ad53cd29cb
When iterator->current is NULL, hash_next() assumes we've reached the end of a bucket (linked list) and moves to the next one. Wehn the first element of a linked list was removed in hash_remove_current() iterator->current was set to NULL, causing the next call to hash_next() to skip over the rest of the list of that bucket. To fix this we now decrement iterator->bucket by one, so the next call to hash_next() correctly arrives at the new first element of the same bucket. Doing it this way avoids having to search backwards through the table to find the actual previous item. This caused modules to be skipped in module_init_post_boot_device() when normalizing module image paths so some of the module images ended up non-normalized. This could then cause images to be loaded a second time for modules that were part of an actually already loaded image. This setup is present for the PCI module with the pci/x86 submodule and would lead to a second copy of the PCI module image to be loaded but without being initialized, eventually leading to #8684. The affected module images were pretty much random, as it depended on the order in which they were loaded from the file system, in this case the boot floppy archive of the El-Torito boot part of ISO and anyboot images. The r1alpha4 release images unfortunately had the module files ordered in the archive just so that the PCI module image would be skipped, allowing #8684 to happen on many systems with MSI support. Since the block cache uses hash_remove_current() as well in some cases, it is possible that transactions in its list could've been skipped. Cursory testing didn't reveal this to be a usual case, and it is possible that in the pattern it is used there, the bug wouldn't be triggered at all. It's still possible that it caused rare misbehaviour though. |
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3rdparty | ||
build | ||
data | ||
docs | ||
headers | ||
src | ||
.gitignore | ||
configure | ||
Jamfile | ||
Jamrules | ||
makehaikufloppy | ||
ReadMe | ||
ReadMe.IntroductionToHaiku |
Building Haiku from source ========================== This is a overview into the process of building HAIKU from source. An online version is available at http://www.haiku-os.org/guides/building/ Official releases of Haiku are at http://www.haiku-os.org/get-haiku The (unstable) nightly builds are available at http://www.haiku-files.org To build Haiku, you will need to * ensure pre-requisite software is installed * download sources * configure your build * run jam to initiate the build process We currently support these platforms: * Haiku * Linux * FreeBSD * Mac OS X Intel Pre-requisite software ====================== Tools provided within Haiku's repositories * Jam (Jam 2.5-haiku-20111222) * Haiku's cross-compiler (needed only for non-Haiku platforms) The tools to compile Haiku will vary, depending on the platform that you are using to build Haiku. When building from Haiku, all of the necessary development tools are included in official releases (e.g. R1 alpha 1) and in the (unstable) nightly builds. * Git client * SSH client (for developers with commit access) * gcc and the binutils (as, ld, etc., required by gcc) * make (GNU make) * bison * flex and lex (usually a mini shell script invoking flex) * makeinfo (part of texinfo, needed for building gcc 4 only) * autoheader (part of autoconf, needed for building gcc) * automake * gawk * yasm (http://www.tortall.net/projects/yasm/wiki/Download) * wget * (un)zip * cdrtools (not genisoimage!) * case-sensitive file system Whether they are installed can be tested for instance by running them in the shell with the "--version" parameter. Specific: Haiku for the ARM platform ------------------------------------ The following tools are needed to compile Haiku for the ARM platform * mkimage (http://www.denx.de/wiki/UBoot) * Mtools (http://www.gnu.org/software/mtools/intro.html) * sfdisk Specific: Linux --------------- * zlib1g-dev (for building GCC4 buildtools on Linux hosts) Specific: Mac OS X ------------------ Disk Utility can create a case-sensitive disk image of at least 3 GiB in size. The following darwin ports need to be installed: * expat * gawk * gettext * libiconv * gnuregex * gsed * cdrtools * yasm * wget * less * mpfr * gmp * libmpc More information about individual distributions of Linux and BSD can be found at http://haiku-os.org/guides/building/pre-reqs Download Haiku's sources ======================== There are two parts to Haiku's sources -- the code for Haiku itself and a set of build tools for compiling Haiku on an operating system other than Haiku. The buildtools are needed only for non-Haiku platform. Anonymous checkout: git clone git://git.haiku-os.org/haiku git clone git://git.haiku-os.org/buildtools Developer with commit access: git clone ssh://git.haiku-os.org/haiku git clone ssh://git.haiku-os.org/buildtools Building the Jam executable =========================== This step applies only to non-Haiku platforms. Change to the buildtools folder and we will start to build 'jam' which is a requirement for building Haiku. Run the following commands to generate and install the tool: cd buildtools/jam make sudo ./jam0 install -- or -- ./jam0 -sBINDIR=$HOME/bin install Configuring your build ====================== The configure script generates a file named "BuildConfig" in the "generated/build" directory. As long as configure is not modified (!), there is no need to call it again. That is for re-building you only need to invoke jam (see below). If you don't update the source tree very frequently, you may want to execute 'configure' after each update just to be on the safe side. Depending on your goal, there are several different ways to configure Haiku. You can either call configure from within your Haiku trunk folder. That will prepare a folder named 'generated', which will contain the compiled objects. Another option is to manually created one or more 'generated.*' folders and run configure from within them. For example imagine the following directory setup buildtools-trunk/ haiku-trunk/ haiku-trunk/generated.x86gcc2 haiku-trunk/generated.x86gcc4 Configure a GCC 2.95 Hybrid, from non-Haiku platform ---------------------------------------------------- cd haiku-trunk/generated.x86gcc4 ../configure --use-gcc-pipe --use-xattr \ --build-cross-tools-gcc4 x86 ../../buildtools/ \ --alternative-gcc-output-dir ../generated.x86gcc2 cd ../generated.x86gcc2 ../configure --use-gcc-pipe --use-xattr \ --build-cross-tools ../../buildtools/ \ --alternative-gcc-output-dir ../generated.x86gcc4 Configure a GCC 2.95 Hybrid, from within Haiku ---------------------------------------------- cd haiku-trunk/generated.x86gcc4 ../configure --use-gcc-pipe \ --alternative-gcc-output-dir ../generated.x86gcc2 \ --cross-tools-prefix /boot/develop/abi/x86/gcc4/tools/current/bin/ cd ../generated.x86gcc2 ../configure --use-gcc-pipe \ --alternative-gcc-output-dir ../generated.x86gcc4 \ --cross-tools-prefix /boot/develop/abi/x86/gcc2/tools/current/bin/ Additional information about GCC Hybrids can be found on the website, http://www.haiku-os.org/guides/building/gcc-hybrid Configure options ----------------- The various runtime options for configure are documented in its onscreen help ./configure --help Building via Jam ================ Haiku can be built in either of two ways, as disk image file (e.g. for use with emulators, to be written directly to a usb stick, burned as a compact disc) or as installation in a directory. Running Jam ----------- There are various ways in which you can run jam. * If you have a single generated folder, you can run 'jam' from the top level of Haiku's trunk. * If you have one or more generated folders, (e.g. generated.x86gcc2), you can cd into that directory and run 'jam' * In either case, you can cd into a certain folder in the source tree (e.g. src/apps/debugger) and run jam -sHAIKU_OUTPUT_DIR=<path to generated folder> Be sure to read build/jam/UserBuildConfig.ReadMe and UserBuildConfig.sample, as they contain information on customizing your build of Haiku. Building a Haiku anyboot file --------------------------- jam -q haiku-anyboot-image This generates an image file named 'haiku-anyboot.image' in your output directory under 'generated/'. Building a VMware image file ---------------------------- jam -q haiku-vmware-image This generates an image file named 'haiku.vmdk' in your output directory under 'generated/'. Directory Installation ---------------------- HAIKU_INSTALL_DIR=/Haiku jam -q install-haiku Installs all Haiku components into the volume mounted at "/Haiku" and automatically marks it as bootable. To create a partition in the first place use DriveSetup and initialize it to BFS. Note that installing Haiku in a directory only works as expected under Haiku, but it is not yet supported under Linux and other non-Haiku platforms. Building individual components ------------------------------ If you don't want to build the complete Haiku, but only a certain app/driver/etc. you can specify it as argument to jam, e.g.: jam Debugger Alternatively, you can 'cd' to the directory of the component you want to build and run 'jam' from there. Note: if your generated directory named something other than "generated/", you will need to tell jam where it is. jam -sHAIKU_OUTPUT_DIR=<path to generated folder> You can also force rebuilding of a component by using the "-a" parameter: jam -a Debugger Running ======= Generally there are two ways of running Haiku. On real hardware using a partition and on emulated hardware using an emulator like Bochs or QEMU. On Real Hardware ---------------- If you have installed Haiku to its own partition you can include this partition in your bootmanager and try to boot Haiku like any other OS you have installed. To include a new partition in the Haiku bootmanager run this in a Terminal: BootManager On Emulated Hardware -------------------- For emulated hardware you should build disk image (see above). How to setup this image depends on your emulater. If you use QEMU, you can usually just provide the path to the image as command line argument to the "qemu" executable. Docbook documentation ===================== Our documentation can be found in 'src/documentation/'. You can build it by running 'jam' in that folder. The results will be stored in the 'generated/' folder.