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If ext sdk is built by gcc version higher than host gcc version
and host gcc version is 4.8 or 4.9 the installation is known to
fail due to the way uninative sstate package is built.
It's a known issue and we don't have a way to fix it for above
mentioned combinations of build and host gcc versions.
Detected non-installable combinations of gcc versions and
print an installation error.
[YOCTO #10881]
Signed-off-by: Ed Bartosh <ed.bartosh@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
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This patch is comparatively large and invasive. It does only do one thing, switching the
system to build using recipe specific sysroots and where changes could be isolated from it,
that has been done.
With the current single sysroot approach, its possible for software to find things which
aren't in their dependencies. This leads to a determinism problem and is a growing issue in
several of the market segments where OE makes sense. The way to solve this problem for OE is
to have seperate sysroots for each recipe and these will only contain the dependencies for
that recipe.
Its worth noting that this is not task specific sysroots and that OE's dependencies do vary
enormously by task. This did result in some implementation challenges. There is nothing stopping
the implementation of task specific sysroots at some later point based on this work but
that as deemed a bridge too far right now.
Implementation details:
* Rather than installing the sysroot artefacts into a combined sysroots, they are now placed in
TMPDIR/sysroot-components/PACKAGE_ARCH/PN.
* WORKDIR/recipe-sysroot and WORKDIR/recipe-sysroot-native are built by hardlinking in files
from the sysroot-component trees. These new directories are known as RECIPE_SYSROOT and
RECIPE_SYSROOT_NATIVE.
* This construction is primarily done by a new do_prepare_recipe_sysroot task which runs
before do_configure and consists of a call to the extend_recipe_sysroot function.
* Other tasks need things in the sysroot before/after this, e.g. do_patch needs quilt-native
and do_package_write_deb needs dpkg-native. The code therefore inspects the dependencies
for each task and adds extend_recipe_sysroot as a prefunc if it has populate_sysroot
dependencies.
* We have to do a search/replace 'fixme' operation on the files installed into the sysroot to
change hardcoded paths into the correct ones. We create a fixmepath file in the component
directory which lists the files which need this operation.
* Some files have "postinstall" commands which need to run against them, e.g. gdk-pixbuf each
time a new loader is added. These are handled by adding files in bindir with the name
prefixed by "postinst-" and are run in each sysroot as its created if they're present.
This did mean most sstate postinstalls have to be rewritten but there shouldn't be many of them.
* Since a recipe can have multiple tasks and these tasks can run against each other at the same
time we have to have a lock when we perform write operations against the sysroot. We also have
to maintain manifests of what we install against a task checksum of the dependency. If the
checksum changes, we remove its files and then add the new ones.
* The autotools logic for filtering the view of m4 files is no longer needed (and was the model
for the way extend_recipe_sysroot works).
* For autotools, we used to build a combined m4 macros directory which had both the native and
target m4 files. We can no longer do this so we use the target sysroot as the default and add
the native sysroot as an extra backup include path. If we don't do this, we'd have to build
target pkg-config before we could built anything using pkg-config for example (ditto gettext).
Such dependencies would be painful so we haven't required that.
* PKDDATA_DIR was moved out the sysroot and works as before using sstate to build a hybrid copy
for each machine. The paths therefore changed, the behaviour did not.
* The ccache class had to be reworked to function with rss.
* The TCBOOTSTRAP sysroot for compiler bootstrap is no longer needed but the -initial data
does have to be filtered out from the main recipe sysroots. Putting "-initial" in a normal
recipe name therefore remains a bad idea.
* The logic in insane needed tweaks to deal with the new path layout, as did the debug source
file extraction code in package.bbclass.
* The logic in sstate.bbclass had to be rewritten since it previously only performed search and
replace on extracted sstate and we now need this to happen even if the compiled path was
"correct". This in theory could cause a mild performance issue but since the sysroot data
was the main data that needed this and we'd have to do it there regardless with rss, I've opted
just to change the way the class for everything. The built output used to build the sstate output
is now retained and installed rather than deleted.
* The search and replace logic used in sstate objects also seemed weak/incorrect and didn't hold
up against testing. This has been rewritten too. There are some assumptions made about paths, we
save the 'proper' search and replace operations to fixmepath.cmd but then ignore this. What is
here works but is a little hardcoded and an area for future improvement.
* In order to work with eSDK we need a way to build something that looks like the old style sysroot.
"bitbake build-sysroots" will construct such a sysroot based on everything in the components
directory that matches the current MACHINE. It will allow transition of external tools and can
built target or native variants or both. It also supports a clean task. I'd suggest not relying on
this for anything other than transitional purposes though. To see XXX in that sysroot, you'd have
to have built that in a previous bitbake invocation.
* pseudo is run out of its components directory. This is fine as its statically linked.
* The hacks for wayland to see allarch dependencies in the multilib case are no longer needed
and can be dropped.
* wic needed more extensive changes to work with rss and the fixes are in a separate commit series
* Various oe-selftest tweaks were needed since tests did assume the location to binaries and the
combined sysroot in several cases.
* Most missing dependencies this work found have been sent out as separate patches as they were found
but a few tweaks are still included here.
* A late addition is that extend_recipe_sysroot became multilib aware and able to populate multilib
sysroots. I had hoped not to have to add that complexity but the meta-environment recipe forced my
hand. That implementation can probably be neater but this is on the list of things to cleanup later
at this point.
In summary, the impact people will likely see after this change:
* Recipes may fail with missing dependencies, particularly native tools like gettext-native,
glib-2.0-native and libxml2.0-native. Some hosts have these installed and will mask these errors
* Any recipe/class using SSTATEPOSTINSTFUNCS will need that code rewriting into a postinst
* There was a separate patch series dealing with roots postinst native dependency issues. Any postinst
which expects native tools at rootfs time will need to mark that dependency with PACKAGE_WRITE_DEPS.
There could well be other issues. This has been tested repeatedly against our autobuilders and oe-selftest
and issues found have been fixed. We believe at least OE-Core is in good shape but that doesn't mean
we've found all the issues.
Also, the logging is a bit chatty at the moment. It does help if something goes wrong and goes to the
task logfiles, not the console so I've intentionally left this like that for now. We can turn it down
easily enough in due course.
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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When the host and the SDK architectures are incompatible the SDK
installer outputs an incomplete error message "Error: Installation
machine not supported!". This commit adds a more verbose error
message e.g "Error: Incompatible SDK installer! Your host is i686
and this SDK was built for x86_64 hosts."
Signed-off-by: Todor Minchev <todor.minchev@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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The relocation script of the SDK doesn't have enough
error handling when replacing host perl with SDK perl
or changing the symlinks. This will add those checks
along with a sanity check of xargs.
[YOCTO #10114]
Signed-off-by: Mariano Lopez <mariano.lopez@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
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The preparation script itself prints out an error on failure, and we
aren't redirecting its output anymore, so we no longer need to print out
a message here when it fails. At the same time, make the message printed
out by the script a little clearer - we're just writing the log out to
the file, we shouldn't give the user an expectation that there will be
extra details in there (other than the output produced by
oe-init-build-env there won't be).
Signed-off-by: Paul Eggleton <paul.eggleton@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
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Check a number of things as early as possible in the eSDK installer
script so that the user gets an error up front rather than waiting for
the build system to be extracted and then have the error produced:
* Check for missing utilities specified in SANITY_REQUIRED_UTILITIES
(along with gcc and g++), taking into account that some of these are
satisfied by buildtools which ships as part of the SDK. We use the
newly added capability to list an SDK's contents to allow us to see
exactly which binaries are inside the buildtools installer.
* Check that Python is available (since the buildtools installer's
relocate script is written in Python).
* Check that locale value set by the script is actually available
* Check that the install path is not on NFS
This does duplicate some of the checks in sanity.bbclass but it's
difficult to avoid that given that here they have to be written in shell
and there they are written in Python, as well as the fact that we only
need to run some of the checks here and not all (i.e. the ones that
relate to the host system or install path, and not those that check the
configuration or metadata). Given those issues and the fact that the
amount of code is fairly small I elected to just re-implement the checks
here.
Fixes [YOCTO #8657].
Signed-off-by: Paul Eggleton <paul.eggleton@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
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Add a -l command-line option for SDK installers to get a list of files
that will be extracted by the SDK - internally this just runs "tar tv"
on the embedded tarball. This can be used to look at which files the SDK
provides without actually installing it. The initial user of this is the
extensible SDK build process which needs to know what binaries are going
to be installed by the buildtools installer without installing it.
Signed-off-by: Paul Eggleton <paul.eggleton@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
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During the extensible SDK installation process the final step is to
prepare the internal copy of the build system. This can take some time,
especially if you have SDK_EXT_TYPE set to "minimal" (downloading
sstate artifacts) and SDK_INCLUDE_PKGDATA set to "1" (restoring
pkgdata for world). To make this a bit less painful, use BitBake's new
quiet mode to display status during this operation so you have some idea
of how it's progressing; instead of redirecting the output to
preparing_build_system.log we grab the last console log and append it
instead.
One result of this change is that you get the errors printed on the
console during normal output rather than this going to the
preparing_build_system.log file first. In OE-Core revision
227d2cbf9e0b8c35fa6644e3d72e0699db9607fa, we changed to always print the
contents of preparing_build_system.log on failure, but now at least the
error contents of that log is duplicated. Besides, I intentionally
didn't print out the contents of that log during normal usage because
it's quite verbose - the bug that we were attempting to fix was about
not getting this information when seeing failures in the automated
tests, thus I've moved printing the log to the test handling code
instead.
Part of the implementation for [YOCTO #9613].
Signed-off-by: Paul Eggleton <paul.eggleton@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
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Use the new BB_SETSCENE_ENFORCE functionality to avoid having to run
bitbake twice on installing the extensible SDK - we can now do it all in
one invocation which not only takes less time, but we should also get
more meaningful errors for some types of failure, in particular where
downloading from an sstate mirror fails.
One result of this change is that you get the errors printed on the
console during normal output rather than this going to the
preparing_build_system.log file first. In OE-Core revision
227d2cbf9e0b8c35fa6644e3d72e0699db9607fa, we changed to always print the
contents of preparing_build_system.log on failure, but now at least the
error contents of that log is duplicated. Besides, I intentionally
didn't print out the contents of that log during normal usage because
it's quite verbose - the bug that we were attempting to fix was about
not getting this information when seeing failures in the automated
tests, thus I've moved printing the log to the test handling code
instead.
Part of the implementation of [YOCTO #9367].
Signed-off-by: Paul Eggleton <paul.eggleton@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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In order to show the task progress during the extensible SDK
installation, knotty needs to know it is using a terminal it can
support the "interactive" mode on (i.e. ncurses can be used), which
means it needs access to the TERM variable value, so allow that
through into the cleaned environment within the SDK installation
script.
Part of the implementation for [YOCTO #9613].
Signed-off-by: Paul Eggleton <paul.eggleton@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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Python 3 doesn't have basestring type as all string
are unicode strings.
Signed-off-by: Ed Bartosh <ed.bartosh@linux.intel.com>
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Under python 3, if we spawn python processes, we need to have a UTF-8 locale,
else python's file access methods will use ascii. You can't change that mode
once the interpreter is started so we have to ensure a locale is set. Ideally
we'd use C.UTF-8 since OE already forces the C locale but not all distros support
that and we need to set something so en_US.UTF-8 seems as standard we we can get.
This matches the change in bitbake revision 8902c29638411d312e6fc4a197707e5742652e15
Also set this into the environment used when installing SDKs since
python can be run and we need to ensure we use a standardised locale
which is available from things like buildtools-tarball.
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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When installing the esdk with INHERIT += "rm_work", the script complains
about do_rm_work as unexpected output from the bitbake run. This patch
ignores any output lines with do_rm_work and further refactors the
output comparison into its own function creates a new unit test to
verify the fix. The unit test can be run direct from the command line or
via oe-selftest.
[YOCTO #9019]
Signed-off-by: Bill Randle <william.c.randle@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
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It should be 0700 rather than 0755.
Reported-by: Charles Chan <charles.wh.chan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Robert Yang <liezhi.yang@windriver.com>
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
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This reverts commit eeae2ac4887298bcbab0e105798818414686dc97.
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It should be 0700 rather than 0755.
Reported-by: Charles Chan <charles.wh.chan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Robert Yang <liezhi.yang@windriver.com>
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
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all_proxy is referred to by oe-git-proxy so ensure it is allowed through
into the installer environment in case the extensible SDK install
process needs to query a remote git repository.
Signed-off-by: Paul Eggleton <paul.eggleton@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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If SDK_EXT_TYPE is set to "minimal" then the SDK won't contain many
sstate artifacts, and you're required to set up an sstate mirror in this
case anyway so there's no point publishing the "stub" sstate-cache
directory from within the SDK since it won't be useful for update
purposes and may be confused with the real sstate-cache.
There is however a possibility that people might publish the real
sstate-cache directory under the same output directory provided to
oe-publish-sdk, thus deleting it after extracting (as we were doing with
other files we wanted to clean up at the end) would be problematic,
besides which extracting it and then deleting it is wasteful. Thus,
introduce a "-p" command line option to the SDK installer that we can
use to tell tar not to extract the items we don't want when publishing.
This has the added benefit of mostly keeping references to these in the
place they belong i.e. in populate_sdk_ext.bbclass.
Signed-off-by: Paul Eggleton <paul.eggleton@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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There appears to have been a lot of copy and pasting of the code
which prints tracebacks upon failure and limits the stack trace to
5 entries. This obscures the real error and is very confusing to the user
it look me an age to work out why some tracebacks weren't useful.
This patch removes the limit, making tracebacks much more useful for
debugging.
[YOCTO #9230]
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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Check the length for target_sdk_dir to ensure the relocation
behaviour in relocate_sdk.py is correct.
Signed-off-by: Wenlin Kang <wenlin.kang@windriver.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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Instead of skipping the build system preparation step within the
extensible SDK install process when SDK_EXT_TYPE is "minimal", run
bitbake -p so that the cache is populated ready for the first time
devtool is run.
Signed-off-by: Paul Eggleton <paul.eggleton@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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The ParaType Free Font License is used by various fonts, out of which a
recipe will be added to meta-openembedded for ttf-pt-sans.
Signed-off-by: Ioan-Adrian Ratiu <adrian.ratiu@ni.com>
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
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directory as SDK script.
If SDK will be extracted in the same folder as sdk shar script.
The shar_relocate will substitute SDK.sh script SDKPATH with extract destination path.
After that operation no one will be able use this sdk script as paths in it will be different.
To fix this we need to filter out sdk script and relocate_sdk scripts from SDKPATH substitution
Signed-off-by: Krzysztof Zawadzki <krzysztof.zawadzki@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
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When installing the eSDK, if setscene task fail for some reason, the tests
would ignore this. This is bad since we assume they're working.
This adds some sanity test code which detects if setscene tasks are
needing to run and errors if there are any.
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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Extensible SDK needs to do network operations so add proxies to
environment.
Signed-off-by: Aníbal Limón <anibal.limon@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
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Currently if xz isn't installed when installing the SDK you get an error
from tar and then the SDK installation continues, cascading into a load
of other failures since files are missing. Add a check to see if xz can
be run and error out if it can't, and also exit if tar fails.
Signed-off-by: Paul Eggleton <paul.eggleton@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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select one that exists.
Although the relocate_sdk.sh supports python3, fc23 does not symlink
/usr/bin/python3 to /usr/bin/python. Using exec instead of a call to
the correct interpreter causes a failure on fc23 when python2 is not
present. This uses 'which' to locate python, python2, then python3 and
uses the first one that's found.
Signed-off-by: Liam R. Howlett <Liam.Howlett@WindRiver.com>
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
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After the change to use --setscene-only when running bitbake to prepare
the SDK at the end of installation, add a check that the SDK got
prepared correctly by doing a dry-run and looking at the output for any
real tasks that we don't expect. In order to make this easier, the
preparation shell script was rewritten in python.
Signed-off-by: Paul Eggleton <paul.eggleton@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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xz gives *much* faster decompression times for the SDK which in itself
is a good reason to use it. It also gives better compression.
One downside is its slower but we care about the end user case
first, build performance secondary.
It also assumes the SDK user has a tar capable of understanding a xz
compressed file but that should be common enough now.
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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workarounds
Rather than horrible workarounds, use the new --setscene-only option
of bitbake to pre-populate the SDK structures.
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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Fix a second regression in the extensible SDK installation caused by
OE-Core revision 6d2074d477596971dc52027dd87b02af7f39138d - the HOME
environment variable was being cleared, thus using ~/ in the install
path (which is in the default path for the extensible SDK) resulted in a
directory named '~' being created in the current directory.
Signed-off-by: Paul Eggleton <paul.eggleton@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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In OE-Core revision 6d2074d477596971dc52027dd87b02af7f39138d we added a
line which re-executes the script with a cleaned environment using
env -i; unfortunately that caused a regression in the extensible SDK on
Ubuntu 14.04 - strangely, there it seems that the value you get for PATH
under env -i contains '.' which triggers a sanity check failure when
preparing the build system. Do a belt-and-braces fix - source
/etc/environment if it exists (so you get a more complete PATH value)
and then filter any nastiness out of PATH for good measure. (Ubuntu
15.04 doesn't seem to suffer from the same problem.)
Signed-off-by: Paul Eggleton <paul.eggleton@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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buildtools-tarball uses a custom env setup script, which isn't named the
same as the default; thus unfortunately OE-Core revision
a36469c97c9cb335de1e95dea5141038f337df95 broke installation of
buildtools-tarball. Revert that and implement a more robust mechanism.
Signed-off-by: Paul Eggleton <paul.eggleton@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
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Fixes [YOCTO #8698] -- https://bugzilla.yoctoproject.org/show_bug.cgi?id=8698
If prior to running the toolchain installation script a toolchain
environment script is sourced then the toolchain installation will
fail. This because the environment is now set for the sourced toolchain
and doesn't suit the installation. In particular PATH points to the
toolchain executables.
The fix makes the script recursively call itself a second time with a
clean environment.
Tested by sourcing a previous successfully installed environment, erasing the
previous installation directory and then reinstalling in the same directory.
Signed-off-by: George Nita <george.nita@enea.com>
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
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If you put an $ character in the path, SDK installation fails during the
preparation stage, so add this to the disallowed characters.
Fixes [YOCTO #8625].
Signed-off-by: Paul Eggleton <paul.eggleton@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
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In the case where many environment-setup-* files exist, the incorrect
filename might be lastly set in env_setup_script, which leads to
incorrect behaviour for the initialization of native_sysroot.
The scenario I had was that our custom meta-toolchain-*.bb, which
inherits populate_sdk, defined another environment-setup-* file to dump
variable information for qt-creator. The file is named like so in order
for the sdk shell script to pick it up and fix the SDK paths in the
file. Since it (coincidentally) alphabetically comes after ...-core2, it
was last set in env_setup_script and the grep OECORE_NATIVE_SYSROOT
would simply be blank. The apparent symptom was "...relocate_sdk.py:
Argument list too long" since the find command would not be searching in
the right path.
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
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Print a line that's the full length of the title that it's underneath.
Signed-off-by: Paul Eggleton <paul.eggleton@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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In order to prepare the build system within the extensible SDK, we
actually go ahead and build the targets specified by SDK_TARGETS (by
default the image the SDK was built for). Assuming that's an image, we
don't actually need to build the image itself - we just need to have
everything done up to the point before building the image, so that we
have everything needed in the sysroot.
In order to do this, create temporary bbappends for each of the targets
in the workspace layer that stub out do_rootfs and related tasks if they
exist. This is a little bit of a hack but is the least intrusive fix at
this point. To make things a bit tidier, I have split out the
preparation commands into a separate script so we can run that in the
appropriate environment rather than all the commands separately.
Fixes [YOCTO #7590].
Signed-off-by: Paul Eggleton <paul.eggleton@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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The toolchain install script suggest the user to source env_setup_script
from wrong path now. eg:
" Each time you wish to use the SDK in a new shell session, you need to
source the environment setup script e.g.
$ . /opt/poky/2.0//opt/poky/2.0/environment-setup-armv5e-poky-linux-gnueabi
"
fix it.
Signed-off-by: Maxin B. John <maxin.john@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
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It seems that the GFDL 1.1 license file that was originally committed
was actually the 1.2 version. Replace it with the 1.1 version fetched
from http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/fdl-1.1.txt.
Signed-off-by: Paul Eggleton <paul.eggleton@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
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Currently a lib32-core-image-* SDK prints an incorrect environment-setup-*
file name when installing the SDK. Instead of printing the wrong thing, list
the environment setup files present in the SDK.
As it happens this fixes the message printed with buildtools-tarball too
which someone reported to me about the same time as I finished this patch!
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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Make the extrating faster by:
* Merge the two heavy "for .. find" loops into one
* Move the commands out of for loop rather than inside, this can reduce the
forking amount.
As a result, when install:
* buildtools-nativesdk-standalone: 14s -> 7s (50% saved)
* core-image-minimal-core2-64-toolchain: 56s -> 47s (17% saved)
[YOCTO #8404]
Signed-off-by: Robert Yang <liezhi.yang@windriver.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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Fixed when sh is bash:
$ sh ./tmp/deploy/sdk/poky-glibc-x86_64-core-image-minimal-core2-64-toolchain-1.8+snapshot.sh
Poky (Yocto Project Reference Distro) SDK installer version 1.8+snapshot
===========================================================
./tmp/deploy/sdk/poky-glibc-x86_64-core-image-minimal-core2-64-toolchain-1.8+snapshot.sh: 77: read: Illegal option -e
You are about to install the SDK to "/opt/poky/1.8+snapshot". Proceed[Y/n]? ../SDK2
Installation aborted!
There is ony one bashism "read -e" in toolchain-shar-extract.sh, but
'-e' is useless here, so remove it and use /bin/sh.
Signed-off-by: Robert Yang <liezhi.yang@windriver.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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Tar has supported a --checkpoint option since version 1.15.91, so it
should be safe to use here to print dots showing that it's still doing
something (technically it's not really progress unless you know how many
dots it's going to print, which even it doesn't know at the start, but
it's better than nothing).
Signed-off-by: Paul Eggleton <paul.eggleton@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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When publishing SDK, what we want is basically its metadata and sstate
cache objects. We don't want the SDK to be prepared with running bitbake
as it takes time which reproduces meaningless output for the published SDK.
So this patch adds an option to allow for SDK to be extracted without
preparing the build system.
Signed-off-by: Chen Qi <Qi.Chen@windriver.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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Signed-off-by: Brendan Le Foll <brendan.le.foll@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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Extensible SDK cannot be installed as root so by default offer to install it in
user's home directory under distro/distro_version replacing the normal SDK
version '+' char with a '_' as that's a restricted character for bitbake
Signed-off-by: Brendan Le Foll <brendan.le.foll@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Eggleton <paul.eggleton@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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There are some characters that cannot appear in the installation path, so we
need to check for these
Signed-off-by: Brendan Le Foll <brendan.le.foll@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Eggleton <paul.eggleton@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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For a clear look when input.
[YOCTO #8089]
Signed-off-by: Robert Yang <liezhi.yang@windriver.com>
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
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