weston/.gitlab-ci/build-deps.sh
Manuel Stoeckl b0ed4a2e3b gl-renderer: add support for (a|x)bgr16161616 shm formats
These formats are useful because they are often easier to produce
on CPU than half-float formats, and abgr16161616 has both >= 10bpc
color channels and adequate alpha, unlike abgr2101010.

The 16-bpc textures created from buffers with these formats require
the GL_EXT_texture_norm16 extension.

As WL_SHM_FORMAT_ABGR16161616 was introduced in libwayland 1.20,
update Weston's build requirements and CI.

The formats also needed to be registered in the pixel format table,
and defined in a fallback path if recent libdrm is not available.

Signed-off-by: Manuel Stoeckl <code@mstoeckl.com>
2022-02-02 11:58:58 +00:00

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#!/bin/bash
#
# Builds the dependencies required for any OS/architecture combination. See
# .gitlab-ci.yml for more information. This script is called from an
# OS-specific build scripts like debian-install.sh.
set -o xtrace -o errexit
# Set concurrency to an appropriate level for our shared runners, falling back
# to the conservative default form before we had this variable.
export MAKEFLAGS="-j${FDO_CI_CONCURRENT:-4}"
export NINJAFLAGS="-j${FDO_CI_CONCURRENT:-4}"
# Build and install Meson. Generally we want to keep this in sync with what
# we require inside meson.build, however we require at least 0.57.0 per
# wayland/weston@bcf37c937a36, and 0.57.1 to fix the TAP parser when a test
# exits unsuccessfully
pip3 install --user git+https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson.git@0.57.1
export PATH=$HOME/.local/bin:$PATH
# Our docs are built using Sphinx (top-level organisation and final HTML/CSS
# generation), Doxygen (parse structures/functions/comments from source code),
# Breathe (a bridge between Doxygen and Sphinx), and we use the Read the Docs
# theme for the final presentation.
pip3 install sphinx==4.2.0 --user
pip3 install breathe==4.31.0 --user
pip3 install sphinx_rtd_theme==1.0.0 --user
# Build a Linux kernel for use in testing. We enable the VKMS module so we can
# predictably test the DRM backend in the absence of real hardware. We lock the
# version here so we see predictable results.
#
# To run this we use virtme, a QEMU wrapper: https://github.com/amluto/virtme
#
# virtme makes our lives easier by abstracting handling of the console,
# filesystem, etc, so we can pretend that the VM we execute in is actually
# just a regular container.
#
# The reason why we are using a fork here is that it adds a patch to have the
# --script-dir command line option. With that we can run scripts that are in a
# certain folder when virtme starts, which is necessary in our use case.
#
# The upstream also has some commands that could help us to reach the same
# results: --script-sh and --script-exec. Unfornutately they are not completely
# implemented yet, so we had some trouble to use them and it was becoming
# hackery.
#
# The fork pulls in this support from the original GitHub PR, rebased on top of
# a newer upstream version which fixes AArch64 support.
if [[ -n "$KERNEL_DEFCONFIG" ]]; then
git clone --depth=1 --branch=v5.14 https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git linux
cd linux
if [[ "${BUILD_ARCH}" = "x86-64" ]]; then
LINUX_ARCH=x86
elif [[ "$BUILD_ARCH" = "aarch64" ]]; then
LINUX_ARCH=arm64
else
echo "Invalid or missing \$BUILD_ARCH"
exit 1
fi
if [[ -z "${KERNEL_DEFCONFIG}" ]]; then
echo "Invalid or missing \$KERNEL_DEFCONFIG"
exit
fi
if [[ -z "${KERNEL_IMAGE}" ]]; then
echo "Invalid or missing \$KERNEL_IMAGE"
exit
fi
make ARCH=${LINUX_ARCH} ${KERNEL_DEFCONFIG}
make ARCH=${LINUX_ARCH} kvm_guest.config
./scripts/config \
--enable CONFIG_DRM \
--enable CONFIG_DRM_KMS_HELPER \
--enable CONFIG_DRM_KMS_FB_HELPER \
--enable CONFIG_DRM_VKMS
make ARCH=${LINUX_ARCH} oldconfig
make ARCH=${LINUX_ARCH}
cd ..
mkdir /weston-virtme
mv linux/arch/${LINUX_ARCH}/boot/${KERNEL_IMAGE} /weston-virtme/
mv linux/.config /weston-virtme/.config
rm -rf linux
git clone https://github.com/fooishbar/virtme
cd virtme
git checkout -b snapshot 70e390c564cd09e0da287a7f2c04a6592e59e379
./setup.py install
cd ..
fi
# Build and install Wayland; keep this version in sync with our dependency
# in meson.build.
git clone --branch 1.20.0 --depth=1 https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland
cd wayland
git show -s HEAD
mkdir build
meson build -Ddocumentation=false
ninja ${NINJAFLAGS} -C build install
cd ..
rm -rf wayland
# Keep this version in sync with our dependency in meson.build. If you wish to
# raise a MR against custom protocol, please change this reference to clone
# your relevant tree, and make sure you bump $FDO_DISTRIBUTION_TAG.
git clone --branch 1.24 --depth=1 https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland-protocols
cd wayland-protocols
git show -s HEAD
meson build
ninja ${NINJAFLAGS} -C build install
cd ..
rm -rf wayland-protocols
# Build and install our own version of Mesa. Debian provides a perfectly usable
# Mesa, however llvmpipe's rendering behaviour can change subtly over time.
# This doesn't work for our tests which expect pixel-precise reproduction, so
# we lock it to a set version for more predictability. If you need newer
# features from Mesa then bump this version and $FDO_DISTRIBUTION_TAG, however
# please be prepared for some of the tests to change output, which will need to
# be manually inspected for correctness.
git clone --branch 21.3 --depth=1 https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa.git
cd mesa
meson build -Dauto_features=disabled \
-Dgallium-drivers=swrast -Dvulkan-drivers= -Ddri-drivers=
ninja ${NINJAFLAGS} -C build install
cd ..
rm -rf mesa
# PipeWire is used for remoting support. Unlike our other dependencies its
# behaviour will be stable, however as a pre-1.0 project its API is not yet
# stable, so again we lock it to a fixed version.
#
# ... the version chosen is 0.3.32 with a small Clang-specific build fix.
git clone --single-branch --branch master https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pipewire/pipewire.git pipewire-src
cd pipewire-src
git checkout -b snapshot bf112940d0bf8f526dd6229a619c1283835b49c2
meson build
ninja ${NINJAFLAGS} -C build install
cd ..
rm -rf pipewire-src
# seatd lets us avoid the pain of handling VTs manually through weston-launch
# or open-coding TTY assignment within Weston. We use this for our tests using
# the DRM backend.
git clone --depth=1 --branch 0.6.1 https://git.sr.ht/~kennylevinsen/seatd
cd seatd
meson build -Dauto_features=disabled \
-Dlibseat-seatd=enabled -Dlibseat-logind=systemd -Dserver=enabled
ninja ${NINJAFLAGS} -C build install
cd ..
rm -rf seatd