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The current default is provided in various Makefile.inc in some top-level directories and covers a good portion of the tree, but doesn't cover parts of the build a little deeper (e.g. libcasper). Provide a default in src.sys.mk and set WARNS to it in bsd.sys.mk if that variable is defined. This lets us relatively cleanly provide a default WARNS no matter where you're building in the src tree without breaking things outside of the tree. Crunchgen has been updated as a bootstrap tool to work on this change because it needs r365605 at a minimum to succeed. The cleanup necessary to successfully walk over this change on WITHOUT_CLEAN builds has been added. There is a supplemental project to this to list all of the warnings that are encountered when the environment has WARNS=6 NO_WERROR=yes: https://warns.kevans.dev -- this project will hopefully eventually go away in favor of CI doing a much better job than it. Reviewed by: emaste, brooks, ngie (all earlier version) Reviewed by: emaste, arichardson (depend-cleanup.sh change) Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26455 |
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librescue | ||
rescue | ||
Makefile | ||
README |
The /rescue build system here has three goals: 1) Produce a reliable standalone set of /rescue tools. The contents of /rescue are all statically linked and do not depend on anything in /bin or /sbin. In particular, they'll continue to function even if you've hosed your dynamic /bin and /sbin. For example, note that /rescue/mount runs /rescue/mount_nfs and not /sbin/mount_nfs. This is more subtle than it looks. As an added bonus, /rescue is fairly small (thanks to crunchgen) and includes a number of tools (such as gzip, bzip2, vi) that are not normally found in /bin and /sbin. 2) Demonstrate robust use of crunchgen. These Makefiles recompile each of the crunchgen components and include support for overriding specific library entries. Such techniques should be useful elsewhere. 3) Produce a toolkit suitable for small distributions. Install /rescue on a CD or CompactFlash disk, and symlink /bin and /sbin to /rescue to produce a small and fairly complete FreeBSD system. These tools have one big disadvantage: being statically linked, they cannot use some advanced library functions that rely on dynamic linking. In particular, nsswitch, locales, and pam all rely on dynamic linking. To compile: # cd /usr/src/rescue # make obj # make # make install Note that rebuilds don't always work correctly; if you run into trouble, try 'make clean' before recompiling. $FreeBSD$