Different from OPKG, APK uses a deterministic version schema which chips
the version into chunks and compares them individually. This enforces a
certain schema which was previously entirely flexible.
- Releases are added at the very and end prefixed with an `r` like
`1.2.3-r3`.
- Hashes are prefixed with a `~` like `1.2.3~abc123`.
- Dates become semantic versions, like `2024.04.01`
- Extra tags are possible like `_git`, `_alpha` and more.
For full details see the APK test list:
https://gitlab.alpinelinux.org/alpine/apk-tools/-/blob/master/test/version.data
Signed-off-by: Paul Spooren <mail@aparcar.org>
hostpkg python from packages feed can be picked when do a incremental
build because hostpkg has higher priority in PATH. It may lead build
faliure as it's heavily trimmed (e.g. lacks necessary modules).
For uboot which uses binman and intree dtc, this is forced as hostpkg
python will never provide those modules by default.
Signed-off-by: Tianling Shen <cnsztl@immortalwrt.org>
This reverts commit c42b915af0.
Now that rpcd uses the 'Auto-Installed' field to differentiate between
deliberately and implicitely installed packages we can remove the
hotfix.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Commit be9023ed43 ("build: fix opkg flags in rootfs") introduced a
call to 'awk' which removes the 'user' flag from all installed
packages in the opkg status file. While is is somehow desireable when
building images directly within the buildroot, when using the
ImageBuilder dropping the 'user' flag means loosing information about
a package being deliberately selected or just implicitely pulled as a
dependency. And that then break tools like 'auc' which request only
packages having the 'user' flag from the asu server, resulting in
broken images being delivered to users.
Restore the original behavior in case of an image being created using
the ImageBuilder.
Fixes: be9023ed43 ("build: fix opkg flags in rootfs")
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Building a package in the build system or the SDK results in different
values for the `SOURCE` property, it's either `packages/<package name>`
or `feeds/base/<package name>`. The reason is that the SDK handles
`openwrt.git` as an external feed called while the build system contains
the *base* packages directly.
Since packages created with either method are (ideally) the same (bit
for bit), align the content of SOURCE. To do so this commit creates a
symlink from `feeds/base` to `$(TOPDIR)/package` and adopts the SOURCE
when building from inside the build system.
Signed-off-by: Paul Spooren <mail@aparcar.org>
Let ubinize-image append the ubinized image to the existing image
instead of replacing it.
Fixes: 6c17d71973 ("scripts: ubinize-image.sh: support static volumes, make size optional")
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
By default opkg sets the "user" flag when a package is installed,
which resulted in most packages in the rootfs having this flag
set incorrectly. This patch removes the "user" flag from all
installed packages when preparing the rootfs image.
Fixes: #14427
Signed-off-by: Justin Klaassen <justin@tidylabs.app>
Make sure ubinize-image.sh also works with more simple POSIX Shell and
allow creating complete custom images to be used as ARTIFACT/foo.img
and thereby allow including uImage.FIT, TF-A FIP and what ever else
is required on a specific board.
Fixes: 6c17d71973 ("scripts: ubinize-image.sh: support static volumes, make size optional")
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
In order to support devices having TF-A FIP image or UBI-aware U-Boot
SPL we need to include a static volume for the bootloader.
Introduce support for adding additional static volumes by prefixing
the filename with ':', eg.
UBINIZE_PARTS := fip:=$(STAGING_DIR_IMAGE)/u-boot.fip
Also add support for rootfs-in-uImage.FIT setups which don't require a
rootfs partition and make the (3rd) size parameter in UBINIZE_PARTS
optional (see example above without declared size).
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
This reverts commit 131e41614d.
Sadly it makes menuconfig fail with
tmp/.config-package.in:171: glob failed: No files found "feeds/base/utils/busybox/Config.in"
make: *** [/usr/src/openwrt/include/toplevel.mk:136: menuconfig] Error 1
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Building a package in the build system or the SDK results in different
values for the `SOURCE` property, it's either `packages/<package name>`
or `feeds/base/<package name>`. The reason is that the SDK handles
`openwrt.git` as an external feed called while the build system contains
the *base* packages directly.
Since packages created with either method are (ideally) the same (bit
for bit), align the content of SOURCE. To do so this commit creates a
symlink from `feeds/base` to `$(TOPDIR)/package` and adopts the SOURCE
when building from inside the build system.
Signed-off-by: Paul Spooren <mail@aparcar.org>
Add support for compiling DTS for the selected target. This can be
useful for testing if the DTS correctly compile and doesn't produce any
error.
This adds a new make target. To compile only DTS use:
make target/linux/dtb
Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com>
The GCC option -fstack-protector-all is a security feature used to protect against stack-smashing attacks.
This option enhances the stack-smashing protection provided by -fstack-protector-strong.
-fstack-protector-all option applies stack protection to all functions, regardless of their characteristics.
While this offers the most comprehensive protection against stack-smashing attacks, it can significantly impact
the performance of the program because every function call includes additional checks for stack integrity.
This option can incur a performance penalty because of the extra checks added to every function call,
but it significantly enhances security, making it harder for attackers to exploit buffer overflows to execute arbitrary code.
It's particularly useful in scenarios where security is paramount and performance trade-offs are acceptable.
Signed-off-by: Cedric DOURLENT <cedric.dourlent@softathome.com>
Using PKG_URL one may set the URL for all sub packages, which is usually
shared anyway. Future packages should only use PKG_URL instead of adding
it per sub-package.
Signed-off-by: Paul Spooren <mail@aparcar.org>
The manifest should provide as much information as possible about the
package, including the project URL. With this commit the URL is stored
as it's own attribute instead of at the end of the description.
Signed-off-by: Paul Spooren <mail@aparcar.org>
Previous commits installed non-elf files into /lib/modules/$VER/.
COLLECT_KERNEL_DEBUG tries to strip all files and these two files
break the build.
Fix it by copying only kernel modules for debug info collection.
Fixes: e1d8e57614 ("kernel: include modinfo for built-in modules")
Fixes: 29f6da4340 ("kernel: include built-in module list")
Signed-off-by: Chuanhong Guo <gch981213@gmail.com>
Partially revert changes to verbose logging that break the 'check' target
dependencies and trigger many runtime warnings like:
/home/kodidev/openwrt-project/include/toplevel.mk:213: *** mixed implicit and normal rules: deprecated syntax
Fixes: e4a43cda0 ("build: allow var.% targets to bypass the prepare steps")
Signed-off-by: Tony Ambardar <itugrok@yahoo.com>
In order to pass a status message at runtime,
which is usually listing subtargets
of a Makefile target or an error message,
from a child invocation of Make (submake)
through the parent process to the terminal,
the file descriptors 8 and 9 are opened to be used
by the functions MESSAGE and ERROR_MESSAGE.
However, there are situations where those functions
can be called while not in a submake or a subshell
or a child process which results in a shell error:
/bin/bash: 8: Bad file descriptor
Commit aee3594ffc
("verbose.mk: print ERROR messages in non-verbose")
has exposed this issue to more cases, but it is not the root cause.
To solve this, use the exit code of the first printf attempt
to the alternative file descriptors in order to tell whether
the standard file descriptors need to be used instead.
In order to get rid of the "Bad file descriptor" error, stderr is
redirected to null after grouping the two printf alternatives
into one command to combine outputs.
For ERROR_MESSAGE, the real message is redirected to stderr
after redirecting the error from the attempted printing to null.
For MESSAGE, without redirection, the Make function "shell"
will absorb the actual message from stdout and input the value into the Makefile,
therefore the dummy variable "_NULL", previously used merely for causing
a call to the MESSAGE function to trigger without writing target rules,
now has and a real value when defined, so rename it to "_MESSAGE"
as a placeholder for the real message when the output should be stdout.
When "_MESSAGE" has a value, use Make function "info" to
finally bring it from the Makefile to the terminal.
This also fixes what is likely a typo, in that
while file descriptor 9 is meant to redirect to stderr
for use in error messages like in the function ERROR_MESSAGE,
that function has printf redirecting to file descriptor 8 instead.
Fixes: a4c8d4e37 ("build: make the color of the 'configuration out of sync' warning red")
Signed-off-by: Michael Pratt <mcpratt@pm.me>
These targets are used to input variable values from the Make
context into other things like python scripts, so log messages
should be silenced and build prerequisites should be skipped.
The same thing is done for the other variable print target "val.%".
While at it, combine identical target rules into one definition.
Signed-off-by: Michael Pratt <mcpratt@pm.me>