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.