and UPDATING and has been posted to both freebsd-current and
freebsd-stable, users are still not adding the required smmsp user and
group before doing an installworld. Therefore, don't let users do an
installworld unless they have followed directions.
Add a new installcheck Makefile target which installworld runs before
actually starting the installation. This target can be used by other parts
of userland as well. The first addition to the target is to check for the
smmsp user and group if NO_SENDMAIL isn't defined.
Others may add checks to this target as they see fit.
MFC after: 1 week
breakage with ioctl.c. The .depend file should track dependencies
just fine, and the worst we can have is to miss new ioctls.
But I still think it's a good idea to have -DNOCLEAN build produce
the same ioctl.c as it would without -DNOCLEAN.
Prodded for a long time by: bde
of setting ${TARGET} -- make it default to ${MACHINE} if we are
not cross-building, and ${TARGET_ARCH} otherwise.
Set MAKEOBJDIREPREFIX based on ${TARGET}, not on ${TARGET_ARCH}.
This is useful if you want to cross-build pc98 worlds on i386.
Install sys/<arch>/include/pc/*.h to /usr/include/machine/pc/.
PR: docs/29534
Install sys/netatm/*/*.h to /usr/include/netatm/*/.
Don't install compatibility symlinks for <machine/soundcard.h>
and <machine/joystick.h>. Three years is enough to be aware of
the change, and these weren't visible in the SHARED=symlinks
case.
Back out include/Makefile,v 1.160 that was a null change anyway
due to the bug in the path, and we now don't want to install
these headers because they would otherwise be invisible in the
SHARED=symlinks case.
Don't install IPFILTER headers. Userland utilities fetch them
directly, and they were not visible in the SHARED=symlinks case.
Resurrect SHARED=symlinks in Makefile.inc1.
PR: bin/28002
Prodded by: bde
MFC after: 2 weeks
(See commit log for usr.bin/xlint/Makefile,v 1.11 for what was wrong
with enabling build of lint libraries in rev. 1.12.)
This fixes cross-arch compiles (running binaries for a different arch
when generating lint.7 and lint libraries) and cross-branch compiles
(4.x -> 5.0 buildworld should be working again).
to pick up the correct cross-tools (the compiler executables and binutils)
and special linker files (crt*.o). This is now controlled by a single knob,
TOOLS_PREFIX, when building cross-tools.
Fixed regression in Makefile.inc1,v 1.203 (-nostdinc). This clobbered target
architecture's CFLAGS with building host's CPUTYPE setting in /etc/make.conf,
and had a nice but nasty side effect of exposing some (normally hidden) bugs
in system headers.
(Attempt to move the "-nostdinc -I..." part of CFLAGS into the new CINCLUDES
(modeled after a similar CXXINCLUDES) eventually failed because hard-coding
${WORLDTMP}/usr/include to be the first in the include list does not always
work, e.g. lib/libbind.)
Compensate the -nostdinc removal by making cpp(1) built in the cross-tools
stage to not look for <> header files in the building host's /usr/include
(already committed as gnu/usr.bin/cc/cc_tools/freebsd-native.h, revisions
1.10-1.12, STANDARD_INCLUDE_DIR).
: $ /usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/bin/cpp -v /dev/null
:
: Before:
:
: #include <...> search starts here:
: /usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/include
: /usr/include
: End of search list.
:
: After:
:
: #include <...> search starts here:
: /usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/include
: /usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/include
(Disabling the use of GCC_INCLUDE_DIR in the FREEBSD_NATIVE case would fix
the duplicate above.)
Get rid of the (now unneeded) -I${DESTDIR}/usr/include magic in bsd.prog.mk
and bsd.lib.mk. Finish the removal of LDDESTDIR in bsd.lib.mk,v 1.55 -- we
no longer have users of it.
The required changes to gcc were already committed as contrib/gcc.295/gcc.c,
revisions 1.23 and 1.24.
Basically, this allows for the changes above plus makes gcc(1) persistent
about path configuration, whether it's configured as a native or a cross
compiler:
: $ /usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/bin/cc -print-search-dirs
: install: /usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/libexec/(null)
: programs: /usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/libexec/elf/:/usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/libexec/
: libraries: /usr/obj/usr/src/i386/usr/lib/
:
: $ /usr/obj/alpha/usr/src/i386/usr/bin/cc -print-search-dirs
: install: /usr/obj/alpha/usr/src/i386/usr/libexec/(null)
: programs: /usr/obj/alpha/usr/src/i386/usr/libexec/elf/:/usr/obj/alpha/usr/src/i386/usr/libexec/
: libraries: /usr/obj/alpha/usr/src/i386/usr/lib/
Reviewed by: bde, obrien
Finish it by adding kerberos5/lib/libvers to the build-tools list.
(I didn't notice it before because I tested my fix in a -DNOCLEAN
environment, and static libc.a was already in ${WORLDTMP}/usr/lib,
and libvers's make-print-version build tool used it for linking.)
Spotted by: John Indra <maverick@office.naver.co.id>
(make-roken is a build tool). This bug was hiding itself after
a just fixed bug in cross-linker (binutuils/ld/Makefile,v 1.20).
The bug was fatal for cross builds; for example, an alpha binary
(make-roken) was attempted to be run on i386.
Added make-roken to the list of build-tools in libasn1. It only
worked because another build tool needs make-roken implicitly:
(build-tools: asn1_compile: print_version.o: roken.h: make-roken).
Spotted by: nectar
dependencies in the correct place, record the fact that -lssh
depends on -lcrypto and -lz.
Removed false dependencies on -lz (except ssh(1) and sshd(8)).
Removed false dependencies on -lcrypto and -lutil for scp(1).
Reviewed by: markm
This backs out (sort of) delta 1.18 to perl/miniperl/Makefile.
Update to the ld(1) comment by peter in this revision:
ld(1) built as part of the cross-tools stage of buildworld has
been fixed to look for dynamic dependencies in the right place,
${WORLDTMP}/usr/lib, effective binutils/ld/Makefile,v 1.20.
Approved by: markm
In src/Makefile rev 1.232, environment variable PATH is set explicitly
to /sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin. As a result, binaries located on
non-standard path cannot be executed without full-path (it's the change
of this revision).
However, cvsup is not in our base system -- you lose if you try to
"make update" without setting SUP in make.conf or command line argument.
I think it is safe to assume that cvsup is located at /usr/local/bin,
and it would help other people who first try to do "make update".
PR: 31932
MFC after: 1 day
Introduce ${TARGET} defaulting to ${MACHINE} which should be set to
whatever your target ${MACHINE} is, and use that with world-related
stages. That is, to build pc98 on alpha, one now needs to set both
TARGET_ARCH=i386 and TARGET=pc98.
The scope of ${TARGET} is limited to Makefile.inc1 and cross-tools.
In particular, this change was tested to fix:
1. Cross building of "alpha" on i386. The breakage was introduced
by rev. 1.10 to sbin/i386/Makefile (missing <machine/cronyx.h>).
2. Descending into machine-specific subdirs for a different arch.
Previously, sbin/i386 and usr.sbin/boot0cfg were descended into
when cross-building "alpha" or pc98 on i386.
3. Fixes pc98 cross-building which was horribly broken, caused by
not setting MACHINE correctly (most ${MACHINE} == pc98 checking
Makefiles put -DPC98 to CFLAGS).
1. To cross-build, one now needs to set TARGET_ARCH, and not the
MACHINE_ARCH. MACHINE_ARCH should never be changed manually!
2. Initialize DESTDIR= explicitly for bootstrap-tools, build-tools,
and cross-tools stages. This fixes broken header and library
dependencies problem. We build them in the host environment,
and obviously want them to depend on host headers and libraries.
The problem with broken header dependencies for bootstrap-tools
and cross-tools was already partially solved (see BOOTSTRAPPING
tests in bsd.prog.mk and bsd.lib.mk), but it was still there for
build-tools if the user ran "make world DESTDIR=/foo". Also,
for all of these stages, the library dependencies were broken
because of how bsd.libnames.mk define DPADD members.
We still provide a glue to install bootstrap- and cross-tools
under the ${WORLDTMP}.
Removed PATH overrides for bootstrap-, build-, and cross-tools
stages. There is just no reason why we would need to override
it, and the hacks to clean up the ${WORLDTMP} in the -DNOCLEAN
case are no longer needed with fixes from this step.
That is, we now never use ${WORLDTMP} headers and libraries,
and we don't use any ${WORLDTMP} installed binaries during
these stages. Again, these stages depend solely on the host
environment, including compiler, headers, and libraries.
3. Moved "miniperl" back from cross-tools (it has nothing to do
with a cross-compiler) to build-tools where it belongs. The
change from step 1 let to do this. Also, to make this work,
build-tools targets of "cc_tools" and "miniperl" were modified
to call "depend". Here follow the detailed explanations.
There are two categories of build tools, for now. In the first
category there are "cc_tools" and "miniperl". They occupy the
whole (sub)directory, and nothing needs to be done in this
subdirectory later during the "all" stage. They are also
constructed using system makefiles. We must build the .depend
early in the build-tools stage because:
1) They use (and depend on) the host environment.
2) If we don't do this in build-tools, the "depend" stage of
buildworld will do this for us; wrong library and header
dependencies will be recorded (DESTDIR=${WORLDTMP}) and,
what's worse, the "all" stage may then clobber the
build-architecture format tools (that we built in the
build-tools stage) with the target-architecture format
ones, breaking cross build.
In the second category there are all other build-tools. They
share their directory with the "main" module that needs them
in the "all" stage, and they don't show up themselves in the
.depend file. The portion of this fix was already committed
in gnu/usr.bin/cc/cc_tools/Makefile,v 1.52.
4. "libperl" is no longer a build tool, and "miniperl" is the
stand-alone application. I had to make this change because
build-tools and "all" stages share the same object directory.
Without this change, if we cross compile, libperl.a is first
built for the build architecture during the build-tools stage
(for the purposes of immediate linkage with "miniperl").
Later on, the "all" stage sees this library as up-to-date,
and doesn't rebuild it. The effect is that the wrong format
static libperl library is installed with installworld.
5. Fixed "includes" to install secure/lib/libtelnet headers if
required.
Reviewed by: bde