Directives in if statements end at the end of an if. The cannot
change or split across directive boundaries.
Add more trace detail to config.py.
Updates #2661.
The building of 3rd party packages for an RTEMS BSP requires a valid
BSP so the standard method to download the source for releasing does
not work. This change adds support to allow this. The RTEMS BSP support
will not generate an error is no BSP or tools are provided or found.
The change addis logic operators to the %if statement so you can '||'
to 'or' and '&&' to 'and' logic expressions.
A new %log directive has been added to clean up the messages.
A new %{!define ...} has been added to aid checking within logic
expressions.
All command line --with/--without now appear as macros.
Add version.version to get just the RTEMS major and minor version.
Some pkg-config issues have been resolved.
Closes#2655.
If the package references macros yet to be defined an error is
generated. Let the macro expands happen when the package name is
actually used.
Closes#2645.
Add support to release the RSB by adding the VERSION file. The file
is a single line with the version.
Fix the reports to include the version. Update the INI file
support to include the details of the build.
Show the GIT or released version when the command starts.
Closes#2480.
The change fixes installing for RTEMS 3rd Party packages where the
RSB considered them Canadian Cross Compiling (Cxc). Fixing the
Cxc issue broke real Cxc builds. The change corrects the issue of
macros being changed in the Cxc and the prep data not being udpated.
The configuration is loaded again after the updated macros. The
macros are also copied and restored to ensure a clean stable base.
The change also introduces --rtems-tools and --rtems-bsp to align
the command line with the waf configure process or RTEMS application.
File download by http, ftp, pw support checksum. The %hash
directive provides a means of setting a hash used to
checksum the file.
Files on disk or just downloaded are checked.
Generate a separate report of each package being built in a build set.
This creates a better list of faults in the case of nesting build sets
such as */rtems-all.
Remove the numbered source and patches and automatically manage
sources and patches. This removes the overhead in maintaining large
collections of patches.
Python's distutil's copy tree code maintains a cache of directories
created so deleting a tree a different way then coping the same
tree results in an error because the destination folders in the
tree are not present because distutils thinks they exist. The
solution is to implement a copy tree function.
This changes adds support to build the autotools if the host installed
version is not a suitable version. Autoconf and automake have hard coded
references to the install prefix and host tools and this makes it impossible
to relocate, that is use in any path other than the install prefix. To
bootstrap automake you need to first build a suitable autoconf and with that
you can built automake for the install prefix. The other complication is
not referencing the install prefix in the path when building in the RSB.
Having the install prefix in the path can result in strange issues appearing
such as gcc using a new assembler feature not present in an older assember
installed under the install prefix.
The process is to build the autotools using an install prefix to an
internal path inside the RSB temporary path and to use that autoconf
to build the version for the install prefix. The internal install
prefix version is also used to bootstrap RTEMS.
Refactor the reporter to allow the setbuilder to use its build config
rather than regenerating the configuration from the configuration file.
Using the config file and the build macros exposed an issue if a
macro was undefined that was defined in a build set above the
config file. Using the build set's configuration as used to build
is a better solution.
The reporter was refactored to allow a config class to be used
to report.
The setbuild can now take a configuration file as an input file.
Added a check in the options post processing to check is the
prefix path allows writes. No actual write check is made. just
the permissions are checked. If the --no-install options is
used the check is not made.
Moved the --no-install option from the set builder to the options
module.
To support building snapshots and pre-release source the defaults
has been refactored. The defaults have been moved to a stand alone
file and a macros.py module added. This modile abstracts the
old default dictionary turning it into a class. The macros
class can load macros from a file therefore the defaults have
been moved to a stand alone file.
The use of defaults has been removed from the project. The only
case where it is used in the options where the defaults are read
from a file. Macros are used everywhere now.
The defaults.py has been moved to the option.py and the separate
options and defaults values has been moved to a new pattern. When
constructing an object that needs macros and options if the macros
passed in is None the defaults from the options are used. This makes
it clear when the defaults are being used or when a modified set of
macros is being used.
The macros class support maps. The default is 'global' and where all
the defaults reside and where configuratiion file changes end up.
Maps allow macros to be read from a file and override the values
being maintained in the 'global' map. Reading a macro first checks
the map and if not present checks the 'global' map.
The addition of maps to the macros provides the base to support
snapshots and pre-release testing with standard configurations.
This functionality needs to be added. It works by letting to
specify a snapshot with:
source0: none, override, 'my-dist.tar.bz2'
and it will be used rather the value from the standard configuration.
With a build set you need to also specify the package these macros
are for. The maps provide this.
Refactor the options handling in defaults.py to allow the --jobs
option have varing specific parameters. The option supports 'none',
'max' and 'half' or a fraction to divide the number of CPUs or
an integer value which is the number of jobs. The --no-smp has
been removed.
The host specific modules have been changed to set the number of
CPUs in the defaults table.
Fixed the --keep-going to clean up is --always-clean is provided
even if the build has an error.
Add support to build MinGW tools using Cygwin. This is a Canadian cross
build.
Do not expand the directives when parsing a configuration file. Hold
in the package object the text as read from the configuration file. Still
parse the logic but leave the macros. This allows a configuration to be
varied when the build happens. The Canadian cross uses this to build a
build compiler used to build a Cxc runtime.
Add Cxc support to the build module. In the defaults add rm and rmfile
macros, add Cxc paths and pre-build script code.
In the setbuilder check for a Cxc build and if so and the package
allow Cxc build the build host version then the host target
version.
Add cygiwn support to the defaults processing and to the Windows module.
When using the set builder and nesting builds prpvide the nested
set builder and build objects with copies of the master defaults.
Python's variable sharing was sharing a single set of defaults
across all build sets and this resulted in popluted configurations.