Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
Github-Pull: #24549
Rebased-From: 53dd6165b8994301d638298906b006032e0bbe48
|
|
This change makes naming of the signed artifacts consistent across
different OSes, including Windows.
Github-Pull: #24549
Rebased-From: 4b4b04a66d8f088f6aa9ec6398db49d40481910f
|
|
Github-Pull: #24549
Rebased-From: 933a43018f0f1c0b72acbfa9de5e0f84bf49d0a2
|
|
|
|
This currently points to the version-1.4.0 branch.
|
|
-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
./contrib/devtools/copyright_header.py insert contrib/guix/libexec/build.sh
./contrib/devtools/copyright_header.py insert contrib/guix/libexec/codesign.sh
./contrib/devtools/copyright_header.py insert contrib/tracing/log_raw_p2p_msgs.py
./contrib/devtools/copyright_header.py insert contrib/tracing/log_utxocache_flush.py
./contrib/devtools/copyright_header.py insert contrib/tracing/p2p_monitor.py
./contrib/devtools/copyright_header.py insert test/lint/lint-files.sh
-END VERIFY SCRIPT-
|
|
maintainability
2f356a0ca8b080c860c8924d201b98f1f9fa0ad5 scripted-diff: Drop Darwin version for better maintainability (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
After this PR, any macOS tools version bumping in the future will touch fewer files in the repo.
Pointing a Darwin version for the `--host` system does not matter for the following reasons:
- in terms of the resulted binaries, we should only care about the minimum supported macOS version which is a separated parameter in our build system.
- in terms of the build system itself, the usage of the `$(host)` variable is self-consistent enough. Btw `$(host_os)` value already has the version dropped:
```
$ make -C depends --no-print-directory print-host_os HOST=x86_64-apple-darwin19
host_os=darwin
```
ACKs for top commit:
gruve-p:
ACK https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/23585/commits/2f356a0ca8b080c860c8924d201b98f1f9fa0ad5
promag:
ACK 2f356a0ca8b080c860c8924d201b98f1f9fa0ad5.
fanquake:
ACK 2f356a0ca8b080c860c8924d201b98f1f9fa0ad5
Tree-SHA512: 374896ab0ba02b0d8b4b21431fe963bd213b0d09586e0898c13a4c5fa294c1b693f1b2c92880c245c4157c14217b4825b36522f461930477f4d2a727086ebb2a
|
|
`shellcheck` tool
a3f61676e83e908da67664c6163db61d1d11c5d2 test: Make more shell scripts verifiable by the `shellcheck` tool (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
Some shell scripts from `contrib/guix` and `contrib/shell` are not verifiable by the `shellcheck` tool for the following reasons:
- they have no extension (see https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/21375/commits/4eccf063b252bfe256cf72d363a24cf0183e926e from bitcoin/bitcoin#21375)
- they have the `.bash` extension while `.sh` is expected
This PR adds these scripts to the input for the `shellcheck` tool, and it fixes discovered `shellcheck` warnings.
ACKs for top commit:
dongcarl:
Code Review ACK a3f61676e83e908da67664c6163db61d1d11c5d2, this is a good robustness improvement for our shell scripts.
jamesob:
crACK https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/23506/commits/a3f61676e83e908da67664c6163db61d1d11c5d2
Tree-SHA512: 6703f5369d9c04c1a174491f381afa5ec2cc4d37321c1b93615abcdde4dfd3caae82868b699c25b72132d8c8c6f2e9cf24d38eb180ed4d0f0584d8c282e58935
|
|
|
|
-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
sed -i 's/darwin19/darwin/g' $(git grep --files-with-matches 'darwin19')
-END VERIFY SCRIPT-
|
|
From what I can see the only platform this drops support for is CentOS
7. CentOS 7 reached the end of it's "full update" support at the end of
2020. It does receive maintenance updates until 2024, however I don't
think supporting glibc 2.17 until 2024 is realistic. Note that anyone
wanting to self-compile and target a glibc 2.17 runtime could build with
--disable-threadlocal.
glibc 2.18 was released in August 2013.
https://sourceware.org/legacy-ml/libc-alpha/2013-08/msg00160.html
|
|
`--with-system-univalue`
0f95247246344510c9a51810c14c633abb382e95 Integrate univalue into our buildsystem (Cory Fields)
9b49ed656fb2b687fbbe8a3236d18285957eee16 Squashed 'src/univalue/' changes from 98fadc0909..a44caf65fe (fanquake)
Pull request description:
This PR more tightly integrates building Univalue into our build system. This follows the same approach we use for [LevelDB](https://github.com/bitcoin-core/leveldb/), ([`Makefile.leveldb.include`](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/blob/master/src/Makefile.leveldb.include)), and [CRC32C](https://github.com/bitcoin-core/crc32c) ([`Makefile.crc32c.include`](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/blob/master/src/Makefile.crc32c.include)), and will be the same approach we use for [minisketch](https://github.com/sipa/minisketch); see #23114.
This approach yields a number of benefits, including:
* Faster configuration due to one less subconfigure being run during `./configure` i.e 22s with this PR vs 26s
* Faster autoconf i.e 13s with this PR vs 17s
* Improved caching
* No more issues with compiler flags i.e https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/12467
* More direct control means we can build exactly the objects we want
There might be one argument against making this change, which is that builders should have the option to use "proper shared/system libraries". However, I think that falls down for a few reasons. The first being that we already don't support building with a number of system libraries (secp256k1, leveldb, crc32c); some for good reason. Univalue is really the odd one out at the moment.
Note that the only fork of Core I'm aware of, that actively patches in support for using system libs, also explicitly marks them as ["DANGEROUS"](https://github.com/bitcoinknots/bitcoin/blob/a886811721ce66eb586871706b3f5dd27518ac3e/configure.ac#L1430) and ["NOT SUPPORTED"](https://github.com/bitcoinknots/bitcoin/blob/a886811721ce66eb586871706b3f5dd27518ac3e/configure.ac#L1312). So it would seem they exist more to satisfy a distro requirement, as opposed to something that anyone should, or would actually use in practice.
PRs like #22412 highlight the "issue" with us operating with our own Univalue fork, where we actively fix bugs, and make improvements, when upstream (https://github.com/jgarzik/univalue) may not be taking those improvements, and by all accounts, is not currently actively maintained. Bitcoin Core should not be hamstrung into not being able to fix bugs in a library, and/or have to litter our source with "workarounds", i.e #22412, for bugs we've already fixed, based on the fact that an upstream project is not actively being maintained. Allowing builders to use system libs is really only exacerbating this problem, with little benefit to our project. Bitcoin Core is not quite like your average piece of distro packaged software.
There is the potential for us to give the same treatment to libsecp256k1, however it seems doing that is currently less straightforward.
ACKs for top commit:
dongcarl:
ACK 0f95247246 less my comment above, always nice to have an include-able `sources.mk` which makes integration easier.
theuni:
ACK 0f95247246344510c9a51810c14c633abb382e95. Thanks fanquake for keeping this going.
Tree-SHA512: a7f2e41ee7cba06ae72388638e86b264eca1b9a8b81c15d1d7b45df960c88c3b91578b4ade020f8cc61d75cf8d16914575f9a78fa4cef9c12be63504ed804b99
|
|
I used Guix's values for the powerpc64(le) dynamic linkers, and the
/lib-prefix seems to be a Guix-ism rather than standard. The standard
path for the linker-loaders start with /lib64.
I've taken the new loader values from SYSDEP_KNOWN_INTERPRETER_NAMES in
glibc's sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/ldconfig.h file.
For future reference, loader path values can also be found on glibc's
website: https://sourceware.org/glibc/wiki/ABIList?action=recall&rev=16
|
|
This addresses issues like the one in #12467, where some of our compiler flags
end up being dropped during the subconfigure of Univalue. Specifically, we're
still using the compiler-default c++ version rather than forcing c++17.
We can drop the need subconfigure completely in favor of a tighter build
integration, where the sources are listed separately from the build recipes,
so that they may be included directly by upstream projects. This is
similar to the way leveldb build integration works in Core.
Core benefits of this approach include:
- Better caching (for ex. ccache and autoconf)
- No need for a slow subconfigure
- Faster autoconf
- No more missing compile flags
- Compile only the objects needed
There are no benefits to Univalue itself that I can think of. These changes
should be a no-op there, and to downstreams as well until they take advantage
of the new sources.mk.
This also removes the option to use an external univalue to avoid similar ABI
issues with mystery binaries.
Co-authored-by: fanquake <fanquake@gmail.com>
|
|
This is required to use std::filesystem on macOS as support for it only
landed in the libc++ dylib shipped with 10.15.
See also: https://developer.apple.com/documentation/xcode-release-notes/xcode-11-release-notes
Clang now supports the C++17 <filesystem> library for iOS 13, macOS 10.15, watchOS 6, and tvOS 13.
|
|
Previously, if the builder exported $VERSION in their environment (as
past Gitian-building docs told them to), but their HEAD does not
actually point to v$VERSION, their build outputs will differ from those
of other builders.
This is because the contrib/guix/guix-* scripts only ever act on the
current git worktree, and does not try to check out $VERSION if $VERSION
is set in the environment.
Setting $VERSION only makes the scripts pretend like the current
worktree is $VERSION.
This problem was seen in jonatack's attestation for all.SHA256SUMS,
where only his bitcoin-22.0rc3-osx-signed.dmg differed from everyone
else's.
Here is my deduced sequence of events:
1. Aug 27th: He guix-builds 22.0rc3 and uploads his attestations up to
guix.sigs
2. Aug 30th, sometime after POSIX time 1630310848: he pulls the latest
changes from master in the same worktree where he guix-built 22.0rc3
and ends up at 7be143a960e2
3. Aug 30th, sometime before POSIX time 1630315907: With his worktree
still on 7be143a960e2, he guix-codesigns. Normally, this would result
in outputs going in guix-build-7be143a960e2, but he had
VERSION=22.0rc3 in his environment, so the guix-* scripts pretended
like he was building 22.0rc3, and used 22.0rc3's guix-build directory
to locate un-codesigned outputs and dump codesigned ones.
However, our SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH defaults to the POSIX time of HEAD
(7be143a960e2), which made all timestamps in the resulting codesigned
DMG 1630310848, 7be143a960e2's POSIX timestamp. This differs from the
POSIX timestamp of 22.0rc3, which is 1630348517. Note that the
windows codesigning procedure does not consider SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH.
We resolve this by only allowing VERSION overrides via the FORCE_VERSION
environment variable.
|
|
|
|
1edddf5de41b053049ce0b0bdbc39c2fbb743c40 Avoid GCC 7.1 ABI change warning in guix build (Pieter Wuille)
Pull request description:
The arm-linux-gnueabihf guix build output is littered with warnings like:
```
/gnu/store/7a96hdqdb2qi8a39f09n84xjy2hr23rs-gcc-cross-arm-linux-gnueabihf-8.4.0/include/c++/bits/stl_vector.h:1085:4: note:
parameter passing for argument of type '__gnu_cxx::__normal_iterator<CRecipient*, std::vector<CRecipient> >' changed in GCC 7.1
```
These are irrelevant for us. Disable them using `-Wno-psabi`.
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
ACK 1edddf5de41b053049ce0b0bdbc39c2fbb743c40
hebasto:
ACK 1edddf5de41b053049ce0b0bdbc39c2fbb743c40, after thorough reading related materials, I agree this change can be merged. As I mentioned above, I have been compiling my arm-32bit binaries with `-Wno-psabi` flag for two years, and no related flaws were observed.
Tree-SHA512: 485c7500547ac5da567ad23847341c18ff832607f5a1002676404cc647e437cf3445b6894ecff5b52929ca52bea946c06bd90eace1997c895e56204e787065e4
|
|
|
|
|
|
Now that our Guix builds are performed on glibc 2.24 and 2.27 (RISCV),
we no-longer need to pass the --enable-glibc-back-compat option.
Replace it with --disable-threadlocal, to prevent the usage of symbols
from glibc 2.18.
None of the binaries produced required symbols later than 2.17, and 2.27
(RISCV).
|
|
|
|
Our 'bitcoin-linux-g++' definition better integrates with our depends
system than the stock linux-g++-64 definition.
This fixes a bug whereby Guix builds on x86_64 for x86_64 did not
produce a QMinimalIntegrationPlugin and led to bitcoin-qt not being
built.
|
|
|
|
108a6be92adc1e80839d90b552e72b8142140f6c guix: Check for disk space availability before building (Carl Dong)
d7dec89091ee4a456ff64ad7ce675ae6813668f1 guix: Remove dest if OUTDIR mv fails (Carl Dong)
Pull request description:
There seems to be some corner cases that can be hit when guix scripts unexpectedly fail in the middle of operation, see: https://gnusha.org/bitcoin-builds/2021-05-24.log
- Perform an early disk space check for `guix-build`
- Overwrite existing output directory after a successful build (the existing one might be malformed), and cleanup output directory if the `mv` somehow fails
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Tested ACK 108a6be92adc1e80839d90b552e72b8142140f6c
achow101:
ACK 108a6be92adc1e80839d90b552e72b8142140f6c
Tree-SHA512: cf6438317da40bf55714cd2d8cce859b3d435cc66cabefe8d4a53552d7880966acfe84ffe8fadf1c80e368ae6b037992258a6d409df85ffc6ce8bf780e98e2e5
|
|
a58868d201cb6d263aa552815f7f86562c1ca9a5 build: Makes rcc output always deterministic (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
The Qt Resource Compiler ([rcc](https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/rcc.html)) has a command-line option `--format-version` which has the [default value](https://code.qt.io/cgit/qt/qtbase.git/tree/src/tools/rcc/main.cpp?h=5.12.10#n172) 2.
The only difference from `--format-version 1` is adding a [last modified timestamp](https://code.qt.io/cgit/qt/qtbase.git/tree/src/tools/rcc/rcc.cpp?h=5.12.10#n207) to the output file ([credits](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/21654#issuecomment-819198228) to **fanquake**). That, in turn, forces us to use `QT_RCC_SOURCE_DATE_OVERRIDE=1` to get deterministic builds (#13732).
This change makes rcc output always deterministic by using `--format-version 1` option that makes usage of the
`QT_RCC_SOURCE_DATE_OVERRIDE` needless.
---
Also it improves interaction with ccache:
On master (f6c44e999b7d1d9a0de5d678ac8f1679aa271f65):
```
$ make && make clean && ccache --zero-stats && make && ccache --show-stats
...
cache directory /home/hebasto/.ccache
primary config /home/hebasto/.ccache/ccache.conf
secondary config (readonly) /etc/ccache.conf
stats updated Sun Apr 11 15:45:43 2021
stats zeroed Sun Apr 11 15:45:05 2021
cache hit (direct) 638
cache hit (preprocessed) 0
cache miss 1
cache hit rate 99.84 %
called for link 10
cleanups performed 0
files in cache 20023
cache size 13.2 GB
max cache size 15.0 GB
```
The missed file is always `qt/libbitcoinqt_a-qrc_bitcoin_locale.o`.
With this PR:
```
$ make && make clean && ccache --zero-stats && make && ccache --show-stats
...
cache directory /home/hebasto/.ccache
primary config /home/hebasto/.ccache/ccache.conf
secondary config (readonly) /etc/ccache.conf
stats updated Sun Apr 11 15:28:46 2021
stats zeroed Sun Apr 11 15:28:21 2021
cache hit (direct) 639
cache hit (preprocessed) 0
cache miss 0
cache hit rate 100.00 %
called for link 10
cleanups performed 0
files in cache 20012
cache size 13.2 GB
max cache size 15.0 GB
```
ACKs for top commit:
fanquake:
ACK a58868d201cb6d263aa552815f7f86562c1ca9a5
Tree-SHA512: 52f4a3267f41883d13025c0de79b6da22e92d60c729e01b986935c6812bbfe7fadc40b742bd715bfdf09df94af6838d4fbbe8208c6123f366108e38c8e1121c5
|
|
|
|
|
|
d420e5c1c015f58d07aca4d6a805086488f74d03 guix-attest: Avoid incomplete sigdirs with ERR traps (Carl Dong)
feda2c8e3180cb983c35976d4440cea23a155b7f guix: Skip attesting to dist-archive (Carl Dong)
d522d8006b891eccd7901faf391f9c041ddf8e38 guix: Attest to inputs in inputs.SHA256SUMS (Carl Dong)
f9e2960c018103be756a7f8a506816b49d662514 guix: Construct $OUTDIR in ${DISTSRC}/output (Carl Dong)
022abc85fc7e711a900fed8e5071919a151c0a63 guix: Minor quoting fix in libexec/build.sh (Carl Dong)
c83c4fa5b78aef33bba36b3a0d273422297bd630 guix-attest: Allow skipping GPG signing with NO_SIGN (Carl Dong)
0e1c2e448c25568f276e4f022128870c76ca216b guix-attest: Use ascii-armor signatures (Carl Dong)
b5fd89c4c89136007429688601ce4fa497f5f09e guix-attest: Only use cross-platform flags for find+xargs (Carl Dong)
5926432ba68ba154df6c8eaa74adb18cc0123167 guix: Add guix-verify script (Carl Dong)
30daf76a97c57a5f74c8dad1da282dcc0ff8b3fb guix: Add guix-attest script (Carl Dong)
Pull request description:
Adds replacements for `gsign` and `gverify`.
Personally I'm not a big fan of using the word "sign" as it's been used to refer to both codesigning and GPG signing.
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Code review and tested ACK d420e5c1c015f58d07aca4d6a805086488f74d03
Tree-SHA512: 93d82d201f4596eaea0e3825aa55b013dfb91790e6ccee79893833d37921513d7b4e735f0641103e1e2ea8308abe4cb6218b73160924708802f2e0e3f7f6caf1
|
|
The Qt Resource Compiler (rcc) has a command-line option
`--format-version` which has the default value 2.
The only difference from `--format-version 1` is adding a last modified
timestamp to the output file. That, in turn, forces us to use
`QT_RCC_SOURCE_DATE_OVERRIDE=1` to get deterministic builds.
This change makes rcc output always deterministic by using
`--format-version 1` option that makes usage of the
`QT_RCC_SOURCE_DATE_OVERRIDE` needless. Also it improves interaction
with ccache.
Co-authored-by: fanquake <fanquake@gmail.com>
|
|
and permissions
46b025e00df40724175735eb5606ac73067cb3b8 test: add new python linter to check file names and permissions (windsok)
6f6bb3ebc7cb8e17a5dfc8ef55aa2d3f2dc6bdea test: fix file permissions on various scripts (windsok)
Pull request description:
Adds a new python linter test which tests for correct filenames and file permissions in the repository.
Replaces the existing tests in the `test/lint/lint-filenames.sh` and `test/lint/lint-shebang.sh` linter tests, as well as adding some new and increased testing. This increased coverage is intended to catch issues such as in #21728 and https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/16807/files#r345547050
Summary of tests:
* Checks every file in the repository against an allowed regexp to make sure only lowercase or uppercase alphanumerics (a-zA-Z0-9), underscores (_), hyphens (-), at (@) and dots (.) are used in repository filenames.
* Checks only source files (*.cpp, *.h, *.py, *.sh) against a stricter allowed regexp to make sure only lowercase alphanumerics (a-z0-9), underscores (_), hyphens (-) and dots (.) are used in source code filenames. Additionally there is an exception regexp for directories or files which are excepted from matching this regexp (This should replicate the existing `test/lint/lint-filenames.sh` test)
* Checks all files in the repository match an allowed executable or non-executable file permission octal. Additionally checks that for executable files, the file contains a shebang line.
* Checks that for executable `.py` and `.sh` files, the shebang line used matches an allowable list of shebangs (This should replicate the existing `test/lint/lint-shebang.sh` test)
* Checks every file that contains a shebang line to ensure it has an executable permission
Additionally updates the permissions on various files to comply with the new tests.
Fixes #21729
ACKs for top commit:
practicalswift:
cr re-ACK 46b025e00df40724175735eb5606ac73067cb3b8: patch still looks correct
kiminuo:
code review ACK 46b025e00df40724175735eb5606ac73067cb3b8 if `contrib/gitian-descriptors/assign_DISTNAME` permission change is deemed OK.
laanwj:
Code review ACK 46b025e00df40724175735eb5606ac73067cb3b8
Tree-SHA512: 1c8201a2cee0d9cbce15652b68cec9a6458a8b493fcd5392f98560aca0b1a12e668baab65a47100f116f626dadc3f591deb47f7368468c6a46c6c712c2533455
|
|
|
|
We already attest to the relevant dist-archive in inputs.SHA256SUMS,
which is recorded at build-time.
We use a SKIPATTEST.TAG file to indicate output directories which do not
require attestation (much like the CACHEDIR.TAG specification).
Generally, it's better to have build scripts declare properties of
directories instead of introducing name-based special cases in attest
scripts since build scripts have a more detailed context of what is
going on.
|
|
At build/codesigning-time, hash build inputs and output the digest to
${OUTDIR}/inputs.SHA256SUMS, which gets included in the final SHA256SUMS
constructed by guix-attest.
Example final SHA256SUMS:
ee832d2a35b7701bff581dea05a536118b118e3ad0a587a2855b6ee8cd6fba20 inputs/bitcoin-78199266af7b.tar.gz
ca765e70a0c12866dd63c0be228b675278a26329e5f8f5b5c52fd09200fedf21 bitcoin-78199266af7b-powerpc64le-linux-gnu-debug.tar.gz
dae95327d7f2c324e2728c4b73627be6cb2c0d2f2e5bea940d1d5e6463939327 bitcoin-78199266af7b-powerpc64le-linux-gnu.tar.gz
|
|
While files are being output to $OUTDIR, it will be under
${DISTSRC}/output, and only when everything is done, will
${DISTSRC}/output be moved to the actual $OUTDIR.
This makes it so that a Ctrl-C in the middle of a build is less likely
to result in a partially-constructed $OUTDIR. In fact, if I understand
correctly, if $OUTDIR and $DISTSRC reside on the same filesystem, the
move (rename) is likely atomic.
Also, since the "working $OUTDIR" is under ${DISTSRC}/output, it will be
cleaned properly by the guix-clean script.
|
|
|
|
Updates permissions on files to comply with the new test added in the following commit
|
|
Since Qt 5.3.1 hash seeding is disabled for rcc.
See commit 5283a6c87beac5a43f612786fefd6e43f2c70bf6.
|
|
profiles
867a5e172a23899a4a70eca4a396c64f1951745e guix: Register garbage collector root for containers (Carl Dong)
8f8b96fb542701b7717683caa3848390b24f77ab guix: Update hint messages to mention guix-clean (Carl Dong)
44f6d4f56b16e1dc5e8a23318b8e7aad0665f178 guix: Record precious directories and add guix-clean (Carl Dong)
84912d4b24382ae022da3a863bd6caa2b8948d94 build: Remove spaces from variable-printing rules (Carl Dong)
Pull request description:
```
guix: Record precious directories and add guix-clean
Many users have reported problems that stem from having an unclean
working tree. To that end, I've written a guix-clean script which should
help reset the working tree while respecting user-specified precious
directories.
Precious directories, such as:
- SOURCES_PATH
- BASE_CACHE
- SDK_PATH
- OUTDIR
Should be preserved when cleaning the working tree, and are thus
recorded in ./contrib/guix/var/precious_dirs.
The ./contrib/guix/guix-clean script is able to parse that file and make
sure to avoid them when cleaning out the working tree.
```
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
ACK 867a5e172a23899a4a70eca4a396c64f1951745e
Tree-SHA512: c498fad781ff5e6406639df2b91b687fc528273fdf266bcdba8f6eec3b3b37ecce544b6da0252f0b9c6717f9d88e844e4c7b72d1877bdbabfc6871ddd0172af5
|
|
By registering the container profiles as garbage collector roots, it
will prevent `guix gc` from garbage collecting derivations which our
container needs and inconvieniencing the user with a rebuild.
|
|
|
|
Many users have reported problems that stem from having an unclean
working tree. To that end, I've written a guix-clean script which should
help reset the working tree while respecting user-specified precious
directories.
Precious directories, such as:
- SOURCES_PATH
- BASE_CACHE
- SDK_PATH
- OUTDIR
Should be preserved when cleaning the working tree, and are thus
recorded in ./contrib/guix/var/precious_dirs.
The ./contrib/guix/guix-clean script is able to parse that file and make
sure to avoid them when cleaning out the working tree.
|
|
This relatively easy change eliminates all runtime dependencies (except
for the kernel) for dmg, which is the only native build tool that gets
put in our output tarballs.
This allows much more flexibility when constructing the codesigning
environment, and is much more robust.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
./windeploy is a "working directory", and therefore belongs inside
distsrc-*. Many people have noticed their Guix builds failing after
hours simply because they did not remove windeploy (but did remove the
distsrc-* directories).
|
|
In Guix, there are two flags for controlling parallelism:
Note: When I say "derivation," think "package"
--cores=n
- controls the number of CPU cores to build each derivation. This is
the value passed to `make`'s `--jobs=` flag.
- defaults to 0: as many cores as is available
--max-jobs=n
- controls how many derivations can be built in parallel
- defaults to 1
Therefore, if set --max-jobs=$MAX_JOBS and don't set --cores, Guix could
theoretically spin up $MAX_JOBS * $(nproc) number of threads, and that's
no good.
So we could either default to --cores=1, --max-jobs=$MAX_JOBS
- Pro: --cores=1 means that `make` will be invoked with `-j1`,
avoiding problems with package whose build systems and test
suites break when running multi-threaded.
- Con: There will be times when only 1 or 2 derivations can be built
at a time, because the rest of the dependency graph all depend
on those 1 or 2 derivations. During these times, the machine
will be severely under-utilized.
or --cores=$MAX_JOBS, --max-jobs=1
- Pro: We don't encounter prolonged periods of
severe under-utilization mentioned above.
- Con: Many packages' build systems and test suites break when running
multi-threaded.
or --cores=1, --max-jobs=1 and let the user override with
$ADDITIONAL_GUIX_COMMON_FLAGS
|
|
|