Since commit 38de434123 ("download: fix file:// BR2_PRIMARY_SITE
(download cache)"), the urlencode option is no longer passed to the
download backend, because we use ${backend} instead of
${backend_urlencode}.
We must get the urlencode information from backend_urlencode.
Signed-off-by: Damien Thébault <damien.thebault@vitec.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
[Thomas: rework commit log]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
(cherry picked from commit bb7c13273f)
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Graphviz' dot utility does not like nodes which names does not start
with an ^[[:alpha:]], i.e. 18xx-ti-utils would cause grievance:
Warning: syntax ambiguity - badly delimited number '18x' in line 4 [...]/graph-depends.dot splits into two tokens
Warning: syntax ambiguity - badly delimited number '18x' in line 5 [...]/graph-depends.dot splits into two tokens
Warning: syntax ambiguity - badly delimited number '18x' in line 6 [...]/graph-depends.dot splits into two tokens
Warning: syntax ambiguity - badly delimited number '18x' in line 7 [...]/graph-depends.dot splits into two tokens
Prefix nodes with an underscore to fix that.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
(cherry picked from commit 020206ca57)
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Since 118534fe54 (fs: use a common tarball as base for the other
filesystems), the filesystem creation is split in two steps, using an
intermediate tarball to carry the generic, common finalisations to the
per-filesystem finalisation and image creation.
However, this intermediate tarball causes an issue with capabilities:
they are entirely missing in the generated filesystems.
Capabilities are stored in the extended attribute security.capability,
which tar by default will not store/restore, unless explicitly told to,
e.g. with --xattrs-include='*', which we don't pass.
Now, passing this option when creating and extracting the intermediate
tarball, both done under fakeroot, will cause fakeroot to report an
invalid filetype for files with capabilities. mksquashfs would report
such unknown files as a warning, while mkfs.ext2 would fail (with a
similar error message), e.g.:
File [...]/usr/sbin/getcap has unrecognised filetype 0, ignoring
This is due to a poor interaction between tar and fakeroot; running as
root the exact same commands we run under fakeroot, works as expected.
Unfortunately, short of fixing fakeroot (which would first require
understanding the problem in there), we don't have much options.
The intermediate tarball was made to avoid redoing the same actions over
and over again for each filesystem to build. However, most of the time,
only one or two such filesystems would be enabled [0], and those actions
are usually pretty lightweight. So, using an intermediate tarball does
not provide a big optimisation.
The main reason to introduce the intermediate tarball, however, is that
it allows to postpone per-filesystem finalisations to be applied only
for the corresponding filesystem, not for all of them.
So, we get rid of the intermediate tarball, and simply move all of the
code to run under fakeroot to the per-filesystem fakeroot script.
Instead of extracting the intermediate tarball, we just rsync the
original target/ directory, and apply the filesystem finalisations on
that copy. The only thing still done in the rootfs-common step is to
generate the intermediate files (users file, devices file) that are used
in the fakeroot script.
Fixes: https://bugs.busybox.net/show_bug.cgi?id=11216
Note: an alternate solution would have been to keep the intermediate
tarball to keep most of the common finalisations, and move only the
permissions to each filesystem, but that was getting a bit more complex
and changed the ordering of permissions and post-fakeroot scripts. Once
we bite the bullet of having some common finalisation done in each
filesystem, it's easier to just move all of them.
[0] Most probsably, users would enable the real filesystem to put on
their device, plus the 'tar' filesystem, to be able to easily inspect
the content on their development machine.
Reported-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnout Vandecappelle (Essensium/Mind) <arnout@mind.be>
(cherry picked from commit 409d4c3fe9)
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Suppose we use Makefile wrapper and build some project out of
buildroot tree (O=...). A command like "make
busybox-all-external-deps" will output the string "uname 022 && make
..." to stdout before the usefull information. It pollutes stdout. At
the same time if we use the same command in the buildroot source-tree
then we don't get the additional output. This patch makes wrapper
silent by default. People who prefer to see more verbose output can
use V=1.
Signed-off-by: Serj Kalichev <serj.kalichev@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
(cherry picked from commit c77cd17082)
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
When the function add_one_group is called on an existing group,
make sure the members of this group are not removed in the process of
deleting then re-adding the group.
Signed-off-by: Johan Oudinet <johan.oudinet@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
[Thomas: add curly braces when referencing ${members}, as suggested by
Yann.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
(cherry picked from commit 497f7134fc)
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
wget is the only downloader currently usable with BR2_PRIMARY_SITE, and that
doesn't work at all for file:// URLs. The symptoms are these:
support/download/dl-wrapper -c '2.4.47' -d '/PATH/build/sw/source/attr' -D '/PATH/build/sw/source' -f 'attr-2.4.47.src.tar.gz' -H 'package/attr//attr.hash' -n 'attr-2.4.47' -N 'attr' -o '/PATH/build/sw/source/attr/attr-2.4.47.src.tar.gz' -u file\|urlencode+file:///NFS/buildroot_dl_cache/attr -u file\|urlencode+file:///NFS/buildroot_dl_cache -u http+http://download.savannah.gnu.org/releases/attr -u http\|urlencode+http://sources.buildroot.net/attr -u http\|urlencode+http://sources.buildroot.net --
file:///NFS/buildroot_dl_cache/attr/attr-2.4.47.src.tar.gz: Unsupported scheme `file'.
ERROR: attr-2.4.47.src.tar.gz has wrong sha256 hash:
ERROR: expected: 25772f653ac5b2e3ceeb89df50e4688891e21f723c460636548971652af0a859
ERROR: got : e3b0c44298fc1c149afbf4c8996fb92427ae41e4649b934ca495991b7852b855
ERROR: Incomplete download, or man-in-the-middle (MITM) attack
In the case of custom Linux kernel versions, this is fatal, because there isn't
necessarily a hash file to indicate that wget's empty tarball is wrong.
This seems to have been broken by commit c8ef0c03b0, because:
1. BR2_PRIMARY_SITE always appends "urlencode" (package/pkg-download.mk)
2. Anything with the "|urlencode" suffix in $uri will end up using wget due to
the backend case wildcarding.
3. The wget backend rejects file:/// URLs ("unsupported scheme"), and we end up
with an empty .tar.gz file in the downloads directory.
Fix that by shell-extracting the backend name from the left of "|". I'm not
positive if all URLs will have a "|", so this code only looks for a "|" left of
the "+".
Signed-off-by: Hollis Blanchard <hollis_blanchard@mentor.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Tested-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
With cmake packages, we are only using TARGET_LDFLAGS for executables
and not for shared libraries.
This patch adds CMAKE_SHARED_LINKER_FLAGS and
CMAKE_MODULE_LINKER_FLAGS to the cmake toolchain file so that
buildroot TARGET_LDFLAGS are used for shared and module libraries.
Signed-off-by: Damien Thébault <damien.thebault@vitec.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Add the i686 package list to install when using pre-built 32 bits
binaries with a redhat/fedora host distribution (glibc.i686 and
zlib.i686).
Signed-off-by: David De Grave (Essensium/Mind) <david.degrave@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
All pre-built Buildroot toolchains have been rebuilt with Buildroot
2018.05, so this commit updates the corresponding configuration
fragments to make sure the autobuilders use the new toolchains.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Currently, we install flake8 and its dependencies via pip. We
tried to be reproducible by pinning the version of those python
packages, but we did forget quite a few of them, and thus some
dependencies for flake8 are installed as uncontrolled versions.
Furthermore, before we install flake8 and its dependencies, we
forcibly update pip, setuptools, and wheels packages to their
latest versions. This explicitly breaks reproducibility.
While we could enforce a specific version of all those packages
and still grab them from PyPI, we can simply grab them from the
distribution-provided packages instead.
Since we're using a pinned version of stretch, this already
guarantees we'll reproducibly get the same versions over and
over again. Besides, we just need to list flake8 as a package to
install to automatically get all its dependencies (again, in a
reproducible way).
This has the slight unfortunate drawback of downgrading flake8
to version 3.2.1, from version 3.5.0, as well as downgrading a
few of flake8's dependencies, as noticed by Ricardo:
http://lists.busybox.net/pipermail/buildroot/2018-May/222376.html
However, as Ricardo said, there isn't "any serious limitation of
this old version, the release notes for a version in the between
mentions 'Dramatically improve the performance' but we have a
limited number of scripts and running on Gitlab for all of them
still takes less than 5 minutes".
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Fix three issues with code style in our test infra:
- 'print' is now a function,
- exceptions need to be caught-assigned with the 'as' keyword,
- old-style "%s"%() formatting is deprecated.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
[Thomas: drop indices in format strings.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
'+' is a valid character in a url. The current dl-wrapper gets the
URI scheme by dropping everything after the last '+' character, with
the intension of finding 'git' from e.g. 'git+https://uri'.
If a uri has a '+' anywhere in it, it ends up using too much of the
string as a scheme, and fails to match the handler properly.
An example of where this form of URI is used is when using deploy tokens
in gitlab. It uses a form like https://<username>:<password>@gitlab.com/<group>/<repo.git>
where username for deploy token is of the form 'gitlab+deploy-token-<number>'.
Use the %% operator to search backwards until the last '+' character when
dropping the rest of the string as we know that the first '+'
in the string should be the scheme.
Signed-off-by: Robert Beckett <bbeckett@netvu.org.uk>
Acked-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
In commit 7517aef4d (support/docker: limit the number of layers),
we reduced the number of layers by coalescing multiple RUN commands
into less commands.
In doing so, we especially coalesced "apt-get update" with "apt-get
install".
However, the distribution we used is a pinned version of stretch, so
we know that running apt-get update will always yield the same apt
database.
If we split the two apt-get commands, then we can re-use any local
intermediate image when we need to update the list of packages to
install; this helps quite a bit when testing the docker files over
and over again, with just slight variants in the packages list.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
Reviewed-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Since the rework of the download infrastructure, the "file" download
helper gets passed an URL that starts with file://, but forgets to
strip it before passing it to "cp", causing a failure as the "cp"
program isn't prepared for file paths starting with file://. This is
fixed by stripping the file:// at the beginning of the URL.
In addition, the path passed to cp lacked a slash between the
directory path and the filename part of the url. This is fixed by
adding a slash at the appropriate places.
Fixes the following build failure when the "file" download method is
used:
cp: cannot stat 'file:///home/angelo/DEV/TOOLCHAINSarmv7-eabihf--glibc--bleeding-edge-2017.11-1.tar.bz2': No such file or directory
Signed-off-by: Angelo Compagnucci <angelo@amarulasolutions.com>
Reviewed-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
A person on IRC reported a build failure with the util-linux package,
looking like this:
for I in uname26 linux32 linux64 ; do \
cd /home/aep/consulting/chargery/tracker/output/target/usr/bin && ln -sf setarch $I ; \
done
[...]
/bin/sh: line 1: ./ln: cannot execute binary file: Exec format error
/bin/sh: line 1: ./ln: cannot execute binary file: Exec format error
/bin/sh: line 1: ./ln: cannot execute binary file: Exec format error
The issue was an empty path in the PATH variable, which means "current
working directory", causing a "ln" binary built by util-linux for the
target to be used instead of the system-provided "ln".
We already check a number of things in the PATH and LD_LIBRARY_PATH
variables in support/dependencies/dependencies.sh, but we were not
checking that PATH did not contain an empty path.
This commit fixes that and takes this opportunity to simplify the test
code for PATH and LD_LIBRARY_PATH.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
[Thomas: improve commit log.]
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
We currently attempt a shallow clone, as tentative to save bandwidth and
download time.
However, now that we keep the git tree as a cache, it may happen that we
need to checkout an earlier commit, and that would not be present with a
shallow clone.
Furthermore, the shallow fetch is already really broken, and just
happens to work by chance. Consider the following actions, which are
basically what happens today:
mkdir git
git init git
cd git
git remote add origin https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git
git fetch origin --depth 1 v4.17-rc1
if ! git fetch origin v4.17-rc1:v4.17-rc1 ; then
echo "warning"
fi
git checkout v4.17-rc1
The checkout succeeds just because of the git-fetch in the if-condition,
which is initially there to fetch the special refs from github PRs, or
gerrit reviews. That fails, but we just print a warning. If we were to
ever remove support for special refs, then the checkout would fail.
The whole purpose of the git cache is to actually save bandwidth and
download time, but in the long run. For one-offs, people would
preferably use a wget download (e.g. with the github macro) instead of
a git clone.
We switch to always doing a full clone. It is more correct, and pays off
in the long run...
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
When a git tree has had sub-dir <-> sub-module conversions, or has had
submodules added or removed over the course of time, checking out a
changeset across those conversions/additions/removals may leave
untracked files, or may fail because of a conflict of type.
So, before we checkout the new changeset, we forcibly remove the
submodules. The new set of submodules, if any, will be restored later.
Ideally, we would use a native git command: git submodule deinit --all.
However, that was only introduced in git 1.8.3 which, while not being
recent by modern standards, is still too old for some enterprise-grade
distributions (RHEL6 only has git-1.7.1).
So, instead, we just use git submodule foreach, to rm -rf the submodules
directory.
Again, we would ideally use 'cd $toplevel && rm -rf $path', but
$toplevel was only introduced in git 1.7.2. $path has always been there.
So, instead, we just cd back one level, and remove the basename of the
directory.
Eventually, we need to get rid of now-empty and untracked directories,
that were parents of a removed submodule. For example. ./foo/bar/ was a
submodule, so ./foo/bar/ was removed, which left ./foo/ around.
Yet again, recent-ish git versions would have removed it during the
forced checkout, but old-ish versions (e.g. 1.7.1) do not remove it with
the forced checkout.
Instead we rely on the already used forced-forced clean of directories,
untracked, and ignored content, to really get rid of extra stuff we are
not interested in.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Reviewed-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
In some cases, the repository may be in a state we can't automatically
recover from, especially since we must still support oldish git versions
that do not provide the necessary commands or options thereof.
As a last-ditch recovery, delete the repository and recreate the cache
from scratch.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
We really want the user not to use our git cache manually, or their
changes (committed or not) may eventually get lost.
So, add a warning file, not unlike the one we put in the target/
directory, to warn the user not to use the git tree.
Ideally, we would have carried this file in support/misc/, but the git
backend does not have access to it: the working directory is somewhere
unknown, and TOPDIR is not exported in the environment.
So, we have to carry it in-line in the backend instead.
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Reviewed-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
When the run-time tests to build rust and rust-bin packages are run via Docker,
the $USER environment variable is not set, which makes cargo fail when
initializing the test project.
So add it to make cargo happy.
Signed-off-by: Eric Le Bihan <eric.le.bihan.dev@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This script causes a large number of flake8 warnings, is rarely used
(but even never used), and is going to be replaced at some point by
the improved pkg-stats that will give details about the upstream
version available for all packages, not just X.org packages.
Therefore, let's drop the xorg-release script in order to silence all
those flake8 warnings:
support/scripts/xorg-release:36:1: E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
support/scripts/xorg-release:58:27: E201 whitespace after '{'
support/scripts/xorg-release:58:44: E203 whitespace before ':'
support/scripts/xorg-release:58:54: E202 whitespace before '}'
support/scripts/xorg-release:63:1: E305 expected 2 blank lines after class or function definition, found 1
support/scripts/xorg-release:64:15: E261 at least two spaces before inline comment
support/scripts/xorg-release:67:32: E261 at least two spaces before inline comment
support/scripts/xorg-release:86:1: E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
support/scripts/xorg-release:95:1: E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
support/scripts/xorg-release:107:1: E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
support/scripts/xorg-release:115:20: W601 .has_key() is deprecated, use 'in'
support/scripts/xorg-release:123:34: E201 whitespace after '{'
support/scripts/xorg-release:124:46: E203 whitespace before ':'
support/scripts/xorg-release:124:50: E202 whitespace before '}'
support/scripts/xorg-release:127:1: E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
support/scripts/xorg-release:141:15: W601 .has_key() is deprecated, use 'in'
support/scripts/xorg-release:146:21: W601 .has_key() is deprecated, use 'in'
support/scripts/xorg-release:176:1: E305 expected 2 blank lines after class or function definition, found 1
support/scripts/xorg-release:180:1: W391 blank line at end of file
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Acked-by: Bernd Kuhls <bernd.kuhls@t-online.de>
Tested-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
The version of the ARM Trusted Firmware from Marvell was a Git branch,
not a Git commit, leading to unreproducible results. So let's use a
Git commit instead, which is the latest available from the branch that
was previously used.
More specifically, this branch has recently seen a fix that is needed
for ATF to build properly with recent gcc versions:
c96ec59f8b
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This test case currently fails to build with:
./build/juno/release/bl1/context_mgmt.o: In function `cm_prepare_el3_exit':
context_mgmt.c:(.text.cm_prepare_el3_exit+0x54): undefined reference to `cm_set_next_context'
context_mgmt.c:(.text.cm_prepare_el3_exit+0x54): relocation truncated to fit: R_AARCH64_JUMP26 against undefined symbol `cm_set_next_context'
This issue has been fixed upstream in commit
10c252c14b7f446c0b49ef1aafbd5d37804577dd, available since v1.3. So
while we bump, let's bump to the latest version of ATF, v1.5.
Fixes:
https://gitlab.com/buildroot.org/buildroot/-/jobs/64360659
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Since commit 5563a1c6a4
("support/check-uniq-files: support weird locales and filenames"), the
'csv' Python module is no longer used by the check-uniq-files.
Due to this, flake8 complains with:
support/scripts/check-uniq-files:4:1: F401 'csv' imported but unused
Fix this by dropping the useless csv import.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
This commit updates all the pre-built Buildroot toolchains, which have
all been rebuilt with Buildroot as of commit 046c5e2. The initial
motivation for this update is that an upcoming bump of procps-ng uses
fopencookie(), which has only been introduced in musl 1.1.19, which
itself started being used in Buildroot after the 2018.02 release.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Older versions of tar (e.g. 1.27.1) incorrectly interpret the escaping
of the regexp separator, and generate broken tarballs.
For example, given the following transform expression:
--transform="s/^\.\//squashfs-e38956b92f738518c29734399629e7cdb33072d3\//"
the resulting paths in the generated tarball would be:
squashfs-e38956b92f738518c29734399629e7cdb33072d3\/
i.e. a directory which last character is indeed a '\'.
We fix that by using a separator which is very unlikely to occur in a
filename.
Fixes:
http://autobuild.buildroot.org/results/742/7427f34e5c9f6d043b0fe6ad2c66cc0f31d2b24f/
and probably a slew of others as well...
Take this opportunity to fix indentation on the following line
(leading spaces, not TABs).
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Check:
- the daemon is started;
- a message is collected;
- the daemon does not issue a warning message on startup.
When the .conf file version does not match the package version a warning
message shows up on serial on every boot. This message is generated by
syslog-ng before it is running, so it is not logged to
/var/log/messages. So in order to test the message is generated, restart
the server. It makes the message appears on /var/log/messages (since the
server is already running) where its existence can be easily tested
using grep.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@datacom.ind.br>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
There are cases where a repository might be broken, e.g. when a previous
operation was killed or otherwise failed unexpectedly.
We fix that by always initialising the repository, as suggested by
Ricardo. git-init is safe on an otherwise-healthy repository:
Running git init in an existing repository is safe. It will not
overwrite things that are already there. [...]
Using git-init will just ensure that we have the strictly required files
to form a sane tree. Any blob that is still missing would get fetched
later on.
Reported-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Reported-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Acked-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
git always look directories up until it finds a repository. In case
the git cache is broken, it may no longer be identified as a repository,
and git will look higher in the directories until it finds one.
In the default conditions, this would be Buildroot's own git tree
(because DL_DIR is a subdir of Buildroot), but in some situations may
very well be any repository the user has Buildroot in, like a
br2-external tree...
So, we force git to use our git cache and never look elsewhere, as
Suggested by Ricardo.
Use GIT_DIR, as it has been there for ages now, while --git-dir was
only introduced later (even if most distros ship an later version),
as suggested by Arnout.
Also fix the one call to git that was not using the wrapper.
Reported-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Cc: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Cc: Maxime Hadjinlian <maxime.hadjinlian@gmail.com>
Cc: Arnout Vandecappelle <arnout@mind.be>
Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
Acked-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>