When FILES is defined in a Makefile that _also_ includes bsd.subdir.mk, the
build of the files (if any) was not properly triggered during the build
stage. This was because bsd.files.mk did not define the buildfiles target
if it was already defined... and bsd.subdir.mk defined this target on its
own, thus causing a conflict.
Fix this by unconditionally defining buildfiles from bsd.files.mk; this is
safe because nothing else in the tree needs to redefine this and because the
target itself contains no commands: all it does is define dependencies.
Also ensure that bsd.files.mk is always pulled in by bsd.test.mk regardless
of what bsd.prog.mk does.
These fixes allow "make installworld" to run cleanly on a system with
read-only src and obj trees.
This is "make tinderbox" clean.
Reviewed by: imp
Obtained from: jilles
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]
In r266650, we made libatf-c and libatf-c++ private libraries so that no
components outside of the source tree could unintendedly depend on them.
This change does the same for the "atf-sh library" by moving the atf-sh
interpreter from its public location in /usr/bin/ to the private location
in /usr/libexec/. Our build system will ensure that our own test programs
use the right binary, but users won't be able to depend on atf-sh by
"mistake".
Committing this now to ride the UPDATING notice added with r267172 today.
This exists already in plain.test.mk and tap.test.mk and should have been
added to atf.test.mk too when the feature was first introduced.
(It is probably time to address the related TODOs but I will do that
separately.)
We should not be leaking these interfaces to the outside world given
that it's much easier for third-party components to use the devel/atf
package from ports.
As a side-effect, we can also drop the ATF pkgconfig and aclocal files
from the base system. Nothing in the base system needs these, and it
was quite ugly to have to get them installed only so that a few ports
could build. The offending ports have been fixed to depend on
devel/atf explicitly.
Reviewed by: bapt
Makefiles are evaluated without building things. In a normal build,
the prerequisites would be built, and CC would be an actual thing. In
an INDEX build, though, they don't exists. Redirect stderr to get rid
of annoying messages, and assume that the compiler version is 0 if the
actual compiler can't tell us. Do this in preference to guessing based
on numbers because gcc410 might be 4.10, or 4.1.0 and without
carefully crafted special knowledge we differentiate between them
easily (also ming-gcc has no clues at all). Elsewhere, don't trust
the compiler version if it is 0.
this allows make -n to do tree walks as expected without
doing anything else (as intended).
Use prefix _sub. to help avoid conflict with any real target.
Reviewed by: imp
Targets thus marked are supposed to run even with -n.
As such they should not do anything except run the sub-make.
Use an intermediate target _* to associate with _SUBDIR and which
depends on installincludes etc so that we get the correct behavior with -n.
Reviewed by: marcel
src/sys and the rest of the tree for builds.
o eliminate including bsd.mkopts.mk for the moment in kern.opts.mk
o No need to include src.opts.mk at all anymore. The reasons for it
are now coverted in sys.mk and src.sys.mk.
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.
with clang 3.3. Useful for test building -current on a -stable system
in individual directories. Potentially useful if we ever want to
support, say, gcc 4.8 or 4.9's new warnings when building with an
external toolchain (but such support not yet committed). Document
the bsd.compiler.mk interface.
install it as fmake. This defaults to no. This should be viewed as the
first step towards evental migration of this historic code to ports
and removal from the tree.
versions. With its movement to src.opts.mk, bsd.prog.mk was testing
COMPILER_TYPE without including the bsd.compiler.mk anymore. In the
source tree, this caused no problems, for reasons that aren't clear,
but does cause problems outside of the source tree. Allow
bsd.compiler.mk to be included multiple times safely, and always
include bsd.compiler.mk at the top of bsd.prog.mk. Resist the urge to
put it in bsd.init.mk, since that would reintroduce the implicit
include.
options, so move their processing there. This fixes issues with
Makefiles that define NO_MAN=t and only inlcude bsd.*.mk files. A few
ports fell into this category, and they should be fixed by this change.
Also, for now, disable the warning about NO_foo being deprecated. More
work is needed than anticipated before we can do that, so kill the
noise for now.
build world, so it is the only make we build or install. fmake is
still in the tree, but disconnected, and upgrades from older systems
that still have bmake has not been removed, but its state has not been
tested (it should work given how minimal the work to upgrade to bmake
is).
/etc/src.conf to this file as well. Now, it will only affect builds of
/usr/src and not others that use the bsd.*.mk files. Specifically
don't install src.opts.mk so we can catch when it 'leaks' into
bsd.*.mk again and have there be errors when this happens. Future
commits will move to including src.opts.mk instead of bsd.own.mk when
all that's needed is one of the MK_FOO options from src.opts.mk.
Future options should be placed here, unless they directly affect a
bsd.*.mk file, in which case they should be placed in bsd.opts.mk.
thicket of .if ${COMPILER_TYPE} == "clang" that controls
warnings. Also, use CFLAGS.clang in a couple places in preference to
having a similar construct that's related to the CWARNFLAGS changes.
default. This restores more of the historical expectations that
were broken when we started disallowing both WITH_FOO and
WITHOUT_FOO to be defined.
[2] Document this new behavior, and improve the documentation in
general here.
Submitted by: sjg@ [1].