Bryan Drewery [Thu, 3 Dec 2015 22:39:42 +0000 (22:39 +0000)]
Revert r288966 as it is redundant and not right.
bsd.prog.mk and bsd.lib.mk already make OBJS depend on headers when there is
not .OBJDIR/.depend file, which is still true for the initial meta mode builds.
If there was something to benefit the meta mode build here then it should be
extended to the non-meta mode build as well.
Some of the problems here were just DPSRCS being hooked up wrongly, fixed in
r291330.
The logic itself is flawed as 'buildfiles' is in a different part of the
dependency tree than the objects and headers are, so the objects will still be
built independent from 'buildfiles'. 'buildfiles' is not ordered in the build
before objects.
Add asynchronous command support to the pass(4) driver, and the new
camdd(8) utility.
CCBs may be queued to the driver via the new CAMIOQUEUE ioctl, and
completed CCBs may be retrieved via the CAMIOGET ioctl. User
processes can use poll(2) or kevent(2) to get notification when
I/O has completed.
While the existing CAMIOCOMMAND blocking ioctl interface only
supports user virtual data pointers in a CCB (generally only
one per CCB), the new CAMIOQUEUE ioctl supports user virtual and
physical address pointers, as well as user virtual and physical
scatter/gather lists. This allows user applications to have more
flexibility in their data handling operations.
Kernel memory for data transferred via the queued interface is
allocated from the zone allocator in MAXPHYS sized chunks, and user
data is copied in and out. This is likely faster than the
vmapbuf()/vunmapbuf() method used by the CAMIOCOMMAND ioctl in
configurations with many processors (there are more TLB shootdowns
caused by the mapping/unmapping operation) but may not be as fast
as running with unmapped I/O.
The new memory handling model for user requests also allows
applications to send CCBs with request sizes that are larger than
MAXPHYS. The pass(4) driver now limits queued requests to the I/O
size listed by the SIM driver in the maxio field in the Path
Inquiry (XPT_PATH_INQ) CCB.
There are some things things would be good to add:
1. Come up with a way to do unmapped I/O on multiple buffers.
Currently the unmapped I/O interface operates on a struct bio,
which includes only one address and length. It would be nice
to be able to send an unmapped scatter/gather list down to
busdma. This would allow eliminating the copy we currently do
for data.
2. Add an ioctl to list currently outstanding CCBs in the various
queues.
3. Add an ioctl to cancel a request, or use the XPT_ABORT CCB to do
that.
4. Test physical address support. Virtual pointers and scatter
gather lists have been tested, but I have not yet tested
physical addresses or scatter/gather lists.
5. Investigate multiple queue support. At the moment there is one
queue of commands per pass(4) device. If multiple processes
open the device, they will submit I/O into the same queue and
get events for the same completions. This is probably the right
model for most applications, but it is something that could be
changed later on.
Also, add a new utility, camdd(8) that uses the asynchronous pass(4)
driver interface.
This utility is intended to be a basic data transfer/copy utility,
a simple benchmark utility, and an example of how to use the
asynchronous pass(4) interface.
It can copy data to and from pass(4) devices using any target queue
depth, starting offset and blocksize for the input and ouptut devices.
It currently only supports SCSI devices, but could be easily extended
to support ATA devices.
It can also copy data to and from regular files, block devices, tape
devices, pipes, stdin, and stdout. It does not support queueing
multiple commands to any of those targets, since it uses the standard
read(2)/write(2)/writev(2)/readv(2) system calls.
The I/O is done by two threads, one for the reader and one for the
writer. The reader thread sends completed read requests to the
writer thread in strictly sequential order, even if they complete
out of order. That could be modified later on for random I/O patterns
or slightly out of order I/O.
camdd(8) uses kqueue(2)/kevent(2) to get I/O completion events from
the pass(4) driver and also to send request notifications internally.
For pass(4) devcies, camdd(8) uses a single buffer (CAM_DATA_VADDR)
per CAM CCB on the reading side, and a scatter/gather list
(CAM_DATA_SG) on the writing side. In addition to testing both
interfaces, this makes any potential reblocking of I/O easier. No
data is copied between the reader and the writer, but rather the
reader's buffers are split into multiple I/O requests or combined
into a single I/O request depending on the input and output blocksize.
For the file I/O path, camdd(8) also uses a single buffer (read(2),
write(2), pread(2) or pwrite(2)) on reads, and a scatter/gather list
(readv(2), writev(2), preadv(2), pwritev(2)) on writes.
Things that would be nice to do for camdd(8) eventually:
1. Add support for I/O pattern generation. Patterns like all
zeros, all ones, LBA-based patterns, random patterns, etc. Right
Now you can always use /dev/zero, /dev/random, etc.
2. Add support for a "sink" mode, so we do only reads with no
writes. Right now, you can use /dev/null.
3. Add support for automatic queue depth probing, so that we can
figure out the right queue depth on the input and output side
for maximum throughput. At the moment it defaults to 6.
4. Add support for SATA device passthrough I/O.
5. Add support for random LBAs and/or lengths on the input and
output sides.
6. Track average per-I/O latency and busy time. The busy time
and latency could also feed in to the automatic queue depth
determination.
sys/cam/scsi/scsi_pass.h:
Define two new ioctls, CAMIOQUEUE and CAMIOGET, that queue
and fetch asynchronous CAM CCBs respectively.
Although these ioctls do not have a declared argument, they
both take a union ccb pointer. If we declare a size here,
the ioctl code in sys/kern/sys_generic.c will malloc and free
a buffer for either the CCB or the CCB pointer (depending on
how it is declared). Since we have to keep a copy of the
CCB (which is fairly large) anyway, having the ioctl malloc
and free a CCB for each call is wasteful.
CAMIOQUEUE adds a CCB to the incoming queue. The CCB is
executed immediately (and moved to the active queue) if it
is an immediate CCB, but otherwise it will be executed
in passstart() when a CCB is available from the transport layer.
When CCBs are completed (because they are immediate or
passdone() if they are queued), they are put on the done
queue.
If we get the final close on the device before all pending
I/O is complete, all active I/O is moved to the abandoned
queue and we increment the peripheral reference count so
that the peripheral driver instance doesn't go away before
all pending I/O is done.
The new passcreatezone() function is called on the first
call to the CAMIOQUEUE ioctl on a given device to allocate
the UMA zones for I/O requests and S/G list buffers. This
may be good to move off to a taskqueue at some point.
The new passmemsetup() function allocates memory and
scatter/gather lists to hold the user's data, and copies
in any data that needs to be written. For virtual pointers
(CAM_DATA_VADDR), the kernel buffer is malloced from the
new pass(4) driver malloc bucket. For virtual
scatter/gather lists (CAM_DATA_SG), buffers are allocated
from a new per-pass(9) UMA zone in MAXPHYS-sized chunks.
Physical pointers are passed in unchanged. We have support
for up to 16 scatter/gather segments (for the user and
kernel S/G lists) in the default struct pass_io_req, so
requests with longer S/G lists require an extra kernel malloc.
The new passcopysglist() function copies a user scatter/gather
list to a kernel scatter/gather list. The number of elements
in each list may be different, but (obviously) the amount of data
stored has to be identical.
The new passmemdone() function copies data out for the
CAM_DATA_VADDR and CAM_DATA_SG cases.
The new passiocleanup() function restores data pointers in
user CCBs and frees memory.
Add new functions to support kqueue(2)/kevent(2):
passreadfilt() tells kevent whether or not the done
queue is empty.
passkqfilter() adds a knote to our list.
passreadfiltdetach() removes a knote from our list.
Add a new function, passpoll(), for poll(2)/select(2)
to use.
Add devstat(9) support for the queued CCB path.
sys/cam/ata/ata_da.c:
Add support for the BIO_VLIST bio type.
sys/cam/cam_ccb.h:
Add a new enumeration for the xflags field in the CCB header.
(This doesn't change the CCB header, just adds an enumeration to
use.)
sys/cam/cam_xpt.c:
Add a new function, xpt_setup_ccb_flags(), that allows specifying
CCB flags.
sys/cam/cam_xpt.h:
Add a prototype for xpt_setup_ccb_flags().
sys/cam/scsi/scsi_da.c:
Add support for BIO_VLIST.
sys/dev/md/md.c:
Add BIO_VLIST support to md(4).
sys/geom/geom_disk.c:
Add BIO_VLIST support to the GEOM disk class. Re-factor the I/O size
limiting code in g_disk_start() a bit.
sys/kern/subr_bus_dma.c:
Change _bus_dmamap_load_vlist() to take a starting offset and
length.
Add a new function, _bus_dmamap_load_pages(), that will load a list
of physical pages starting at an offset.
Update _bus_dmamap_load_bio() to allow loading BIO_VLIST bios.
Allow unmapped I/O to start at an offset.
sys/kern/subr_uio.c:
Add two new functions, physcopyin_vlist() and physcopyout_vlist().
sys/pc98/include/bus.h:
Guard kernel-only parts of the pc98 machine/bus.h header with
#ifdef _KERNEL.
This allows userland programs to include <machine/bus.h> to get the
definition of bus_addr_t and bus_size_t.
sys/sys/bio.h:
Add a new bio flag, BIO_VLIST.
sys/sys/uio.h:
Add prototypes for physcopyin_vlist() and physcopyout_vlist().
share/man/man4/pass.4:
Document the CAMIOQUEUE and CAMIOGET ioctls.
usr.sbin/Makefile:
Add camdd.
usr.sbin/camdd/Makefile:
Add a makefile for camdd(8).
Conrad Meyer [Thu, 3 Dec 2015 17:22:55 +0000 (17:22 +0000)]
if_ntb: Don't roundup MW size to full BAR size unnecessarily
Note that the MW allocation still must be BAR *aligned*. So, this only
loosens the constraints on MW allocation slightly. BAR-aligned does not
play well with large (GB+) BAR sizes.
Going forward, if anyone cares about if_ntb on very large BARs, I
suggest they add functionality to allocate a smaller window than the BAR
size, and set the BAR range to cover a window much larger than the
allocated window. This will require negotiating a window offset and
limit for protocol traffic. None of this is implemented in this
revision.
Conrad Meyer [Thu, 3 Dec 2015 17:21:10 +0000 (17:21 +0000)]
Pull vm_object_scan_all_shadowed out of vm_object_backing_scan
These two functions were largely unrelated, they just used the same same
loop logic to walk through a backing object's memq. Pull out the
all_shadowed test as its own function and eliminate
OBSC_TEST_ALL_SHADOWED. Rename vm_object_backing_scan to
vm_object_collapse_scan.
Dimitry Andric [Thu, 3 Dec 2015 15:41:10 +0000 (15:41 +0000)]
In assembler mode, clang defaulted to DWARF3, if only -g was specified.
Change this to DWARF2, in the simplest way possible. (Upstream, this
was fixed in clang trunk r250173, but this was done along with a lot of
shuffling around of debug option handling, so it cannot be applied
as-is.)
Convert the mlxen driver to use the BUSDMA(9) APIs instead of
vtophys() when loading mbufs for transmission and reception. While at
it all pointer arithmetic and cast qualifier issues were fixed, mostly
related to transmission and reception.
Updated the mlx4 and mlxen drivers to the latest version, v2.1.6:
- Added support for dumping the SFP EEPROM content to dmesg.
- Fixed handling of network interface capability IOCTLs.
- Fixed race when loading and unloading the mlxen driver by applying
appropriate locking.
- Removed two unused C-files.
Ed Maste [Thu, 3 Dec 2015 12:17:09 +0000 (12:17 +0000)]
newvers: Honour SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH as a build reproducibility measure
One reason the kernel does not build reproducibly is that it includes
a timestamp in the version string. SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH provides a standard
method to address this: it should be set to the last modification time
of the source, and build processes use the specified timestamp instead
of the "current" date and time.
This change uses SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH if it is set; how it gets set needs
to be addressed elsewhere.
Reviewed by: bapt
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Andrew Turner [Thu, 3 Dec 2015 11:24:11 +0000 (11:24 +0000)]
Add support for a generic AHCI attachment. This allows us to attach to a
typically memory mapped bus, for example on the AMD Opteron A1100 the AHCI
device is mapped in the CPUs address space, and not through a PCI
controller.
Further work is needed for this to work with ACPI as this is expected to be
common on ARMv8 servers.
For amd64 non-PCID machines, and for i386 machines with support for
the PG_G global pte flag, pmap_invalidate_all() fails to flush global
TLB entries [*]. This is because TLB shootdown handler for such
configs reloads CR3, and on i386 pmap_invalidate_all() does the same
for the initiating CPU. Note that current code does not issue total
invalidation requests for the kernel_pmap.
Rename amd64 function invltlb_globpcid() to invltlb_glob(), it is not
specific for PCID for quite some time, and implement the same
functionality for i386. Use the function instead of invltlb() in
shootdown handlers and in i386 pmap_invalidate_all(), but only for the
kernel pmap (which maps pages with the PG_G attribute set), which
takes care of PG_G TLB entries on flush.
To detect the affected pmap in i386 TLB shootdown handler, pmap should
be passed to the smp_masked_invltlb() function, which makes amd64 and
i386 TLB shootdown code almost identical. Merge the code under x86/.
Noted by: jhb [*]
Reviewed by: cem, jhb, pho
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4346
Add glue driver for Amlogic Meson Gigabit Ethernet Controller
and enable it for Odroid C1 board.
Together with r291676 change, dwc(4) can receive packets now.
Submitted by: Andy Moreton <amoreton at solarflare.com>
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4331
Pyun YongHyeon [Thu, 3 Dec 2015 05:27:39 +0000 (05:27 +0000)]
Disable EEE(Energy Efficient Ethernet) for RTL8211F PHY.
It seems the EEE made RX MAC enter LPI(Low Power Idle) mode such
that dwc(4) was not able to receive packets. Ideally dwc(4) should
be able to use EEE to save power during periods of low link
utilization(i.e. gating off clock). Due to lack of dwc(4)
datasheet it's not easy to take required steps for EEE on LPI
enter/exit events. Disabling EEE in PHY seems to be easy
workaround until dwc(4) supports EEE.
Updating EEE advertisement register on RTL8211F seems to have no
effect until reprogramming MII_ANAR, MII_100T2CR and MII_BMCR
with auto-negotiation. It's not clear whether it's related with
mii_phy_reset()'s BMCR_ISO handling for RTL8211F though.
It seems rgephy_reset() needs careful investigation for newer
RealTek PHYs.
Ganbold submitted working version based on NetBSD change and
tested lots of changes I made. Thanks a lot!
Submitted by: ganbold (initial version)
In collaboration with: ganbold
Fix build on GCC 5.2 where, at least on PPC64, the compiler would "optimize"
the malloc() + memset() in the local implementation of calloc() into a call
to calloc(), helpfully turning it into an infinite loop. Clean up some
unneeded flags on PPC64 while here.
John Baldwin [Thu, 3 Dec 2015 00:02:01 +0000 (00:02 +0000)]
Add support for configuring additional virtual interfaces (VIs) on a port.
Each virtual interface has its own MAC address, queues, and statistics.
The dedicated netmap interfaces (ncxgbeX / ncxlX) were already implemented
as additional VIs on each port. This change allows additional non-netmap
interfaces to be configured on each port. Additional virtual interfaces
use the naming scheme vcxgbeX or vcxlX.
Additional VIs are enabled by setting the hw.cxgbe.num_vis tunable to a
value greater than 1 before loading the cxgbe(4) or cxl(4) driver.
NB: The first VI on each port is the "main" interface (cxgbeX or cxlX).
T4/T5 NICs provide a limited number of MAC addresses for each physical port.
As a result, a maximum of six VIs can be configured on each port (including
the "main" interface and the netmap interface when netmap is enabled).
One user-visible result is that when netmap is enabled, packets received
or transmitted via the netmap interface are no longer counted in the stats
for the "main" interface, but are not accounted to the netmap interface.
The netmap interfaces now also have a new-bus device and export various
information sysctl nodes via dev.n(cxgbe|cxl).X.
The cxgbetool 'clearstats' command clears the stats for all VIs on the
specified port along with the port's stats. There is currently no way to
clear the stats of an individual VI.
pw_checkname since the beginning if too strict on GECOS field,
relax it a bit so gecos can be used to store multibytes data.
This was unseen before FreeBSD 10.2 as this validation function was motly unused
since FreeBSD 10.2 the usage of this function has been generalized to improve
validation.
John Baldwin [Wed, 2 Dec 2015 18:27:30 +0000 (18:27 +0000)]
The cdevpriv_dtr_t typedef was not able to be used in a function prototype
like the various d_*_t typedefs since it declared a function pointer rather
than a function. Add a new d_priv_dtor_t typedef that declares the function
and can be used as a function prototype. The previous typedef wasn't
useful outside of the cdevpriv implementation, so retire it.
The name d_priv_dtor_t was chosen to be more consistent with cdev methods
since it is commonly used in place of d_close_t even though it is not a
direct pointer in struct cdevsw.
Michal Meloun [Wed, 2 Dec 2015 14:22:58 +0000 (14:22 +0000)]
ARM: Fix of detection of root interrupt controller.
This fixes detection of root interrupt controller for cases,
when interrupt parent is not defined at all or it's not defined directly
in controller node.
Rick Macklem [Wed, 2 Dec 2015 02:47:13 +0000 (02:47 +0000)]
Fix the memory leak that occurs when the nfscommon.ko module is unloaded.
This leak was introduced by r291527.
Since the nfscommon.ko module is rarely unloaded, this leak would not
have been much of an issue.
Bryan Drewery [Wed, 2 Dec 2015 01:50:22 +0000 (01:50 +0000)]
bsd.subdir.mk: Only recurse on called targets, rather than dependencies.
This is to fix 'make all' causing it to recurse on both 'all' and 'buildconfig'
due to 'buildconfig' being in ALL_SUBDIR_TARGETS and being a dependency of
'all'.
This now adds all of the '*includes', '*files' targets as subdir targets,
allowing them to recurse.
This also removes the need for some 'realinstall' hacks in bsd.subdir.mk since
it no longer recurses; only 'install' will recurse and call the proper
'beforeinstall', 'realinstall', and 'afterinstall' in each sub-directory.
This fixes 'make includes' and 'make files' to not be a rerolled ${MAKE}
sub-shell but to rather just recurse on 'inclues' and 'files'. This avoids
various issues such as the one fixed in r289462. As such revert Makefile.inc1
back to using 'includes' which avoids an extra tree walk and parallelizes
the includes phases better.
Makefile.inc1 includes a guard so that 'make all' will not use SUBDIR_PARALLEL,
added in r289438. This is so users do not get a probably broken build if they
run 'make all' from the top-level. Before the change in this commit, the
workaround for 'make everything' was 'par-all' which would depend on 'all' and
cause a proper parallel recursion. Now that will not work so a new
_PARALLEL_SUBUDIR_OK is used to allow it.
This is still part of an effort to combine bsd.(files|incs|confs).mk and move
some of its logic out of bsd.subdir.mk, as attempted in r289282 and reverted in
r289331. This commit fixes the problems found there which was mostly double
recursing during 'includes' which would recurse on itself and 'buildincludes'
and 'installincludes', all in parallel. The logic is still in bsd.subdir.mk
for now.
I've been cautious about this commit but have experienced no breakage on the
tree except for the 'par-all' case which was already a hack. If something foo
is depending on something bar that should recurse, it is very likely that the
foo target is being recursed on already meaning that bar will still effectively
recurse once sub-directories call foo.
Discussed on: arch@
MFC after: never
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Bryan Drewery [Wed, 2 Dec 2015 01:47:27 +0000 (01:47 +0000)]
bsd.subdir.mk: Only recurse on called targets, rather than dependencies.
This is to fix 'make all' causing it to recurse on both 'all' and 'buildconfig'
due to 'buildconfig' being in ALL_SUBDIR_TARGETS and being a dependency of
'all'.
This now adds all of the '*includes', '*files' targets as subdir targets,
allowing them to recurse.
This also removes the need for some 'realinstall' hacks in bsd.subdir.mk since
it no longer recurses; only 'install' will recurse and call the proper
'beforeinstall', 'realinstall', and 'afterinstall' in each sub-directory.
This fixes 'make includes' and 'make files' to not be a rerolled ${MAKE}
sub-shell but to rather just recurse on 'inclues' and 'files'. This avoids
various issues such as the one fixed in r289462. As such revert Makefile.inc1
back to using 'includes' which avoids an extra tree walk and parallelizes
the includes phases better.
Makefile.inc1 includes a guard so that 'make all' will not use SUBDIR_PARALLEL,
added in r289438. This is so users do not get a probably broken build if they
run 'make all' from the top-level. Before the change in this commit, the
workaround for 'make everything' was 'par-all' which would depend on 'all' and
cause a proper parallel recursion. Now that will not work so a new
_PARALLEL_SUBUDIR_OK is used to allow it.
This is still part of an effort to combine bsd.(files|incs|confs).mk and move
some of its logic out of bsd.subdir.mk, as attempted in r289282 and reverted in
r289331. This commit fixes the problems found there which was mostly double
recursing during 'includes' which would recurse on itself and 'buildincludes'
and 'installincludes', all in parallel. The logic is still in bsd.subdir.mk
for now.
I've been cautious about this commit but have experienced no breakage on the
tree except for the 'par-all' case which was already a hack. If something foo
is depending on something bar that should recurse, it is very likely that the
foo target is being recursed on already meaning that bar will still effectively
recurse once sub-directories call foo.
Discussed on: arch@
MFC after: never
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Bryan Drewery [Wed, 2 Dec 2015 01:24:31 +0000 (01:24 +0000)]
Add assertions that capture invalid configurations for new libraries.
Fix current findings, which should fix cases of NO_SHARED not building
properly.
Given libfoo:
- Ensure that a LIBFOO is set. For INTERNALLIBS advise setting this in
src.libnames.mk, otherwise bsd.libnames.mk.
- Ensure that a LIBFOODIR is properly set.
- Ensure that _DP_foo is set and matches the LIBADD in the build of foo's own
Makefile
Bryan Drewery [Wed, 2 Dec 2015 00:49:42 +0000 (00:49 +0000)]
Don't overlink libmt consumers with libsbuf.
This change came in r281332 which was reducing overlinking in mt(1) but
currently mt(1) is linked with sbuf when it does not need it due to the
LDADD_mt+=${LDADD_sbuf}. Only libmt needs sbuf.
Add sbuf to _DP_mt so static linkage of libmt picks it up.
Bryan Drewery [Wed, 2 Dec 2015 00:01:09 +0000 (00:01 +0000)]
Add assertions that capture invalid configurations for new libraries.
Fix current findings.
Given libfoo:
- Ensure that a LIBFOO is set. For INTERNALLIBS advise setting this in
src.libnames.mk, otherwise bsd.libnames.mk.
- Ensure that a LIBFOODIR is properly set.
- Ensure that _DP_foo is set and matches the LIBADD in the build of foo's own
Makefile
Bryan Drewery [Tue, 1 Dec 2015 22:50:32 +0000 (22:50 +0000)]
Fix build after r291620.
"don't know how to make /Versions.def. Stop"
This was trying to define a target in bsd.symver.mk based on LIBCDIR which was
not yet defined. Switching the order of inclusion of bsd.prog.mk and
bsd.symver.mk fixes it and seems fine.
Pointyhat to: bdrewery
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Craig Rodrigues [Tue, 1 Dec 2015 21:25:18 +0000 (21:25 +0000)]
Enable libcrypt tests.
kyua 0.12 has fix for https://github.com/jmmv/kyua/pull/148
which eliminates invalid XML characters from being written to test reports
with "kyua report-junit".
John Baldwin [Tue, 1 Dec 2015 21:19:16 +0000 (21:19 +0000)]
Restore cleaning of auto-generated kobj files after the recent MFILES
changes. Use the list of MFILES found by find to identify the set of
possible auto-generated files and add the intersection of this set and
SRCS to CLEANFILES.
Bryan Drewery [Tue, 1 Dec 2015 20:56:16 +0000 (20:56 +0000)]
Only include src.conf if _WITHOUT_SRCCONF not defined.
This does not really fix anything currently since _WITHOUT_SRCCONF must be
defined in the environment or local.sys.*.mk, but is proper and needed for
downstream fixes. I am working towards reworking src.conf inclusion still.
Bryan Drewery [Tue, 1 Dec 2015 20:24:58 +0000 (20:24 +0000)]
Add NO_INSTALLKERNEL to undo the assumption that the first KERNCONF will be
installed as "kernel". This is relevant for packaging of the kernel when
not wanting a default "kernel.txz".
Bryan Drewery [Tue, 1 Dec 2015 19:00:43 +0000 (19:00 +0000)]
Fix errors being ignored in many phases of the build since the bmake integration.
Say it with me, "I will not chain commands with && in Makefiles"
This was originally fixed and explained quite well by bde@ in r36074. The
initial bmake integration caused 'set -e' to stop being used which lead to
r252419. Later 'set -e' expectations were fixed with bmake in r254980.
Because of the && here, errors would be ignored when building in parallel and
a dependency failed. Such as bootstrap-tools since it builds everything in
parallel. If any tool failed in obj/depend/all, it would just ignore the error
and continue to build. This later would result in cascaded errors that only
confused the real issue. This could also cause commands after the failed
command to still execute, leading to more confusion.
This should be fine if the command is in a sub-shell such as: (cmd1 && cmd2)