On Thu, Feb 07, 2019 at 04:21:34PM +0100, Andrea Bolognani wrote: > On Tue, 2019-02-05 at 17:53 +0000, Daniel P. Berrangé wrote: > [...] > > With the Debian 9 distro, this supports arm64, armel, armhf, mips, > > mipsel, mips64el, ppc64el, s390x, which are all the official archs > > that Debian maintainers currently build libvirt for. With Debian Sid, > > this is extended to include i386. > > Is i386 really not supported as a cross compilation target on Debian > 9? It seems like it would be such a low hanging fruit... Yes, the i386 gcc simply doesn't exist in 9. No idea why > [...] > > +++ b/guests/host_vars/libvirt-debian-9/docker.yml > > @@ -1,2 +1,59 @@ > > --- > > docker_base: debian:9 > > +cross_build: > > I don't think this belongs in docker.yml, since there's nothing > specific to Docker here: we could just as well use this information > to build a virtual machine in which to perform cross builds. > > I would create a new fact file, eg. cross-build.yml, for this. Ok. In practice this split doesn't seem to actually do anything since we load all files & take the union of their contents. > > + blacklist: > > + # Doesn't properly resolve from foreign arch package > > + # to the native package of augeas-lenses > > I cannot really understand what you're trying to say with this > comment, can you try to reword it please? dpkg fails to resolve the deps. It wants augeas-lenses:s390x when it should be satisfied with augeas-lenses:$NATIVE. You can't install both augeas-lenses as they conflict on files. > > + - libnetcf-dev > > + # Fails to resolve deps from foreign arch > > + - wireshark-dev > > + # dtrace tool doesn't know how to cross-compile > > + - systemtap-sdt-dev > > For these and all other blacklisted packages, you should list the > name of the mapping (eg. netcf) rather than the concrete Debian > package name (eg. libnetcf-dev). Then of course you'll have to act > on the blacklist earlier, before mapping is performed. I don't find that desirable. This is a debian specific config file, and it is clearer to list the actual debian packages we have trouble with, as that's what apt-get is complaining about when it fails. Using the generic mapping obscures what is going on. > > + arches: > > + arm64: > > + gcc-pkg-prefix: crossbuild-essential-arm64 > > This is not a prefix, and the package is not GCC :) > > I would use 'cross_gcc', which incidentally is also the name of the > variable you use in the Python script to store this value. (More on > this later, though.) Actually this entire variable can be eliminated, as we can derive it from the target name. > > > + target-prefix: aarch64-linux-gnu > > Same here, you later use 'cross_prefix' in the script but also store > it as 'TARGET' in the environment... I'd suggest 'cross_target'. Using "cross_" is redundant as this already inside a parent "cross-build" block. > [...] > > + mipsel: > > + gcc-pkg-prefix: gcc-mipsel-linux-gnu > > crossbuild-essential-mipsel is available in Debian 9, so you should > use that instead. Actually, I've eliminated all usage of the crossbuild-essential-* packages. These needlessly pull in the C++ compiler too. > > docker_base: debian:sid > > +cross_build: > > + blacklist: > > + # Doesn't properly resolve from foreign arch package > > + # to the native package of augeas-lenses > > + - libnetcf-dev > > + # Fails to resolve deps from foreign arch > > + - wireshark-dev > > + # dtrace tool doesn't know how to cross-compile > > + - systemtap-sdt-dev > > + # appears to be dropped from the 'sid' tree > > + - sheepdog > > So it has! And it's apparently not going to be in the next Ubuntu > release, either. What's missing that we've not seen this problem already ? Is it just because we don't regularlyl rebuild the CI hosts / images ? > > + if cross_arch and pkgname[-4:] == "-dev": > > + if pkgname not in cross_pkgs: > > + cross_pkgs.append(pkgname + ":" + cross_arch) > > I can see how sticking with the Debian-style architecture names > makes this bit trivial, but I'm still entirely convinced we should > use the same architecture names as libvirt does. > Especially once we'll have integrated this into libvirt's own build > system, the difference in names would introduce needless friction, > as the target audience (libvirt developers) is certainly more > familiar with the architecture names used in that project than > Debian's. Using the libvirt arch names adds no value. There's no friction as there is no context in which we're using the libvirt arch names & need a mapping to the cross build names. These image configs are distro specific and using the distro's native arch is directly relevant to the build results. > > + ENV TARGET "%(cross_prefix)s" > > + ENV CONFIGURE_OPTS "--host=%(cross_prefix)s --target=%(cross_prefix)s" > > + ENV PKG_CONFIG_LIBDIR "/usr/lib/%(cross_prefix)s/pkgconfig" > > As you mention in a previous commit message, each ENV statement > will create and additional layer, and it's considered best practice > to have as few of those as possible. The difference is the usage context. The ENV statement is intended to provide environment variables to runtime users of the image. The previous ENV usage was merely used internally to the docker build and was polluting the runtime env where it was not required. These ENV statements are intended for direct usage in the docker images at runtime, so you can launch the image with docker and simply type "$TARGET-gcc" or "./configure $CONFIGURE_OPTS" and have it do the right thing. > Another reason why I don't like this is that it's different from > what we already do for the "cross compilation" target we already > support, MinGW: in that case, we have a single image with pristine > environment, and we inject the additional variables only when > actually running the build. In my opinion, that's a saner way to > tweak the build, since the interaction is very explicit and doesn't > require any knowledge of other components that might even be > hosted, as is the case here, in a separate git repository! The mingw images are slightly different in that the Fedora mingw RPMs have invented a "mingw32-configure" program that sets all these env variables already. If that program didn't exist, then it would be desirable to have the same env vars set for the mingw images too. > Additionally, and I only thought about this now :) did we consider > the possibility of providing a single Debian image with all cross > compilation packages installed, rather than one image per target > architecture? Assuming that's feasible, it would also fit very > nicely with how we have a single Fedora image that we use for both > MinGW variants... Creating a single image would mean a significantly larger download image size when you only care about testing a single architecture. Because of the way image layer sharing works, having lots of separate images ensures you can have a minimal download size for a single image, while not giving duplication if you need to download all images. We ought to have a separate Fedora image for each MinGW target for this same reason in fact. Regards, Daniel -- |: https://berrange.com -o- https://www.flickr.com/photos/dberrange :| |: https://libvirt.org -o- https://fstop138.berrange.com :| |: https://entangle-photo.org -o- https://www.instagram.com/dberrange :|