generic-poky/meta/classes/kernel-yocto.bbclass

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# remove tasks that modify the source tree in case externalsrc is inherited
SRCTREECOVEREDTASKS += "do_kernel_configme do_validate_branches do_kernel_configcheck do_kernel_checkout do_fetch do_unpack do_patch"
PATCH_GIT_USER_EMAIL ?= "kernel-yocto@oe"
PATCH_GIT_USER_NAME ?= "OpenEmbedded"
# returns local (absolute) path names for all valid patches in the
# src_uri
def find_patches(d):
patches = src_patches(d)
patch_list=[]
for p in patches:
_, _, local, _, _, _ = bb.fetch.decodeurl(p)
patch_list.append(local)
return patch_list
# returns all the elements from the src uri that are .scc files
def find_sccs(d):
sources=src_patches(d, True)
sources_list=[]
for s in sources:
base, ext = os.path.splitext(os.path.basename(s))
if ext and ext in [".scc", ".cfg"]:
sources_list.append(s)
elif base and base in 'defconfig':
sources_list.append(s)
return sources_list
kernel-yocto: allow multiple / shared kernel feature directories To promote the reuse and sharing of configuration fragments this change allows any kernel-yocto based recipe to have multiple alternate git repositories which provide kernel feature directory trees listed on the SRC_URI. These feature directories are in addition to any in-tree kernel meta data branches that may be available (described via the KMETA variable in linux-yocto recipes). Features found within these directories can be used from recipes via the KERNEL_FEATURES variable. Features found within a feature directory are free to include any other features that are available in any directories. In both cases the path to a feature description (a .scc file) is relative to the root of a given feature directory (which is how existing .scc files work) The search order for features is determined by the order that repositories appear on the SRC_URI. Normal SRC_URI rules apply to any repository that is added as a kernel feature container. A SRCREV must be supplied and it must be unpacked to a unique directory, which is controlled via the "destsuffic" url parameter. In addition to these standard requirements, any kernel feature repository reference should identify itself via the "type=kmeta" url parameter. If type=kmeta is not supplied, the repository will not be processed for kernel features. As an example, the following in a linux-yocto bbappend makes two additional feature directories available to KERNEL_FEATURES and fragments. SRC_URI += "git://git.yoctoproject.org/yocto-kernel-cache;protocol=git;branch=master;type=kmeta;name=feat1;destsuffix=kernel-cache/" SRC_URI += "git://${KSRC_linux_yocto_3_4};protocol=file;branch=meta;name=feat2;type=kmeta;destsuffix=kernel-features-experimental/" SRCREV_feat1 = "${AUTOREV}" SRCREV_feat2 = "${AUTOREV}" (From OE-Core rev: 02ad603a104b70ab74548c8018e738bfbb3c59db) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Saul Wold <sgw@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2013-01-23 20:21:52 +00:00
# check the SRC_URI for "kmeta" type'd git repositories. Return the name of
# the repository as it will be found in WORKDIR
def find_kernel_feature_dirs(d):
feature_dirs=[]
fetch = bb.fetch2.Fetch([], d)
for url in fetch.urls:
urldata = fetch.ud[url]
parm = urldata.parm
type=""
kernel-yocto: allow multiple / shared kernel feature directories To promote the reuse and sharing of configuration fragments this change allows any kernel-yocto based recipe to have multiple alternate git repositories which provide kernel feature directory trees listed on the SRC_URI. These feature directories are in addition to any in-tree kernel meta data branches that may be available (described via the KMETA variable in linux-yocto recipes). Features found within these directories can be used from recipes via the KERNEL_FEATURES variable. Features found within a feature directory are free to include any other features that are available in any directories. In both cases the path to a feature description (a .scc file) is relative to the root of a given feature directory (which is how existing .scc files work) The search order for features is determined by the order that repositories appear on the SRC_URI. Normal SRC_URI rules apply to any repository that is added as a kernel feature container. A SRCREV must be supplied and it must be unpacked to a unique directory, which is controlled via the "destsuffic" url parameter. In addition to these standard requirements, any kernel feature repository reference should identify itself via the "type=kmeta" url parameter. If type=kmeta is not supplied, the repository will not be processed for kernel features. As an example, the following in a linux-yocto bbappend makes two additional feature directories available to KERNEL_FEATURES and fragments. SRC_URI += "git://git.yoctoproject.org/yocto-kernel-cache;protocol=git;branch=master;type=kmeta;name=feat1;destsuffix=kernel-cache/" SRC_URI += "git://${KSRC_linux_yocto_3_4};protocol=file;branch=meta;name=feat2;type=kmeta;destsuffix=kernel-features-experimental/" SRCREV_feat1 = "${AUTOREV}" SRCREV_feat2 = "${AUTOREV}" (From OE-Core rev: 02ad603a104b70ab74548c8018e738bfbb3c59db) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Saul Wold <sgw@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2013-01-23 20:21:52 +00:00
if "type" in parm:
type = parm["type"]
if "destsuffix" in parm:
destdir = parm["destsuffix"]
if type == "kmeta":
feature_dirs.append(destdir)
return feature_dirs
# find the master/machine source branch. In the same way that the fetcher proceses
# git repositories in the SRC_URI we take the first repo found, first branch.
def get_machine_branch(d, default):
fetch = bb.fetch2.Fetch([], d)
for url in fetch.urls:
urldata = fetch.ud[url]
parm = urldata.parm
if "branch" in parm:
branches = urldata.parm.get("branch").split(',')
btype = urldata.parm.get("type")
if btype != "kmeta":
return branches[0]
return default
do_kernel_metadata() {
set +e
yocto-kernel: factor common routes, update to 2.6.37 and branch renaming In order to extend and create more kernel recipes based on the supported yocto kernel common routines need to be placed in re-usable blocks. To accomplish this meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto_git.bb is broken into three parts: - meta/classes/kernel-yocto.bbclass: contains common routines for checking out and configuring a yocto kernel git repository. This should be inherited by recipes that need this functionality. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto.inc: Contains the machine mappings, compatibility, build directives and common task definitions for a yocto kernel based recipe. This inherits kernel-yocto, and is the typical point of entry for other recipes. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linuux-tools.inc: tasks and function definitions for kernel recipes that want to build/export perf It also updates the linux-yocto recipe to default to 2.6.37. As part of the update to 2.6.37 the branch naming and conventions have been modified to show inheritance, and be more generic. For example: master meta yocto/base yocto/standard/arm_versatile_926ejs yocto/standard/base yocto/standard/beagleboard yocto/standard/common_pc/atom-pc yocto/standard/common_pc/base yocto/standard/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/fsl-mpc8315e-rdb yocto/standard/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/mti_malta32_be yocto/standard/preempt_rt/base yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/qemu_ppc32 yocto/standard/routerstationpro In this structure: master: tracks the mainline kernel meta: meta information for the BSPs and kernel features yocto/base: baseline kernel branch yocto/standard/base: 'standard' kernel, contains features and configs for all BSPs yocto/standard/<machine>: represents a BSP with specific features or configurations The tools, tree and libc-headers have all been updated to deal with this new structure. Also in addition to dealing with the new structure, they continue to work with the existing tree and will adapt at runtime to the differences. The linux-yocto-stable_git.bb recipe continues to build the 2.6.34 based tree,and linux-yocto_git.bb builds 2.6.37. As boards are enabled for the new kernel they will move from -stable to the development kernel. As of now, only the emulated targets have moved to 2.6.37-rcX Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-18 21:09:02 +00:00
cd ${S}
export KMETA=${KMETA}
yocto-kernel: factor common routes, update to 2.6.37 and branch renaming In order to extend and create more kernel recipes based on the supported yocto kernel common routines need to be placed in re-usable blocks. To accomplish this meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto_git.bb is broken into three parts: - meta/classes/kernel-yocto.bbclass: contains common routines for checking out and configuring a yocto kernel git repository. This should be inherited by recipes that need this functionality. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto.inc: Contains the machine mappings, compatibility, build directives and common task definitions for a yocto kernel based recipe. This inherits kernel-yocto, and is the typical point of entry for other recipes. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linuux-tools.inc: tasks and function definitions for kernel recipes that want to build/export perf It also updates the linux-yocto recipe to default to 2.6.37. As part of the update to 2.6.37 the branch naming and conventions have been modified to show inheritance, and be more generic. For example: master meta yocto/base yocto/standard/arm_versatile_926ejs yocto/standard/base yocto/standard/beagleboard yocto/standard/common_pc/atom-pc yocto/standard/common_pc/base yocto/standard/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/fsl-mpc8315e-rdb yocto/standard/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/mti_malta32_be yocto/standard/preempt_rt/base yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/qemu_ppc32 yocto/standard/routerstationpro In this structure: master: tracks the mainline kernel meta: meta information for the BSPs and kernel features yocto/base: baseline kernel branch yocto/standard/base: 'standard' kernel, contains features and configs for all BSPs yocto/standard/<machine>: represents a BSP with specific features or configurations The tools, tree and libc-headers have all been updated to deal with this new structure. Also in addition to dealing with the new structure, they continue to work with the existing tree and will adapt at runtime to the differences. The linux-yocto-stable_git.bb recipe continues to build the 2.6.34 based tree,and linux-yocto_git.bb builds 2.6.37. As boards are enabled for the new kernel they will move from -stable to the development kernel. As of now, only the emulated targets have moved to 2.6.37-rcX Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-18 21:09:02 +00:00
# if kernel tools are available in-tree, they are preferred
# and are placed on the path before any external tools. Unless
# the external tools flag is set, in that case we do nothing.
if [ -f "${S}/scripts/util/configme" ]; then
if [ -z "${EXTERNAL_KERNEL_TOOLS}" ]; then
PATH=${S}/scripts/util:${PATH}
fi
fi
machine_branch="${@ get_machine_branch(d, "${KBRANCH}" )}"
machine_srcrev="${SRCREV_machine}"
if [ -z "${machine_srcrev}" ]; then
# fallback to SRCREV if a non machine_meta tree is being built
machine_srcrev="${SRCREV}"
fi
# In a similar manner to the kernel itself:
#
# defconfig: $(obj)/conf
# ifeq ($(KBUILD_DEFCONFIG),)
# $< --defconfig $(Kconfig)
# else
# @echo "*** Default configuration is based on '$(KBUILD_DEFCONFIG)'"
# $(Q)$< --defconfig=arch/$(SRCARCH)/configs/$(KBUILD_DEFCONFIG) $(Kconfig)
# endif
#
# If a defconfig is specified via the KBUILD_DEFCONFIG variable, we copy it
# from the source tree, into a common location and normalized "defconfig" name,
# where the rest of the process will include and incoroporate it into the build
#
# If the fetcher has already placed a defconfig in WORKDIR (from the SRC_URI),
# we don't overwrite it, but instead warn the user that SRC_URI defconfigs take
# precendence.
#
if [ -n "${KBUILD_DEFCONFIG}" ]; then
if [ -f "${S}/arch/${ARCH}/configs/${KBUILD_DEFCONFIG}" ]; then
if [ -f "${WORKDIR}/defconfig" ]; then
# If the two defconfig's are different, warn that we didn't overwrite the
# one already placed in WORKDIR by the fetcher.
cmp "${WORKDIR}/defconfig" "${S}/arch/${ARCH}/configs/${KBUILD_DEFCONFIG}"
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
bbwarn "defconfig detected in WORKDIR. ${KBUILD_DEFCONFIG} skipped"
fi
else
cp -f ${S}/arch/${ARCH}/configs/${KBUILD_DEFCONFIG} ${WORKDIR}/defconfig
sccs="${WORKDIR}/defconfig"
fi
else
bbfatal "A KBUILD_DECONFIG '${KBUILD_DEFCONFIG}' was specified, but not present in the source tree"
fi
fi
sccs="$sccs ${@" ".join(find_sccs(d))}"
patches="${@" ".join(find_patches(d))}"
kernel-yocto: allow multiple / shared kernel feature directories To promote the reuse and sharing of configuration fragments this change allows any kernel-yocto based recipe to have multiple alternate git repositories which provide kernel feature directory trees listed on the SRC_URI. These feature directories are in addition to any in-tree kernel meta data branches that may be available (described via the KMETA variable in linux-yocto recipes). Features found within these directories can be used from recipes via the KERNEL_FEATURES variable. Features found within a feature directory are free to include any other features that are available in any directories. In both cases the path to a feature description (a .scc file) is relative to the root of a given feature directory (which is how existing .scc files work) The search order for features is determined by the order that repositories appear on the SRC_URI. Normal SRC_URI rules apply to any repository that is added as a kernel feature container. A SRCREV must be supplied and it must be unpacked to a unique directory, which is controlled via the "destsuffic" url parameter. In addition to these standard requirements, any kernel feature repository reference should identify itself via the "type=kmeta" url parameter. If type=kmeta is not supplied, the repository will not be processed for kernel features. As an example, the following in a linux-yocto bbappend makes two additional feature directories available to KERNEL_FEATURES and fragments. SRC_URI += "git://git.yoctoproject.org/yocto-kernel-cache;protocol=git;branch=master;type=kmeta;name=feat1;destsuffix=kernel-cache/" SRC_URI += "git://${KSRC_linux_yocto_3_4};protocol=file;branch=meta;name=feat2;type=kmeta;destsuffix=kernel-features-experimental/" SRCREV_feat1 = "${AUTOREV}" SRCREV_feat2 = "${AUTOREV}" (From OE-Core rev: 02ad603a104b70ab74548c8018e738bfbb3c59db) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Saul Wold <sgw@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2013-01-23 20:21:52 +00:00
feat_dirs="${@" ".join(find_kernel_feature_dirs(d))}"
kernel-yocto: allow multiple / shared kernel feature directories To promote the reuse and sharing of configuration fragments this change allows any kernel-yocto based recipe to have multiple alternate git repositories which provide kernel feature directory trees listed on the SRC_URI. These feature directories are in addition to any in-tree kernel meta data branches that may be available (described via the KMETA variable in linux-yocto recipes). Features found within these directories can be used from recipes via the KERNEL_FEATURES variable. Features found within a feature directory are free to include any other features that are available in any directories. In both cases the path to a feature description (a .scc file) is relative to the root of a given feature directory (which is how existing .scc files work) The search order for features is determined by the order that repositories appear on the SRC_URI. Normal SRC_URI rules apply to any repository that is added as a kernel feature container. A SRCREV must be supplied and it must be unpacked to a unique directory, which is controlled via the "destsuffic" url parameter. In addition to these standard requirements, any kernel feature repository reference should identify itself via the "type=kmeta" url parameter. If type=kmeta is not supplied, the repository will not be processed for kernel features. As an example, the following in a linux-yocto bbappend makes two additional feature directories available to KERNEL_FEATURES and fragments. SRC_URI += "git://git.yoctoproject.org/yocto-kernel-cache;protocol=git;branch=master;type=kmeta;name=feat1;destsuffix=kernel-cache/" SRC_URI += "git://${KSRC_linux_yocto_3_4};protocol=file;branch=meta;name=feat2;type=kmeta;destsuffix=kernel-features-experimental/" SRCREV_feat1 = "${AUTOREV}" SRCREV_feat2 = "${AUTOREV}" (From OE-Core rev: 02ad603a104b70ab74548c8018e738bfbb3c59db) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Saul Wold <sgw@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2013-01-23 20:21:52 +00:00
# check for feature directories/repos/branches that were part of the
# SRC_URI. If they were supplied, we convert them into include directives
# for the update part of the process
kernel-yocto: streamline patch, configuration and audit phases We've been running with a set of kern-tools that were designed to work with build systems that knew nothing about git, trees, commits, etc. As such, there's been a set of shims/wrappers in place to work with within bitbake/oe-core. These were the *me scripts: createme, updateme, patchme and configme. With this commit, we strip that legacy code and use the tools directly. This means less complexity, fewer corner cases .. and no surprises when the tools are arunning. As another benefit, the tools consume much less time during a typical build and have no noticeable impact on the overall build time. Existing .scc files, features, and processing are not impacted as these tools are compatible with existing feature descriptions and kerne configuration fragments. The audit of kernel configuration fragments is now detached from the linux-yocto build structure and process. This means that they can eventually be tweaked to offer kernel audit to any type of kernel build and configuration process. Additionally, the kernel symbol audit phase can now resolve symbol dependencies and offer guidance when a symbol is missing: WARNING: linux-yocto-4.4.15+gitAUTOINC+b030d96c7b_f5e2c49d58-r0 do_kernel_configcheck: [kernel config]: specified values did not make it into the kernel's final configuration: ---------- CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN ----------------- Config: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN From: /home/bruce/poky/build/tmp/work-shared/qemux86-64/kernel-source/.kernel-meta/configs/standard/features/bluetooth/bluetooth.cfg Requested value: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN=y Actual value: Config 'BT_6LOWPAN' has the following conditionals: BT_LE && 6LOWPAN (value: "n") Dependency values are: BT_LE [y] 6LOWPAN [n] (From OE-Core rev: 0f698dfd1c8bbc0d53ae7977e26685a7a3df52a3) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2016-08-15 18:26:59 +00:00
for f in ${feat_dirs}; do
kernel-yocto: allow multiple / shared kernel feature directories To promote the reuse and sharing of configuration fragments this change allows any kernel-yocto based recipe to have multiple alternate git repositories which provide kernel feature directory trees listed on the SRC_URI. These feature directories are in addition to any in-tree kernel meta data branches that may be available (described via the KMETA variable in linux-yocto recipes). Features found within these directories can be used from recipes via the KERNEL_FEATURES variable. Features found within a feature directory are free to include any other features that are available in any directories. In both cases the path to a feature description (a .scc file) is relative to the root of a given feature directory (which is how existing .scc files work) The search order for features is determined by the order that repositories appear on the SRC_URI. Normal SRC_URI rules apply to any repository that is added as a kernel feature container. A SRCREV must be supplied and it must be unpacked to a unique directory, which is controlled via the "destsuffic" url parameter. In addition to these standard requirements, any kernel feature repository reference should identify itself via the "type=kmeta" url parameter. If type=kmeta is not supplied, the repository will not be processed for kernel features. As an example, the following in a linux-yocto bbappend makes two additional feature directories available to KERNEL_FEATURES and fragments. SRC_URI += "git://git.yoctoproject.org/yocto-kernel-cache;protocol=git;branch=master;type=kmeta;name=feat1;destsuffix=kernel-cache/" SRC_URI += "git://${KSRC_linux_yocto_3_4};protocol=file;branch=meta;name=feat2;type=kmeta;destsuffix=kernel-features-experimental/" SRCREV_feat1 = "${AUTOREV}" SRCREV_feat2 = "${AUTOREV}" (From OE-Core rev: 02ad603a104b70ab74548c8018e738bfbb3c59db) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Saul Wold <sgw@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2013-01-23 20:21:52 +00:00
if [ -d "${WORKDIR}/$f/meta" ]; then
includes="$includes -I${WORKDIR}/$f/kernel-meta"
elif [ -d "${WORKDIR}/$f" ]; then
kernel-yocto: streamline patch, configuration and audit phases We've been running with a set of kern-tools that were designed to work with build systems that knew nothing about git, trees, commits, etc. As such, there's been a set of shims/wrappers in place to work with within bitbake/oe-core. These were the *me scripts: createme, updateme, patchme and configme. With this commit, we strip that legacy code and use the tools directly. This means less complexity, fewer corner cases .. and no surprises when the tools are arunning. As another benefit, the tools consume much less time during a typical build and have no noticeable impact on the overall build time. Existing .scc files, features, and processing are not impacted as these tools are compatible with existing feature descriptions and kerne configuration fragments. The audit of kernel configuration fragments is now detached from the linux-yocto build structure and process. This means that they can eventually be tweaked to offer kernel audit to any type of kernel build and configuration process. Additionally, the kernel symbol audit phase can now resolve symbol dependencies and offer guidance when a symbol is missing: WARNING: linux-yocto-4.4.15+gitAUTOINC+b030d96c7b_f5e2c49d58-r0 do_kernel_configcheck: [kernel config]: specified values did not make it into the kernel's final configuration: ---------- CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN ----------------- Config: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN From: /home/bruce/poky/build/tmp/work-shared/qemux86-64/kernel-source/.kernel-meta/configs/standard/features/bluetooth/bluetooth.cfg Requested value: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN=y Actual value: Config 'BT_6LOWPAN' has the following conditionals: BT_LE && 6LOWPAN (value: "n") Dependency values are: BT_LE [y] 6LOWPAN [n] (From OE-Core rev: 0f698dfd1c8bbc0d53ae7977e26685a7a3df52a3) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2016-08-15 18:26:59 +00:00
includes="$includes -I${WORKDIR}/$f"
kernel-yocto: allow multiple / shared kernel feature directories To promote the reuse and sharing of configuration fragments this change allows any kernel-yocto based recipe to have multiple alternate git repositories which provide kernel feature directory trees listed on the SRC_URI. These feature directories are in addition to any in-tree kernel meta data branches that may be available (described via the KMETA variable in linux-yocto recipes). Features found within these directories can be used from recipes via the KERNEL_FEATURES variable. Features found within a feature directory are free to include any other features that are available in any directories. In both cases the path to a feature description (a .scc file) is relative to the root of a given feature directory (which is how existing .scc files work) The search order for features is determined by the order that repositories appear on the SRC_URI. Normal SRC_URI rules apply to any repository that is added as a kernel feature container. A SRCREV must be supplied and it must be unpacked to a unique directory, which is controlled via the "destsuffic" url parameter. In addition to these standard requirements, any kernel feature repository reference should identify itself via the "type=kmeta" url parameter. If type=kmeta is not supplied, the repository will not be processed for kernel features. As an example, the following in a linux-yocto bbappend makes two additional feature directories available to KERNEL_FEATURES and fragments. SRC_URI += "git://git.yoctoproject.org/yocto-kernel-cache;protocol=git;branch=master;type=kmeta;name=feat1;destsuffix=kernel-cache/" SRC_URI += "git://${KSRC_linux_yocto_3_4};protocol=file;branch=meta;name=feat2;type=kmeta;destsuffix=kernel-features-experimental/" SRCREV_feat1 = "${AUTOREV}" SRCREV_feat2 = "${AUTOREV}" (From OE-Core rev: 02ad603a104b70ab74548c8018e738bfbb3c59db) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Saul Wold <sgw@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2013-01-23 20:21:52 +00:00
fi
kernel-yocto: streamline patch, configuration and audit phases We've been running with a set of kern-tools that were designed to work with build systems that knew nothing about git, trees, commits, etc. As such, there's been a set of shims/wrappers in place to work with within bitbake/oe-core. These were the *me scripts: createme, updateme, patchme and configme. With this commit, we strip that legacy code and use the tools directly. This means less complexity, fewer corner cases .. and no surprises when the tools are arunning. As another benefit, the tools consume much less time during a typical build and have no noticeable impact on the overall build time. Existing .scc files, features, and processing are not impacted as these tools are compatible with existing feature descriptions and kerne configuration fragments. The audit of kernel configuration fragments is now detached from the linux-yocto build structure and process. This means that they can eventually be tweaked to offer kernel audit to any type of kernel build and configuration process. Additionally, the kernel symbol audit phase can now resolve symbol dependencies and offer guidance when a symbol is missing: WARNING: linux-yocto-4.4.15+gitAUTOINC+b030d96c7b_f5e2c49d58-r0 do_kernel_configcheck: [kernel config]: specified values did not make it into the kernel's final configuration: ---------- CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN ----------------- Config: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN From: /home/bruce/poky/build/tmp/work-shared/qemux86-64/kernel-source/.kernel-meta/configs/standard/features/bluetooth/bluetooth.cfg Requested value: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN=y Actual value: Config 'BT_6LOWPAN' has the following conditionals: BT_LE && 6LOWPAN (value: "n") Dependency values are: BT_LE [y] 6LOWPAN [n] (From OE-Core rev: 0f698dfd1c8bbc0d53ae7977e26685a7a3df52a3) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2016-08-15 18:26:59 +00:00
done
for s in ${sccs} ${patches}; do
kernel-yocto: streamline patch, configuration and audit phases We've been running with a set of kern-tools that were designed to work with build systems that knew nothing about git, trees, commits, etc. As such, there's been a set of shims/wrappers in place to work with within bitbake/oe-core. These were the *me scripts: createme, updateme, patchme and configme. With this commit, we strip that legacy code and use the tools directly. This means less complexity, fewer corner cases .. and no surprises when the tools are arunning. As another benefit, the tools consume much less time during a typical build and have no noticeable impact on the overall build time. Existing .scc files, features, and processing are not impacted as these tools are compatible with existing feature descriptions and kerne configuration fragments. The audit of kernel configuration fragments is now detached from the linux-yocto build structure and process. This means that they can eventually be tweaked to offer kernel audit to any type of kernel build and configuration process. Additionally, the kernel symbol audit phase can now resolve symbol dependencies and offer guidance when a symbol is missing: WARNING: linux-yocto-4.4.15+gitAUTOINC+b030d96c7b_f5e2c49d58-r0 do_kernel_configcheck: [kernel config]: specified values did not make it into the kernel's final configuration: ---------- CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN ----------------- Config: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN From: /home/bruce/poky/build/tmp/work-shared/qemux86-64/kernel-source/.kernel-meta/configs/standard/features/bluetooth/bluetooth.cfg Requested value: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN=y Actual value: Config 'BT_6LOWPAN' has the following conditionals: BT_LE && 6LOWPAN (value: "n") Dependency values are: BT_LE [y] 6LOWPAN [n] (From OE-Core rev: 0f698dfd1c8bbc0d53ae7977e26685a7a3df52a3) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2016-08-15 18:26:59 +00:00
sdir=$(dirname $s)
includes="$includes -I${sdir}"
# if a SRC_URI passed patch or .scc has a subdir of "kernel-meta",
# then we add it to the search path
if [ -d "${sdir}/kernel-meta" ]; then
includes="$includes -I${sdir}/kernel-meta"
fi
kernel-yocto: streamline patch, configuration and audit phases We've been running with a set of kern-tools that were designed to work with build systems that knew nothing about git, trees, commits, etc. As such, there's been a set of shims/wrappers in place to work with within bitbake/oe-core. These were the *me scripts: createme, updateme, patchme and configme. With this commit, we strip that legacy code and use the tools directly. This means less complexity, fewer corner cases .. and no surprises when the tools are arunning. As another benefit, the tools consume much less time during a typical build and have no noticeable impact on the overall build time. Existing .scc files, features, and processing are not impacted as these tools are compatible with existing feature descriptions and kerne configuration fragments. The audit of kernel configuration fragments is now detached from the linux-yocto build structure and process. This means that they can eventually be tweaked to offer kernel audit to any type of kernel build and configuration process. Additionally, the kernel symbol audit phase can now resolve symbol dependencies and offer guidance when a symbol is missing: WARNING: linux-yocto-4.4.15+gitAUTOINC+b030d96c7b_f5e2c49d58-r0 do_kernel_configcheck: [kernel config]: specified values did not make it into the kernel's final configuration: ---------- CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN ----------------- Config: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN From: /home/bruce/poky/build/tmp/work-shared/qemux86-64/kernel-source/.kernel-meta/configs/standard/features/bluetooth/bluetooth.cfg Requested value: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN=y Actual value: Config 'BT_6LOWPAN' has the following conditionals: BT_LE && 6LOWPAN (value: "n") Dependency values are: BT_LE [y] 6LOWPAN [n] (From OE-Core rev: 0f698dfd1c8bbc0d53ae7977e26685a7a3df52a3) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2016-08-15 18:26:59 +00:00
done
kernel-yocto: allow multiple / shared kernel feature directories To promote the reuse and sharing of configuration fragments this change allows any kernel-yocto based recipe to have multiple alternate git repositories which provide kernel feature directory trees listed on the SRC_URI. These feature directories are in addition to any in-tree kernel meta data branches that may be available (described via the KMETA variable in linux-yocto recipes). Features found within these directories can be used from recipes via the KERNEL_FEATURES variable. Features found within a feature directory are free to include any other features that are available in any directories. In both cases the path to a feature description (a .scc file) is relative to the root of a given feature directory (which is how existing .scc files work) The search order for features is determined by the order that repositories appear on the SRC_URI. Normal SRC_URI rules apply to any repository that is added as a kernel feature container. A SRCREV must be supplied and it must be unpacked to a unique directory, which is controlled via the "destsuffic" url parameter. In addition to these standard requirements, any kernel feature repository reference should identify itself via the "type=kmeta" url parameter. If type=kmeta is not supplied, the repository will not be processed for kernel features. As an example, the following in a linux-yocto bbappend makes two additional feature directories available to KERNEL_FEATURES and fragments. SRC_URI += "git://git.yoctoproject.org/yocto-kernel-cache;protocol=git;branch=master;type=kmeta;name=feat1;destsuffix=kernel-cache/" SRC_URI += "git://${KSRC_linux_yocto_3_4};protocol=file;branch=meta;name=feat2;type=kmeta;destsuffix=kernel-features-experimental/" SRCREV_feat1 = "${AUTOREV}" SRCREV_feat2 = "${AUTOREV}" (From OE-Core rev: 02ad603a104b70ab74548c8018e738bfbb3c59db) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Saul Wold <sgw@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2013-01-23 20:21:52 +00:00
kernel-yocto: streamline patch, configuration and audit phases We've been running with a set of kern-tools that were designed to work with build systems that knew nothing about git, trees, commits, etc. As such, there's been a set of shims/wrappers in place to work with within bitbake/oe-core. These were the *me scripts: createme, updateme, patchme and configme. With this commit, we strip that legacy code and use the tools directly. This means less complexity, fewer corner cases .. and no surprises when the tools are arunning. As another benefit, the tools consume much less time during a typical build and have no noticeable impact on the overall build time. Existing .scc files, features, and processing are not impacted as these tools are compatible with existing feature descriptions and kerne configuration fragments. The audit of kernel configuration fragments is now detached from the linux-yocto build structure and process. This means that they can eventually be tweaked to offer kernel audit to any type of kernel build and configuration process. Additionally, the kernel symbol audit phase can now resolve symbol dependencies and offer guidance when a symbol is missing: WARNING: linux-yocto-4.4.15+gitAUTOINC+b030d96c7b_f5e2c49d58-r0 do_kernel_configcheck: [kernel config]: specified values did not make it into the kernel's final configuration: ---------- CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN ----------------- Config: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN From: /home/bruce/poky/build/tmp/work-shared/qemux86-64/kernel-source/.kernel-meta/configs/standard/features/bluetooth/bluetooth.cfg Requested value: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN=y Actual value: Config 'BT_6LOWPAN' has the following conditionals: BT_LE && 6LOWPAN (value: "n") Dependency values are: BT_LE [y] 6LOWPAN [n] (From OE-Core rev: 0f698dfd1c8bbc0d53ae7977e26685a7a3df52a3) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2016-08-15 18:26:59 +00:00
# expand kernel features into their full path equivalents
bsp_definition=$(spp ${includes} --find -DKMACHINE=${KMACHINE} -DKTYPE=${LINUX_KERNEL_TYPE})
meta_dir=$(kgit --meta)
# run1: pull all the configuration fragments, no matter where they come from
elements="`echo -n ${bsp_definition} ${sccs} ${patches} ${KERNEL_FEATURES}`"
if [ -n "${elements}" ]; then
echo "${bsp_definition}" > ${S}/${meta_dir}/bsp_definition
scc --force -o ${S}/${meta_dir}:cfg,merge,meta ${includes} ${bsp_definition} ${sccs} ${patches} ${KERNEL_FEATURES}
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
bbfatal_log "Could not generate configuration queue for ${KMACHINE}."
fi
fi
kernel-yocto: streamline patch, configuration and audit phases We've been running with a set of kern-tools that were designed to work with build systems that knew nothing about git, trees, commits, etc. As such, there's been a set of shims/wrappers in place to work with within bitbake/oe-core. These were the *me scripts: createme, updateme, patchme and configme. With this commit, we strip that legacy code and use the tools directly. This means less complexity, fewer corner cases .. and no surprises when the tools are arunning. As another benefit, the tools consume much less time during a typical build and have no noticeable impact on the overall build time. Existing .scc files, features, and processing are not impacted as these tools are compatible with existing feature descriptions and kerne configuration fragments. The audit of kernel configuration fragments is now detached from the linux-yocto build structure and process. This means that they can eventually be tweaked to offer kernel audit to any type of kernel build and configuration process. Additionally, the kernel symbol audit phase can now resolve symbol dependencies and offer guidance when a symbol is missing: WARNING: linux-yocto-4.4.15+gitAUTOINC+b030d96c7b_f5e2c49d58-r0 do_kernel_configcheck: [kernel config]: specified values did not make it into the kernel's final configuration: ---------- CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN ----------------- Config: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN From: /home/bruce/poky/build/tmp/work-shared/qemux86-64/kernel-source/.kernel-meta/configs/standard/features/bluetooth/bluetooth.cfg Requested value: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN=y Actual value: Config 'BT_6LOWPAN' has the following conditionals: BT_LE && 6LOWPAN (value: "n") Dependency values are: BT_LE [y] 6LOWPAN [n] (From OE-Core rev: 0f698dfd1c8bbc0d53ae7977e26685a7a3df52a3) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2016-08-15 18:26:59 +00:00
# run2: only generate patches for elements that have been passed on the SRC_URI
elements="`echo -n ${sccs} ${patches} ${KERNEL_FEATURES}`"
if [ -n "${elements}" ]; then
scc --force -o ${S}/${meta_dir}:patch --cmds patch ${includes} ${sccs} ${patches} ${KERNEL_FEATURES}
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
bbfatal_log "Could not generate configuration queue for ${KMACHINE}."
fi
fi
}
do_patch() {
set +e
cd ${S}
yocto-kernel: factor common routes, update to 2.6.37 and branch renaming In order to extend and create more kernel recipes based on the supported yocto kernel common routines need to be placed in re-usable blocks. To accomplish this meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto_git.bb is broken into three parts: - meta/classes/kernel-yocto.bbclass: contains common routines for checking out and configuring a yocto kernel git repository. This should be inherited by recipes that need this functionality. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto.inc: Contains the machine mappings, compatibility, build directives and common task definitions for a yocto kernel based recipe. This inherits kernel-yocto, and is the typical point of entry for other recipes. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linuux-tools.inc: tasks and function definitions for kernel recipes that want to build/export perf It also updates the linux-yocto recipe to default to 2.6.37. As part of the update to 2.6.37 the branch naming and conventions have been modified to show inheritance, and be more generic. For example: master meta yocto/base yocto/standard/arm_versatile_926ejs yocto/standard/base yocto/standard/beagleboard yocto/standard/common_pc/atom-pc yocto/standard/common_pc/base yocto/standard/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/fsl-mpc8315e-rdb yocto/standard/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/mti_malta32_be yocto/standard/preempt_rt/base yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/qemu_ppc32 yocto/standard/routerstationpro In this structure: master: tracks the mainline kernel meta: meta information for the BSPs and kernel features yocto/base: baseline kernel branch yocto/standard/base: 'standard' kernel, contains features and configs for all BSPs yocto/standard/<machine>: represents a BSP with specific features or configurations The tools, tree and libc-headers have all been updated to deal with this new structure. Also in addition to dealing with the new structure, they continue to work with the existing tree and will adapt at runtime to the differences. The linux-yocto-stable_git.bb recipe continues to build the 2.6.34 based tree,and linux-yocto_git.bb builds 2.6.37. As boards are enabled for the new kernel they will move from -stable to the development kernel. As of now, only the emulated targets have moved to 2.6.37-rcX Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-18 21:09:02 +00:00
check_git_config
kernel-yocto: streamline patch, configuration and audit phases We've been running with a set of kern-tools that were designed to work with build systems that knew nothing about git, trees, commits, etc. As such, there's been a set of shims/wrappers in place to work with within bitbake/oe-core. These were the *me scripts: createme, updateme, patchme and configme. With this commit, we strip that legacy code and use the tools directly. This means less complexity, fewer corner cases .. and no surprises when the tools are arunning. As another benefit, the tools consume much less time during a typical build and have no noticeable impact on the overall build time. Existing .scc files, features, and processing are not impacted as these tools are compatible with existing feature descriptions and kerne configuration fragments. The audit of kernel configuration fragments is now detached from the linux-yocto build structure and process. This means that they can eventually be tweaked to offer kernel audit to any type of kernel build and configuration process. Additionally, the kernel symbol audit phase can now resolve symbol dependencies and offer guidance when a symbol is missing: WARNING: linux-yocto-4.4.15+gitAUTOINC+b030d96c7b_f5e2c49d58-r0 do_kernel_configcheck: [kernel config]: specified values did not make it into the kernel's final configuration: ---------- CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN ----------------- Config: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN From: /home/bruce/poky/build/tmp/work-shared/qemux86-64/kernel-source/.kernel-meta/configs/standard/features/bluetooth/bluetooth.cfg Requested value: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN=y Actual value: Config 'BT_6LOWPAN' has the following conditionals: BT_LE && 6LOWPAN (value: "n") Dependency values are: BT_LE [y] 6LOWPAN [n] (From OE-Core rev: 0f698dfd1c8bbc0d53ae7977e26685a7a3df52a3) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2016-08-15 18:26:59 +00:00
meta_dir=$(kgit --meta)
(cd ${meta_dir}; ln -sf patch.queue series)
if [ -f "${meta_dir}/series" ]; then
kgit-s2q --gen -v --patches .kernel-meta/
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
bberror "Could not apply patches for ${KMACHINE}."
bbfatal_log "Patch failures can be resolved in the linux source directory ${S})"
fi
fi
if [ -f "${meta_dir}/merge.queue" ]; then
# we need to merge all these branches
for b in $(cat ${meta_dir}/merge.queue); do
git show-ref --verify --quiet refs/heads/${b}
if [ $? -eq 0 ]; then
bbnote "Merging branch ${b}"
git merge -q --no-ff -m "Merge branch ${b}" ${b}
else
bbfatal "branch ${b} does not exist, cannot merge"
fi
done
fi
yocto-kernel: factor common routes, update to 2.6.37 and branch renaming In order to extend and create more kernel recipes based on the supported yocto kernel common routines need to be placed in re-usable blocks. To accomplish this meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto_git.bb is broken into three parts: - meta/classes/kernel-yocto.bbclass: contains common routines for checking out and configuring a yocto kernel git repository. This should be inherited by recipes that need this functionality. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto.inc: Contains the machine mappings, compatibility, build directives and common task definitions for a yocto kernel based recipe. This inherits kernel-yocto, and is the typical point of entry for other recipes. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linuux-tools.inc: tasks and function definitions for kernel recipes that want to build/export perf It also updates the linux-yocto recipe to default to 2.6.37. As part of the update to 2.6.37 the branch naming and conventions have been modified to show inheritance, and be more generic. For example: master meta yocto/base yocto/standard/arm_versatile_926ejs yocto/standard/base yocto/standard/beagleboard yocto/standard/common_pc/atom-pc yocto/standard/common_pc/base yocto/standard/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/fsl-mpc8315e-rdb yocto/standard/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/mti_malta32_be yocto/standard/preempt_rt/base yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/qemu_ppc32 yocto/standard/routerstationpro In this structure: master: tracks the mainline kernel meta: meta information for the BSPs and kernel features yocto/base: baseline kernel branch yocto/standard/base: 'standard' kernel, contains features and configs for all BSPs yocto/standard/<machine>: represents a BSP with specific features or configurations The tools, tree and libc-headers have all been updated to deal with this new structure. Also in addition to dealing with the new structure, they continue to work with the existing tree and will adapt at runtime to the differences. The linux-yocto-stable_git.bb recipe continues to build the 2.6.34 based tree,and linux-yocto_git.bb builds 2.6.37. As boards are enabled for the new kernel they will move from -stable to the development kernel. As of now, only the emulated targets have moved to 2.6.37-rcX Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-18 21:09:02 +00:00
}
do_kernel_checkout() {
linux-yocto: improve checkout error handling and reporting The typical workflow for linux-yocto simply uses a remote upstream repository (Whether it is mirrored or not), and in this case there are no issues with consistency in the format of the resository that is unpacked into the WORKDIR. When working with a local linux-yocto repository for kernel development the remote vs local branches is not always consistent between repositories. The suggested/documented workflow has always been to use a bare clone of linux-yocto, and use a second working tree repository for development. Changes flow from the working tree to the bare clone and then into the working directory for build. A common mistake that happens with this workflow is that the non-bare, working repository is used instead of the bare clone version. If a non-bare repository is reference by the SRC_URI, then the branches that are fetched into WORKDIR are not consitent. If the MACHINE and META branches are not present, cryptic build errors will result. To solve this problem, the checkout code has been changed in several ways: - works with a newly proposed 'bareclone' option to bitbake - detects if a bareclone is present in WORKDIR or not and adjustst the checkout accordingly. - if a non-bare clone is detected, machine and meta branches are checked. If they are not present, or can't be created a clear error message is produced - instead of manipulating the refs directly in the git tree, local tracking branches are (quietly) created for remote branches. Enabling a better workflow in the WORKDIR kernel repository. This has been tested with linux-yocto remote upstreams, local bare and non-bare respositories. All builds succeed or fail with clear error messages. (From OE-Core rev: e3b6537cc7931636ab11ae6ed2c8fbaad9da91bc) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2012-02-24 01:58:47 +00:00
set +e
source_dir=`echo ${S} | sed 's%/$%%'`
source_workdir="${WORKDIR}/git"
if [ -d "${WORKDIR}/git/" ]; then
# case: git repository
# if S is WORKDIR/git, then we shouldn't be moving or deleting the tree.
if [ "${source_dir}" != "${source_workdir}" ]; then
if [ -d "${source_workdir}/.git" ]; then
# regular git repository with .git
rm -rf ${S}
mv ${WORKDIR}/git ${S}
else
# create source for bare cloned git repository
git clone ${WORKDIR}/git ${S}
rm -rf ${WORKDIR}/git
fi
fi
linux-yocto: improve checkout error handling and reporting The typical workflow for linux-yocto simply uses a remote upstream repository (Whether it is mirrored or not), and in this case there are no issues with consistency in the format of the resository that is unpacked into the WORKDIR. When working with a local linux-yocto repository for kernel development the remote vs local branches is not always consistent between repositories. The suggested/documented workflow has always been to use a bare clone of linux-yocto, and use a second working tree repository for development. Changes flow from the working tree to the bare clone and then into the working directory for build. A common mistake that happens with this workflow is that the non-bare, working repository is used instead of the bare clone version. If a non-bare repository is reference by the SRC_URI, then the branches that are fetched into WORKDIR are not consitent. If the MACHINE and META branches are not present, cryptic build errors will result. To solve this problem, the checkout code has been changed in several ways: - works with a newly proposed 'bareclone' option to bitbake - detects if a bareclone is present in WORKDIR or not and adjustst the checkout accordingly. - if a non-bare clone is detected, machine and meta branches are checked. If they are not present, or can't be created a clear error message is produced - instead of manipulating the refs directly in the git tree, local tracking branches are (quietly) created for remote branches. Enabling a better workflow in the WORKDIR kernel repository. This has been tested with linux-yocto remote upstreams, local bare and non-bare respositories. All builds succeed or fail with clear error messages. (From OE-Core rev: e3b6537cc7931636ab11ae6ed2c8fbaad9da91bc) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2012-02-24 01:58:47 +00:00
cd ${S}
else
# case: we have no git repository at all.
# To support low bandwidth options for building the kernel, we'll just
# convert the tree to a git repo and let the rest of the process work unchanged
# if ${S} hasn't been set to the proper subdirectory a default of "linux" is
# used, but we can't initialize that empty directory. So check it and throw a
# clear error
cd ${S}
if [ ! -f "Makefile" ]; then
bberror "S is not set to the linux source directory. Check "
bbfatal "the recipe and set S to the proper extracted subdirectory"
fi
rm -f .gitignore
git init
git add .
git commit -q -m "baseline commit: creating repo for ${PN}-${PV}"
git clean -d -f
yocto-kernel: factor common routes, update to 2.6.37 and branch renaming In order to extend and create more kernel recipes based on the supported yocto kernel common routines need to be placed in re-usable blocks. To accomplish this meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto_git.bb is broken into three parts: - meta/classes/kernel-yocto.bbclass: contains common routines for checking out and configuring a yocto kernel git repository. This should be inherited by recipes that need this functionality. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto.inc: Contains the machine mappings, compatibility, build directives and common task definitions for a yocto kernel based recipe. This inherits kernel-yocto, and is the typical point of entry for other recipes. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linuux-tools.inc: tasks and function definitions for kernel recipes that want to build/export perf It also updates the linux-yocto recipe to default to 2.6.37. As part of the update to 2.6.37 the branch naming and conventions have been modified to show inheritance, and be more generic. For example: master meta yocto/base yocto/standard/arm_versatile_926ejs yocto/standard/base yocto/standard/beagleboard yocto/standard/common_pc/atom-pc yocto/standard/common_pc/base yocto/standard/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/fsl-mpc8315e-rdb yocto/standard/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/mti_malta32_be yocto/standard/preempt_rt/base yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/qemu_ppc32 yocto/standard/routerstationpro In this structure: master: tracks the mainline kernel meta: meta information for the BSPs and kernel features yocto/base: baseline kernel branch yocto/standard/base: 'standard' kernel, contains features and configs for all BSPs yocto/standard/<machine>: represents a BSP with specific features or configurations The tools, tree and libc-headers have all been updated to deal with this new structure. Also in addition to dealing with the new structure, they continue to work with the existing tree and will adapt at runtime to the differences. The linux-yocto-stable_git.bb recipe continues to build the 2.6.34 based tree,and linux-yocto_git.bb builds 2.6.37. As boards are enabled for the new kernel they will move from -stable to the development kernel. As of now, only the emulated targets have moved to 2.6.37-rcX Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-18 21:09:02 +00:00
fi
# convert any remote branches to local tracking ones
for i in `git branch -a --no-color | grep remotes | grep -v HEAD`; do
b=`echo $i | cut -d' ' -f2 | sed 's%remotes/origin/%%'`;
git show-ref --quiet --verify -- "refs/heads/$b"
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
git branch $b $i > /dev/null
fi
done
# Create a working tree copy of the kernel by checking out a branch
machine_branch="${@ get_machine_branch(d, "${KBRANCH}" )}"
# checkout and clobber any unimportant files
git checkout -f ${machine_branch}
yocto-kernel: factor common routes, update to 2.6.37 and branch renaming In order to extend and create more kernel recipes based on the supported yocto kernel common routines need to be placed in re-usable blocks. To accomplish this meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto_git.bb is broken into three parts: - meta/classes/kernel-yocto.bbclass: contains common routines for checking out and configuring a yocto kernel git repository. This should be inherited by recipes that need this functionality. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto.inc: Contains the machine mappings, compatibility, build directives and common task definitions for a yocto kernel based recipe. This inherits kernel-yocto, and is the typical point of entry for other recipes. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linuux-tools.inc: tasks and function definitions for kernel recipes that want to build/export perf It also updates the linux-yocto recipe to default to 2.6.37. As part of the update to 2.6.37 the branch naming and conventions have been modified to show inheritance, and be more generic. For example: master meta yocto/base yocto/standard/arm_versatile_926ejs yocto/standard/base yocto/standard/beagleboard yocto/standard/common_pc/atom-pc yocto/standard/common_pc/base yocto/standard/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/fsl-mpc8315e-rdb yocto/standard/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/mti_malta32_be yocto/standard/preempt_rt/base yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/qemu_ppc32 yocto/standard/routerstationpro In this structure: master: tracks the mainline kernel meta: meta information for the BSPs and kernel features yocto/base: baseline kernel branch yocto/standard/base: 'standard' kernel, contains features and configs for all BSPs yocto/standard/<machine>: represents a BSP with specific features or configurations The tools, tree and libc-headers have all been updated to deal with this new structure. Also in addition to dealing with the new structure, they continue to work with the existing tree and will adapt at runtime to the differences. The linux-yocto-stable_git.bb recipe continues to build the 2.6.34 based tree,and linux-yocto_git.bb builds 2.6.37. As boards are enabled for the new kernel they will move from -stable to the development kernel. As of now, only the emulated targets have moved to 2.6.37-rcX Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-18 21:09:02 +00:00
}
do_kernel_checkout[dirs] = "${S}"
addtask kernel_checkout before do_kernel_metadata after do_unpack
addtask kernel_metadata after do_validate_branches do_unpack before do_patch
do_kernel_metadata[depends] = "kern-tools-native:do_populate_sysroot"
do_validate_branches[depends] = "kern-tools-native:do_populate_sysroot"
yocto-kernel: factor common routes, update to 2.6.37 and branch renaming In order to extend and create more kernel recipes based on the supported yocto kernel common routines need to be placed in re-usable blocks. To accomplish this meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto_git.bb is broken into three parts: - meta/classes/kernel-yocto.bbclass: contains common routines for checking out and configuring a yocto kernel git repository. This should be inherited by recipes that need this functionality. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto.inc: Contains the machine mappings, compatibility, build directives and common task definitions for a yocto kernel based recipe. This inherits kernel-yocto, and is the typical point of entry for other recipes. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linuux-tools.inc: tasks and function definitions for kernel recipes that want to build/export perf It also updates the linux-yocto recipe to default to 2.6.37. As part of the update to 2.6.37 the branch naming and conventions have been modified to show inheritance, and be more generic. For example: master meta yocto/base yocto/standard/arm_versatile_926ejs yocto/standard/base yocto/standard/beagleboard yocto/standard/common_pc/atom-pc yocto/standard/common_pc/base yocto/standard/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/fsl-mpc8315e-rdb yocto/standard/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/mti_malta32_be yocto/standard/preempt_rt/base yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/qemu_ppc32 yocto/standard/routerstationpro In this structure: master: tracks the mainline kernel meta: meta information for the BSPs and kernel features yocto/base: baseline kernel branch yocto/standard/base: 'standard' kernel, contains features and configs for all BSPs yocto/standard/<machine>: represents a BSP with specific features or configurations The tools, tree and libc-headers have all been updated to deal with this new structure. Also in addition to dealing with the new structure, they continue to work with the existing tree and will adapt at runtime to the differences. The linux-yocto-stable_git.bb recipe continues to build the 2.6.34 based tree,and linux-yocto_git.bb builds 2.6.37. As boards are enabled for the new kernel they will move from -stable to the development kernel. As of now, only the emulated targets have moved to 2.6.37-rcX Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-18 21:09:02 +00:00
do_kernel_configme[dirs] += "${S} ${B}"
yocto-kernel: factor common routes, update to 2.6.37 and branch renaming In order to extend and create more kernel recipes based on the supported yocto kernel common routines need to be placed in re-usable blocks. To accomplish this meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto_git.bb is broken into three parts: - meta/classes/kernel-yocto.bbclass: contains common routines for checking out and configuring a yocto kernel git repository. This should be inherited by recipes that need this functionality. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto.inc: Contains the machine mappings, compatibility, build directives and common task definitions for a yocto kernel based recipe. This inherits kernel-yocto, and is the typical point of entry for other recipes. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linuux-tools.inc: tasks and function definitions for kernel recipes that want to build/export perf It also updates the linux-yocto recipe to default to 2.6.37. As part of the update to 2.6.37 the branch naming and conventions have been modified to show inheritance, and be more generic. For example: master meta yocto/base yocto/standard/arm_versatile_926ejs yocto/standard/base yocto/standard/beagleboard yocto/standard/common_pc/atom-pc yocto/standard/common_pc/base yocto/standard/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/fsl-mpc8315e-rdb yocto/standard/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/mti_malta32_be yocto/standard/preempt_rt/base yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/qemu_ppc32 yocto/standard/routerstationpro In this structure: master: tracks the mainline kernel meta: meta information for the BSPs and kernel features yocto/base: baseline kernel branch yocto/standard/base: 'standard' kernel, contains features and configs for all BSPs yocto/standard/<machine>: represents a BSP with specific features or configurations The tools, tree and libc-headers have all been updated to deal with this new structure. Also in addition to dealing with the new structure, they continue to work with the existing tree and will adapt at runtime to the differences. The linux-yocto-stable_git.bb recipe continues to build the 2.6.34 based tree,and linux-yocto_git.bb builds 2.6.37. As boards are enabled for the new kernel they will move from -stable to the development kernel. As of now, only the emulated targets have moved to 2.6.37-rcX Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-18 21:09:02 +00:00
do_kernel_configme() {
kernel-yocto: streamline patch, configuration and audit phases We've been running with a set of kern-tools that were designed to work with build systems that knew nothing about git, trees, commits, etc. As such, there's been a set of shims/wrappers in place to work with within bitbake/oe-core. These were the *me scripts: createme, updateme, patchme and configme. With this commit, we strip that legacy code and use the tools directly. This means less complexity, fewer corner cases .. and no surprises when the tools are arunning. As another benefit, the tools consume much less time during a typical build and have no noticeable impact on the overall build time. Existing .scc files, features, and processing are not impacted as these tools are compatible with existing feature descriptions and kerne configuration fragments. The audit of kernel configuration fragments is now detached from the linux-yocto build structure and process. This means that they can eventually be tweaked to offer kernel audit to any type of kernel build and configuration process. Additionally, the kernel symbol audit phase can now resolve symbol dependencies and offer guidance when a symbol is missing: WARNING: linux-yocto-4.4.15+gitAUTOINC+b030d96c7b_f5e2c49d58-r0 do_kernel_configcheck: [kernel config]: specified values did not make it into the kernel's final configuration: ---------- CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN ----------------- Config: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN From: /home/bruce/poky/build/tmp/work-shared/qemux86-64/kernel-source/.kernel-meta/configs/standard/features/bluetooth/bluetooth.cfg Requested value: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN=y Actual value: Config 'BT_6LOWPAN' has the following conditionals: BT_LE && 6LOWPAN (value: "n") Dependency values are: BT_LE [y] 6LOWPAN [n] (From OE-Core rev: 0f698dfd1c8bbc0d53ae7977e26685a7a3df52a3) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2016-08-15 18:26:59 +00:00
set +e
yocto-kernel: factor common routes, update to 2.6.37 and branch renaming In order to extend and create more kernel recipes based on the supported yocto kernel common routines need to be placed in re-usable blocks. To accomplish this meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto_git.bb is broken into three parts: - meta/classes/kernel-yocto.bbclass: contains common routines for checking out and configuring a yocto kernel git repository. This should be inherited by recipes that need this functionality. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto.inc: Contains the machine mappings, compatibility, build directives and common task definitions for a yocto kernel based recipe. This inherits kernel-yocto, and is the typical point of entry for other recipes. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linuux-tools.inc: tasks and function definitions for kernel recipes that want to build/export perf It also updates the linux-yocto recipe to default to 2.6.37. As part of the update to 2.6.37 the branch naming and conventions have been modified to show inheritance, and be more generic. For example: master meta yocto/base yocto/standard/arm_versatile_926ejs yocto/standard/base yocto/standard/beagleboard yocto/standard/common_pc/atom-pc yocto/standard/common_pc/base yocto/standard/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/fsl-mpc8315e-rdb yocto/standard/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/mti_malta32_be yocto/standard/preempt_rt/base yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/qemu_ppc32 yocto/standard/routerstationpro In this structure: master: tracks the mainline kernel meta: meta information for the BSPs and kernel features yocto/base: baseline kernel branch yocto/standard/base: 'standard' kernel, contains features and configs for all BSPs yocto/standard/<machine>: represents a BSP with specific features or configurations The tools, tree and libc-headers have all been updated to deal with this new structure. Also in addition to dealing with the new structure, they continue to work with the existing tree and will adapt at runtime to the differences. The linux-yocto-stable_git.bb recipe continues to build the 2.6.34 based tree,and linux-yocto_git.bb builds 2.6.37. As boards are enabled for the new kernel they will move from -stable to the development kernel. As of now, only the emulated targets have moved to 2.6.37-rcX Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-18 21:09:02 +00:00
kernel-yocto: streamline patch, configuration and audit phases We've been running with a set of kern-tools that were designed to work with build systems that knew nothing about git, trees, commits, etc. As such, there's been a set of shims/wrappers in place to work with within bitbake/oe-core. These were the *me scripts: createme, updateme, patchme and configme. With this commit, we strip that legacy code and use the tools directly. This means less complexity, fewer corner cases .. and no surprises when the tools are arunning. As another benefit, the tools consume much less time during a typical build and have no noticeable impact on the overall build time. Existing .scc files, features, and processing are not impacted as these tools are compatible with existing feature descriptions and kerne configuration fragments. The audit of kernel configuration fragments is now detached from the linux-yocto build structure and process. This means that they can eventually be tweaked to offer kernel audit to any type of kernel build and configuration process. Additionally, the kernel symbol audit phase can now resolve symbol dependencies and offer guidance when a symbol is missing: WARNING: linux-yocto-4.4.15+gitAUTOINC+b030d96c7b_f5e2c49d58-r0 do_kernel_configcheck: [kernel config]: specified values did not make it into the kernel's final configuration: ---------- CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN ----------------- Config: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN From: /home/bruce/poky/build/tmp/work-shared/qemux86-64/kernel-source/.kernel-meta/configs/standard/features/bluetooth/bluetooth.cfg Requested value: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN=y Actual value: Config 'BT_6LOWPAN' has the following conditionals: BT_LE && 6LOWPAN (value: "n") Dependency values are: BT_LE [y] 6LOWPAN [n] (From OE-Core rev: 0f698dfd1c8bbc0d53ae7977e26685a7a3df52a3) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2016-08-15 18:26:59 +00:00
# translate the kconfig_mode into something that merge_config.sh
# understands
case ${KCONFIG_MODE} in
*allnoconfig)
kernel-yocto: streamline patch, configuration and audit phases We've been running with a set of kern-tools that were designed to work with build systems that knew nothing about git, trees, commits, etc. As such, there's been a set of shims/wrappers in place to work with within bitbake/oe-core. These were the *me scripts: createme, updateme, patchme and configme. With this commit, we strip that legacy code and use the tools directly. This means less complexity, fewer corner cases .. and no surprises when the tools are arunning. As another benefit, the tools consume much less time during a typical build and have no noticeable impact on the overall build time. Existing .scc files, features, and processing are not impacted as these tools are compatible with existing feature descriptions and kerne configuration fragments. The audit of kernel configuration fragments is now detached from the linux-yocto build structure and process. This means that they can eventually be tweaked to offer kernel audit to any type of kernel build and configuration process. Additionally, the kernel symbol audit phase can now resolve symbol dependencies and offer guidance when a symbol is missing: WARNING: linux-yocto-4.4.15+gitAUTOINC+b030d96c7b_f5e2c49d58-r0 do_kernel_configcheck: [kernel config]: specified values did not make it into the kernel's final configuration: ---------- CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN ----------------- Config: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN From: /home/bruce/poky/build/tmp/work-shared/qemux86-64/kernel-source/.kernel-meta/configs/standard/features/bluetooth/bluetooth.cfg Requested value: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN=y Actual value: Config 'BT_6LOWPAN' has the following conditionals: BT_LE && 6LOWPAN (value: "n") Dependency values are: BT_LE [y] 6LOWPAN [n] (From OE-Core rev: 0f698dfd1c8bbc0d53ae7977e26685a7a3df52a3) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2016-08-15 18:26:59 +00:00
config_flags="-n"
;;
*alldefconfig)
kernel-yocto: streamline patch, configuration and audit phases We've been running with a set of kern-tools that were designed to work with build systems that knew nothing about git, trees, commits, etc. As such, there's been a set of shims/wrappers in place to work with within bitbake/oe-core. These were the *me scripts: createme, updateme, patchme and configme. With this commit, we strip that legacy code and use the tools directly. This means less complexity, fewer corner cases .. and no surprises when the tools are arunning. As another benefit, the tools consume much less time during a typical build and have no noticeable impact on the overall build time. Existing .scc files, features, and processing are not impacted as these tools are compatible with existing feature descriptions and kerne configuration fragments. The audit of kernel configuration fragments is now detached from the linux-yocto build structure and process. This means that they can eventually be tweaked to offer kernel audit to any type of kernel build and configuration process. Additionally, the kernel symbol audit phase can now resolve symbol dependencies and offer guidance when a symbol is missing: WARNING: linux-yocto-4.4.15+gitAUTOINC+b030d96c7b_f5e2c49d58-r0 do_kernel_configcheck: [kernel config]: specified values did not make it into the kernel's final configuration: ---------- CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN ----------------- Config: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN From: /home/bruce/poky/build/tmp/work-shared/qemux86-64/kernel-source/.kernel-meta/configs/standard/features/bluetooth/bluetooth.cfg Requested value: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN=y Actual value: Config 'BT_6LOWPAN' has the following conditionals: BT_LE && 6LOWPAN (value: "n") Dependency values are: BT_LE [y] 6LOWPAN [n] (From OE-Core rev: 0f698dfd1c8bbc0d53ae7977e26685a7a3df52a3) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2016-08-15 18:26:59 +00:00
config_flags=""
;;
*)
if [ -f ${WORKDIR}/defconfig ]; then
kernel-yocto: streamline patch, configuration and audit phases We've been running with a set of kern-tools that were designed to work with build systems that knew nothing about git, trees, commits, etc. As such, there's been a set of shims/wrappers in place to work with within bitbake/oe-core. These were the *me scripts: createme, updateme, patchme and configme. With this commit, we strip that legacy code and use the tools directly. This means less complexity, fewer corner cases .. and no surprises when the tools are arunning. As another benefit, the tools consume much less time during a typical build and have no noticeable impact on the overall build time. Existing .scc files, features, and processing are not impacted as these tools are compatible with existing feature descriptions and kerne configuration fragments. The audit of kernel configuration fragments is now detached from the linux-yocto build structure and process. This means that they can eventually be tweaked to offer kernel audit to any type of kernel build and configuration process. Additionally, the kernel symbol audit phase can now resolve symbol dependencies and offer guidance when a symbol is missing: WARNING: linux-yocto-4.4.15+gitAUTOINC+b030d96c7b_f5e2c49d58-r0 do_kernel_configcheck: [kernel config]: specified values did not make it into the kernel's final configuration: ---------- CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN ----------------- Config: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN From: /home/bruce/poky/build/tmp/work-shared/qemux86-64/kernel-source/.kernel-meta/configs/standard/features/bluetooth/bluetooth.cfg Requested value: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN=y Actual value: Config 'BT_6LOWPAN' has the following conditionals: BT_LE && 6LOWPAN (value: "n") Dependency values are: BT_LE [y] 6LOWPAN [n] (From OE-Core rev: 0f698dfd1c8bbc0d53ae7977e26685a7a3df52a3) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2016-08-15 18:26:59 +00:00
config_flags="-n"
fi
kernel-yocto: streamline patch, configuration and audit phases We've been running with a set of kern-tools that were designed to work with build systems that knew nothing about git, trees, commits, etc. As such, there's been a set of shims/wrappers in place to work with within bitbake/oe-core. These were the *me scripts: createme, updateme, patchme and configme. With this commit, we strip that legacy code and use the tools directly. This means less complexity, fewer corner cases .. and no surprises when the tools are arunning. As another benefit, the tools consume much less time during a typical build and have no noticeable impact on the overall build time. Existing .scc files, features, and processing are not impacted as these tools are compatible with existing feature descriptions and kerne configuration fragments. The audit of kernel configuration fragments is now detached from the linux-yocto build structure and process. This means that they can eventually be tweaked to offer kernel audit to any type of kernel build and configuration process. Additionally, the kernel symbol audit phase can now resolve symbol dependencies and offer guidance when a symbol is missing: WARNING: linux-yocto-4.4.15+gitAUTOINC+b030d96c7b_f5e2c49d58-r0 do_kernel_configcheck: [kernel config]: specified values did not make it into the kernel's final configuration: ---------- CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN ----------------- Config: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN From: /home/bruce/poky/build/tmp/work-shared/qemux86-64/kernel-source/.kernel-meta/configs/standard/features/bluetooth/bluetooth.cfg Requested value: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN=y Actual value: Config 'BT_6LOWPAN' has the following conditionals: BT_LE && 6LOWPAN (value: "n") Dependency values are: BT_LE [y] 6LOWPAN [n] (From OE-Core rev: 0f698dfd1c8bbc0d53ae7977e26685a7a3df52a3) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2016-08-15 18:26:59 +00:00
;;
esac
cd ${S}
kernel-yocto: streamline patch, configuration and audit phases We've been running with a set of kern-tools that were designed to work with build systems that knew nothing about git, trees, commits, etc. As such, there's been a set of shims/wrappers in place to work with within bitbake/oe-core. These were the *me scripts: createme, updateme, patchme and configme. With this commit, we strip that legacy code and use the tools directly. This means less complexity, fewer corner cases .. and no surprises when the tools are arunning. As another benefit, the tools consume much less time during a typical build and have no noticeable impact on the overall build time. Existing .scc files, features, and processing are not impacted as these tools are compatible with existing feature descriptions and kerne configuration fragments. The audit of kernel configuration fragments is now detached from the linux-yocto build structure and process. This means that they can eventually be tweaked to offer kernel audit to any type of kernel build and configuration process. Additionally, the kernel symbol audit phase can now resolve symbol dependencies and offer guidance when a symbol is missing: WARNING: linux-yocto-4.4.15+gitAUTOINC+b030d96c7b_f5e2c49d58-r0 do_kernel_configcheck: [kernel config]: specified values did not make it into the kernel's final configuration: ---------- CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN ----------------- Config: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN From: /home/bruce/poky/build/tmp/work-shared/qemux86-64/kernel-source/.kernel-meta/configs/standard/features/bluetooth/bluetooth.cfg Requested value: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN=y Actual value: Config 'BT_6LOWPAN' has the following conditionals: BT_LE && 6LOWPAN (value: "n") Dependency values are: BT_LE [y] 6LOWPAN [n] (From OE-Core rev: 0f698dfd1c8bbc0d53ae7977e26685a7a3df52a3) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2016-08-15 18:26:59 +00:00
meta_dir=$(kgit --meta)
configs="$(scc --configs -o ${meta_dir})"
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
bberror "${configs}"
kernel-yocto: streamline patch, configuration and audit phases We've been running with a set of kern-tools that were designed to work with build systems that knew nothing about git, trees, commits, etc. As such, there's been a set of shims/wrappers in place to work with within bitbake/oe-core. These were the *me scripts: createme, updateme, patchme and configme. With this commit, we strip that legacy code and use the tools directly. This means less complexity, fewer corner cases .. and no surprises when the tools are arunning. As another benefit, the tools consume much less time during a typical build and have no noticeable impact on the overall build time. Existing .scc files, features, and processing are not impacted as these tools are compatible with existing feature descriptions and kerne configuration fragments. The audit of kernel configuration fragments is now detached from the linux-yocto build structure and process. This means that they can eventually be tweaked to offer kernel audit to any type of kernel build and configuration process. Additionally, the kernel symbol audit phase can now resolve symbol dependencies and offer guidance when a symbol is missing: WARNING: linux-yocto-4.4.15+gitAUTOINC+b030d96c7b_f5e2c49d58-r0 do_kernel_configcheck: [kernel config]: specified values did not make it into the kernel's final configuration: ---------- CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN ----------------- Config: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN From: /home/bruce/poky/build/tmp/work-shared/qemux86-64/kernel-source/.kernel-meta/configs/standard/features/bluetooth/bluetooth.cfg Requested value: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN=y Actual value: Config 'BT_6LOWPAN' has the following conditionals: BT_LE && 6LOWPAN (value: "n") Dependency values are: BT_LE [y] 6LOWPAN [n] (From OE-Core rev: 0f698dfd1c8bbc0d53ae7977e26685a7a3df52a3) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2016-08-15 18:26:59 +00:00
bbfatal_log "Could not find configuration queue (${meta_dir}/config.queue)"
fi
CFLAGS="${CFLAGS} ${TOOLCHAIN_OPTIONS}" ARCH=${ARCH} merge_config.sh -O ${B} ${config_flags} ${configs} > ${meta_dir}/cfg/merge_config_build.log 2>&1
yocto-kernel: factor common routes, update to 2.6.37 and branch renaming In order to extend and create more kernel recipes based on the supported yocto kernel common routines need to be placed in re-usable blocks. To accomplish this meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto_git.bb is broken into three parts: - meta/classes/kernel-yocto.bbclass: contains common routines for checking out and configuring a yocto kernel git repository. This should be inherited by recipes that need this functionality. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto.inc: Contains the machine mappings, compatibility, build directives and common task definitions for a yocto kernel based recipe. This inherits kernel-yocto, and is the typical point of entry for other recipes. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linuux-tools.inc: tasks and function definitions for kernel recipes that want to build/export perf It also updates the linux-yocto recipe to default to 2.6.37. As part of the update to 2.6.37 the branch naming and conventions have been modified to show inheritance, and be more generic. For example: master meta yocto/base yocto/standard/arm_versatile_926ejs yocto/standard/base yocto/standard/beagleboard yocto/standard/common_pc/atom-pc yocto/standard/common_pc/base yocto/standard/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/fsl-mpc8315e-rdb yocto/standard/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/mti_malta32_be yocto/standard/preempt_rt/base yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/qemu_ppc32 yocto/standard/routerstationpro In this structure: master: tracks the mainline kernel meta: meta information for the BSPs and kernel features yocto/base: baseline kernel branch yocto/standard/base: 'standard' kernel, contains features and configs for all BSPs yocto/standard/<machine>: represents a BSP with specific features or configurations The tools, tree and libc-headers have all been updated to deal with this new structure. Also in addition to dealing with the new structure, they continue to work with the existing tree and will adapt at runtime to the differences. The linux-yocto-stable_git.bb recipe continues to build the 2.6.34 based tree,and linux-yocto_git.bb builds 2.6.37. As boards are enabled for the new kernel they will move from -stable to the development kernel. As of now, only the emulated targets have moved to 2.6.37-rcX Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-18 21:09:02 +00:00
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
bbfatal_log "Could not configure ${KMACHINE}-${LINUX_KERNEL_TYPE}"
yocto-kernel: factor common routes, update to 2.6.37 and branch renaming In order to extend and create more kernel recipes based on the supported yocto kernel common routines need to be placed in re-usable blocks. To accomplish this meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto_git.bb is broken into three parts: - meta/classes/kernel-yocto.bbclass: contains common routines for checking out and configuring a yocto kernel git repository. This should be inherited by recipes that need this functionality. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto.inc: Contains the machine mappings, compatibility, build directives and common task definitions for a yocto kernel based recipe. This inherits kernel-yocto, and is the typical point of entry for other recipes. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linuux-tools.inc: tasks and function definitions for kernel recipes that want to build/export perf It also updates the linux-yocto recipe to default to 2.6.37. As part of the update to 2.6.37 the branch naming and conventions have been modified to show inheritance, and be more generic. For example: master meta yocto/base yocto/standard/arm_versatile_926ejs yocto/standard/base yocto/standard/beagleboard yocto/standard/common_pc/atom-pc yocto/standard/common_pc/base yocto/standard/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/fsl-mpc8315e-rdb yocto/standard/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/mti_malta32_be yocto/standard/preempt_rt/base yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/qemu_ppc32 yocto/standard/routerstationpro In this structure: master: tracks the mainline kernel meta: meta information for the BSPs and kernel features yocto/base: baseline kernel branch yocto/standard/base: 'standard' kernel, contains features and configs for all BSPs yocto/standard/<machine>: represents a BSP with specific features or configurations The tools, tree and libc-headers have all been updated to deal with this new structure. Also in addition to dealing with the new structure, they continue to work with the existing tree and will adapt at runtime to the differences. The linux-yocto-stable_git.bb recipe continues to build the 2.6.34 based tree,and linux-yocto_git.bb builds 2.6.37. As boards are enabled for the new kernel they will move from -stable to the development kernel. As of now, only the emulated targets have moved to 2.6.37-rcX Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-18 21:09:02 +00:00
fi
kernel-yocto: streamline patch, configuration and audit phases We've been running with a set of kern-tools that were designed to work with build systems that knew nothing about git, trees, commits, etc. As such, there's been a set of shims/wrappers in place to work with within bitbake/oe-core. These were the *me scripts: createme, updateme, patchme and configme. With this commit, we strip that legacy code and use the tools directly. This means less complexity, fewer corner cases .. and no surprises when the tools are arunning. As another benefit, the tools consume much less time during a typical build and have no noticeable impact on the overall build time. Existing .scc files, features, and processing are not impacted as these tools are compatible with existing feature descriptions and kerne configuration fragments. The audit of kernel configuration fragments is now detached from the linux-yocto build structure and process. This means that they can eventually be tweaked to offer kernel audit to any type of kernel build and configuration process. Additionally, the kernel symbol audit phase can now resolve symbol dependencies and offer guidance when a symbol is missing: WARNING: linux-yocto-4.4.15+gitAUTOINC+b030d96c7b_f5e2c49d58-r0 do_kernel_configcheck: [kernel config]: specified values did not make it into the kernel's final configuration: ---------- CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN ----------------- Config: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN From: /home/bruce/poky/build/tmp/work-shared/qemux86-64/kernel-source/.kernel-meta/configs/standard/features/bluetooth/bluetooth.cfg Requested value: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN=y Actual value: Config 'BT_6LOWPAN' has the following conditionals: BT_LE && 6LOWPAN (value: "n") Dependency values are: BT_LE [y] 6LOWPAN [n] (From OE-Core rev: 0f698dfd1c8bbc0d53ae7977e26685a7a3df52a3) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2016-08-15 18:26:59 +00:00
yocto-kernel: factor common routes, update to 2.6.37 and branch renaming In order to extend and create more kernel recipes based on the supported yocto kernel common routines need to be placed in re-usable blocks. To accomplish this meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto_git.bb is broken into three parts: - meta/classes/kernel-yocto.bbclass: contains common routines for checking out and configuring a yocto kernel git repository. This should be inherited by recipes that need this functionality. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto.inc: Contains the machine mappings, compatibility, build directives and common task definitions for a yocto kernel based recipe. This inherits kernel-yocto, and is the typical point of entry for other recipes. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linuux-tools.inc: tasks and function definitions for kernel recipes that want to build/export perf It also updates the linux-yocto recipe to default to 2.6.37. As part of the update to 2.6.37 the branch naming and conventions have been modified to show inheritance, and be more generic. For example: master meta yocto/base yocto/standard/arm_versatile_926ejs yocto/standard/base yocto/standard/beagleboard yocto/standard/common_pc/atom-pc yocto/standard/common_pc/base yocto/standard/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/fsl-mpc8315e-rdb yocto/standard/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/mti_malta32_be yocto/standard/preempt_rt/base yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/qemu_ppc32 yocto/standard/routerstationpro In this structure: master: tracks the mainline kernel meta: meta information for the BSPs and kernel features yocto/base: baseline kernel branch yocto/standard/base: 'standard' kernel, contains features and configs for all BSPs yocto/standard/<machine>: represents a BSP with specific features or configurations The tools, tree and libc-headers have all been updated to deal with this new structure. Also in addition to dealing with the new structure, they continue to work with the existing tree and will adapt at runtime to the differences. The linux-yocto-stable_git.bb recipe continues to build the 2.6.34 based tree,and linux-yocto_git.bb builds 2.6.37. As boards are enabled for the new kernel they will move from -stable to the development kernel. As of now, only the emulated targets have moved to 2.6.37-rcX Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-18 21:09:02 +00:00
echo "# Global settings from linux recipe" >> ${B}/.config
echo "CONFIG_LOCALVERSION="\"${LINUX_VERSION_EXTENSION}\" >> ${B}/.config
}
addtask kernel_configme before do_configure after do_patch
python do_kernel_configcheck() {
import re, string, sys
yocto-kernel: factor common routes, update to 2.6.37 and branch renaming In order to extend and create more kernel recipes based on the supported yocto kernel common routines need to be placed in re-usable blocks. To accomplish this meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto_git.bb is broken into three parts: - meta/classes/kernel-yocto.bbclass: contains common routines for checking out and configuring a yocto kernel git repository. This should be inherited by recipes that need this functionality. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto.inc: Contains the machine mappings, compatibility, build directives and common task definitions for a yocto kernel based recipe. This inherits kernel-yocto, and is the typical point of entry for other recipes. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linuux-tools.inc: tasks and function definitions for kernel recipes that want to build/export perf It also updates the linux-yocto recipe to default to 2.6.37. As part of the update to 2.6.37 the branch naming and conventions have been modified to show inheritance, and be more generic. For example: master meta yocto/base yocto/standard/arm_versatile_926ejs yocto/standard/base yocto/standard/beagleboard yocto/standard/common_pc/atom-pc yocto/standard/common_pc/base yocto/standard/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/fsl-mpc8315e-rdb yocto/standard/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/mti_malta32_be yocto/standard/preempt_rt/base yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/qemu_ppc32 yocto/standard/routerstationpro In this structure: master: tracks the mainline kernel meta: meta information for the BSPs and kernel features yocto/base: baseline kernel branch yocto/standard/base: 'standard' kernel, contains features and configs for all BSPs yocto/standard/<machine>: represents a BSP with specific features or configurations The tools, tree and libc-headers have all been updated to deal with this new structure. Also in addition to dealing with the new structure, they continue to work with the existing tree and will adapt at runtime to the differences. The linux-yocto-stable_git.bb recipe continues to build the 2.6.34 based tree,and linux-yocto_git.bb builds 2.6.37. As boards are enabled for the new kernel they will move from -stable to the development kernel. As of now, only the emulated targets have moved to 2.6.37-rcX Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-18 21:09:02 +00:00
kernel-yocto: fix kernel configuration audit for custom yocto kernels It was reported that the kernel configuration checks for custom yocto kernels had the following output: NOTE: validating kernel configuration grep: /meta-series: No such file or directory grep: /meta-series: No such file or directory WARNING: Can't find any BSP hardware or required configuration fragments. WARNING: Looked at //cfg///hdw_frags.txt and //cfg///required_frags.txt in directory: //cfg// NOTE: Tasks Summary: Attempted 375 tasks of which 367 didn't need to be rerun and all succeeded. which is not inspire confidence in the output of the process. Completely inhibiting the check is one option to remove the messages, but that removes the ability see output, which can help move users to a better or more fully configured linux-yocto based kernel. To fix this, we have to ensure that the path to the meta-series is always valid, and that the tools can deal with not all files existing in the audit directory. Since custom yocto kernels do not set KMETA (they don't have a meta branch), we ensure that a default of 'meta' is passed to the audit ('meta' is always valid), and that kconf_check itself can deal with an incomplete set of input audit files. The net result is output like this (using a defconfig with invalid options for the kernel being built): NOTE: validating kernel configuration This BSP sets 19 invalid/obsolete kernel options. These config options are not offered anywhere within this kernel. The full list can be found in your kernel src dir at: meta/cfg/standard/qemux86/invalid.cfg There were 1 instances of config fragment errors. The full list can be found in your kernel src dir at: meta/cfg/standard/qemux86/fragment_errors.txt The full list can be found in your kernel src dir at: meta/cfg/standard/qemux86/missing_required.cfg (From OE-Core rev: 4d1b7dae063ee4c35c426306d0e22f11ce112c72) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Saul Wold <sgw@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2012-09-13 12:59:08 +00:00
# if KMETA isn't set globally by a recipe using this routine, we need to
# set the default to 'meta'. Otherwise, kconf_check is not passed a valid
# meta-series for processing
kmeta = d.getVar("KMETA") or "meta"
kern-tools: usability, bug fixes and no guilt Updating the kern-tools SRCREV to pick up the following fixes: 60a894e kgit-s2q: add proper commit ID handling for mixed am/apply usage 3b08257 kgit-s2q: delete pruning of path support. c5868b4 kgit-s2q: Restore implicit exit status to "git apply" section 1bd00b9 kgit-scc: mask warnings from cleanup phase 5 bb75299 kgit-s2q: fix commit warp when running "git am --abort" ef9571b kgit-scc: cleanup git rebase-apply dir fdb7d21 kgit-scc: ensure treegen stops if a meta series fails 008987b config: add kconfig cleaning options 69ff569 kgit-s2q: strip blank lines and comments e7b4540 kgit-init: disable garbage collection on a new tree 417eaed kgit-s2q: delete old LTSI patch dir finding code 21f2200 kgit-scc: better error checking on resume ad5084c kern-tools: use .meta as meta data container 1deb5d8 kgit-meta: don't push patches without a series file eb431a1 kgit-s2q: aid patch reject resolution via helper scripts f859c40 kgit-s2q: only use patch annotations when explicitly asked 333ae18 kgit: speed patch application by batching patches bf6991d kgit: teach tools about non-default meta dirs bcfc712 kgit-s2q: usability improvements cb28803 kgit-s2q: fix patch prefix stripping. 37f40e1 kgit-s2q: warn/exit with error if patch not in series f4704d2 kgit-s2q: consistent rm usage e11819c kgit-s2q: standardize on use of git mailinfo 36a5eda kgit: remove guilt dependency c461a4f spp/scc: export mark commands to meta-series 5311162 updateme: ensure that generated features are only used once 4f7a263 kgit-checkpoint: clear .gitignore for meta branch 21ee6f2 updateme: enforce a matching machine b08749d kgit-scc: remove -meta files after consruction These are bug fixes, usability changes as well as the removal of the guilt dependency. During the uprev of the guilt package, the amount of circumvention of the typical guilt workflow and checks meant that using it as a series -> branch manager was no longer appropriate. As a result a new tools kgit-s2q (series 2 queue) was created based on git-quiltimport, git am, and the LTSI tree generation scripts. The result is better series to branch validation, faster application and a simpler management model. This tool is backwards compatible with any tree previously constructed with guilt. We are now "guilt free" (From OE-Core rev: 983bff587b60fdd0244ad00f238df5ed50cc1e1a) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2013-08-23 18:08:16 +00:00
if not os.path.exists(kmeta):
kmeta = "." + kmeta
kernel-yocto: fix kernel configuration audit for custom yocto kernels It was reported that the kernel configuration checks for custom yocto kernels had the following output: NOTE: validating kernel configuration grep: /meta-series: No such file or directory grep: /meta-series: No such file or directory WARNING: Can't find any BSP hardware or required configuration fragments. WARNING: Looked at //cfg///hdw_frags.txt and //cfg///required_frags.txt in directory: //cfg// NOTE: Tasks Summary: Attempted 375 tasks of which 367 didn't need to be rerun and all succeeded. which is not inspire confidence in the output of the process. Completely inhibiting the check is one option to remove the messages, but that removes the ability see output, which can help move users to a better or more fully configured linux-yocto based kernel. To fix this, we have to ensure that the path to the meta-series is always valid, and that the tools can deal with not all files existing in the audit directory. Since custom yocto kernels do not set KMETA (they don't have a meta branch), we ensure that a default of 'meta' is passed to the audit ('meta' is always valid), and that kconf_check itself can deal with an incomplete set of input audit files. The net result is output like this (using a defconfig with invalid options for the kernel being built): NOTE: validating kernel configuration This BSP sets 19 invalid/obsolete kernel options. These config options are not offered anywhere within this kernel. The full list can be found in your kernel src dir at: meta/cfg/standard/qemux86/invalid.cfg There were 1 instances of config fragment errors. The full list can be found in your kernel src dir at: meta/cfg/standard/qemux86/fragment_errors.txt The full list can be found in your kernel src dir at: meta/cfg/standard/qemux86/missing_required.cfg (From OE-Core rev: 4d1b7dae063ee4c35c426306d0e22f11ce112c72) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Saul Wold <sgw@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2012-09-13 12:59:08 +00:00
pathprefix = "export PATH=%s:%s; " % (d.getVar('PATH'), "${S}/scripts/util/")
kernel-yocto: streamline patch, configuration and audit phases We've been running with a set of kern-tools that were designed to work with build systems that knew nothing about git, trees, commits, etc. As such, there's been a set of shims/wrappers in place to work with within bitbake/oe-core. These were the *me scripts: createme, updateme, patchme and configme. With this commit, we strip that legacy code and use the tools directly. This means less complexity, fewer corner cases .. and no surprises when the tools are arunning. As another benefit, the tools consume much less time during a typical build and have no noticeable impact on the overall build time. Existing .scc files, features, and processing are not impacted as these tools are compatible with existing feature descriptions and kerne configuration fragments. The audit of kernel configuration fragments is now detached from the linux-yocto build structure and process. This means that they can eventually be tweaked to offer kernel audit to any type of kernel build and configuration process. Additionally, the kernel symbol audit phase can now resolve symbol dependencies and offer guidance when a symbol is missing: WARNING: linux-yocto-4.4.15+gitAUTOINC+b030d96c7b_f5e2c49d58-r0 do_kernel_configcheck: [kernel config]: specified values did not make it into the kernel's final configuration: ---------- CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN ----------------- Config: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN From: /home/bruce/poky/build/tmp/work-shared/qemux86-64/kernel-source/.kernel-meta/configs/standard/features/bluetooth/bluetooth.cfg Requested value: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN=y Actual value: Config 'BT_6LOWPAN' has the following conditionals: BT_LE && 6LOWPAN (value: "n") Dependency values are: BT_LE [y] 6LOWPAN [n] (From OE-Core rev: 0f698dfd1c8bbc0d53ae7977e26685a7a3df52a3) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2016-08-15 18:26:59 +00:00
cmd = d.expand("scc --configs -o ${S}/.kernel-meta")
ret, configs = oe.utils.getstatusoutput("%s%s" % (pathprefix, cmd))
cmd = d.expand("cd ${S}; kconf_check --report -o ${S}/%s/cfg/ ${B}/.config ${S} %s" % (kmeta,configs))
ret, result = oe.utils.getstatusoutput("%s%s" % (pathprefix, cmd))
config_check_visibility = int(d.getVar("KCONF_AUDIT_LEVEL") or 0)
bsp_check_visibility = int(d.getVar("KCONF_BSP_AUDIT_LEVEL") or 0)
linux-yocto: make kernel configuration audit user visible After a linux-yocto style kernel is configured, a kernel configuration audit is executed to detect common errors or issues with the config. This output used to be visible, but was made less obvious to not alarm users unnecessarily (since some configuration issues are acceptable). There are some classes of configuration issue that are worth being visible, and that is specified configuration values that do not make the final .config. These dropped options can result in any number of runtime failures, so flagging them at build time makes sense. The visibility of auditing is controlled by KCONF_AUDIT_LEVEL: 0: no reporting 1: report options that are specified, but not in the final config 2: report options that are not hardware related, but set by a BSP The default level is 1, with level 2 and above being for BSP development only. If these conditions are detected, warnings will be generated as follows: WARNING: [kernel config]: specified values did not make it into the kernel's final configuration: Value requested for CONFIG_SND_PCSP not in final ".config" Requested value: "CONFIG_SND_PCSP=y" Actual value set: "" or WARNING: [kernel config]: BSP specified non-hw configuration: CONFIG_BLOCK CONFIG_CFG80211_WEXT CONFIG_CORDIC CONFIG_CRC8 CONFIG_EFIVAR_FS CONFIG_EFI_PARTITION CONFIG_NET CONFIG_NETDEVICES CONFIG_PARTITION_ADVANCED CONFIG_WEXT_CORE CONFIG_WEXT_PROC CONFIG_WIRELESS At this point thse are only a warnings, since there needs to be time for layers and configuration fragments to be validated against this new check. [YOCTO: #6943] (From OE-Core rev: ad4d59495194b37bc510e9891bd14c0a2ac30dba) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2015-02-18 21:15:35 +00:00
# if config check visibility is non-zero, report dropped configuration values
kernel-yocto: streamline patch, configuration and audit phases We've been running with a set of kern-tools that were designed to work with build systems that knew nothing about git, trees, commits, etc. As such, there's been a set of shims/wrappers in place to work with within bitbake/oe-core. These were the *me scripts: createme, updateme, patchme and configme. With this commit, we strip that legacy code and use the tools directly. This means less complexity, fewer corner cases .. and no surprises when the tools are arunning. As another benefit, the tools consume much less time during a typical build and have no noticeable impact on the overall build time. Existing .scc files, features, and processing are not impacted as these tools are compatible with existing feature descriptions and kerne configuration fragments. The audit of kernel configuration fragments is now detached from the linux-yocto build structure and process. This means that they can eventually be tweaked to offer kernel audit to any type of kernel build and configuration process. Additionally, the kernel symbol audit phase can now resolve symbol dependencies and offer guidance when a symbol is missing: WARNING: linux-yocto-4.4.15+gitAUTOINC+b030d96c7b_f5e2c49d58-r0 do_kernel_configcheck: [kernel config]: specified values did not make it into the kernel's final configuration: ---------- CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN ----------------- Config: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN From: /home/bruce/poky/build/tmp/work-shared/qemux86-64/kernel-source/.kernel-meta/configs/standard/features/bluetooth/bluetooth.cfg Requested value: CONFIG_BT_6LOWPAN=y Actual value: Config 'BT_6LOWPAN' has the following conditionals: BT_LE && 6LOWPAN (value: "n") Dependency values are: BT_LE [y] 6LOWPAN [n] (From OE-Core rev: 0f698dfd1c8bbc0d53ae7977e26685a7a3df52a3) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2016-08-15 18:26:59 +00:00
mismatch_file = d.expand("${S}/%s/cfg/mismatch.txt" % kmeta)
linux-yocto: make kernel configuration audit user visible After a linux-yocto style kernel is configured, a kernel configuration audit is executed to detect common errors or issues with the config. This output used to be visible, but was made less obvious to not alarm users unnecessarily (since some configuration issues are acceptable). There are some classes of configuration issue that are worth being visible, and that is specified configuration values that do not make the final .config. These dropped options can result in any number of runtime failures, so flagging them at build time makes sense. The visibility of auditing is controlled by KCONF_AUDIT_LEVEL: 0: no reporting 1: report options that are specified, but not in the final config 2: report options that are not hardware related, but set by a BSP The default level is 1, with level 2 and above being for BSP development only. If these conditions are detected, warnings will be generated as follows: WARNING: [kernel config]: specified values did not make it into the kernel's final configuration: Value requested for CONFIG_SND_PCSP not in final ".config" Requested value: "CONFIG_SND_PCSP=y" Actual value set: "" or WARNING: [kernel config]: BSP specified non-hw configuration: CONFIG_BLOCK CONFIG_CFG80211_WEXT CONFIG_CORDIC CONFIG_CRC8 CONFIG_EFIVAR_FS CONFIG_EFI_PARTITION CONFIG_NET CONFIG_NETDEVICES CONFIG_PARTITION_ADVANCED CONFIG_WEXT_CORE CONFIG_WEXT_PROC CONFIG_WIRELESS At this point thse are only a warnings, since there needs to be time for layers and configuration fragments to be validated against this new check. [YOCTO: #6943] (From OE-Core rev: ad4d59495194b37bc510e9891bd14c0a2ac30dba) Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
2015-02-18 21:15:35 +00:00
if os.path.exists(mismatch_file):
if config_check_visibility:
with open (mismatch_file, "r") as myfile:
results = myfile.read()
bb.warn( "[kernel config]: specified values did not make it into the kernel's final configuration:\n\n%s" % results)
}
yocto-kernel: factor common routes, update to 2.6.37 and branch renaming In order to extend and create more kernel recipes based on the supported yocto kernel common routines need to be placed in re-usable blocks. To accomplish this meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto_git.bb is broken into three parts: - meta/classes/kernel-yocto.bbclass: contains common routines for checking out and configuring a yocto kernel git repository. This should be inherited by recipes that need this functionality. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto.inc: Contains the machine mappings, compatibility, build directives and common task definitions for a yocto kernel based recipe. This inherits kernel-yocto, and is the typical point of entry for other recipes. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linuux-tools.inc: tasks and function definitions for kernel recipes that want to build/export perf It also updates the linux-yocto recipe to default to 2.6.37. As part of the update to 2.6.37 the branch naming and conventions have been modified to show inheritance, and be more generic. For example: master meta yocto/base yocto/standard/arm_versatile_926ejs yocto/standard/base yocto/standard/beagleboard yocto/standard/common_pc/atom-pc yocto/standard/common_pc/base yocto/standard/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/fsl-mpc8315e-rdb yocto/standard/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/mti_malta32_be yocto/standard/preempt_rt/base yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/qemu_ppc32 yocto/standard/routerstationpro In this structure: master: tracks the mainline kernel meta: meta information for the BSPs and kernel features yocto/base: baseline kernel branch yocto/standard/base: 'standard' kernel, contains features and configs for all BSPs yocto/standard/<machine>: represents a BSP with specific features or configurations The tools, tree and libc-headers have all been updated to deal with this new structure. Also in addition to dealing with the new structure, they continue to work with the existing tree and will adapt at runtime to the differences. The linux-yocto-stable_git.bb recipe continues to build the 2.6.34 based tree,and linux-yocto_git.bb builds 2.6.37. As boards are enabled for the new kernel they will move from -stable to the development kernel. As of now, only the emulated targets have moved to 2.6.37-rcX Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-18 21:09:02 +00:00
# Ensure that the branches (BSP and meta) are on the locations specified by
yocto-kernel: factor common routes, update to 2.6.37 and branch renaming In order to extend and create more kernel recipes based on the supported yocto kernel common routines need to be placed in re-usable blocks. To accomplish this meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto_git.bb is broken into three parts: - meta/classes/kernel-yocto.bbclass: contains common routines for checking out and configuring a yocto kernel git repository. This should be inherited by recipes that need this functionality. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto.inc: Contains the machine mappings, compatibility, build directives and common task definitions for a yocto kernel based recipe. This inherits kernel-yocto, and is the typical point of entry for other recipes. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linuux-tools.inc: tasks and function definitions for kernel recipes that want to build/export perf It also updates the linux-yocto recipe to default to 2.6.37. As part of the update to 2.6.37 the branch naming and conventions have been modified to show inheritance, and be more generic. For example: master meta yocto/base yocto/standard/arm_versatile_926ejs yocto/standard/base yocto/standard/beagleboard yocto/standard/common_pc/atom-pc yocto/standard/common_pc/base yocto/standard/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/fsl-mpc8315e-rdb yocto/standard/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/mti_malta32_be yocto/standard/preempt_rt/base yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/qemu_ppc32 yocto/standard/routerstationpro In this structure: master: tracks the mainline kernel meta: meta information for the BSPs and kernel features yocto/base: baseline kernel branch yocto/standard/base: 'standard' kernel, contains features and configs for all BSPs yocto/standard/<machine>: represents a BSP with specific features or configurations The tools, tree and libc-headers have all been updated to deal with this new structure. Also in addition to dealing with the new structure, they continue to work with the existing tree and will adapt at runtime to the differences. The linux-yocto-stable_git.bb recipe continues to build the 2.6.34 based tree,and linux-yocto_git.bb builds 2.6.37. As boards are enabled for the new kernel they will move from -stable to the development kernel. As of now, only the emulated targets have moved to 2.6.37-rcX Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-18 21:09:02 +00:00
# their SRCREV values. If they are NOT on the right commits, the branches
# are corrected to the proper commit.
yocto-kernel: factor common routes, update to 2.6.37 and branch renaming In order to extend and create more kernel recipes based on the supported yocto kernel common routines need to be placed in re-usable blocks. To accomplish this meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto_git.bb is broken into three parts: - meta/classes/kernel-yocto.bbclass: contains common routines for checking out and configuring a yocto kernel git repository. This should be inherited by recipes that need this functionality. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto.inc: Contains the machine mappings, compatibility, build directives and common task definitions for a yocto kernel based recipe. This inherits kernel-yocto, and is the typical point of entry for other recipes. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linuux-tools.inc: tasks and function definitions for kernel recipes that want to build/export perf It also updates the linux-yocto recipe to default to 2.6.37. As part of the update to 2.6.37 the branch naming and conventions have been modified to show inheritance, and be more generic. For example: master meta yocto/base yocto/standard/arm_versatile_926ejs yocto/standard/base yocto/standard/beagleboard yocto/standard/common_pc/atom-pc yocto/standard/common_pc/base yocto/standard/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/fsl-mpc8315e-rdb yocto/standard/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/mti_malta32_be yocto/standard/preempt_rt/base yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/qemu_ppc32 yocto/standard/routerstationpro In this structure: master: tracks the mainline kernel meta: meta information for the BSPs and kernel features yocto/base: baseline kernel branch yocto/standard/base: 'standard' kernel, contains features and configs for all BSPs yocto/standard/<machine>: represents a BSP with specific features or configurations The tools, tree and libc-headers have all been updated to deal with this new structure. Also in addition to dealing with the new structure, they continue to work with the existing tree and will adapt at runtime to the differences. The linux-yocto-stable_git.bb recipe continues to build the 2.6.34 based tree,and linux-yocto_git.bb builds 2.6.37. As boards are enabled for the new kernel they will move from -stable to the development kernel. As of now, only the emulated targets have moved to 2.6.37-rcX Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-18 21:09:02 +00:00
do_validate_branches() {
set +e
yocto-kernel: factor common routes, update to 2.6.37 and branch renaming In order to extend and create more kernel recipes based on the supported yocto kernel common routines need to be placed in re-usable blocks. To accomplish this meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto_git.bb is broken into three parts: - meta/classes/kernel-yocto.bbclass: contains common routines for checking out and configuring a yocto kernel git repository. This should be inherited by recipes that need this functionality. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto.inc: Contains the machine mappings, compatibility, build directives and common task definitions for a yocto kernel based recipe. This inherits kernel-yocto, and is the typical point of entry for other recipes. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linuux-tools.inc: tasks and function definitions for kernel recipes that want to build/export perf It also updates the linux-yocto recipe to default to 2.6.37. As part of the update to 2.6.37 the branch naming and conventions have been modified to show inheritance, and be more generic. For example: master meta yocto/base yocto/standard/arm_versatile_926ejs yocto/standard/base yocto/standard/beagleboard yocto/standard/common_pc/atom-pc yocto/standard/common_pc/base yocto/standard/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/fsl-mpc8315e-rdb yocto/standard/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/mti_malta32_be yocto/standard/preempt_rt/base yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/qemu_ppc32 yocto/standard/routerstationpro In this structure: master: tracks the mainline kernel meta: meta information for the BSPs and kernel features yocto/base: baseline kernel branch yocto/standard/base: 'standard' kernel, contains features and configs for all BSPs yocto/standard/<machine>: represents a BSP with specific features or configurations The tools, tree and libc-headers have all been updated to deal with this new structure. Also in addition to dealing with the new structure, they continue to work with the existing tree and will adapt at runtime to the differences. The linux-yocto-stable_git.bb recipe continues to build the 2.6.34 based tree,and linux-yocto_git.bb builds 2.6.37. As boards are enabled for the new kernel they will move from -stable to the development kernel. As of now, only the emulated targets have moved to 2.6.37-rcX Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-18 21:09:02 +00:00
cd ${S}
machine_branch="${@ get_machine_branch(d, "${KBRANCH}" )}"
machine_srcrev="${SRCREV_machine}"
# if SRCREV is AUTOREV it shows up as AUTOINC there's nothing to
# check and we can exit early
if [ "${machine_srcrev}" = "AUTOINC" ]; then
bbnote "SRCREV validation is not required for AUTOREV"
elif [ "${machine_srcrev}" = "" ]; then
if [ "${SRCREV}" != "AUTOINC" ] && [ "${SRCREV}" != "INVALID" ]; then
# SRCREV_machine_<MACHINE> was not set. This means that a custom recipe
# that doesn't use the SRCREV_FORMAT "machine_meta" is being built. In
# this case, we need to reset to the give SRCREV before heading to patching
bbnote "custom recipe is being built, forcing SRCREV to ${SRCREV}"
force_srcrev="${SRCREV}"
fi
else
git cat-file -t ${machine_srcrev} > /dev/null
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
bberror "${machine_srcrev} is not a valid commit ID."
bbfatal_log "The kernel source tree may be out of sync"
fi
force_srcrev=${machine_srcrev}
yocto-kernel: factor common routes, update to 2.6.37 and branch renaming In order to extend and create more kernel recipes based on the supported yocto kernel common routines need to be placed in re-usable blocks. To accomplish this meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto_git.bb is broken into three parts: - meta/classes/kernel-yocto.bbclass: contains common routines for checking out and configuring a yocto kernel git repository. This should be inherited by recipes that need this functionality. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto.inc: Contains the machine mappings, compatibility, build directives and common task definitions for a yocto kernel based recipe. This inherits kernel-yocto, and is the typical point of entry for other recipes. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linuux-tools.inc: tasks and function definitions for kernel recipes that want to build/export perf It also updates the linux-yocto recipe to default to 2.6.37. As part of the update to 2.6.37 the branch naming and conventions have been modified to show inheritance, and be more generic. For example: master meta yocto/base yocto/standard/arm_versatile_926ejs yocto/standard/base yocto/standard/beagleboard yocto/standard/common_pc/atom-pc yocto/standard/common_pc/base yocto/standard/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/fsl-mpc8315e-rdb yocto/standard/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/mti_malta32_be yocto/standard/preempt_rt/base yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/qemu_ppc32 yocto/standard/routerstationpro In this structure: master: tracks the mainline kernel meta: meta information for the BSPs and kernel features yocto/base: baseline kernel branch yocto/standard/base: 'standard' kernel, contains features and configs for all BSPs yocto/standard/<machine>: represents a BSP with specific features or configurations The tools, tree and libc-headers have all been updated to deal with this new structure. Also in addition to dealing with the new structure, they continue to work with the existing tree and will adapt at runtime to the differences. The linux-yocto-stable_git.bb recipe continues to build the 2.6.34 based tree,and linux-yocto_git.bb builds 2.6.37. As boards are enabled for the new kernel they will move from -stable to the development kernel. As of now, only the emulated targets have moved to 2.6.37-rcX Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-18 21:09:02 +00:00
fi
git checkout -q -f ${machine_branch}
if [ -n "${force_srcrev}" ]; then
# see if the branch we are about to patch has been properly reset to the defined
# SRCREV .. if not, we reset it.
branch_head=`git rev-parse HEAD`
if [ "${force_srcrev}" != "${branch_head}" ]; then
current_branch=`git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD`
git branch "$current_branch-orig"
git reset --hard ${force_srcrev}
# We've checked out HEAD, make sure we cleanup kgit-s2q fence post check
# so the patches are applied as expected otherwise no patching
# would be done in some corner cases.
kgit-s2q --clean
fi
fi
yocto-kernel: factor common routes, update to 2.6.37 and branch renaming In order to extend and create more kernel recipes based on the supported yocto kernel common routines need to be placed in re-usable blocks. To accomplish this meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto_git.bb is broken into three parts: - meta/classes/kernel-yocto.bbclass: contains common routines for checking out and configuring a yocto kernel git repository. This should be inherited by recipes that need this functionality. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-yocto.inc: Contains the machine mappings, compatibility, build directives and common task definitions for a yocto kernel based recipe. This inherits kernel-yocto, and is the typical point of entry for other recipes. - meta/recipes-kernel/linux/linuux-tools.inc: tasks and function definitions for kernel recipes that want to build/export perf It also updates the linux-yocto recipe to default to 2.6.37. As part of the update to 2.6.37 the branch naming and conventions have been modified to show inheritance, and be more generic. For example: master meta yocto/base yocto/standard/arm_versatile_926ejs yocto/standard/base yocto/standard/beagleboard yocto/standard/common_pc/atom-pc yocto/standard/common_pc/base yocto/standard/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/fsl-mpc8315e-rdb yocto/standard/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/mti_malta32_be yocto/standard/preempt_rt/base yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc yocto/standard/preempt_rt/common_pc_64 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_atom_z530 yocto/standard/preempt_rt/intel_core_qm57_pch yocto/standard/qemu_ppc32 yocto/standard/routerstationpro In this structure: master: tracks the mainline kernel meta: meta information for the BSPs and kernel features yocto/base: baseline kernel branch yocto/standard/base: 'standard' kernel, contains features and configs for all BSPs yocto/standard/<machine>: represents a BSP with specific features or configurations The tools, tree and libc-headers have all been updated to deal with this new structure. Also in addition to dealing with the new structure, they continue to work with the existing tree and will adapt at runtime to the differences. The linux-yocto-stable_git.bb recipe continues to build the 2.6.34 based tree,and linux-yocto_git.bb builds 2.6.37. As boards are enabled for the new kernel they will move from -stable to the development kernel. As of now, only the emulated targets have moved to 2.6.37-rcX Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-18 21:09:02 +00:00
}
OE_TERMINAL_EXPORTS += "KBUILD_OUTPUT"
KBUILD_OUTPUT = "${B}"
python () {
# If diffconfig is available, ensure it runs after kernel_configme
if 'do_diffconfig' in d:
bb.build.addtask('do_diffconfig', None, 'do_kernel_configme', d)
}