HAIKU_* variables are copied to TARGET_*, making it possible to also
build for other targets (libbe_build, or BeOS R5 when we still allowed
that).
Thanks to Ingo for explaining how this is meant to work.
... mirroring home/config/non-packaged/
Also, sort the list lexographically and move the creation of the non-packaged
decorators directory from HaikuImage to HaikuImageCommon along with the rest.
* ArchitectureRules define a variable named HAIKU_ASFLAGS, so other
Jamfiles can append to it.
* But, TARGET_ASFLAGS was used instead in the single place where we
tried to make use of this (the verdex BoardSetup), and in the As rule
* Moreover, the As rule used $(architecture) instead of
$(TARGET_PACKAGING_ARCH) (I suspect a bogus copypaste?). So, it never
actually made use of the flags
With this working, add the proper flags to the BeagleBoard BoardSetup,
so we implement atomic operations the ARMv7 way (no need to syscall).
This helps with compiling, as the As and Cc/Cpp rules now agree on the
defines and the atomic implementation to use.
* As per the ML discussions. Bumps MIPS to tier 3.
* We've reached a unanimous descision that MIPS doesn't
target any real / valid hardware Haiku wants to pursue
at the moment. In the event that anyone wants to pursue
MIPS, feel free to fork Haiku into your own repository
(and we'll even link to it on the website ports page)
* If someone develops a viable plan for MIPS (and gets the
port working, it can be readded at a later date)
The ones with ARCH extension are used for setting up the KERNEL
ones, so no need to try and set both.
Also, the verdex target was not setting the ARCH one, and therefore
never configured gcc for ARMv5.
The new version breaks git, but only once it's in the repository.
Installing it manually alongside the old one works. Rebuilding git and
uploading a new package does not work, as for the package management,
the new version is exactly equal to the old, as the port revision isn't
newer. We need to come up with a proper way to handle this.
Also removes zsh, as that requires the new libpcre.
* build kernel libgcc and libsupc++ with disabled posix threads for all
architectures. We currently change the configuration manually, as gcc
doesn't easily let us reconfigure without a full rebuild.
This is required on OS X and other systems which do not have the glibc
extensions for regular expressions (FreeBSD is not one of them as it
already includes gnuregex in /usr). With this there are no hardcoded
non-standard paths for OS X anymore.
regex.c and regex.h are from the official gnuregex 0.12 distribution,
the only modification is that I added __BEGIN_DECLS and __END_DECLS to
regex.h.
* Added cards need testing.
* 3dfx, ati, neomagic, and s3 still don't build due to some
more complex pointer size issues. (and I don't have hardware
to test on)
* as Ingo has pointed out, the remote user settings doesn't
relate to the build configuration at all, so setting the
remote user via HAIKU_REMOTE_USER in UserBuildConfig or
via shell environment is the way to go
* additionally: drop debug output
* add option --remote-user to configure, which sets HAIKU_REMOTE_USER
* add evaluation of HAIKU_REMOTE_USER variable when ssh-ing
into git.haiku-os.org
* HaikuRepository rule: Create the repository config.
* HaikuImage: Add the repository config for the Haiku image. The
repository cache is not added, though (it would only be available, if
the repository had been built before).
Implements #10287. The Haiku repository is now available in Haiku by
default.
Instead of the repository the URL can now be passed. It can use the
"$version" placeholder, which will be replaced by the content of the
given version file. If the URL is not given, the one from the repository
info will be used.
* PreprocessPackageInfo rule: Pull out new rule
PreprocessPackageOrRepositoryInfo which does the sed substituation and
optionally the filtering through the C preprocessor.
* HaikuRepository rule: Generate the repository info file (from the
given template). No longer do that in the build_haiku_repository
script.
Due to depending on dynamically built files, package files will always
be rebuilt when they are needed (e.g. when an image is built). The build
variable HAIKU_DONT_REBUILD_PACKAGES can be defined to prevent
rebuilding existing package files (even ones that are out-of-date).
Main target for this change is buildbot. We want to make sure that the
packages in the repository it builds are exactly identical to the ones
in the images, which may not be the case when the packages are rebuilt
(due to different timestamps of contained files). The respective build
order should be:
1. Build repository.
2. Without cleaning the generated directory, build different image types
with HAIKU_DONT_REBUILD_PACKAGES defined.
* Resolves problem with secondary arch builds
not picking up secondary os kit headers
* Still need to build x86 gcc packages
* No binary changes, shouldn't need a bootstrap
Older versions will not work anymore because of the API changes in
network kit (removal of nonstandard B_PROT_* status codes). x86 and
x86_64 packages have to be updated again.
This uses a variable CLANG that should be set to the Clang version. For
now, this has to be done manually (e.g. when invoking jam using jam
-sCLANG=34), but later, this will be auto-detected.
Work towards bug #10396
* Also update dependencies cmake and libxml2
* Bonus package: Milkytracker
This is for gcc2hybrids only. gcc4 and x86_64 users are welcome to
contribute an haikuwebkit package for their architectures using the
haikuporter recipe.
* Fix issue where mesa_devel attempted to lay
a symlink over a directory causing instability
installing mesa_devel
* Add mesa_swpipe to repos (LLVM enabled Gallium softpipe)
The introduction of secondary arch support for kernel files disabled
-Werror for all kernel files, since the -Werror flags were moved from
{CC,C++}FLAGS to TARGET_WARNING_{CC,C++}FLAGS_<arch>, which, however,
was overwritten by the SetupKernel rule. This commit introduces new
global variables {HAIKU,HOST,TARGET}_WERROR_FLAGS[_<arch>], which
contain the additional -Werror flags to be applied for the architecture.
The config variable WARNINGS can be set to "treatAsErrors" to cause
-Werror and {HOST,TARGET}_WERROR_FLAGS[_<arch>] to be appended to the
compilation flags.
Fixes#10280.
If for some reason (e.g., a forced rebuild), Buildbot rebuilds the same hrev,
it was possible for the scp command to place the repositoryDir as a subdir
in $arch/$version/, instead of as $arch/version. This should ensure that the
contents of repositoryDir are placed in $arch/$version/.
* Create new interface for cpuidle modules (similar to the cpufreq
interface)
* Generic cpuidle module is no longer needed
* Fix and update Intel C-State module
Somehow gcc doesn't detect the linker is GNU ld when run in Haikuporter.
We now force this in the recipe. This allows gcc to invoke the linker
with response files, avoiding "command line too long" errors, for
example when building WebKit.
* Fix adding WebPositive optional package.
* Fix adding wonderbrush package. Add it only for gcc2 to avoid a
warning by AddHaikuImagePackages.
* Simplify adding xz_utils package.
* Add rule HaikuRepository to build a repository from a repository info
file and a list of package files. It calls a build_haiku_repository
script which does all the work.
* Add target <repository>haiku for building the Haiku package
repository.
It should be built via "jam -q @alpha-raw build <repository>haiku";
the build profile is only needed to activate all build features.
We can't reliably set contemporary processors to an arbitrary frequency.
There are dependencies between cores and thechnologies like Turbo Boost
which may make actual frequency significantly different than the requested.
Moreover, it is the scheduler job to decide how much CPU performance is
needed and user shouldn't interfere with that.
In current state this driver is useless anyway. It's not MP safe.
The P-state values stored in hardcoded tables are only for processors
on which we can't use SpeedStep, because of lack of invariant TSC.
Proper driver should get P-states from ACPI, ensure that the CPU offers
invariant TSC and obviouslt be MP safe.
Some gristing mixup caused the non-secondary version of the lib to be
added to the non-secondary directory, which is what the main
architecture HaikuDevel is already doing.