freebsd-dev/config/kernel-make-request-fn.m4

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Perform KABI checks in parallel Reduce the time required for ./configure to perform the needed KABI checks by allowing kbuild to compile multiple test cases in parallel. This was accomplished by splitting each test's source code from the logic handling whether that code could be compiled or not. By introducing this split it's possible to minimize the number of times kbuild needs to be invoked. As importantly, it means all of the tests can be built in parallel. This does require a little extra care since we expect some tests to fail, so the --keep-going (-k) option must be provided otherwise some tests may not get compiled. Furthermore, since a failure during the kbuild modpost phase will result in an early exit; the final linking phase is limited to tests which passed the initial compilation and produced an object file. Once everything has been built the configure script proceeds as previously. The only significant difference is that it now merely needs to test for the existence of a .ko file to determine the result of a given test. This vastly speeds up the entire process. New test cases should use ZFS_LINUX_TEST_SRC to declare their test source code and ZFS_LINUX_TEST_RESULT to check the result. All of the existing kernel-*.m4 files have been updated accordingly, see config/kernel-current-time.m4 for a basic example. The legacy ZFS_LINUX_TRY_COMPILE macro has been kept to handle special cases but it's use is not encouraged. master (secs) patched (secs) ------------- ---------------- autogen.sh 61 68 configure 137 24 (~17% of current run time) make -j $(nproc) 44 44 make rpms 287 150 Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov> Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov> Closes #8547 Closes #9132 Closes #9341
2019-10-01 19:50:34 +00:00
dnl #
dnl # Check for make_request_fn interface.
dnl #
AC_DEFUN([ZFS_AC_KERNEL_SRC_MAKE_REQUEST_FN], [
ZFS_LINUX_TEST_SRC([make_request_fn_void], [
#include <linux/blkdev.h>
void make_request(struct request_queue *q,
struct bio *bio) { return; }
],[
blk_queue_make_request(NULL, &make_request);
])
ZFS_LINUX_TEST_SRC([make_request_fn_blk_qc_t], [
#include <linux/blkdev.h>
blk_qc_t make_request(struct request_queue *q,
struct bio *bio) { return (BLK_QC_T_NONE); }
],[
blk_queue_make_request(NULL, &make_request);
])
ZFS_LINUX_TEST_SRC([blk_alloc_queue_request_fn], [
#include <linux/blkdev.h>
blk_qc_t make_request(struct request_queue *q,
struct bio *bio) { return (BLK_QC_T_NONE); }
],[
struct request_queue *q __attribute__ ((unused));
q = blk_alloc_queue(make_request, NUMA_NO_NODE);
])
ZFS_LINUX_TEST_SRC([blk_alloc_queue_request_fn_rh], [
#include <linux/blkdev.h>
blk_qc_t make_request(struct request_queue *q,
struct bio *bio) { return (BLK_QC_T_NONE); }
],[
struct request_queue *q __attribute__ ((unused));
q = blk_alloc_queue_rh(make_request, NUMA_NO_NODE);
])
ZFS_LINUX_TEST_SRC([block_device_operations_submit_bio], [
#include <linux/blkdev.h>
],[
struct block_device_operations o;
o.submit_bio = NULL;
])
ZFS_LINUX_TEST_SRC([blk_alloc_disk], [
#include <linux/blkdev.h>
],[
struct gendisk *disk __attribute__ ((unused));
disk = blk_alloc_disk(NUMA_NO_NODE);
])
ZFS_LINUX_TEST_SRC([blk_cleanup_disk], [
#include <linux/blkdev.h>
],[
struct gendisk *disk __attribute__ ((unused));
blk_cleanup_disk(disk);
])
Perform KABI checks in parallel Reduce the time required for ./configure to perform the needed KABI checks by allowing kbuild to compile multiple test cases in parallel. This was accomplished by splitting each test's source code from the logic handling whether that code could be compiled or not. By introducing this split it's possible to minimize the number of times kbuild needs to be invoked. As importantly, it means all of the tests can be built in parallel. This does require a little extra care since we expect some tests to fail, so the --keep-going (-k) option must be provided otherwise some tests may not get compiled. Furthermore, since a failure during the kbuild modpost phase will result in an early exit; the final linking phase is limited to tests which passed the initial compilation and produced an object file. Once everything has been built the configure script proceeds as previously. The only significant difference is that it now merely needs to test for the existence of a .ko file to determine the result of a given test. This vastly speeds up the entire process. New test cases should use ZFS_LINUX_TEST_SRC to declare their test source code and ZFS_LINUX_TEST_RESULT to check the result. All of the existing kernel-*.m4 files have been updated accordingly, see config/kernel-current-time.m4 for a basic example. The legacy ZFS_LINUX_TRY_COMPILE macro has been kept to handle special cases but it's use is not encouraged. master (secs) patched (secs) ------------- ---------------- autogen.sh 61 68 configure 137 24 (~17% of current run time) make -j $(nproc) 44 44 make rpms 287 150 Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov> Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov> Closes #8547 Closes #9132 Closes #9341
2019-10-01 19:50:34 +00:00
])
AC_DEFUN([ZFS_AC_KERNEL_MAKE_REQUEST_FN], [
dnl # Checked as part of the blk_alloc_queue_request_fn test
Perform KABI checks in parallel Reduce the time required for ./configure to perform the needed KABI checks by allowing kbuild to compile multiple test cases in parallel. This was accomplished by splitting each test's source code from the logic handling whether that code could be compiled or not. By introducing this split it's possible to minimize the number of times kbuild needs to be invoked. As importantly, it means all of the tests can be built in parallel. This does require a little extra care since we expect some tests to fail, so the --keep-going (-k) option must be provided otherwise some tests may not get compiled. Furthermore, since a failure during the kbuild modpost phase will result in an early exit; the final linking phase is limited to tests which passed the initial compilation and produced an object file. Once everything has been built the configure script proceeds as previously. The only significant difference is that it now merely needs to test for the existence of a .ko file to determine the result of a given test. This vastly speeds up the entire process. New test cases should use ZFS_LINUX_TEST_SRC to declare their test source code and ZFS_LINUX_TEST_RESULT to check the result. All of the existing kernel-*.m4 files have been updated accordingly, see config/kernel-current-time.m4 for a basic example. The legacy ZFS_LINUX_TRY_COMPILE macro has been kept to handle special cases but it's use is not encouraged. master (secs) patched (secs) ------------- ---------------- autogen.sh 61 68 configure 137 24 (~17% of current run time) make -j $(nproc) 44 44 make rpms 287 150 Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov> Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov> Closes #8547 Closes #9132 Closes #9341
2019-10-01 19:50:34 +00:00
dnl #
dnl # Linux 5.9 API Change
dnl # make_request_fn was moved into block_device_operations->submit_bio
Perform KABI checks in parallel Reduce the time required for ./configure to perform the needed KABI checks by allowing kbuild to compile multiple test cases in parallel. This was accomplished by splitting each test's source code from the logic handling whether that code could be compiled or not. By introducing this split it's possible to minimize the number of times kbuild needs to be invoked. As importantly, it means all of the tests can be built in parallel. This does require a little extra care since we expect some tests to fail, so the --keep-going (-k) option must be provided otherwise some tests may not get compiled. Furthermore, since a failure during the kbuild modpost phase will result in an early exit; the final linking phase is limited to tests which passed the initial compilation and produced an object file. Once everything has been built the configure script proceeds as previously. The only significant difference is that it now merely needs to test for the existence of a .ko file to determine the result of a given test. This vastly speeds up the entire process. New test cases should use ZFS_LINUX_TEST_SRC to declare their test source code and ZFS_LINUX_TEST_RESULT to check the result. All of the existing kernel-*.m4 files have been updated accordingly, see config/kernel-current-time.m4 for a basic example. The legacy ZFS_LINUX_TRY_COMPILE macro has been kept to handle special cases but it's use is not encouraged. master (secs) patched (secs) ------------- ---------------- autogen.sh 61 68 configure 137 24 (~17% of current run time) make -j $(nproc) 44 44 make rpms 287 150 Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov> Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov> Closes #8547 Closes #9132 Closes #9341
2019-10-01 19:50:34 +00:00
dnl #
AC_MSG_CHECKING([whether submit_bio is member of struct block_device_operations])
ZFS_LINUX_TEST_RESULT([block_device_operations_submit_bio], [
Perform KABI checks in parallel Reduce the time required for ./configure to perform the needed KABI checks by allowing kbuild to compile multiple test cases in parallel. This was accomplished by splitting each test's source code from the logic handling whether that code could be compiled or not. By introducing this split it's possible to minimize the number of times kbuild needs to be invoked. As importantly, it means all of the tests can be built in parallel. This does require a little extra care since we expect some tests to fail, so the --keep-going (-k) option must be provided otherwise some tests may not get compiled. Furthermore, since a failure during the kbuild modpost phase will result in an early exit; the final linking phase is limited to tests which passed the initial compilation and produced an object file. Once everything has been built the configure script proceeds as previously. The only significant difference is that it now merely needs to test for the existence of a .ko file to determine the result of a given test. This vastly speeds up the entire process. New test cases should use ZFS_LINUX_TEST_SRC to declare their test source code and ZFS_LINUX_TEST_RESULT to check the result. All of the existing kernel-*.m4 files have been updated accordingly, see config/kernel-current-time.m4 for a basic example. The legacy ZFS_LINUX_TRY_COMPILE macro has been kept to handle special cases but it's use is not encouraged. master (secs) patched (secs) ------------- ---------------- autogen.sh 61 68 configure 137 24 (~17% of current run time) make -j $(nproc) 44 44 make rpms 287 150 Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov> Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov> Closes #8547 Closes #9132 Closes #9341
2019-10-01 19:50:34 +00:00
AC_MSG_RESULT(yes)
AC_DEFINE(HAVE_SUBMIT_BIO_IN_BLOCK_DEVICE_OPERATIONS, 1,
[submit_bio is member of struct block_device_operations])
dnl #
dnl # Linux 5.14 API Change:
dnl # blk_alloc_queue() + alloc_disk() combo replaced by
dnl # a single call to blk_alloc_disk().
dnl #
AC_MSG_CHECKING([whether blk_alloc_disk() exists])
ZFS_LINUX_TEST_RESULT([blk_alloc_disk], [
AC_MSG_RESULT(yes)
AC_DEFINE([HAVE_BLK_ALLOC_DISK], 1, [blk_alloc_disk() exists])
dnl #
dnl # 5.20 API change,
dnl # Removed blk_cleanup_disk(), put_disk() should be used.
dnl #
AC_MSG_CHECKING([whether blk_cleanup_disk() exists])
ZFS_LINUX_TEST_RESULT([blk_cleanup_disk], [
AC_MSG_RESULT(yes)
AC_DEFINE([HAVE_BLK_CLEANUP_DISK], 1,
[blk_cleanup_disk() exists])
], [
AC_MSG_RESULT(no)
])
], [
AC_MSG_RESULT(no)
])
],[
AC_MSG_RESULT(no)
dnl # Checked as part of the blk_alloc_queue_request_fn test
Perform KABI checks in parallel Reduce the time required for ./configure to perform the needed KABI checks by allowing kbuild to compile multiple test cases in parallel. This was accomplished by splitting each test's source code from the logic handling whether that code could be compiled or not. By introducing this split it's possible to minimize the number of times kbuild needs to be invoked. As importantly, it means all of the tests can be built in parallel. This does require a little extra care since we expect some tests to fail, so the --keep-going (-k) option must be provided otherwise some tests may not get compiled. Furthermore, since a failure during the kbuild modpost phase will result in an early exit; the final linking phase is limited to tests which passed the initial compilation and produced an object file. Once everything has been built the configure script proceeds as previously. The only significant difference is that it now merely needs to test for the existence of a .ko file to determine the result of a given test. This vastly speeds up the entire process. New test cases should use ZFS_LINUX_TEST_SRC to declare their test source code and ZFS_LINUX_TEST_RESULT to check the result. All of the existing kernel-*.m4 files have been updated accordingly, see config/kernel-current-time.m4 for a basic example. The legacy ZFS_LINUX_TRY_COMPILE macro has been kept to handle special cases but it's use is not encouraged. master (secs) patched (secs) ------------- ---------------- autogen.sh 61 68 configure 137 24 (~17% of current run time) make -j $(nproc) 44 44 make rpms 287 150 Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov> Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov> Closes #8547 Closes #9132 Closes #9341
2019-10-01 19:50:34 +00:00
dnl #
dnl # Linux 5.7 API Change
dnl # blk_alloc_queue() expects request function.
Perform KABI checks in parallel Reduce the time required for ./configure to perform the needed KABI checks by allowing kbuild to compile multiple test cases in parallel. This was accomplished by splitting each test's source code from the logic handling whether that code could be compiled or not. By introducing this split it's possible to minimize the number of times kbuild needs to be invoked. As importantly, it means all of the tests can be built in parallel. This does require a little extra care since we expect some tests to fail, so the --keep-going (-k) option must be provided otherwise some tests may not get compiled. Furthermore, since a failure during the kbuild modpost phase will result in an early exit; the final linking phase is limited to tests which passed the initial compilation and produced an object file. Once everything has been built the configure script proceeds as previously. The only significant difference is that it now merely needs to test for the existence of a .ko file to determine the result of a given test. This vastly speeds up the entire process. New test cases should use ZFS_LINUX_TEST_SRC to declare their test source code and ZFS_LINUX_TEST_RESULT to check the result. All of the existing kernel-*.m4 files have been updated accordingly, see config/kernel-current-time.m4 for a basic example. The legacy ZFS_LINUX_TRY_COMPILE macro has been kept to handle special cases but it's use is not encouraged. master (secs) patched (secs) ------------- ---------------- autogen.sh 61 68 configure 137 24 (~17% of current run time) make -j $(nproc) 44 44 make rpms 287 150 Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov> Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov> Closes #8547 Closes #9132 Closes #9341
2019-10-01 19:50:34 +00:00
dnl #
AC_MSG_CHECKING([whether blk_alloc_queue() expects request function])
ZFS_LINUX_TEST_RESULT([blk_alloc_queue_request_fn], [
AC_MSG_RESULT(yes)
dnl # This is currently always the case.
AC_MSG_CHECKING([whether make_request_fn() returns blk_qc_t])
Perform KABI checks in parallel Reduce the time required for ./configure to perform the needed KABI checks by allowing kbuild to compile multiple test cases in parallel. This was accomplished by splitting each test's source code from the logic handling whether that code could be compiled or not. By introducing this split it's possible to minimize the number of times kbuild needs to be invoked. As importantly, it means all of the tests can be built in parallel. This does require a little extra care since we expect some tests to fail, so the --keep-going (-k) option must be provided otherwise some tests may not get compiled. Furthermore, since a failure during the kbuild modpost phase will result in an early exit; the final linking phase is limited to tests which passed the initial compilation and produced an object file. Once everything has been built the configure script proceeds as previously. The only significant difference is that it now merely needs to test for the existence of a .ko file to determine the result of a given test. This vastly speeds up the entire process. New test cases should use ZFS_LINUX_TEST_SRC to declare their test source code and ZFS_LINUX_TEST_RESULT to check the result. All of the existing kernel-*.m4 files have been updated accordingly, see config/kernel-current-time.m4 for a basic example. The legacy ZFS_LINUX_TRY_COMPILE macro has been kept to handle special cases but it's use is not encouraged. master (secs) patched (secs) ------------- ---------------- autogen.sh 61 68 configure 137 24 (~17% of current run time) make -j $(nproc) 44 44 make rpms 287 150 Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov> Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov> Closes #8547 Closes #9132 Closes #9341
2019-10-01 19:50:34 +00:00
AC_MSG_RESULT(yes)
AC_DEFINE(HAVE_BLK_ALLOC_QUEUE_REQUEST_FN, 1,
[blk_alloc_queue() expects request function])
AC_DEFINE(MAKE_REQUEST_FN_RET, blk_qc_t,
Perform KABI checks in parallel Reduce the time required for ./configure to perform the needed KABI checks by allowing kbuild to compile multiple test cases in parallel. This was accomplished by splitting each test's source code from the logic handling whether that code could be compiled or not. By introducing this split it's possible to minimize the number of times kbuild needs to be invoked. As importantly, it means all of the tests can be built in parallel. This does require a little extra care since we expect some tests to fail, so the --keep-going (-k) option must be provided otherwise some tests may not get compiled. Furthermore, since a failure during the kbuild modpost phase will result in an early exit; the final linking phase is limited to tests which passed the initial compilation and produced an object file. Once everything has been built the configure script proceeds as previously. The only significant difference is that it now merely needs to test for the existence of a .ko file to determine the result of a given test. This vastly speeds up the entire process. New test cases should use ZFS_LINUX_TEST_SRC to declare their test source code and ZFS_LINUX_TEST_RESULT to check the result. All of the existing kernel-*.m4 files have been updated accordingly, see config/kernel-current-time.m4 for a basic example. The legacy ZFS_LINUX_TRY_COMPILE macro has been kept to handle special cases but it's use is not encouraged. master (secs) patched (secs) ------------- ---------------- autogen.sh 61 68 configure 137 24 (~17% of current run time) make -j $(nproc) 44 44 make rpms 287 150 Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov> Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov> Closes #8547 Closes #9132 Closes #9341
2019-10-01 19:50:34 +00:00
[make_request_fn() return type])
AC_DEFINE(HAVE_MAKE_REQUEST_FN_RET_QC, 1,
[Noting that make_request_fn() returns blk_qc_t])
Perform KABI checks in parallel Reduce the time required for ./configure to perform the needed KABI checks by allowing kbuild to compile multiple test cases in parallel. This was accomplished by splitting each test's source code from the logic handling whether that code could be compiled or not. By introducing this split it's possible to minimize the number of times kbuild needs to be invoked. As importantly, it means all of the tests can be built in parallel. This does require a little extra care since we expect some tests to fail, so the --keep-going (-k) option must be provided otherwise some tests may not get compiled. Furthermore, since a failure during the kbuild modpost phase will result in an early exit; the final linking phase is limited to tests which passed the initial compilation and produced an object file. Once everything has been built the configure script proceeds as previously. The only significant difference is that it now merely needs to test for the existence of a .ko file to determine the result of a given test. This vastly speeds up the entire process. New test cases should use ZFS_LINUX_TEST_SRC to declare their test source code and ZFS_LINUX_TEST_RESULT to check the result. All of the existing kernel-*.m4 files have been updated accordingly, see config/kernel-current-time.m4 for a basic example. The legacy ZFS_LINUX_TRY_COMPILE macro has been kept to handle special cases but it's use is not encouraged. master (secs) patched (secs) ------------- ---------------- autogen.sh 61 68 configure 137 24 (~17% of current run time) make -j $(nproc) 44 44 make rpms 287 150 Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov> Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov> Closes #8547 Closes #9132 Closes #9341
2019-10-01 19:50:34 +00:00
],[
dnl #
dnl # CentOS Stream 4.18.0-257 API Change
dnl # The Linux 5.7 blk_alloc_queue() change was back-
dnl # ported and the symbol renamed blk_alloc_queue_rh().
dnl # As of this kernel version they're not providing
dnl # any compatibility code in the kernel for this.
dnl #
ZFS_LINUX_TEST_RESULT([blk_alloc_queue_request_fn_rh], [
AC_MSG_RESULT(yes)
dnl # This is currently always the case.
AC_MSG_CHECKING([whether make_request_fn_rh() returns blk_qc_t])
AC_MSG_RESULT(yes)
AC_DEFINE(HAVE_BLK_ALLOC_QUEUE_REQUEST_FN_RH, 1,
[blk_alloc_queue_rh() expects request function])
AC_DEFINE(MAKE_REQUEST_FN_RET, blk_qc_t,
[make_request_fn() return type])
AC_DEFINE(HAVE_MAKE_REQUEST_FN_RET_QC, 1,
[Noting that make_request_fn() returns blk_qc_t])
],[
AC_MSG_RESULT(no)
dnl #
dnl # Linux 3.2 API Change
dnl # make_request_fn returns void.
dnl #
AC_MSG_CHECKING(
[whether make_request_fn() returns void])
ZFS_LINUX_TEST_RESULT([make_request_fn_void], [
AC_MSG_RESULT(yes)
AC_DEFINE(MAKE_REQUEST_FN_RET, void,
[make_request_fn() return type])
AC_DEFINE(HAVE_MAKE_REQUEST_FN_RET_VOID, 1,
[Noting that make_request_fn() returns void])
],[
AC_MSG_RESULT(no)
dnl #
dnl # Linux 4.4 API Change
dnl # make_request_fn returns blk_qc_t.
dnl #
AC_MSG_CHECKING(
[whether make_request_fn() returns blk_qc_t])
ZFS_LINUX_TEST_RESULT([make_request_fn_blk_qc_t], [
AC_MSG_RESULT(yes)
AC_DEFINE(MAKE_REQUEST_FN_RET, blk_qc_t,
[make_request_fn() return type])
AC_DEFINE(HAVE_MAKE_REQUEST_FN_RET_QC, 1,
[Noting that make_request_fn() ]
[returns blk_qc_t])
],[
ZFS_LINUX_TEST_ERROR([make_request_fn])
])
])
])
Perform KABI checks in parallel Reduce the time required for ./configure to perform the needed KABI checks by allowing kbuild to compile multiple test cases in parallel. This was accomplished by splitting each test's source code from the logic handling whether that code could be compiled or not. By introducing this split it's possible to minimize the number of times kbuild needs to be invoked. As importantly, it means all of the tests can be built in parallel. This does require a little extra care since we expect some tests to fail, so the --keep-going (-k) option must be provided otherwise some tests may not get compiled. Furthermore, since a failure during the kbuild modpost phase will result in an early exit; the final linking phase is limited to tests which passed the initial compilation and produced an object file. Once everything has been built the configure script proceeds as previously. The only significant difference is that it now merely needs to test for the existence of a .ko file to determine the result of a given test. This vastly speeds up the entire process. New test cases should use ZFS_LINUX_TEST_SRC to declare their test source code and ZFS_LINUX_TEST_RESULT to check the result. All of the existing kernel-*.m4 files have been updated accordingly, see config/kernel-current-time.m4 for a basic example. The legacy ZFS_LINUX_TRY_COMPILE macro has been kept to handle special cases but it's use is not encouraged. master (secs) patched (secs) ------------- ---------------- autogen.sh 61 68 configure 137 24 (~17% of current run time) make -j $(nproc) 44 44 make rpms 287 150 Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov> Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov> Closes #8547 Closes #9132 Closes #9341
2019-10-01 19:50:34 +00:00
])
])
])