUBDIR_PARALLEL now there is no reason to duplicate the handling here.
In build logs this will result in the ${dir}.${target}__D targets now showing
as the normal ${target}_subdir_${dir} targets.
I audited all of the uses of Makefile.inc1 and Makefile's targets that use
bsd.subdir.mk and found that all but 'all' and 'install' were fine to use
as always parallel.
- For 'install' (from installworld -j) the ordering of lib/ and libexec/
before the rest of the system (described in r289433), and etc/ being last
(described in r289435), is all that matters. So now a .WAIT is added in
the proper places when invoking any 'install*' target. A parallel
installworld does work and took 46% of the time a non-parallel
install would take on my system with -j15 to ZFS.
- For 'all' I left the default handling for this to not run in parallel. A
'par-all' target is still used by the 'everything' stage of buildworld
to continue building in parallel as it already has been. This works
because most of the dependencies are handled by the early bootstrap
phases as well as 'libraries' and 'includes' phases. This lets
all of the SUBDIR build in parallel fine, such as bin/ and lib/. This
will not work if the user invokes 'all' though as we have dependencies
spread all over the system with no way to depend between them (except
for the dirdeps feature in the META_MODE build). Calling 'make all'
from the top-level is still useful at least when using SUBDIR_OVERRIDE.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
The ordering of 'etc' in the install has a long history dating back to the
first time it was realized it needed to be "last" in r4486. That commit
still left it before LOCAL_DIRS though. By having it before LOCAL_DIRS
any manpages they install were not being added to the whatis database in the
install image. They would likely show up in the file after a periodic
rebuild of the file though.
Currently the whatis file is built by an 'afterinstall' hook in etc/Makefile
that calls share/man's 'makedb' target.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
It was added in r152006 to handle serializing access of info/dir when
installing INFO files. We no longer support INFO files since r276551
though.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
The case of make(1) using a new /bin/sh issue was fixed in r173219 when ITOOLS
was introduced.
There are still issues with mid-install errors leaving a system unusable that
are currently non-trivial to solve. The safest ordering requires installing
rtld, libc and libthr (in that order) before anything else. We don't do that
now though. Much improvement is needed here still.
Discussed with: kip and kan (rtld/library ordering)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This was handled for libraries in r256842 but for some reason was missed
for files (bsd.prog.mk).
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Relnotes: yes
This was causing files to be removed from the objdir when -n was used.
_worldtmp makes no sub-make calls.
A more comprehensive solution is coming involving fine-grained '+' where
appropriate.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
MFC after: 1 week
with the current behaviour of calling "distribution" in the etc target.
This allows mergemaster/etcupdate to still work when some configuration will be
moved to be handled in the same directories their source code lives in.
when running the build-tools stage.
The requirement is due to the -P flag used when running m4 from usr.bin/lex
Makefile to generate skel.c. With the old m4 that fails and the failure is
ignored, resulting in an empty(-ish) skel.c, which leads to later build
failures when the misconfigured new lex tool is run.
This enables building -current (and 10-stable after MFC) on a stable-8
system again.
MFC after: 3 days
Bootstrap tools exist for backwards compatibility support. DTrace tools
tools are also needed for cross builds, so belong in cross-tools.
Reviewed by: imp (earlier), markj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2144
Stale CTF tools are a frequent source of DTrace issues, and they compile
quickly enough that the increase in build time is negligible.
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3670
a one word variable, which is quite unexpected from documentation.
So, to avoid double installation of a single kernel, protect the extra
kernels loop with ${BUILDKERNELS:[#]} > 1 conditional.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
from BUILDKERNELS list. This is more strict, since INSTALLKERNEL by
definition is the first word of BUILDKERNELS list. The previous
code failed if INSTALLKERNEL is a substring of additional kernel name.
Reviewed by: gjb
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
For most cases they are equivalent, but BINUTILS_BOOTSTRAP is a
BROKEN_OPTION on arm64 as the in-tree GNU binutils do not support it,
so we need a separate internal flag for ELF Tool Chain.
Reviewed by: andrew, brooks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3381
The option was added only to ease the transition from GNU Binutils to
ELF Tool Chain tools, and that process is now complete (for the viable
replacements). Noting the removal in UPDATING is sufficient as we have
not shipped a release with the option.
Reviewed by: brooks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3240
changes to prevent the 'rescue: not found' errors from happening.
Bump FreeBSD_version to 1100078 since there's been no version bumps
since this change was made. Only people that installed since r284356
really need to do this bootstrapping, but since crunchgen needs to
bootstrap for other reasons, bumping the number was the simplest.
They need to be built and installed (including headers) prior to the
DTrace CTF tools.
Reviewed by: imp (as part of a larger change)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This makes sysroot usable for cross building, it also removes the need for
_SHLIBDIRPREFIX (keeps its definition since picobsd uses it and I have no time
to test it)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2920
Submitted by: imp, adrian
Tested by: adrian
This change among other things improve search capabilities over the manpages
allowing fine grain query.
A new build option WITHOUT_MANDOCDB has been added to keep the ancient version
of the database and the tools. The plan is to entirely remove this option before
11.0-RELEASE.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2603
typos, and fixing the dependency when MK_LIBCPLUSPLUS != no
- `:D` operator evaluation is immediate, i.e. like .if defined(..). So r283159
was in effect a no-op commit.
- Fix dependency in MK_LIBCPLUSPLUS case in two ways:
-- lib/libc++ was the wrong dependency. It should have been libcxxrt.
-- lib/libc++ was missing __L, so again it was depending on the directory, not
the relevant .PHONY target.
Tested with: make tinderbox (amd64, arm, sparc64) and JFLAG=-j16
In collaboration with: bdrewery, imp, peter
BIG pointyhat to: ngie (for trying to commit things at 6am while staying up all
night working on other tasks)
This reduces the number of copy of sqlite we have to just one and easier
tracking version of sqlite
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2443
Reviewed by: imp, stas, bjk
- r277259 crunchide: Correct 64-bit section header offset
- r281674 crunchide: always include both 32- and 64-bit ELF support
With built-in cross-size support we also no longer need a special case
for cross-build crunchide.
Reviewed by: imp
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2576
The appropriate subdirectories are handled by lib/csu/Makefile. There's
no need to duplicate this logic in Makefile.inc1 and lib/Makefile.
Reviewed by: imp
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2523
(Makefile.inc1): add dependency of xinstall on libmd to
avoid failure of parallel bootstrap.
(lib/libmd/*.h): do not redefine symbols if already
defined as macros (libcrypt uses the same sources internally,
redefining symbols with a prefix of its own).
Fixes build failures caused by previous change to libmd.
Reported by: ian
Pointy hat to: thomas
if its set in the environement of each command seperately.
Move the PATH setting to the NXBMAKE variable so its picked up to find
the one-off gperf build for the native-xtools target.
Pointed Out by: ngie
enabled host. Build a one-off gperf and put it in the PATH for the rest
of the target so the ONE call to gperf by the gcc build picks it up and
DTRT.
Reviewed by: imp
make bootstrap-tools
On the plus side, this also greatly reduces complexity
MFC after: 1 week
Pointyhat to: ngie
Reported by: Willem Jan Withagen <wjw@digiware.nl>
stopped using kgzip in the release process. We no longer need to build
kgzip as a cross tool, and tests for RELEASEDIR are obsolete, so
remove both.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2313
parallelization work done in r279197
- kerberos5/lib/libroken requires kerberos5/tools/make-roken to build
- kerberos5/tools/asn1_compile, kerberos5/tools/slc, and usr.bin/compile_et
require kerberos5/lib/libroken and kerberos5/lib/libvers
This race is incredibly evident when cross-building sparc64 on
ref10-amd64.freebsd.org
MFC after: 1 week
Pointyhat to: ngie
stage, just like for the regular world stage.
Reviewed by: rodrigc, imp, bapt, emaste
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2187
As legacy executes "make installincludes" we don't want it to be
disabled by a src.conf setting.
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2143
only adds support for kernel-toolchain, however it is expected further
changes to add kernel and userland support will be committed as they are
reviewed.
As our copy of binutils is too old the devel/aarch64-binutils port needs
to be installed to pull in a linker.
To build either TARGET needs to be set to arm64, or TARGET_ARCH set to
aarch64. The latter is set so uname -p will return aarch64 as existing
third party software expects this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2005
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This fixes C++ libraries not implicitly linking in libc++. This is
generally not an issue because the final linking with the compiled binary
will involve CXX via PROG_CXX or other means. It is however
inconsistent with libraries implicitly linking in libc and problematic
for trying to build libraries with '-z defs' to ensure all direct
dependencies are linked in.
libatf-c++ is currently the only consumer of this new feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2039
Reviewed by: imp
Discussed with: bapt
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
The in-tree binutils does not support arm64, so will not work for the
forthcoming FreeBSD arm64 port. BROKEN_OPTIONS will include
BINUTILS_BOOTSTRAP, so provide a default CROSS_BINUTILS_PREFIX for this
case.
Reviewed by: imp
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Dynamically figure out the list of targets based on tags passed on the mtrees
First sanity check that all packages have existing manifests
Generate the packages
Please note that for now the mtree needs more work as it has duplicate entries,
everything is not yet tagged
The packages now have generic entries and needs to be customize
inadvertently removed when support for external GCC was added.
Deprecate XFLAGS in favour of the newer XCFLAGS/XCXXFLAGS.
Tested with: make universe, make CROSS_COMPILER_PREFIX=/usr/bin/ buildworld
Reviewed by: imp, bapt
libarchive(3) doesn't support the new liblzma API yet, but this change
allows us to enable multi-threaded xz compression.
``make release'' should now finish in half the time on a machine with
several cores and fast disks (our typical build server).
This behaviour only applies when building a release and it doesn't
affect buildworld/installworld. To disable threaded xz compression,
set XZ_THREADS=1.
Reviewed by: gjb
Tested by: gjb
update paths; and include everything in the "base" distribution.
The "games" distribution being optional made sense when there were more
games and we had small disks; but the "games-like" games were moved into
the ports tree a dozen years ago and the remaining "utility-like" games
occupy less than 0.001% of my laptop's small hard drive. Meanwhile every
new user is confronted by the question "do you want games installed" when
they they try to install FreeBSD.
The next steps will be:
2. Removing punch card (bcd, ppt), phase-of-moon (pom), clock (grdc), and
caesar cipher (caesar, rot13) utilities. I intend to keep fortune, factor,
morse, number, primes, and random, since there is evidence that those are
still being used.
3. Merging src/games into src/usr.bin.
This change will not be MFCed.
Reviewed by: jmg
Discussed at: EuroBSDCon
Approved by: gjb (release-affecting changes)
This brings support for multi-threaded compression. This brings close
N times faster compression where N is the number of CPU cores.
Because of this, liblzma now depends on libthr.
Soon libarchive will be modified to use the new lzma API.
Thanks to antoine@ for the exp-run.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1786
Reviewed by: bapt
The version scheme used is the following:
For stable/current branches:
${REVISION}.sYYYYMMDDhhmmss
s standing for snapshot
For releases branches:
${REVISION}_${PATCHLEVEL}
When packaging the kernel 2 different package are created per kernel
release (only contains the regular kernel and modules)
debug (contains the .symbols files)
Note that package the kernel (packaging world will follow the same rule) can
only by passing -DNO_ROOT to the build (hence can be done as a regular user)
To package the kernel:
make buildkernel
make distributekernel DESTDIR=/somewhere -DNO_ROOT
make kernel-pkgs DESTDIR=/somewhere -DNO_ROOT
The packages will be created inside the DESTDIR
Addr2line is not required for the build, and a per-arch binary is no
longer required with the switch to the ELF Tool Chain. However, building
these tools during the cross tools stage can be useful for developers
who cross build HEAD from stable/10, and adds very little to the build
time.
Reviewed by: ian, imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1583
To be able to info pages consider installing texinfo from ports print/texinfo or
via pkg: pkg install texinfo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1409
Reviewed by: emaste, imp (previous version)
Relnotes: yes
Previously it also disabled building elftoolchain bootstrap tools such as
strip(1).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1398
Reviewed by: imp
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
ensure that building on a host without makeinfo (i.e. a host where
make delete-old -DWITHOUT_INFO was run), then building with MK_INFO == yes
doesn't manifest in build errors when building info pages
This manifested itself like the following when I was build testing an MFC
change on stable/10:
makeinfo --no-split -I /usr/src/gnu/lib/libregex/doc -I /usr/src/gnu/lib/libregex/doc regex.texi -o regex.info
makeinfo: not found
*** [regex.info] Error code 127
make[6]: stopped in /usr/src/gnu/lib/libregex/doc
1 error
Tested on a head VM without makeinfo installed and by building with MK_INFO=yes
MFC after: 1 week
The work in r258233 hardcoded the assumption that tests was the last component
of the tests tree by pushing tests as an explicit prefix for the paths in
BSD.tests.dist and /usr was the prefix for all tests, per BSD.usr.dist and all
of the mtree calls used in Makefile.inc1. This assumption breaks if/when one
provides a custom TESTSBASE "prefix", e.g. TESTSBASE=/mytests .
One thing that r258233 did properly though was remove "/usr/tests" creation
from BSD.usr.dist -- that should have not been there in the first place. That
was an "oops" on my part for the work that was originally committed in r241823
MFC after: 2 weeks
Phabric: D1301
Reviewed by: imp
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
when strip gets replaced at install time by adding it to ITOOLS for the
default usr.bin/xinstall STRIP_CMD
This will fix the failure noted in this Jenkins build step:
https://jenkins.freebsd.org/job/Build-UFS-image/688/
This will also fix the issue reported by alfred@ dealing with installing on
targets that differ from build hosts (e.g. installing on i386/i386 when built
on amd64/amd64)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This will fix installation with differing host targets in installworld, so
one can build i386/i386 on an amd64 host, then install to an i386/i386 target
Reported by: alfred
Phabric: D1280
MFC after: 1 week
This will unbreak the build when "env MK_CXX=no make delete-old" has been run
on the build host post-r272849
Tested with the following commands:
/bin/sh
export __MAKE_CONF=/dev/null SRCCONF=/dev/null
export MK_CLANG=no MK_CLANG_BOOTSTRAP=no MK_GCC=yes MK_GCC_BOOTSTRAP=yes
export MK_GNUCXX=yes TARGET=armv6 TARGET_ARCH=arm make xdev
make toolchain
make xdev-build
sudo -E make xdev-install
/usr/armv6-freebsd/usr/bin/cc -dumpmachine | grep arm
X-MFC with: r272849
Reported by: Dan Raymond <draymond@foxvalley.net>, gjb
if/when MK_CXX == no and make delete-old has been run on the build host,
post-r272849
Tested with the following command:
% sudo env MK_CLANG=no MK_CLANG_BOOTSTRAP=no MK_GCC=yes MK_GCC_BOOTSTRAP=yes \
MK_GNUCXX=yes make xdev
Set WITH_ELFTOOLCHAIN_TOOLS in src.conf to use the elftoolchain version
of the following tools:
* addr2line
* elfcopy (strip / mcs)
* nm
* size
* strings
Reviewed by: bapt (earlier version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1224
comes after share in SUBDIR in Makefile.inc1, the build will fail when vi is not
installed on the build host
Run build-tools for usr.bin/vi and install ex, etc to WORLDTMP to enable building
share/termcap on hosts that don't have nvi installed on them
directories in LOCAL_LIB_DIRS if they are subdirectories of directories
listed in LOCAL_DIRS. This allows a hierarchy like:
foo
foo/lib
foo/usr.bin
foo/usr.sbin
to be supported with LOCAL_DIRS=foo LOCAL_DIRS=foo/lib.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
built before contrib dependency, dialog(3). Add dialog(3) to the list
of _prebuild_libs to ensure that this does not happen.
Tested on: 11.0-CURRENT amd64 @ r274205
Thanks to: kargl, Larry Rosenman <ler@lerctr.org>, ngie, markj
Recommended by: ngie
Reviewed by: ngie, markj
MFC after: 21 days
X-MFC-to: stable/10 stable/9
X-MFC-with: 274116 274120 274121 274123 274144 274146 274192 274203
Add to using _prebuild_libs in (top-level) Makefile.inc1.
NB: Unbreak build yet again (we'll get this right eventually)
Reviewed by: markj, ngie
Thanks to: ian, markj, ngie, Nikolai Lifanov <lifanov@mail.lifanov.com>
MFC after: 21 days
X-MFC-to: stable/10 stable/9
X-MFC-with: 274116 274120 274121 274123 274144 274146 274192
issue. lib/atf isn't a prereq_lib, since it isn't required for other
libraries to build. Remove it. The old kludge of always building it
had effectively been retired. Since we don't want to build the
libraries with the tests when we're bootstrapping, invent
MK_TESTS_SUPPORT which normally defaults to the current MK_TESTS
value, except when explicitly defined. Make lib/atf depend on it being
yes. When building the libraries set MK_TESTS to no, and
MK_TESTS_SUPPORT to the current value of MK_TESTS so that later stages
of the build work correctly. This should fix (and does for me)
people's issues with parallel builds racing between lib/atf and
libexec/atf. Since lib/atf is built during the libraries phase, the
race disappears.
Even if you were allowed to test for it, the test makes no sense as it
always results in adding -DWITH_ATF unless WITH_ATF was already
defined. But if MK_ATF != no, then we know it was defined. This, in
turn, caused tools/build/options/makemake always think WITH_ATF is the
default, which removed control of that from sys.conf.mk.
To get the intent of the deleted comment, another mechanism is
required, assuming that the intent of that comment is desirable.
and DEPFLAGS for mkdep flags
Pass the path to the libc++ headers in both, enforce the gnu++11 standard in the XXFLAGS
to satisfy libc++ requirements pass the libc++ objectdir as a location where to find
libraries so it can find libstdc++.so and libstdc++.A
Reviewed by: imp
The goal is to provide pre seeded toolchain configurations withing the ports tree
to allow the use of an external toolchain in a simple way:
make CROSS_TOOLCHAIN=powerpc64-gcc TARGET=powerpc TARGET_ARCH=powerpc64 buildworld
This will look for the external toolchain definition in /usr/local/share/mk/powerpc64-gcc.mk
While here add the notion of X_COMPILER_TYPE to the external toolchain framework to allow
to deal with differences between gcc and clang in regards of cross building
the oabi is still in the tree, but it is expected this will be removed
as developers work on surrounding code.
With this commit the ARM EABI is the only supported supported ABI by
FreeBSD on ARMa 32-bit processors.
X-MFC after: never
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D876
depend on the .MAKE special target
This will allow users to do something like the following to print out the
results of the running the simulated make target with bmake, like some of the
other top-level make targets in Makefile.inc1:
% make -f Makefile.inc1 -n distribution TARGET=i386 TARGET_ARCH=i386
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This enables a common root directory for all object files for a given tree,
which eases sharing a common MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX, and cleaning up of object trees.
In particular, one can simply (from the source directory) rm -rf /usr/obj$(pwd)
to destroy all object files for it. Or to copy/sync files, etc.
Reviewed by: bdrewery
CR: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D796
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
1. 50+% of NO_PIE use is fixed by adding -fPIC to INTERNALLIB and other
build-only utility libraries.
2. Another 40% is fixed by generating _pic.a variants of various libraries.
3. Some of the NO_PIE use is a bit absurd as it is disabling PIE (and ASLR)
where it never would work anyhow, such as csu or loader. This suggests
there may be better ways of adding support to the tree. Many of these
cases can be fixed such that -fPIE will work but there is really no
reason to have it in those cases.
4. Some of the uses are working around hacks done to some Makefiles that are
really building libraries but have been using bsd.prog.mk because the code
is cleaner. Had they been using bsd.lib.mk then NO_PIE would not have
been needed.
We likely do want to enable PIE by default (opt-out) for non-tree consumers
(such as ports). For in-tree though we probably want to only enable PIE
(opt-in) for common attack targets such as remote service daemons and setuid
utilities. This is also a great performance compromise since ASLR is expected
to reduce performance. As such it does not make sense to enable it in all
utilities such as ls(1) that have little benefit to having it enabled.
Reported by: kib
building toolchain for the host computer. This toolchain produces
TARGET_ARCH and assumes the rest of the system contains libraries for
the target. It is intended to be used in a "qemu-user jail" where all
the binaries would otherwise be the target architecture's to build
ports. However, emulation of the compilers is too slow, so we build
native binaries for that. Rather than use the xdev produced binaries,
with all their weird links and paths, these binaries use the native
paths. They will not work unless installed into the qemu-user jail.
Differential Revision: https://phabric.freebsd.org/D518
Reviewed by: sbruno@
Makefile.inc1:
Always compile gensnmptree with bootstrap-tools when MK_BSNMP != no
instead of depending on a potentially stale tool installed on the build host
sbin/atm/atmconfig/Makefile:
- Always remove oid.h to avoid cluttering up the build/src tree.
- Consolidate all of the RESCUE/MK_BSNMP != no logic under one
conditional to improve readability
- Remove unnecessary ${.OBJDIR} prefixing for oid.h and use ${.TARGET} instead
of spelling out oid.h
- Add a missing DPADD for ${LIBCRYPTO} when compiled MK_BSNMP == yes and
MK_OPENSSL == yes and not compiling for /rescue/rescue
sbin/atm/atmconfig/main.c:
Change #ifndef RESCUE to #ifdef WITH_BSNMP in main.c to make it
clear that we're compiling bsnmp support into atmconfig
Approved by: jmmv (mentor)
Phabric: D579
PR: 143830
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
take this into account. Alas it breaks source upgrade from any version of
9 because flex is not built as a bootstrap-tools (it would be for older
versions).
That means "libunbound/configlexer.c" is built with the old flex but using
config.h for the new one. Build is thus broken going from 9.* to 10.
Make flex a bootstrap-tools entry if host is less than 1000033 to take into
account the flex update in 10.
Tested on both 9.2-RC3 and 9.3 by myself and dim@. Running buildworld in
head but as both 10 and 11 has the new flex, it will not matter.
Reviewed by: imp
Approved by: des, imp
MFC after: 1 week
Phabric: D554
Make the sysinit tool a build tool rather than building in with
/usr/bin/cc and running it from OBJDIR. (It will be moved to usr.bin
once a manpage is written and a few style cleanups are done.)
Split the makefile bits for Hans' kernel shim layer into their own
includable kshim.mk.
Move USB support into a .mk file so loaders can include it.
for the xdev build target, which is awesome and totally works.
Reapply svn R268377 with correct name of libsupc++ here as this does
resolve one dependancy race when building the xdev target.
the xdev target builds for amd64, i386, mips, mips64 and armv6 with this commit,
must be built as root, must be built from /usr/src, must not have a /usr/obj and
places the xdev tools in /usr/$TARGET_ARCH-freebsd
the xdev target still leaves some assorted files strewn about your /usr/src when
this is done and needs to be investigated further.
Phabric: https://phabric.freebsd.org/D385
Submitted by: bsdimp
enabled (which they are in the default configuration). Otherwise, it
will fail because ${XDDESTDIR}/usr/include/atf-c does not exist.
MFC after: 3 days
nothing more. Force it to be "no" when MK_CXX is "no" to simplify
usage. It no longer also means "build g++" since we no longer have a
platform where that's interesting now that pc98 no longer needs clang
and gcc, but not g++. pc98 now just uses clang after boot2 changes.
UPDATING. This is the first step towards the removal of ia64 from
head. A buildworld for ia64 will now yield:
% make buildworld
make[1]: "/usr/src/Makefile.inc1" line 151: Unknown target ia64:ia64.
While here, trim the ia64-specific additions from ObsoleteFiles.inc
Discussed at: BSDcan
r262491, r262493, r262516, r267345, r267397:
r262491:
Add DEBUG_DISTRIBUTIONS, and set it to include base and
EXTRA_DISTRIBUTIONS, excluding 'doc', since the documentation
distribution does not have corresponding debug information.
Use DEBUG_DISTRIBUTIONS in the 'distributeworld installworld'
and 'packageworld' targets, to reduce the number of occurances
of excluding distributions that do not have .debug files.
r262493:
In release/Makefile, explicitly set WITHOUT_DEBUG_FILES=1
for dvdrom and cdrom targets. (Later reverted.)
Exclude the *.debug.txz distributions from dvdrom and
cdrom images, but include them for ftp distribution.
r262516:
Rename ${dist}.debug.txz to ${dist}-dbg.txz to prevent the
following output:
eval: ${base....}: Bad substitution
eval: ${doc....}: Bad substitution
eval: ${games....}: Bad substitution
eval: ${lib32....}: Bad substitution
This also follows other naming conventions seen in the
wild.
r267345:
Explicitly set MK_DEBUG_FILES=no, which overrides the
WITH_DEBUG_FILES=1 and WITHOUT_DEBUG_FILES=1 collisions
previously experienced.
This change allows us to create the {base,kernel}_debug.txz
distributions without accidentally installing the *.debug
files on the medium itself.
r267397:
Remove evaluations of MK_DEBUG_FILES where not needed.
If DEBUG_DISTRIBUTIONS is empty, which is true if
MK_DEBUG_FILES evaluates to 'no' above, the loop does
nothing.
MFC after: 1 month
Tested on: head@r267801
Reviewed by: brooks [1], emaste, imp [1]
[1] earlier version
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
The _SUPPORT knobs have a consistent meaning which differs from the
behaviour controlled by this knob. As the knob is opt-out and has not
appeared in a release the impact should be low.
Suggested by: imp, wblock
MFC after: 1 week
vtfontcvt(8) is now built during buildworld, so can be used as a
bootstrap tool to create vt(4) fonts from source .hex or .bdf font
files, rather than having uuencoded binary fonts in the tree.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Force all the contents of /usr/tests to go into a separate distribution
file so that users of binary releases can easily choose to not install it.
To make this possible, we need two fixes:
- bsd.subdir.mk needs to properly honor NO_SUBDIR in all cases so that we
do not recurse into 'tests' subdirectories when we needn't. Otherwise,
we end up with some Kyuafiles in base.txz.
- etc/Makefile needs to skip installing tests in its 'distribute' target
so that a Kyuafile doesn't leak into base.txz.
Approved by: gjb
This is currently an opt-in build flag. Once ASLR support is ready and stable
it should changed to opt-out and be enabled by default along with ASLR.
Each application Makefile uses opt-out to ensure that ASLR will be enabled by
default in new directories when the system is compiled with PIE/ASLR. [2]
Mark known build failures as NO_PIE for now.
The only known runtime failure was rtld.
[1] http://www.bsdcan.org/2014/schedule/events/452.en.html
Submitted by: Shawn Webb <lattera@gmail.com>
Discussed between: des@ and Shawn Webb [2]
and MK_LLDB=no, so set those explicitly (now that we can do
that). Simplify tests for these variables as well, since we know they
will always be defined regardless of the phase of the build.
kernel config file. If you also want to have a static DTB compiled
into your kernel, however, it cannot be a list. We have no mechanism
in the kernel for picking one, so that doesn't make sense and will
result in a compile-time error.
MACHINE is defined to the target's value, not the host's
value. However, in Makefile.inc1, it is still defined to be the host's
value. Make the makedtb target work by expanding TARGET in the
existance test, and passing MACHINE=$TARGET in the call to make_dtb.sh
option. Convert all other uses to MK_CTF=no. Set MK_CTF=no rather than
the indirect WITHOUT_CDDL in filemon regression. It is expected that
NO_CTF will be removed in FreeBSD 12 entirely.
building clang and/or gcc as the bootstrap compiler. Normally, the
default compiler is used. WITH_CLANG_BOOTSTRAP and/or
WITH_GCC_BOOTSTRAP will enable building these compilers as part
bootstrap phase. WITH/WITHOUT_CLANG_IS_CC controls which compiler is
used by default for the bootstrap phase, as well as which compiler is
installed as cc. buildworld now successfully completes building the
cross compiler with WITHOUT_CLANG=t and WITHOUT_GCC=t and produces a
built system with neither of these included.
Similarlly, MK_BINUTILS_BOOTSTRAP controls whether binutils is built
during this phase.
WITHOUT_CROSS_COMPILER will now force MK_BINUTILS_BOOTSTRAP=no,
MK_CLANG_BOOTSTRAP=no and MK_GCC_BOOTSTRAP=no.
BOOTSTRAP_COMPILER was considered, but rejected, since pc98 needs both
clang and gcc to bootstrap still. It should be revisisted in the
future if this requirement goes away. Values should be gcc, clang or
none. It could also be a list.
The odd interaction with Xfoo cross/external tools needs work, but
is beyond the scope of this change as well.
issues with vendors that needed 7.x support have been resolved. Many
vendors are still using 8.x build platforms, however, so bumping this
up to 9.0 will have to wait until that is resolved. Actual support for
building from 8.x still relies on those vendors fixing bugs that are
present as most developers have moved onto 9.x or newer platforms.
Reviewed by: marcel@
way. This allows a clang bootstrap to happen, even when WITHOUT_CLANG
is defined. This is a minimal version of a more extensive change which
can be MFC'd more easily. However, we have to also test to see if
we're building clang as not cc, since the bootstrap for that needs
these cross tools and it is easier to build them in just one place.
MFC after: 1 week
XDTP is used as the default SYSROOT for clang and thus should be an absolute path.
PR: arm/188249
Submitted by: Edgar Martinez <wink15987@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: imp
- if TARGET_ARCH is not defined and XDEV_ARCH is defined then early define
TARGET_ARCH to the valud of XDEV_ARCH: This allow the xdev-build target
to be able to correctly chose the compiler it needs to build
- Allow overwriting XDTP to allow a user to not chose where the xdev env will
live in
- Fix build for gcc only xdev (like ia64) by providing the proper -B to the
toolchain and not relying on gcc being installed already in base
- Fix TOOLS_PREFIX so the generated toolchain has the right default sysroot when
installed intead of getting the DESTDIR one
- Fix supporting DESTDIR
- Also overwrite CXX (needed for cross building c++ libraries with clang) and
CPP (needed to cross build some libraries when gcc is the target default
compiler but gcc is not installed on the building host)
Discussed with: imp
guess wrong for buildkernel when CC=gcc49, say. Eliminate all the
guessing. COMPILER_TYPE propigates properly on its own, if specified,
and we guess it correctly otherwise lower in the build. Also, fix
conditionals for armv6hf when using an external compiler chain. They
were broken before, but unused. Also, prefer checking the compiler
type over CLANG_IS_CC since the latter is only supposed to be used to
determine what symlinks to install (more fixes to follow).
when both WITH_FOO and WITHOUT_FOO are set. Use this where
possible. Only disallow setting of MK_FOO on the command line. This
was preferable to inventing a new mechanism or fixing the undef bug
(bin/183762) which precludes users from turning off anything we turn
off for parts of the build with WITHOUT_FOO prior to this.
This targets the existing ARMv6 and ARMv7 SoCs that contain a VFP unit.
This is an optional coprocessors may not be present in all devices, however
it appears to be in all current SoCs we support.
armv6hf targets the VFP variant of the ARM EABI and our copy of gcc is too
old to support this. Because of this there are a number of WITH/WITHOUT
options that are unsupported and must be left as the default value. The
options and their required value are:
* WITH_ARM_EABI
* WITHOUT_GCC
* WITHOUT_GNUCXX
In addition, without an external toolchain, the following need to be left
as their default:
* WITH_CLANG
* WITH_CLANG_IS_CC
As there is a different method of passing float and double values to
functions the ABI is incompatible with existing armv6 binaries. To use
this a full rebuild of world is required. Because no floating point values
are passed into the kernel an armv6 kernel with VFP enabled will work with
an armv6hf userland and vice versa.
The impact of this bug is that you cannot build a kernel if both of the
following are true:
1) The kernel config file is in a non-default location
2) The kernel config file uses the "include" statement from config(5).
usr.sbin/config/main.c
usr.sbin/config/config.8
usr.sbin/config/config.h
usr.sbin/config/lang.l
Added a "-I path" option to config(8). By analogy to cc(1), it adds
an extra path in which the "include" statement will search for
files.
Makefile.inc1
Pass "-I ${KERNCONFDIR}" to config(8).
PR: kern/187712
Reviewed by: will, imp (previous version)
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corporation
IPX was a network transport protocol in Novell's NetWare network operating
system from late 80s and then 90s. The NetWare itself switched to TCP/IP
as default transport in 1998. Later, in this century the Novell Open
Enterprise Server became successor of Novell NetWare. The last release
that claimed to still support IPX was OES 2 in 2007. Routing equipment
vendors (e.g. Cisco) discontinued support for IPX in 2011.
Thus, IPX won't be supported in FreeBSD 11.0-RELEASE.
(1) Invoke cpp to bring in files via #include (although the old
/include/ stuff is supported still).
(2) bring in files from either vendor tree or freebsd-custom files
when building.
(3) move all dts* files from sys/boot/fdt/dts to
sys/boot/fdt/dts/${MACHINE} as appropriate.
(4) encode all the magic to do the build in sys/tools/fdt/make_dtb.sh
so that the different places in the tree use the exact same logic.
(5) switch back to gpl dtc by default. the bsdl one in the tree has
significant issues not easily addressed by those unfamiliar with
the code.
commit 1b41f6de7ca09e04fdc6f66bc478ea6c981a41b9
Author: Brooks Davis <brooks@one-eyed-alien.net>
Date: Mon Jan 27 22:59:02 2014 +0000
Now that mtree is always nmtree use it as mtree
Tested on: ref9-amd64
X-MFC after: never
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
require tests in order to build or install. Crucially, don't try to
install tests during the lib32 install phase. This commit supersedes
r261081, which fixed the lib32 install phase problem, but didn't fix
other phases.
Submitted by: Garrett Cooper
Reviewed by: sjg
MFC after: 13 days
were a little broken and not automatable, with unix_seqpacket_test.
It's coverage is a superset of the old tests and it uses ATF. It
includes test cases for bugs kern/185813 and kern/185812.
PR: kern/185812
PR: kern/185813
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
MFC after: 2 weeks
drivers and their firmware were under active development, but those days
have passed. The firmware now exists in pre-compiled form, no longer
dependent on it's sources or on aicasm. If you wish to rebuild the
firmware from source, the glue still exists under the 'make firmware'
target in sys/modules/aic7xxx.
This also fixes the problem introduced with r257777 et al with building
kernels the old fashioned way in sys/$arch/compile/$CONFIG when the
ahc/ahd drivers were included.
giving access to functionality that is not available in capability mode
sandbox. The functionality can be precisely restricted.
Start with the following services:
- system.dns - provides API compatible to:
- gethostbyname(3),
- gethostbyname2(3),
- gethostbyaddr(3),
- getaddrinfo(3),
- getnameinfo(3),
- system.grp - provides getgrent(3)-compatible API,
- system.pwd - provides getpwent(3)-compatible API,
- system.random - allows to obtain entropy from /dev/random,
- system.sysctl - provides sysctlbyname(3-compatible API.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
by hastctl(8), hastd(8) and auditdistd(8) and will soon be also used
by casperd(8) and its services. There is no documentation and pjdlog.h
header file is not installed in /usr/include/ to keep it private.
Unfortunately we don't have /lib/private/ at this point, only
/usr/lib/private/, so the library is installed in /lib/.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
FreeBSD systems usually implemented this as a third party module and
our implementation hasn't played as nicely with the old way as it could
have.
To that end:
* Rename the iconv* symbols in libc.so.7 to have a __bsd_ prefix.
* Provide .symver compatability with existing 10.x+ binaries that
referenced the iconv symbols. All existing binaries should work.
* Like on Linux/glibc systems, add a libc_nonshared.a to the ldscript
at /usr/lib/libc.so.
* Move the "iconv*" wrapper symbols to libc_nonshared.a
This should solve the runtime ambiguity about which symbols resolve
to where. If you compile against the iconv in libc, your runtime
dependencies will be unambiguous.
Old 9.x libraries and binaries will always resolve against their
libiconv.so.3 like they did on 9.x. They won't resolve against libc.
Old 10.x binaries will be satisified by the .symver helpers.
This should allow ports to selectively compile against the libiconv
port if needed and it should behave without ambiguity now.
Discussed with: kib
This is to ensure that test-related directories don't get needlessly
created (and later deleted) when MK_TESTS=no.
Problem found by jhb@.
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
CTF data. Otherwise FreeBSD Update builds think every kernel file has
changed every time there's a security advisory, since the FreeBSD Update
build code isn't smart enough to look inside CTF data to ignore those
changes.
Pointy hat to: cperciva
MFC after: 1 day, or before the next BETA
the kernel itself: If building for the same architecture as the build host,
the kernel build assumes that the host toolchain is capable of building the
kernel. If it's not, "make kernel-toolchain" will bootstrap a new set of
tools that will work.
With this change the same assumptions are made for building kernel tools,
and the existing host toolchain is used to do the build (notably, the build
doesn't link the tools with the legacy libraries, which may not even exist).
If ever for some reason the host toolchain isn't capable of building the
kernel tools, then doing a "make kernel-toolchain" will bootstrap newer
tools to get the job done.
So when built as part of buildworld or kernel-toolchain, the kernel tools
are built using the XMAKE (via BMAKE) commands and environment. When built
as part of building just the kernel on a same-target host, the tools are
built using the new KTMAKE commands and environment. What doesn't jump
out at you in the diffs is that the difference between BMAKE and KTMAKE
is that BMAKE contains this magic line which changes how the build is done
because it changes what files get included for .include <bsd.prog.mk> and
other standard includes:
MAKEFLAGS="-m ${.CURDIR}/tools/build/mk ${.MAKEFLAGS}"
and KTMAKE doesn't, and contains this instead:
TOOLS_PREFIX=${WORLDTMP}
Hopefully this brings the "how to build aicasm with the right toolchain"
saga to a conclusion that works in all usage scenarios that have
historically been supported.
There is no reason to keep the two knobs separate: if tests are
enabled, the ATF libraries are required; and if tests are disabled,
the ATF libraries are not necessary. Keeping the two just serves
to complicate the build.
Reviewed by: freebsd-testing
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
Some tests may require C++ so we must ensure this library exists as part
of the bootstrap process or else they will fail to build. Do this by
just depending on lib/atf as part of the bootstrap libraries instead of
using lib/atf/libatf-c.
Submitted by: Garrett Cooper <yaneurabeya at gmail dot com>
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
The addition of the TESTS knob and its enabling of the build of tests in
lib/libcrypt/tests/ broke the build. The reason is that we cannot descend
into tests/ subdirectories until all prerequisites have been built, which
in the case of tests may be "a lot of things" (libatf-c in this case).
Ensure that we do not walk tests/ directories during the bootstrapping of
the libraries as part of buildworld.
Reviewed by: freebsd-testing
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
during kernel build (if they didn't get done with world). This will make
-DMODULES_WITH_WORLD work, and it ensures the kernel tools are built
as part of 'make kernel-toolchain'.
kernel tools the way cross-tools get built. This seems to result in the
tool getting installed in the right place. It also seems more correct in
retrospect, because if a tool emitted code or binary data as part of
building the kernel, it should do so in target-specific ways (endianess,
architecture, whatever). That issue is moot for aicasm, our only current
tool, but it still seems to be more correct in principle.
proper kernel-tools step/target modeled after the world build-tools stuff.
This is a re-do of r257730 which was backed out in r257734, but this time
it's one byte smaller... a leftover trailing backslash resulted in a .for
loop with no rules, so no compiler stuff got built and later steps built
with the wrong toolset.
Make head/ buildable again, instead of spewing garbage like:
/src/gnu/lib/csu/../../../contrib/gcc/config/rs6000/crtsavres.asm:280:
Error: no such instruction: `lwz 28,-16(11)'
components instead of with the kernel and/or modules. This ensures that it
gets built with the host compiler, not the compiler in obj/... used to build
the target components (which may be a cross-compiler outputting code for a
different architecture and using header files with types and options set up
for the wrong architecture).
Reviewed by: imp
Makefile.inc1 is being called in sub-make's where make(1) would,
by default, implicitly chdir(2) to ${.OBJDIR} before executing any
targets. This would make some targets, like delete-old, when trying
to derive various variables introduced by change r256921 using
``make -f Makefile.inc1'' that also rely on SRCDIR to fail.
This changeset adds an explicit cd ${.CURDIR} before these unwrapped
make calls, making them in line with the other ones that are already
being wrapped with the explicit chdir's.
Tested by: gjb
MFC after: 5 days
Populate /usr/tests with the only test programs that currently live
in the tree (those in lib/libcrypt/tests/) and add all the build
machinery to accompany this change.
In particular:
- Add a WITHOUT_TESTS variable that users can define to request that
no tests be put in /usr/tests.
- Add a top-level Kyuafile for /usr/tests and a way to create similar
Kyuafiles in top-level subdirectories.
- Add a BSD.tests.dist file to define the directory layout of
/usr/tests.
Submitted by: Julio Merino jmmv google.com
Reviewed by: sjg
MFC after: 2 weeks
This should have been reverted with the stable/10/Makefile.inc1
revert, but apparently my commit did not go through.
Discussed with: cperciva (originally)
The VERSION variable is encoded into the SUNW_ctf sections of the kernel
and every kernel module when dtrace is enabled; starting with 9.2-RELEASE
(when dtrace was turned on in GENERIC) this means that different host kernels
will result in very different kernel binaries being generated. This tripped
up freebsd-update builds after the build boxes were updated from 9.x to 10.x.
MFC after: 3 days (stable/9)
X-MFC after: 0 days (stable/10)
Security: Rendered two members of so@ temporarily insane
bootstrapping a copy of clang without building clang for the base system
which is useful for nanobsd and similar setups. It's still probably
wrong to conflate what is installed as /usr/bin/cc with the selection
of a bootstrap compiler under WITH*_CLANG_IS_CC, but that's for another
day.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: DARPA/AFRL
files created by WITH_DEBUG_FILES. Also cleanup .symbols files from
the period between r244236 when .symbols were supported and r251512
when they were renamed to .debug.
Only propose to delete a .debug file if the corresponding library
itself was deleted already.
Reported by: des
Reviewed by: emaste (earlier version)
Approved by: bapt
MFC after: 3 days