Simon Glass | 79cc9be | 2022-11-09 19:14:43 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ |
| 2 | |
| 3 | Buildman build tool |
| 4 | =================== |
| 5 | |
Simon Glass | 79cc9be | 2022-11-09 19:14:43 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 6 | Quick-start |
| 7 | ----------- |
| 8 | |
| 9 | If you just want to quickly set up buildman so you can build something (for |
| 10 | example Raspberry Pi 2): |
| 11 | |
| 12 | .. code-block:: bash |
| 13 | |
| 14 | cd /path/to/u-boot |
| 15 | PATH=$PATH:`pwd`/tools/buildman |
| 16 | buildman --fetch-arch arm |
| 17 | buildman -k rpi_2 |
| 18 | ls ../current/rpi_2 |
| 19 | # u-boot.bin is the output image |
| 20 | |
| 21 | |
| 22 | What is this? |
| 23 | ------------- |
| 24 | |
| 25 | This tool handles building U-Boot to check that you have not broken it |
| 26 | with your patch series. It can build each individual commit and report |
| 27 | which boards fail on which commits, and which errors come up. It aims |
| 28 | to make full use of multi-processor machines. |
| 29 | |
| 30 | A key feature of buildman is its output summary, which allows warnings, |
| 31 | errors or image size increases in a particular commit or board to be |
| 32 | quickly identified and the offending commit pinpointed. This can be a big |
| 33 | help for anyone working with >10 patches at a time. |
| 34 | |
| 35 | |
| 36 | Caveats |
| 37 | ------- |
| 38 | |
| 39 | Buildman can be stopped and restarted, in which case it will continue |
| 40 | where it left off. This should happen cleanly and without side-effects. |
| 41 | If not, it is a bug, for which a patch would be welcome. |
| 42 | |
| 43 | Buildman gets so tied up in its work that it can ignore the outside world. |
| 44 | You may need to press Ctrl-C several times to quit it. Also it will print |
| 45 | out various exceptions when stopped. You may have to kill it since the |
| 46 | Ctrl-C handling is somewhat broken. |
| 47 | |
| 48 | |
| 49 | Theory of Operation |
| 50 | ------------------- |
| 51 | |
| 52 | (please read this section in full twice or you will be perpetually confused) |
| 53 | |
| 54 | Buildman is a builder. It is not make, although it runs make. It does not |
| 55 | produce any useful output on the terminal while building, except for |
| 56 | progress information (but see -v below). All the output (errors, warnings and |
| 57 | binaries if you ask for them) is stored in output directories, which you can |
| 58 | look at from a separate 'buildman -s' instance while the build is progressing, |
| 59 | or when it is finished. |
| 60 | |
| 61 | Buildman is designed to build entire git branches, i.e. muliple commits. It |
| 62 | can be run repeatedly on the same branch after making changes to commits on |
| 63 | that branch. In this case it will automatically rebuild commits which have |
| 64 | changed (and remove its old results for that commit). It is possible to build |
| 65 | a branch for one board, then later build it for another board. This adds to |
| 66 | the output, so now you have results for two boards. If you want buildman to |
| 67 | re-build a commit it has already built (e.g. because of a toolchain update), |
| 68 | use the -f flag. |
| 69 | |
| 70 | Buildman produces a concise summary of which boards succeeded and failed. |
| 71 | It shows which commit introduced which board failure using a simple |
| 72 | red/green colour coding (with yellow/cyan for warnings). Full error |
| 73 | information can be requested, in which case it is de-duped and displayed |
| 74 | against the commit that introduced the error. An example workflow is below. |
| 75 | |
| 76 | Buildman stores image size information and can report changes in image size |
| 77 | from commit to commit. An example of this is below. |
| 78 | |
| 79 | Buildman starts multiple threads, and each thread builds for one board at |
| 80 | a time. A thread starts at the first commit, configures the source for your |
| 81 | board and builds it. Then it checks out the next commit and does an |
| 82 | incremental build (i.e. not using 'make xxx_defconfig' unless you use -C). |
| 83 | Eventually the thread reaches the last commit and stops. If a commit causes |
| 84 | an error or warning, buildman will try it again after reconfiguring (but see |
| 85 | -Q). Thus some commits may be built twice, with the first result silently |
| 86 | discarded. Lots of errors and warnings will causes lots of reconfigures and your |
| 87 | build will be very slow. This is because a file that produces just a warning |
| 88 | would not normally be rebuilt in an incremental build. Once a thread finishes |
| 89 | building all the commits for a board, it starts on the commits for another |
| 90 | board. |
| 91 | |
| 92 | Buildman works in an entirely separate place from your U-Boot repository. |
| 93 | It creates a separate working directory for each thread, and puts the |
| 94 | output files in the working directory, organised by commit name and board |
| 95 | name, in a two-level hierarchy (but see -P). |
| 96 | |
| 97 | Buildman is invoked in your U-Boot directory, the one with the .git |
| 98 | directory. It clones this repository into a copy for each thread, and the |
| 99 | threads do not affect the state of your git repository. Any checkouts done |
| 100 | by the thread affect only the working directory for that thread. |
| 101 | |
| 102 | Buildman automatically selects the correct tool chain for each board. You |
| 103 | must supply suitable tool chains (see --fetch-arch), but buildman takes care |
| 104 | of selecting the right one. |
| 105 | |
| 106 | Buildman generally builds a branch (with the -b flag), and in this case |
| 107 | builds the upstream commit as well, for comparison. So even if you have one |
| 108 | commit in your branch, two commits will be built. Put all your commits in a |
| 109 | branch, set the branch's upstream to a valid value, and all will be well. |
| 110 | Otherwise buildman will perform random actions. Use -n to check what the |
| 111 | random actions might be. |
| 112 | |
| 113 | Buildman effectively has two modes: without -s it builds, with -s it |
| 114 | summarises the results of previous (or active) builds. |
| 115 | |
| 116 | If you just want to build the current source tree, leave off the -b flag. |
| 117 | This will display results and errors as they happen. You can still look at |
| 118 | them later using -se. Note that buildman will assume that the source has |
| 119 | changed, and will build all specified boards in this case. |
| 120 | |
| 121 | Buildman is optimised for building many commits at once, for many boards. |
| 122 | On multi-core machines, Buildman is fast because it uses most of the |
| 123 | available CPU power. When it gets to the end, or if you are building just |
| 124 | a few commits or boards, it will be pretty slow. As a tip, if you don't |
| 125 | plan to use your machine for anything else, you can use -T to increase the |
| 126 | number of threads beyond the default. |
| 127 | |
| 128 | |
| 129 | Selecting which boards to build |
| 130 | ------------------------------- |
| 131 | |
| 132 | Buildman lets you build all boards, or a subset. Specify the subset by passing |
| 133 | command-line arguments that list the desired build target, architecture, |
| 134 | CPU, board name, vendor, SoC or options. Multiple arguments are allowed. Each |
| 135 | argument will be interpreted as a regular expression, so behaviour is a superset |
| 136 | of exact or substring matching. Examples are: |
| 137 | |
| 138 | - 'tegra20' - all boards with a Tegra20 SoC |
| 139 | - 'tegra' - all boards with any Tegra Soc (Tegra20, Tegra30, Tegra114...) |
| 140 | - '^tegra[23]0$' - all boards with either Tegra20 or Tegra30 SoC |
| 141 | - 'powerpc' - all PowerPC boards |
| 142 | |
| 143 | While the default is to OR the terms together, you can also make use of |
| 144 | the '&' operator to limit the selection: |
| 145 | |
| 146 | - 'freescale & arm sandbox' - all Freescale boards with ARM architecture, plus |
| 147 | sandbox |
| 148 | |
| 149 | You can also use -x to specifically exclude some boards. For example: |
| 150 | |
| 151 | buildman arm -x nvidia,freescale,.*ball$ |
| 152 | |
| 153 | means to build all arm boards except nvidia, freescale and anything ending |
| 154 | with 'ball'. |
| 155 | |
| 156 | For building specific boards you can use the --boards (or --bo) option, which |
| 157 | takes a comma-separated list of board target names and be used multiple times |
| 158 | on the command line: |
| 159 | |
| 160 | .. code-block:: bash |
| 161 | |
| 162 | buildman --boards sandbox,snow --boards |
| 163 | |
| 164 | It is convenient to use the -n option to see what will be built based on |
| 165 | the subset given. Use -v as well to get an actual list of boards. |
| 166 | |
| 167 | Buildman does not store intermediate object files. It optionally copies |
| 168 | the binary output into a directory when a build is successful (-k). Size |
| 169 | information is always recorded. It needs a fair bit of disk space to work, |
| 170 | typically 250MB per thread. |
| 171 | |
| 172 | |
| 173 | Setting up |
| 174 | ---------- |
| 175 | |
| 176 | #. Get the U-Boot source. You probably already have it, but if not these |
| 177 | steps should get you started with a repo and some commits for testing. |
| 178 | |
| 179 | .. code-block:: bash |
| 180 | |
| 181 | cd /path/to/u-boot |
| 182 | git clone git://git.denx.de/u-boot.git . |
| 183 | git checkout -b my-branch origin/master |
| 184 | # Add some commits to the branch, reading for testing |
| 185 | |
| 186 | #. Create ~/.buildman to tell buildman where to find tool chains (see |
| 187 | buildman_settings_ for details). As an example:: |
| 188 | |
| 189 | # Buildman settings file |
| 190 | |
| 191 | [toolchain] |
| 192 | root: / |
| 193 | rest: /toolchains/* |
| 194 | eldk: /opt/eldk-4.2 |
| 195 | arm: /opt/linaro/gcc-linaro-arm-linux-gnueabihf-4.8-2013.08_linux |
| 196 | aarch64: /opt/linaro/gcc-linaro-aarch64-none-elf-4.8-2013.10_linux |
| 197 | |
Simon Glass | c325dbe | 2022-11-09 19:14:45 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 198 | [toolchain-prefix] |
| 199 | arc = /opt/arc/arc_gnu_2021.03_prebuilt_elf32_le_linux_install/bin/arc-elf32- |
| 200 | |
Simon Glass | 79cc9be | 2022-11-09 19:14:43 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 201 | [toolchain-alias] |
Simon Glass | 8897c7d | 2022-11-09 19:14:46 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 202 | riscv = riscv32 |
| 203 | sh = sh4 |
Simon Glass | 79cc9be | 2022-11-09 19:14:43 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 204 | x86: i386 |
Simon Glass | 79cc9be | 2022-11-09 19:14:43 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 205 | |
| 206 | |
| 207 | This selects the available toolchain paths. Add the base directory for |
| 208 | each of your toolchains here. Buildman will search inside these directories |
| 209 | and also in any '/usr' and '/usr/bin' subdirectories. |
| 210 | |
| 211 | Make sure the tags (here root: rest: and eldk:) are unique. |
| 212 | |
| 213 | The toolchain-alias section indicates that the i386 toolchain should be used |
| 214 | to build x86 commits. |
| 215 | |
| 216 | Note that you can also specific exactly toolchain prefixes if you like:: |
| 217 | |
| 218 | [toolchain-prefix] |
| 219 | arm: /opt/arm-eabi-4.6/bin/arm-eabi- |
| 220 | |
| 221 | or even:: |
| 222 | |
| 223 | [toolchain-prefix] |
| 224 | arm: /opt/arm-eabi-4.6/bin/arm-eabi-gcc |
| 225 | |
| 226 | This tells buildman that you want to use this exact toolchain for the arm |
| 227 | architecture. This will override any toolchains found by searching using the |
| 228 | [toolchain] settings. |
| 229 | |
| 230 | Since the toolchain prefix is an explicit request, buildman will report an |
| 231 | error if a toolchain is not found with that prefix. The current PATH will be |
| 232 | searched, so it is possible to use:: |
| 233 | |
| 234 | [toolchain-prefix] |
| 235 | arm: arm-none-eabi- |
| 236 | |
| 237 | and buildman will find arm-none-eabi-gcc in /usr/bin if you have it |
| 238 | installed. |
| 239 | |
| 240 | Another example:: |
| 241 | |
| 242 | [toolchain-wrapper] |
| 243 | wrapper: ccache |
| 244 | |
| 245 | This tells buildman to use a compiler wrapper in front of CROSS_COMPILE. In |
| 246 | this example, ccache. It doesn't affect the toolchain scan. The wrapper is |
| 247 | added when CROSS_COMPILE environtal variable is set. The name in this |
| 248 | section is ignored. If more than one line is provided, only the last one |
| 249 | is taken. |
| 250 | |
| 251 | #. Make sure you have the require Python pre-requisites |
| 252 | |
| 253 | Buildman uses multiprocessing, Queue, shutil, StringIO, ConfigParser and |
| 254 | urllib2. These should normally be available, but if you get an error like |
| 255 | this then you will need to obtain those modules:: |
| 256 | |
| 257 | ImportError: No module named multiprocessing |
| 258 | |
| 259 | |
| 260 | #. Check the available toolchains |
| 261 | |
| 262 | Run this check to make sure that you have a toolchain for every architecture:: |
| 263 | |
| 264 | $ ./tools/buildman/buildman --list-tool-chains |
| 265 | Scanning for tool chains |
| 266 | - scanning prefix '/opt/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/x86_64-linux/bin/x86_64-linux-' |
| 267 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='x86', priority 1 |
| 268 | - scanning prefix '/opt/arm-eabi-4.6/bin/arm-eabi-' |
| 269 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='arm', priority 1 |
| 270 | - scanning path '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/i386-linux' |
| 271 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/i386-linux/.' |
| 272 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/i386-linux/bin' |
| 273 | - found '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/i386-linux/bin/i386-linux-gcc' |
| 274 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/i386-linux/usr/bin' |
| 275 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='i386', priority 4 |
| 276 | - scanning path '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/aarch64-linux' |
| 277 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/aarch64-linux/.' |
| 278 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/aarch64-linux/bin' |
| 279 | - found '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/aarch64-linux/bin/aarch64-linux-gcc' |
| 280 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/aarch64-linux/usr/bin' |
| 281 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='aarch64', priority 4 |
| 282 | - scanning path '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/microblaze-linux' |
| 283 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/microblaze-linux/.' |
| 284 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/microblaze-linux/bin' |
| 285 | - found '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/microblaze-linux/bin/microblaze-linux-gcc' |
| 286 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/microblaze-linux/usr/bin' |
| 287 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='microblaze', priority 4 |
| 288 | - scanning path '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/mips64-linux' |
| 289 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/mips64-linux/.' |
| 290 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/mips64-linux/bin' |
| 291 | - found '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/mips64-linux/bin/mips64-linux-gcc' |
| 292 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/mips64-linux/usr/bin' |
| 293 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='mips64', priority 4 |
| 294 | - scanning path '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/sparc64-linux' |
| 295 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/sparc64-linux/.' |
| 296 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/sparc64-linux/bin' |
| 297 | - found '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/sparc64-linux/bin/sparc64-linux-gcc' |
| 298 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/sparc64-linux/usr/bin' |
| 299 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='sparc64', priority 4 |
| 300 | - scanning path '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi' |
| 301 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/.' |
| 302 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/bin' |
| 303 | - found '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/bin/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi-gcc' |
| 304 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/usr/bin' |
| 305 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='arm', priority 3 |
| 306 | Toolchain '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/bin/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi-gcc' at priority 3 will be ignored because another toolchain for arch 'arm' has priority 1 |
| 307 | - scanning path '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/sparc-linux' |
| 308 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/sparc-linux/.' |
| 309 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/sparc-linux/bin' |
| 310 | - found '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/sparc-linux/bin/sparc-linux-gcc' |
| 311 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/sparc-linux/usr/bin' |
| 312 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='sparc', priority 4 |
| 313 | - scanning path '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/mips-linux' |
| 314 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/mips-linux/.' |
| 315 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/mips-linux/bin' |
| 316 | - found '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/mips-linux/bin/mips-linux-gcc' |
| 317 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/mips-linux/usr/bin' |
| 318 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='mips', priority 4 |
| 319 | - scanning path '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/x86_64-linux' |
| 320 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/x86_64-linux/.' |
| 321 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/x86_64-linux/bin' |
| 322 | - found '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/x86_64-linux/bin/x86_64-linux-gcc' |
| 323 | - found '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/x86_64-linux/bin/x86_64-linux-x86_64-linux-gcc' |
| 324 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/x86_64-linux/usr/bin' |
| 325 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='x86_64', priority 4 |
| 326 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='x86_64', priority 4 |
| 327 | Toolchain '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/x86_64-linux/bin/x86_64-linux-x86_64-linux-gcc' at priority 4 will be ignored because another toolchain for arch 'x86_64' has priority 4 |
| 328 | - scanning path '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/m68k-linux' |
| 329 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/m68k-linux/.' |
| 330 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/m68k-linux/bin' |
| 331 | - found '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/m68k-linux/bin/m68k-linux-gcc' |
| 332 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/m68k-linux/usr/bin' |
| 333 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='m68k', priority 4 |
| 334 | - scanning path '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/powerpc-linux' |
| 335 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/powerpc-linux/.' |
| 336 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/powerpc-linux/bin' |
| 337 | - found '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/powerpc-linux/bin/powerpc-linux-gcc' |
| 338 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/powerpc-linux/usr/bin' |
| 339 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='powerpc', priority 4 |
| 340 | - scanning path '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/bfin-uclinux' |
| 341 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/bfin-uclinux/.' |
| 342 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/bfin-uclinux/bin' |
| 343 | - found '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/bfin-uclinux/bin/bfin-uclinux-gcc' |
| 344 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/bfin-uclinux/usr/bin' |
| 345 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='bfin', priority 6 |
| 346 | - scanning path '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/sparc-linux' |
| 347 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/sparc-linux/.' |
| 348 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/sparc-linux/bin' |
| 349 | - found '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/sparc-linux/bin/sparc-linux-gcc' |
| 350 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/sparc-linux/usr/bin' |
| 351 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='sparc', priority 4 |
| 352 | Toolchain '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/sparc-linux/bin/sparc-linux-gcc' at priority 4 will be ignored because another toolchain for arch 'sparc' has priority 4 |
| 353 | - scanning path '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/mips-linux' |
| 354 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/mips-linux/.' |
| 355 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/mips-linux/bin' |
| 356 | - found '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/mips-linux/bin/mips-linux-gcc' |
| 357 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/mips-linux/usr/bin' |
| 358 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='mips', priority 4 |
| 359 | Toolchain '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/mips-linux/bin/mips-linux-gcc' at priority 4 will be ignored because another toolchain for arch 'mips' has priority 4 |
| 360 | - scanning path '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/m68k-linux' |
| 361 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/m68k-linux/.' |
| 362 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/m68k-linux/bin' |
| 363 | - found '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/m68k-linux/bin/m68k-linux-gcc' |
| 364 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/m68k-linux/usr/bin' |
| 365 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='m68k', priority 4 |
| 366 | Toolchain '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/m68k-linux/bin/m68k-linux-gcc' at priority 4 will be ignored because another toolchain for arch 'm68k' has priority 4 |
| 367 | - scanning path '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/powerpc-linux' |
| 368 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/powerpc-linux/.' |
| 369 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/powerpc-linux/bin' |
| 370 | - found '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/powerpc-linux/bin/powerpc-linux-gcc' |
| 371 | - looking in '/toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/powerpc-linux/usr/bin' |
| 372 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='powerpc', priority 4 |
| 373 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='or32', priority 4 |
| 374 | - scanning path '/' |
| 375 | - looking in '/.' |
| 376 | - looking in '/bin' |
| 377 | - looking in '/usr/bin' |
| 378 | - found '/usr/bin/i586-mingw32msvc-gcc' |
| 379 | - found '/usr/bin/c89-gcc' |
| 380 | - found '/usr/bin/x86_64-linux-gnu-gcc' |
| 381 | - found '/usr/bin/gcc' |
| 382 | - found '/usr/bin/c99-gcc' |
| 383 | - found '/usr/bin/arm-linux-gnueabi-gcc' |
| 384 | - found '/usr/bin/aarch64-linux-gnu-gcc' |
| 385 | - found '/usr/bin/winegcc' |
| 386 | - found '/usr/bin/arm-linux-gnueabihf-gcc' |
| 387 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='i586', priority 11 |
| 388 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='c89', priority 11 |
| 389 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='x86_64', priority 4 |
| 390 | Toolchain '/usr/bin/x86_64-linux-gnu-gcc' at priority 4 will be ignored because another toolchain for arch 'x86_64' has priority 4 |
| 391 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='sandbox', priority 11 |
| 392 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='c99', priority 11 |
| 393 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='arm', priority 4 |
| 394 | Toolchain '/usr/bin/arm-linux-gnueabi-gcc' at priority 4 will be ignored because another toolchain for arch 'arm' has priority 1 |
| 395 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='aarch64', priority 4 |
| 396 | Toolchain '/usr/bin/aarch64-linux-gnu-gcc' at priority 4 will be ignored because another toolchain for arch 'aarch64' has priority 4 |
| 397 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='sandbox', priority 11 |
| 398 | Toolchain '/usr/bin/winegcc' at priority 11 will be ignored because another toolchain for arch 'sandbox' has priority 11 |
| 399 | Tool chain test: OK, arch='arm', priority 4 |
| 400 | Toolchain '/usr/bin/arm-linux-gnueabihf-gcc' at priority 4 will be ignored because another toolchain for arch 'arm' has priority 1 |
| 401 | List of available toolchains (34): |
| 402 | aarch64 : /toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/aarch64-linux/bin/aarch64-linux-gcc |
| 403 | alpha : /toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/alpha-linux/bin/alpha-linux-gcc |
| 404 | am33_2.0 : /toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/am33_2.0-linux/bin/am33_2.0-linux-gcc |
| 405 | arm : /opt/arm-eabi-4.6/bin/arm-eabi-gcc |
| 406 | bfin : /toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/bfin-uclinux/bin/bfin-uclinux-gcc |
| 407 | c89 : /usr/bin/c89-gcc |
| 408 | c99 : /usr/bin/c99-gcc |
| 409 | frv : /toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/frv-linux/bin/frv-linux-gcc |
| 410 | h8300 : /toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/h8300-elf/bin/h8300-elf-gcc |
| 411 | hppa : /toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/hppa-linux/bin/hppa-linux-gcc |
| 412 | hppa64 : /toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/hppa64-linux/bin/hppa64-linux-gcc |
| 413 | i386 : /toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/i386-linux/bin/i386-linux-gcc |
| 414 | i586 : /usr/bin/i586-mingw32msvc-gcc |
| 415 | ia64 : /toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/ia64-linux/bin/ia64-linux-gcc |
| 416 | m32r : /toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/m32r-linux/bin/m32r-linux-gcc |
| 417 | m68k : /toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/m68k-linux/bin/m68k-linux-gcc |
| 418 | microblaze: /toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/microblaze-linux/bin/microblaze-linux-gcc |
| 419 | mips : /toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/mips-linux/bin/mips-linux-gcc |
| 420 | mips64 : /toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/mips64-linux/bin/mips64-linux-gcc |
| 421 | or32 : /toolchains/gcc-4.5.1-nolibc/or32-linux/bin/or32-linux-gcc |
| 422 | powerpc : /toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/powerpc-linux/bin/powerpc-linux-gcc |
| 423 | powerpc64 : /toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/powerpc64-linux/bin/powerpc64-linux-gcc |
| 424 | ppc64le : /toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/ppc64le-linux/bin/ppc64le-linux-gcc |
| 425 | s390x : /toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/s390x-linux/bin/s390x-linux-gcc |
| 426 | sandbox : /usr/bin/gcc |
| 427 | sh4 : /toolchains/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/sh4-linux/bin/sh4-linux-gcc |
| 428 | sparc : /toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/sparc-linux/bin/sparc-linux-gcc |
| 429 | sparc64 : /toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/sparc64-linux/bin/sparc64-linux-gcc |
| 430 | tilegx : /toolchains/gcc-4.6.2-nolibc/tilegx-linux/bin/tilegx-linux-gcc |
| 431 | x86 : /opt/gcc-4.6.3-nolibc/x86_64-linux/bin/x86_64-linux-gcc |
| 432 | x86_64 : /toolchains/gcc-4.9.0-nolibc/x86_64-linux/bin/x86_64-linux-gcc |
| 433 | |
| 434 | |
| 435 | You can see that everything is covered, even some strange ones that won't |
| 436 | be used (c88 and c99). This is a feature. |
| 437 | |
| 438 | |
| 439 | #. Install new toolchains if needed |
| 440 | |
| 441 | You can download toolchains and update the [toolchain] section of the |
| 442 | settings file to find them. |
| 443 | |
| 444 | To make this easier, buildman can automatically download and install |
| 445 | toolchains from kernel.org. First list the available architectures:: |
| 446 | |
| 447 | $ ./tools/buildman/buildman --fetch-arch list |
| 448 | Checking: https://www.kernel.org/pub/tools/crosstool/files/bin/x86_64/4.6.3/ |
| 449 | Checking: https://www.kernel.org/pub/tools/crosstool/files/bin/x86_64/4.6.2/ |
| 450 | Checking: https://www.kernel.org/pub/tools/crosstool/files/bin/x86_64/4.5.1/ |
| 451 | Checking: https://www.kernel.org/pub/tools/crosstool/files/bin/x86_64/4.2.4/ |
| 452 | Available architectures: alpha am33_2.0 arm bfin cris crisv32 frv h8300 |
| 453 | hppa hppa64 i386 ia64 m32r m68k mips mips64 or32 powerpc powerpc64 s390x sh4 |
| 454 | sparc sparc64 tilegx x86_64 xtensa |
| 455 | |
| 456 | Then pick one and download it:: |
| 457 | |
| 458 | $ ./tools/buildman/buildman --fetch-arch or32 |
| 459 | Checking: https://www.kernel.org/pub/tools/crosstool/files/bin/x86_64/4.6.3/ |
| 460 | Checking: https://www.kernel.org/pub/tools/crosstool/files/bin/x86_64/4.6.2/ |
| 461 | Checking: https://www.kernel.org/pub/tools/crosstool/files/bin/x86_64/4.5.1/ |
| 462 | Downloading: https://www.kernel.org/pub/tools/crosstool/files/bin/x86_64/4.5.1//x86_64-gcc-4.5.1-nolibc_or32-linux.tar.xz |
| 463 | Unpacking to: /home/sjg/.buildman-toolchains |
| 464 | Testing |
| 465 | - looking in '/home/sjg/.buildman-toolchains/gcc-4.5.1-nolibc/or32-linux/.' |
| 466 | - looking in '/home/sjg/.buildman-toolchains/gcc-4.5.1-nolibc/or32-linux/bin' |
| 467 | - found '/home/sjg/.buildman-toolchains/gcc-4.5.1-nolibc/or32-linux/bin/or32-linux-gcc' |
| 468 | Tool chain test: OK |
| 469 | |
| 470 | Or download them all from kernel.org and move them to /toolchains directory: |
| 471 | |
| 472 | .. code-block:: bash |
| 473 | |
| 474 | ./tools/buildman/buildman --fetch-arch all |
| 475 | sudo mkdir -p /toolchains |
| 476 | sudo mv ~/.buildman-toolchains/*/* /toolchains/ |
| 477 | |
Simon Glass | 79cc9be | 2022-11-09 19:14:43 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 478 | Buildman should now be set up to use your new toolchain. |
| 479 | |
| 480 | At the time of writing, U-Boot has these architectures: |
| 481 | |
Simon Glass | e93918b | 2022-11-09 19:14:47 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 482 | arc, arm, m68k, microblaze, mips, nios2, powerpc, sandbox, sh, x86, xtensa |
Simon Glass | 79cc9be | 2022-11-09 19:14:43 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 483 | |
Simon Glass | 79cc9be | 2022-11-09 19:14:43 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 484 | |
| 485 | How to run it |
| 486 | ------------- |
| 487 | |
| 488 | First do a dry run using the -n flag: (replace <branch> with a real, local |
| 489 | branch with a valid upstream): |
| 490 | |
| 491 | .. code-block:: bash |
| 492 | |
| 493 | ./tools/buildman/buildman -b <branch> -n |
| 494 | |
| 495 | If it can't detect the upstream branch, try checking out the branch, and |
| 496 | doing something like 'git branch --set-upstream-to upstream/master' |
| 497 | or something similar. Buildman will try to guess a suitable upstream branch |
| 498 | if it can't find one (you will see a message like "Guessing upstream as ..."). |
| 499 | You can also use the -c option to manually specify the number of commits to |
| 500 | build. |
| 501 | |
| 502 | As an example:: |
| 503 | |
| 504 | Dry run, so not doing much. But I would do this: |
| 505 | |
| 506 | Building 18 commits for 1059 boards (4 threads, 1 job per thread) |
| 507 | Build directory: ../lcd9b |
| 508 | 5bb3505 Merge branch 'master' of git://git.denx.de/u-boot-arm |
| 509 | c18f1b4 tegra: Use const for pinmux_config_pingroup/table() |
| 510 | 2f043ae tegra: Add display support to funcmux |
| 511 | e349900 tegra: fdt: Add pwm binding and node |
| 512 | 424a5f0 tegra: fdt: Add LCD definitions for Tegra |
| 513 | 0636ccf tegra: Add support for PWM |
| 514 | a994fe7 tegra: Add SOC support for display/lcd |
| 515 | fcd7350 tegra: Add LCD driver |
| 516 | 4d46e9d tegra: Add LCD support to Nvidia boards |
| 517 | 991bd48 arm: Add control over cachability of memory regions |
| 518 | 54e8019 lcd: Add CONFIG_LCD_ALIGNMENT to select frame buffer alignment |
| 519 | d92aff7 lcd: Add support for flushing LCD fb from dcache after update |
| 520 | dbd0677 tegra: Align LCD frame buffer to section boundary |
| 521 | 0cff9b8 tegra: Support control of cache settings for LCD |
| 522 | 9c56900 tegra: fdt: Add LCD definitions for Seaboard |
| 523 | 5cc29db lcd: Add CONFIG_CONSOLE_SCROLL_LINES option to speed console |
| 524 | cac5a23 tegra: Enable display/lcd support on Seaboard |
| 525 | 49ff541 wip |
| 526 | |
| 527 | Total boards to build for each commit: 1059 |
| 528 | |
| 529 | This shows that it will build all 1059 boards, using 4 threads (because |
| 530 | we have a 4-core CPU). Each thread will run with -j1, meaning that each |
| 531 | make job will use a single CPU. The list of commits to be built helps you |
| 532 | confirm that things look about right. Notice that buildman has chosen a |
| 533 | 'base' directory for you, immediately above your source tree. |
| 534 | |
| 535 | Buildman works entirely inside the base directory, here ../lcd9b, |
| 536 | creating a working directory for each thread, and creating output |
| 537 | directories for each commit and board. |
| 538 | |
| 539 | |
| 540 | Suggested Workflow |
| 541 | ------------------ |
| 542 | |
| 543 | To run the build for real, take off the -n: |
| 544 | |
| 545 | .. code-block:: bash |
| 546 | |
| 547 | ./tools/buildman/buildman -b <branch> |
| 548 | |
| 549 | Buildman will set up some working directories, and get started. After a |
| 550 | minute or so it will settle down to a steady pace, with a display like this:: |
| 551 | |
| 552 | Building 18 commits for 1059 boards (4 threads, 1 job per thread) |
| 553 | 528 36 124 /19062 -18374 1:13:30 : SIMPC8313_SP |
| 554 | |
| 555 | This means that it is building 19062 board/commit combinations. So far it |
| 556 | has managed to successfully build 528. Another 36 have built with warnings, |
| 557 | and 124 more didn't build at all. It has 18374 builds left to complete. |
| 558 | Buildman expects to complete the process in around an hour and a quarter. |
| 559 | Use this time to buy a faster computer. |
| 560 | |
| 561 | |
| 562 | To find out how the build went, ask for a summary with -s. You can do this |
| 563 | either before the build completes (presumably in another terminal) or |
| 564 | afterwards. Let's work through an example of how this is used:: |
| 565 | |
| 566 | $ ./tools/buildman/buildman -b lcd9b -s |
| 567 | ... |
| 568 | 01: Merge branch 'master' of git://git.denx.de/u-boot-arm |
| 569 | powerpc: + galaxy5200_LOWBOOT |
| 570 | 02: tegra: Use const for pinmux_config_pingroup/table() |
| 571 | 03: tegra: Add display support to funcmux |
| 572 | 04: tegra: fdt: Add pwm binding and node |
| 573 | 05: tegra: fdt: Add LCD definitions for Tegra |
| 574 | 06: tegra: Add support for PWM |
| 575 | 07: tegra: Add SOC support for display/lcd |
| 576 | 08: tegra: Add LCD driver |
| 577 | 09: tegra: Add LCD support to Nvidia boards |
| 578 | 10: arm: Add control over cachability of memory regions |
| 579 | 11: lcd: Add CONFIG_LCD_ALIGNMENT to select frame buffer alignment |
| 580 | 12: lcd: Add support for flushing LCD fb from dcache after update |
| 581 | arm: + lubbock |
| 582 | 13: tegra: Align LCD frame buffer to section boundary |
| 583 | 14: tegra: Support control of cache settings for LCD |
| 584 | 15: tegra: fdt: Add LCD definitions for Seaboard |
| 585 | 16: lcd: Add CONFIG_CONSOLE_SCROLL_LINES option to speed console |
| 586 | 17: tegra: Enable display/lcd support on Seaboard |
| 587 | 18: wip |
| 588 | |
| 589 | This shows which commits have succeeded and which have failed. In this case |
| 590 | the build is still in progress so many boards are not built yet (use -u to |
| 591 | see which ones). But already we can see a few failures. The galaxy5200_LOWBOOT |
| 592 | never builds correctly. This could be a problem with our toolchain, or it |
| 593 | could be a bug in the upstream. The good news is that we probably don't need |
| 594 | to blame our commits. The bad news is that our commits are not tested on that |
| 595 | board. |
| 596 | |
| 597 | Commit 12 broke lubbock. That's what the '+ lubbock', in red, means. The |
| 598 | failure is never fixed by a later commit, or you would see lubbock again, in |
| 599 | green, without the +. |
| 600 | |
| 601 | To see the actual error:: |
| 602 | |
| 603 | $ ./tools/buildman/buildman -b <branch> -se |
| 604 | ... |
| 605 | 12: lcd: Add support for flushing LCD fb from dcache after update |
| 606 | arm: + lubbock |
| 607 | +common/libcommon.o: In function `lcd_sync': |
| 608 | +common/lcd.c:120: undefined reference to `flush_dcache_range' |
| 609 | +arm-none-linux-gnueabi-ld: BFD (Sourcery G++ Lite 2010q1-202) 2.19.51.20090709 assertion fail /scratch/julian/2010q1-release-linux-lite/obj/binutils-src-2010q1-202-arm-none-linux-gnueabi-i686-pc-linux-gnu/bfd/elf32-arm.c:12572 |
| 610 | +make: *** [build/u-boot] Error 139 |
| 611 | 13: tegra: Align LCD frame buffer to section boundary |
| 612 | 14: tegra: Support control of cache settings for LCD |
| 613 | 15: tegra: fdt: Add LCD definitions for Seaboard |
| 614 | 16: lcd: Add CONFIG_CONSOLE_SCROLL_LINES option to speed console |
| 615 | -common/lcd.c:120: undefined reference to `flush_dcache_range' |
| 616 | +common/lcd.c:125: undefined reference to `flush_dcache_range' |
| 617 | 17: tegra: Enable display/lcd support on Seaboard |
| 618 | 18: wip |
| 619 | |
| 620 | So the problem is in lcd.c, due to missing cache operations. This information |
| 621 | should be enough to work out what that commit is doing to break these |
| 622 | boards. (In this case pxa did not have cache operations defined). |
| 623 | |
| 624 | Note that if there were other boards with errors, the above command would |
| 625 | show their errors also. Each line is shown only once. So if lubbock and snow |
| 626 | produce the same error, we just see:: |
| 627 | |
| 628 | 12: lcd: Add support for flushing LCD fb from dcache after update |
| 629 | arm: + lubbock snow |
| 630 | +common/libcommon.o: In function `lcd_sync': |
| 631 | +common/lcd.c:120: undefined reference to `flush_dcache_range' |
| 632 | +arm-none-linux-gnueabi-ld: BFD (Sourcery G++ Lite 2010q1-202) 2.19.51.20090709 assertion fail /scratch/julian/2010q1-release-linux-lite/obj/binutils-src-2010q1-202-arm-none-linux-gnueabi-i686-pc-linux-gnu/bfd/elf32-arm.c:12572 |
| 633 | +make: *** [build/u-boot] Error 139 |
| 634 | |
| 635 | But if you did want to see just the errors for lubbock, use: |
| 636 | |
| 637 | .. code-block:: bash |
| 638 | |
| 639 | ./tools/buildman/buildman -b <branch> -se lubbock |
| 640 | |
| 641 | If you see error lines marked with '-', that means that the errors were fixed |
| 642 | by that commit. Sometimes commits can be in the wrong order, so that a |
| 643 | breakage is introduced for a few commits and fixed by later commits. This |
| 644 | shows up clearly with buildman. You can then reorder the commits and try |
| 645 | again. |
| 646 | |
| 647 | At commit 16, the error moves: you can see that the old error at line 120 |
| 648 | is fixed, but there is a new one at line 126. This is probably only because |
| 649 | we added some code and moved the broken line further down the file. |
| 650 | |
| 651 | As mentioned, if many boards have the same error, then -e will display the |
| 652 | error only once. This makes the output as concise as possible. To see which |
| 653 | boards have each error, use -l. So it is safe to omit the board name - you |
| 654 | will not get lots of repeated output for every board. |
| 655 | |
| 656 | Buildman tries to distinguish warnings from errors, and shows warning lines |
| 657 | separately with a 'w' prefix. Warnings introduced show as yellow. Warnings |
| 658 | fixed show as cyan. |
| 659 | |
| 660 | The full build output in this case is available in:: |
| 661 | |
| 662 | ../lcd9b/12_of_18_gd92aff7_lcd--Add-support-for/lubbock/ |
| 663 | |
| 664 | Files: |
| 665 | |
| 666 | done |
| 667 | Indicates the build was done, and holds the return code from make. This is 0 |
| 668 | for a good build, typically 2 for a failure. |
| 669 | |
| 670 | err |
| 671 | Output from stderr, if any. Errors and warnings appear here. |
| 672 | |
| 673 | log |
| 674 | Output from stdout. Normally there isn't any since buildman runs in silent |
| 675 | mode. Use -V to force a verbose build (this passes V=1 to 'make') |
| 676 | |
| 677 | toolchain |
| 678 | Shows information about the toolchain used for the build. |
| 679 | |
| 680 | sizes |
| 681 | Shows image size information. |
| 682 | |
| 683 | It is possible to get the build binary output there also. Use the -k option |
| 684 | for this. In that case you will also see some output files, like: |
| 685 | |
| 686 | - System.map |
| 687 | - toolchain |
| 688 | - u-boot |
| 689 | - u-boot.bin |
| 690 | - u-boot.map |
| 691 | - autoconf.mk |
| 692 | - SPL/TPL versions like u-boot-spl and u-boot-spl.bin if available |
| 693 | |
| 694 | |
| 695 | Checking Image Sizes |
| 696 | -------------------- |
| 697 | |
| 698 | A key requirement for U-Boot is that you keep code/data size to a minimum. |
| 699 | Where a new feature increases this noticeably it should normally be put |
| 700 | behind a CONFIG flag so that boards can leave it disabled and keep the image |
| 701 | size more or less the same with each new release. |
| 702 | |
| 703 | To check the impact of your commits on image size, use -S. For example:: |
| 704 | |
| 705 | $ ./tools/buildman/buildman -b us-x86 -sS |
| 706 | Summary of 10 commits for 1066 boards (4 threads, 1 job per thread) |
| 707 | 01: MAKEALL: add support for per architecture toolchains |
| 708 | 02: x86: Add function to get top of usable ram |
| 709 | x86: (for 1/3 boards) text -272.0 rodata +41.0 |
| 710 | 03: x86: Add basic cache operations |
| 711 | 04: x86: Permit bootstage and timer data to be used prior to relocation |
| 712 | x86: (for 1/3 boards) data +16.0 |
| 713 | 05: x86: Add an __end symbol to signal the end of the U-Boot binary |
| 714 | x86: (for 1/3 boards) text +76.0 |
| 715 | 06: x86: Rearrange the output input to remove BSS |
| 716 | x86: (for 1/3 boards) bss -2140.0 |
| 717 | 07: x86: Support relocation of FDT on start-up |
| 718 | x86: + coreboot-x86 |
| 719 | 08: x86: Add error checking to x86 relocation code |
| 720 | 09: x86: Adjust link device tree include file |
| 721 | 10: x86: Enable CONFIG_OF_CONTROL on coreboot |
| 722 | |
| 723 | |
| 724 | You can see that image size only changed on x86, which is good because this |
| 725 | series is not supposed to change any other board. From commit 7 onwards the |
| 726 | build fails so we don't get code size numbers. The numbers are fractional |
| 727 | because they are an average of all boards for that architecture. The |
| 728 | intention is to allow you to quickly find image size problems introduced by |
| 729 | your commits. |
| 730 | |
| 731 | Note that the 'text' region and 'rodata' are split out. You should add the |
| 732 | two together to get the total read-only size (reported as the first column |
| 733 | in the output from binutil's 'size' utility). |
| 734 | |
| 735 | A useful option is --step which lets you skip some commits. For example |
| 736 | --step 2 will show the image sizes for only every 2nd commit (so it will |
| 737 | compare the image sizes of the 1st, 3rd, 5th... commits). You can also use |
| 738 | --step 0 which will compare only the first and last commits. This is useful |
| 739 | for an overview of how your entire series affects code size. It will build |
| 740 | only the upstream commit and your final branch commit. |
| 741 | |
| 742 | You can also use -d to see a detailed size breakdown for each board. This |
| 743 | list is sorted in order from largest growth to largest reduction. |
| 744 | |
| 745 | It is even possible to go a little further with the -B option (--bloat). This |
| 746 | shows where U-Boot has bloated, breaking the size change down to the function |
| 747 | level. Example output is below:: |
| 748 | |
| 749 | $ ./tools/buildman/buildman -b us-mem4 -sSdB |
| 750 | ... |
| 751 | 19: Roll crc32 into hash infrastructure |
| 752 | arm: (for 10/10 boards) all -143.4 bss +1.2 data -4.8 rodata -48.2 text -91.6 |
| 753 | paz00 : all +23 bss -4 rodata -29 text +56 |
| 754 | u-boot: add: 1/0, grow: 3/-2 bytes: 168/-104 (64) |
| 755 | function old new delta |
| 756 | hash_command 80 160 +80 |
| 757 | crc32_wd_buf - 56 +56 |
| 758 | ext4fs_read_file 540 568 +28 |
| 759 | insert_var_value_sub 688 692 +4 |
| 760 | run_list_real 1996 1992 -4 |
| 761 | do_mem_crc 168 68 -100 |
| 762 | trimslice : all -9 bss +16 rodata -29 text +4 |
| 763 | u-boot: add: 1/0, grow: 1/-3 bytes: 136/-124 (12) |
| 764 | function old new delta |
| 765 | hash_command 80 160 +80 |
| 766 | crc32_wd_buf - 56 +56 |
| 767 | ext4fs_iterate_dir 672 668 -4 |
| 768 | ext4fs_read_file 568 548 -20 |
| 769 | do_mem_crc 168 68 -100 |
| 770 | whistler : all -9 bss +16 rodata -29 text +4 |
| 771 | u-boot: add: 1/0, grow: 1/-3 bytes: 136/-124 (12) |
| 772 | function old new delta |
| 773 | hash_command 80 160 +80 |
| 774 | crc32_wd_buf - 56 +56 |
| 775 | ext4fs_iterate_dir 672 668 -4 |
| 776 | ext4fs_read_file 568 548 -20 |
| 777 | do_mem_crc 168 68 -100 |
| 778 | seaboard : all -9 bss -28 rodata -29 text +48 |
| 779 | u-boot: add: 1/0, grow: 3/-2 bytes: 160/-104 (56) |
| 780 | function old new delta |
| 781 | hash_command 80 160 +80 |
| 782 | crc32_wd_buf - 56 +56 |
| 783 | ext4fs_read_file 548 568 +20 |
| 784 | run_list_real 1996 2000 +4 |
| 785 | do_nandboot 760 756 -4 |
| 786 | do_mem_crc 168 68 -100 |
| 787 | colibri_t20 : all -9 rodata -29 text +20 |
| 788 | u-boot: add: 1/0, grow: 2/-3 bytes: 140/-112 (28) |
| 789 | function old new delta |
| 790 | hash_command 80 160 +80 |
| 791 | crc32_wd_buf - 56 +56 |
| 792 | read_abs_bbt 204 208 +4 |
| 793 | do_nandboot 760 756 -4 |
| 794 | ext4fs_read_file 576 568 -8 |
| 795 | do_mem_crc 168 68 -100 |
| 796 | ventana : all -37 bss -12 rodata -29 text +4 |
| 797 | u-boot: add: 1/0, grow: 1/-3 bytes: 136/-124 (12) |
| 798 | function old new delta |
| 799 | hash_command 80 160 +80 |
| 800 | crc32_wd_buf - 56 +56 |
| 801 | ext4fs_iterate_dir 672 668 -4 |
| 802 | ext4fs_read_file 568 548 -20 |
| 803 | do_mem_crc 168 68 -100 |
| 804 | harmony : all -37 bss -16 rodata -29 text +8 |
| 805 | u-boot: add: 1/0, grow: 2/-3 bytes: 140/-124 (16) |
| 806 | function old new delta |
| 807 | hash_command 80 160 +80 |
| 808 | crc32_wd_buf - 56 +56 |
| 809 | nand_write_oob_syndrome 428 432 +4 |
| 810 | ext4fs_iterate_dir 672 668 -4 |
| 811 | ext4fs_read_file 568 548 -20 |
| 812 | do_mem_crc 168 68 -100 |
| 813 | medcom-wide : all -417 bss +28 data -16 rodata -93 text -336 |
| 814 | u-boot: add: 1/-1, grow: 1/-2 bytes: 88/-376 (-288) |
| 815 | function old new delta |
| 816 | crc32_wd_buf - 56 +56 |
| 817 | do_fat_read_at 2872 2904 +32 |
| 818 | hash_algo 16 - -16 |
| 819 | do_mem_crc 168 68 -100 |
| 820 | hash_command 420 160 -260 |
| 821 | tec : all -449 bss -4 data -16 rodata -93 text -336 |
| 822 | u-boot: add: 1/-1, grow: 1/-2 bytes: 88/-376 (-288) |
| 823 | function old new delta |
| 824 | crc32_wd_buf - 56 +56 |
| 825 | do_fat_read_at 2872 2904 +32 |
| 826 | hash_algo 16 - -16 |
| 827 | do_mem_crc 168 68 -100 |
| 828 | hash_command 420 160 -260 |
| 829 | plutux : all -481 bss +16 data -16 rodata -93 text -388 |
| 830 | u-boot: add: 1/-1, grow: 1/-3 bytes: 68/-408 (-340) |
| 831 | function old new delta |
| 832 | crc32_wd_buf - 56 +56 |
| 833 | do_load_serial_bin 1688 1700 +12 |
| 834 | hash_algo 16 - -16 |
| 835 | do_fat_read_at 2904 2872 -32 |
| 836 | do_mem_crc 168 68 -100 |
| 837 | hash_command 420 160 -260 |
| 838 | powerpc: (for 5/5 boards) all +37.4 data -3.2 rodata -41.8 text +82.4 |
| 839 | MPC8610HPCD : all +55 rodata -29 text +84 |
| 840 | u-boot: add: 1/0, grow: 0/-1 bytes: 176/-96 (80) |
| 841 | function old new delta |
| 842 | hash_command - 176 +176 |
| 843 | do_mem_crc 184 88 -96 |
| 844 | MPC8641HPCN : all +55 rodata -29 text +84 |
| 845 | u-boot: add: 1/0, grow: 0/-1 bytes: 176/-96 (80) |
| 846 | function old new delta |
| 847 | hash_command - 176 +176 |
| 848 | do_mem_crc 184 88 -96 |
| 849 | MPC8641HPCN_36BIT: all +55 rodata -29 text +84 |
| 850 | u-boot: add: 1/0, grow: 0/-1 bytes: 176/-96 (80) |
| 851 | function old new delta |
| 852 | hash_command - 176 +176 |
| 853 | do_mem_crc 184 88 -96 |
| 854 | sbc8641d : all +55 rodata -29 text +84 |
| 855 | u-boot: add: 1/0, grow: 0/-1 bytes: 176/-96 (80) |
| 856 | function old new delta |
| 857 | hash_command - 176 +176 |
| 858 | do_mem_crc 184 88 -96 |
| 859 | xpedite517x : all -33 data -16 rodata -93 text +76 |
| 860 | u-boot: add: 1/-1, grow: 0/-1 bytes: 176/-112 (64) |
| 861 | function old new delta |
| 862 | hash_command - 176 +176 |
| 863 | hash_algo 16 - -16 |
| 864 | do_mem_crc 184 88 -96 |
| 865 | ... |
| 866 | |
| 867 | |
| 868 | This shows that commit 19 has reduced codesize for arm slightly and increased |
| 869 | it for powerpc. This increase was offset in by reductions in rodata and |
| 870 | data/bss. |
| 871 | |
| 872 | Shown below the summary lines are the sizes for each board. Below each board |
| 873 | are the sizes for each function. This information starts with: |
| 874 | |
| 875 | add |
| 876 | number of functions added / removed |
| 877 | |
| 878 | grow |
| 879 | number of functions which grew / shrunk |
| 880 | |
| 881 | bytes |
| 882 | number of bytes of code added to / removed from all functions, plus the total |
| 883 | byte change in brackets |
| 884 | |
| 885 | The change seems to be that hash_command() has increased by more than the |
| 886 | do_mem_crc() function has decreased. The function sizes typically add up to |
| 887 | roughly the text area size, but note that every read-only section except |
| 888 | rodata is included in 'text', so the function total does not exactly |
| 889 | correspond. |
| 890 | |
| 891 | It is common when refactoring code for the rodata to decrease as the text size |
| 892 | increases, and vice versa. |
| 893 | |
| 894 | |
| 895 | .. _buildman_settings: |
| 896 | |
| 897 | The .buildman settings file |
| 898 | --------------------------- |
| 899 | |
| 900 | The .buildman file provides information about the available toolchains and |
| 901 | also allows build flags to be passed to 'make'. It consists of several |
| 902 | sections, with the section name in square brackets. Within each section are |
| 903 | a set of (tag, value) pairs. |
| 904 | |
Tom Rini | 93ebd46 | 2022-11-09 19:14:53 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 905 | '[global]' section |
| 906 | allow-missing |
| 907 | Indicates the policy to use for missing blobs. Note that the flags |
| 908 | ``--allow-missing`` (``-M``) and ``--no-allow-missing`` (``--no-a``) |
| 909 | override these setting. |
| 910 | |
| 911 | always |
| 912 | Run with ``-M`` by default. |
| 913 | |
| 914 | multiple |
| 915 | Run with ``-M`` if more than one board is being built. |
| 916 | |
| 917 | branch |
| 918 | Run with ``-M`` if a branch is being built. |
| 919 | |
| 920 | Note that the last two can be given together:: |
| 921 | |
| 922 | allow-missing = multiple branch |
| 923 | |
Simon Glass | 79cc9be | 2022-11-09 19:14:43 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 924 | '[toolchain]' section |
| 925 | This lists the available toolchains. The tag here doesn't matter, but |
| 926 | make sure it is unique. The value is the path to the toolchain. Buildman |
| 927 | will look in that path for a file ending in 'gcc'. It will then execute |
| 928 | it to check that it is a C compiler, passing only the --version flag to |
| 929 | it. If the return code is 0, buildman assumes that it is a valid C |
| 930 | compiler. It uses the first part of the name as the architecture and |
| 931 | strips off the last part when setting the CROSS_COMPILE environment |
| 932 | variable (parts are delimited with a hyphen). |
| 933 | |
| 934 | For example powerpc-linux-gcc will be noted as a toolchain for 'powerpc' |
| 935 | and CROSS_COMPILE will be set to powerpc-linux- when using it. |
| 936 | |
| 937 | '[toolchain-alias]' section |
| 938 | This converts toolchain architecture names to U-Boot names. For example, |
| 939 | if an x86 toolchains is called i386-linux-gcc it will not normally be |
| 940 | used for architecture 'x86'. Adding 'x86: i386 x86_64' to this section |
| 941 | will tell buildman that the i386 and x86_64 toolchains can be used for |
| 942 | the x86 architecture. |
| 943 | |
| 944 | '[make-flags]' section |
| 945 | U-Boot's build system supports a few flags (such as BUILD_TAG) which |
| 946 | affect the build product. These flags can be specified in the buildman |
| 947 | settings file. They can also be useful when building U-Boot against other |
| 948 | open source software. |
| 949 | |
| 950 | [make-flags] |
| 951 | at91-boards=ENABLE_AT91_TEST=1 |
| 952 | snapper9260=${at91-boards} BUILD_TAG=442 |
| 953 | snapper9g45=${at91-boards} BUILD_TAG=443 |
| 954 | |
| 955 | This will use 'make ENABLE_AT91_TEST=1 BUILD_TAG=442' for snapper9260 |
| 956 | and 'make ENABLE_AT91_TEST=1 BUILD_TAG=443' for snapper9g45. A special |
| 957 | variable ${target} is available to access the target name (snapper9260 |
| 958 | and snapper9g20 in this case). Variables are resolved recursively. Note |
| 959 | that variables can only contain the characters A-Z, a-z, 0-9, hyphen (-) |
| 960 | and underscore (_). |
| 961 | |
| 962 | It is expected that any variables added are dealt with in U-Boot's |
| 963 | config.mk file and documented in the README. |
| 964 | |
| 965 | Note that you can pass ad-hoc options to the build using environment |
| 966 | variables, for example: |
| 967 | |
| 968 | SOME_OPTION=1234 ./tools/buildman/buildman my_board |
| 969 | |
| 970 | |
| 971 | Quick Sanity Check |
| 972 | ------------------ |
| 973 | |
| 974 | If you have made changes and want to do a quick sanity check of the |
| 975 | currently checked-out source, run buildman without the -b flag. This will |
| 976 | build the selected boards and display build status as it runs (i.e. -v is |
| 977 | enabled automatically). Use -e to see errors/warnings as well. |
| 978 | |
| 979 | |
| 980 | Building Ranges |
| 981 | --------------- |
| 982 | |
| 983 | You can build a range of commits by specifying a range instead of a branch |
| 984 | when using the -b flag. For example:: |
| 985 | |
| 986 | buildman -b upstream/master..us-buildman |
| 987 | |
| 988 | will build commits in us-buildman that are not in upstream/master. |
| 989 | |
| 990 | |
| 991 | Building Faster |
| 992 | --------------- |
| 993 | |
| 994 | By default, buildman doesn't execute 'make mrproper' prior to building the |
| 995 | first commit for each board. This reduces the amount of work 'make' does, and |
| 996 | hence speeds up the build. To force use of 'make mrproper', use -the -m flag. |
| 997 | This flag will slow down any buildman invocation, since it increases the amount |
| 998 | of work done on any build. |
| 999 | |
| 1000 | One possible application of buildman is as part of a continual edit, build, |
| 1001 | edit, build, ... cycle; repeatedly applying buildman to the same change or |
| 1002 | series of changes while making small incremental modifications to the source |
| 1003 | each time. This provides quick feedback regarding the correctness of recent |
| 1004 | modifications. In this scenario, buildman's default choice of build directory |
| 1005 | causes more build work to be performed than strictly necessary. |
| 1006 | |
| 1007 | By default, each buildman thread uses a single directory for all builds. When a |
| 1008 | thread builds multiple boards, the configuration built in this directory will |
| 1009 | cycle through various different configurations, one per board built by the |
| 1010 | thread. Variations in the configuration will force a rebuild of affected source |
| 1011 | files when a thread switches between boards. Ideally, such buildman-induced |
| 1012 | rebuilds would not happen, thus allowing the build to operate as efficiently as |
| 1013 | the build system and source changes allow. buildman's -P flag may be used to |
| 1014 | enable this; -P causes each board to be built in a separate (board-specific) |
| 1015 | directory, thus avoiding any buildman-induced configuration changes in any |
| 1016 | build directory. |
| 1017 | |
| 1018 | U-Boot's build system embeds information such as a build timestamp into the |
| 1019 | final binary. This information varies each time U-Boot is built. This causes |
| 1020 | various files to be rebuilt even if no source changes are made, which in turn |
| 1021 | requires that the final U-Boot binary be re-linked. This unnecessary work can |
Simon Glass | 828d70d | 2023-02-21 12:40:29 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1022 | be avoided by turning off the timestamp feature. This can be achieved using |
| 1023 | the `-r` flag, which enables reproducible builds by setting |
| 1024 | `SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH=0` when building. |
Simon Glass | 79cc9be | 2022-11-09 19:14:43 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1025 | |
| 1026 | Combining all of these options together yields the command-line shown below. |
| 1027 | This will provide the quickest possible feedback regarding the current content |
| 1028 | of the source tree, thus allowing rapid tested evolution of the code:: |
| 1029 | |
Simon Glass | 828d70d | 2023-02-21 12:40:29 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1030 | ./tools/buildman/buildman -Pr tegra |
Simon Glass | 79cc9be | 2022-11-09 19:14:43 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1031 | |
| 1032 | |
| 1033 | Checking configuration |
| 1034 | ---------------------- |
| 1035 | |
| 1036 | A common requirement when converting CONFIG options to Kconfig is to check |
| 1037 | that the effective configuration has not changed due to the conversion. |
| 1038 | Buildman supports this with the -K option, used after a build. This shows |
| 1039 | differences in effective configuration between one commit and the next. |
| 1040 | |
| 1041 | For example:: |
| 1042 | |
| 1043 | $ buildman -b kc4 -sK |
| 1044 | ... |
| 1045 | 43: Convert CONFIG_SPL_USBETH_SUPPORT to Kconfig |
| 1046 | arm: |
| 1047 | + u-boot.cfg: CONFIG_SPL_ENV_SUPPORT=1 CONFIG_SPL_NET=1 |
| 1048 | + u-boot-spl.cfg: CONFIG_SPL_MMC=1 CONFIG_SPL_NAND_SUPPORT=1 |
| 1049 | + all: CONFIG_SPL_ENV_SUPPORT=1 CONFIG_SPL_MMC=1 CONFIG_SPL_NAND_SUPPORT=1 CONFIG_SPL_NET=1 |
| 1050 | am335x_evm_usbspl : |
| 1051 | + u-boot.cfg: CONFIG_SPL_ENV_SUPPORT=1 CONFIG_SPL_NET=1 |
| 1052 | + u-boot-spl.cfg: CONFIG_SPL_MMC=1 CONFIG_SPL_NAND_SUPPORT=1 |
| 1053 | + all: CONFIG_SPL_ENV_SUPPORT=1 CONFIG_SPL_MMC=1 CONFIG_SPL_NAND_SUPPORT=1 CONFIG_SPL_NET=1 |
| 1054 | 44: Convert CONFIG_SPL_USB_HOST to Kconfig |
| 1055 | ... |
| 1056 | |
| 1057 | This shows that commit 44 enabled three new options for the board |
| 1058 | am335x_evm_usbspl which were not enabled in commit 43. There is also a |
| 1059 | summary for 'arm' showing all the changes detected for that architecture. |
| 1060 | In this case there is only one board with changes, so 'arm' output is the |
| 1061 | same as 'am335x_evm_usbspl'/ |
| 1062 | |
| 1063 | The -K option uses the u-boot.cfg, spl/u-boot-spl.cfg and tpl/u-boot-tpl.cfg |
| 1064 | files which are produced by a build. If all you want is to check the |
| 1065 | configuration you can in fact avoid doing a full build, using -D. This tells |
| 1066 | buildman to configuration U-Boot and create the .cfg files, but not actually |
| 1067 | build the source. This is 5-10 times faster than doing a full build. |
| 1068 | |
| 1069 | By default buildman considers the follow two configuration methods |
| 1070 | equivalent:: |
| 1071 | |
| 1072 | #define CONFIG_SOME_OPTION |
| 1073 | |
| 1074 | CONFIG_SOME_OPTION=y |
| 1075 | |
| 1076 | The former would appear in a header filer and the latter in a defconfig |
| 1077 | file. The achieve this, buildman considers 'y' to be '1' in configuration |
| 1078 | variables. This avoids lots of useless output when converting a CONFIG |
| 1079 | option to Kconfig. To disable this behaviour, use --squash-config-y. |
| 1080 | |
| 1081 | |
| 1082 | Checking the environment |
| 1083 | ------------------------ |
| 1084 | |
| 1085 | When converting CONFIG options which manipulate the default environment, |
| 1086 | a common requirement is to check that the default environment has not |
| 1087 | changed due to the conversion. Buildman supports this with the -U option, |
| 1088 | used after a build. This shows differences in the default environment |
| 1089 | between one commit and the next. |
| 1090 | |
| 1091 | For example:: |
| 1092 | |
| 1093 | $ buildman -b squash brppt1 -sU |
| 1094 | Summary of 2 commits for 3 boards (3 threads, 3 jobs per thread) |
| 1095 | 01: Migrate bootlimit to Kconfig |
| 1096 | 02: Squashed commit of the following: |
| 1097 | c brppt1_mmc: altbootcmd=mmc dev 1; run mmcboot0; -> mmc dev 1; run mmcboot0 |
| 1098 | c brppt1_spi: altbootcmd=mmc dev 1; run mmcboot0; -> mmc dev 1; run mmcboot0 |
| 1099 | + brppt1_nand: altbootcmd=run usbscript |
| 1100 | - brppt1_nand: altbootcmd=run usbscript |
| 1101 | (no errors to report) |
| 1102 | |
| 1103 | This shows that commit 2 modified the value of 'altbootcmd' for 'brppt1_mmc' |
| 1104 | and 'brppt1_spi', removing a trailing semicolon. 'brppt1_nand' gained an a |
| 1105 | value for 'altbootcmd', but lost one for ' altbootcmd'. |
| 1106 | |
| 1107 | The -U option uses the u-boot.env files which are produced by a build. |
Simon Glass | e96f70a | 2023-02-21 12:40:26 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1108 | Internally, buildman writes out an out-env file into the build directory for |
| 1109 | later comparison. |
Simon Glass | 79cc9be | 2022-11-09 19:14:43 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1110 | |
| 1111 | |
| 1112 | Building with clang |
| 1113 | ------------------- |
| 1114 | |
| 1115 | To build with clang (sandbox only), use the -O option to override the |
| 1116 | toolchain. For example: |
| 1117 | |
| 1118 | .. code-block:: bash |
| 1119 | |
| 1120 | buildman -O clang-7 --board sandbox |
| 1121 | |
| 1122 | |
Simon Glass | f6bfcca | 2023-02-21 12:40:28 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1123 | Building without LTO |
| 1124 | -------------------- |
| 1125 | |
| 1126 | Link-time optimisation (LTO) is designed to reduce code size by globally |
| 1127 | optimising the U-Boot build. Unfortunately this can dramatically slow down |
| 1128 | builds. This is particularly noticeable when running a lot of builds. |
| 1129 | |
| 1130 | Use the -L (--no-lto) flag to disable LTO. |
| 1131 | |
| 1132 | .. code-block:: bash |
| 1133 | |
| 1134 | buildman -L --board sandbox |
| 1135 | |
| 1136 | |
Simon Glass | 79cc9be | 2022-11-09 19:14:43 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1137 | Doing a simple build |
| 1138 | -------------------- |
| 1139 | |
| 1140 | In some cases you just want to build a single board and get the full output, use |
| 1141 | the -w option, for example: |
| 1142 | |
| 1143 | .. code-block:: bash |
| 1144 | |
| 1145 | buildman -o /tmp/build --board sandbox -w |
| 1146 | |
| 1147 | This will write the full build into /tmp/build including object files. You must |
| 1148 | specify the output directory with -o when using -w. |
| 1149 | |
| 1150 | |
| 1151 | Support for IDEs (Integrated Development Environments) |
| 1152 | ------------------------------------------------------ |
| 1153 | |
| 1154 | Normally buildman summarises the output and shows information indicating the |
| 1155 | meaning of each line of output. For example a '+' symbol appears at the start of |
| 1156 | each error line. Also, buildman prints information about what it is about to do, |
| 1157 | along with a summary at the end. |
| 1158 | |
| 1159 | When using buildman from an IDE, it is helpful to drop this behaviour. Use the |
| 1160 | -I/--ide option for that. You might find -W helpful also so that warnings do |
| 1161 | not cause the build to fail: |
| 1162 | |
| 1163 | .. code-block:: bash |
| 1164 | |
| 1165 | buildman -o /tmp/build --board sandbox -wWI |
| 1166 | |
| 1167 | |
Tom Rini | 93ebd46 | 2022-11-09 19:14:53 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1168 | Support for binary blobs |
| 1169 | ------------------------ |
| 1170 | |
| 1171 | U-Boot is moving to using Binman (see :doc:`../develop/package/binman`) for |
| 1172 | dealing with the complexities of packaging U-Boot along with binary files from |
| 1173 | other projects. These are called 'external blobs' by Binman. |
| 1174 | |
| 1175 | Typically a missing external blob causes a build failure. For build testing of |
| 1176 | a lot of boards, or boards for which you do not have the blobs, you can use the |
| 1177 | -M flag to allow missing blobs. This marks the build as if it succeeded, |
| 1178 | although with warnings shown, including 'Some images are invalid'. If any boards |
| 1179 | fail in this way, buildman exits with status 101. |
| 1180 | |
| 1181 | To convert warnings to errors, use -E. To make buildman return success with |
| 1182 | these warnings, use -W. |
| 1183 | |
| 1184 | It is generally safe to default to enabling -M for all runs of buildman, so long |
| 1185 | as you check the exit code. To do this, add:: |
| 1186 | |
| 1187 | allow-missing = "always" |
| 1188 | |
| 1189 | to the top of the buildman_settings_ file. |
| 1190 | |
| 1191 | |
Simon Glass | 79cc9be | 2022-11-09 19:14:43 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1192 | Changing the configuration |
| 1193 | -------------------------- |
| 1194 | |
| 1195 | Sometimes it is useful to change the CONFIG options for a build on the fly. This |
| 1196 | can be used to build a board (or multiple) with a few changes to see the impact. |
| 1197 | The -a option supports this: |
| 1198 | |
| 1199 | .. code-block:: bash |
| 1200 | |
| 1201 | -a <cfg> |
| 1202 | |
| 1203 | where <cfg> is a CONFIG option (with or without the `CONFIG_` prefix) to enable. |
| 1204 | For example: |
| 1205 | |
| 1206 | .. code-block:: bash |
| 1207 | |
| 1208 | buildman -a CMD_SETEXPR_FMT |
| 1209 | |
| 1210 | will build with CONFIG_CMD_SETEXPR_FMT enabled. |
| 1211 | |
| 1212 | You can disable options by preceding them with tilde (~). You can specify the |
| 1213 | -a option multiple times: |
| 1214 | |
| 1215 | .. code-block:: bash |
| 1216 | |
| 1217 | buildman -a CMD_SETEXPR_FMT -a ~CMDLINE |
| 1218 | |
| 1219 | Some options have values, in which case you can change them: |
| 1220 | |
| 1221 | .. code-block:: bash |
| 1222 | |
| 1223 | buildman -a 'BOOTCOMMAND="echo hello"' CONFIG_SYS_LOAD_ADDR=0x1000 |
| 1224 | |
| 1225 | Note that you must put quotes around string options and the whole thing must be |
| 1226 | in single quotes, to make sure the shell leave it alone. |
| 1227 | |
| 1228 | If you try to set an option that does not exist, or that cannot be changed for |
| 1229 | some other reason (e.g. it is 'selected' by another option), then buildman |
| 1230 | shows an error:: |
| 1231 | |
| 1232 | $ buildman --board sandbox -a FRED |
| 1233 | Building current source for 1 boards (1 thread, 32 jobs per thread) |
| 1234 | 0 0 0 /1 -1 (starting)errs |
| 1235 | Some CONFIG adjustments did not take effect. This may be because |
| 1236 | the request CONFIGs do not exist or conflict with others. |
| 1237 | |
| 1238 | Failed adjustments: |
| 1239 | |
| 1240 | FRED Missing expected line: CONFIG_FRED=y |
| 1241 | |
| 1242 | |
| 1243 | One major caveat with this feature with branches (-b) is that buildman does not |
| 1244 | name the output directories differently when you change the configuration, so |
| 1245 | doing the same build again with different configuration will not trigger a |
| 1246 | rebuild. You can use -f to work around that. |
| 1247 | |
| 1248 | |
| 1249 | Other options |
| 1250 | ------------- |
| 1251 | |
| 1252 | Buildman has various other command-line options. Try --help to see them. |
| 1253 | |
| 1254 | To find out what toolchain prefix buildman will use for a build, use the -A |
| 1255 | option. |
| 1256 | |
| 1257 | To request that compiler warnings be promoted to errors, use -E. This passes the |
| 1258 | -Werror flag to the compiler. Note that the build can still produce warnings |
| 1259 | with -E, e.g. the migration warnings:: |
| 1260 | |
| 1261 | ===================== WARNING ====================== |
| 1262 | This board does not use CONFIG_DM_MMC. Please update |
| 1263 | ... |
| 1264 | ==================================================== |
| 1265 | |
| 1266 | When doing builds, Buildman's return code will reflect the overall result:: |
| 1267 | |
| 1268 | 0 (success) No errors or warnings found |
| 1269 | 100 Errors found |
| 1270 | 101 Warnings found (only if no -W) |
| 1271 | |
| 1272 | You can use -W to tell Buildman to return 0 (success) instead of 101 when |
| 1273 | warnings are found. Note that it can be useful to combine -E and -W. This means |
| 1274 | that all compiler warnings will produce failures (code 100) and all other |
| 1275 | warnings will produce success (since 101 is changed to 0). |
| 1276 | |
| 1277 | If there are both warnings and errors, errors win, so buildman returns 100. |
| 1278 | |
| 1279 | The -y option is provided (for use with -s) to ignore the bountiful device-tree |
| 1280 | warnings. Similarly, -Y tells buildman to ignore the migration warnings. |
| 1281 | |
| 1282 | Sometimes you might get an error in a thread that is not handled by buildman, |
| 1283 | perhaps due to a failure of a tool that it calls. You might see the output, but |
| 1284 | then buildman hangs. Failing to handle any eventuality is a bug in buildman and |
| 1285 | should be reported. But you can use -T0 to disable threading and hopefully |
| 1286 | figure out the root cause of the build failure. |
| 1287 | |
| 1288 | Build summary |
| 1289 | ------------- |
| 1290 | |
| 1291 | When buildman finishes it shows a summary, something like this:: |
| 1292 | |
| 1293 | Completed: 5 total built, duration 0:00:21, rate 0.24 |
| 1294 | |
| 1295 | This shows that a total of 5 builds were done across all selected boards, it |
| 1296 | took 21 seconds and the builds happened at the rate of 0.24 per second. The |
| 1297 | latter number depends on the speed of your machine and the efficiency of the |
| 1298 | U-Boot build. |
| 1299 | |
| 1300 | |
Simon Glass | 79cc9be | 2022-11-09 19:14:43 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1301 | Using boards.cfg |
| 1302 | ---------------- |
| 1303 | |
| 1304 | This file is no-longer needed by buildman but it is still generated in the |
| 1305 | working directory. This helps avoid a delay on every build, since scanning all |
Simon Glass | 09afcb7 | 2023-07-19 17:48:28 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1306 | the Kconfig files takes a few seconds. Use the `-R <filename>` flag to force |
| 1307 | regeneration of the file - in that case buildman exits after writing the file |
| 1308 | with exit code 2 if there was an error in the maintainer files. To use the |
| 1309 | default filename, use a hyphen, i.e. `-R -`. |
Simon Glass | 79cc9be | 2022-11-09 19:14:43 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1310 | |
| 1311 | You should use 'buildman -nv <criteria>' instead of greoing the boards.cfg file, |
| 1312 | since it may be dropped altogether in future. |
| 1313 | |
| 1314 | |
Simon Glass | 5e728d4 | 2023-07-19 17:48:27 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1315 | Checking maintainers |
| 1316 | -------------------- |
| 1317 | |
| 1318 | Sometimes a board is added without a corresponding entry in a MAINTAINERS file. |
| 1319 | Use the `--maintainer-check` option to check this:: |
| 1320 | |
| 1321 | $ buildman --maintainer-check |
| 1322 | WARNING: board/mikrotik/crs3xx-98dx3236/MAINTAINERS: missing defconfig ending at line 7 |
| 1323 | WARNING: no maintainers for 'clearfog_spi' |
| 1324 | |
| 1325 | Buildman returns with an exit code of 2 if there area any warnings. |
| 1326 | |
| 1327 | |
Simon Glass | 1382b1d | 2023-02-21 12:40:27 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1328 | Checking the command |
| 1329 | -------------------- |
| 1330 | |
| 1331 | Buildman writes out the toolchain information to a `toolchain` file within the |
| 1332 | output directory. It also writes the commands used to build U-Boot in an |
| 1333 | `out-cmd` file. You can check these if you suspect something strange is |
| 1334 | happening. |
| 1335 | |
Simon Glass | 79cc9be | 2022-11-09 19:14:43 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1336 | TODO |
| 1337 | ---- |
| 1338 | |
| 1339 | Many improvements have been made over the years. There is still quite a bit of |
| 1340 | scope for more though, e.g.: |
| 1341 | |
| 1342 | - easier access to log files |
| 1343 | - 'hunting' for problems, perhaps by building a few boards for each arch, or |
| 1344 | checking commits for changed files and building only boards which use those |
| 1345 | files |
| 1346 | |
| 1347 | |
| 1348 | Credits |
| 1349 | ------- |
| 1350 | |
| 1351 | Thanks to Grant Grundler <grundler@chromium.org> for his ideas for improving |
| 1352 | the build speed by building all commits for a board instead of the other |
| 1353 | way around. |
| 1354 | |
Simon Glass | 79cc9be | 2022-11-09 19:14:43 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1355 | .. sectionauthor:: Simon Glass |
| 1356 | .. sectionauthor:: Copyright (c) 2013 The Chromium OS Authors. |
| 1357 | .. sectionauthor:: sjg@chromium.org |
| 1358 | .. Halloween 2012 |
| 1359 | .. Updated 12-12-12 |
| 1360 | .. Updated 23-02-13 |
| 1361 | .. Updated 09-04-20 |