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196f62e18c
Run samples through upgrade and fix accumulated breakages: *-centos6-*: After 2.12.2 retirement, the samples selected most recent glibc (2.34) which also forced kernels 3.2+. Revert to 2.12.1 and 2.6.32.71, respectively. Interestingly, 2.12.1 was marked as being used in CentOS6, but the samples selected 2.12.2. Anyway, CentOS6 is EOL now and glibc 2.12 is going to be marked obsolete, and retired soon. arc-*: Make TARGET_VENDOR match the sample's name; otherwise `ct-ng saveconfig` places the config file into a different location. Fix 'savedefconfig' which was not saving the configuration file version (CT_VCHECK was set to 'load' after CT_LoadConfig call). Signed-off-by: Alexey Neyman <stilor@att.net> |
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v0 | ||
v1 | ||
v2 | ||
v3 |
Upgrade scripts for specific versions of the config file. Each script must define a function `upgrade` that can assume `${opt}` and `${val}` variables set on input. On output, if `${opt}` is unset - so will be the corresponding option. One thing to keep in mind is that this script may be invoked on full config - or on a defconfig. Do not assume that all options will be present! If an option is not specified, use the value it had as a default for the fallback; to check if it has been specified, use `$selected_opts` associative array to check if it has been present in the config file (otherwise, you an option not being set after sourcing the previous version of the config is ambiguous - it could be that the option is called out as `# CT_FOO is not set` (i.e. selected as false) or not present at all (i.e. selected as default). If it is not possible to determine the settings of an option because a different controlling option is not set, either err out (see CT_LIBC_UCLIBC_CUSTOM in v0 for an example) or select a sane default and issue a warning (see CT_GDB_CUSTOM in v0 for an example).