2020-11-21 17:48 UTC+0800 ~ David Gow <davidgow@xxxxxxxxxx> > On Sat, Nov 21, 2020 at 3:38 PM Andrii Nakryiko > <andrii.nakryiko@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> On Thu, Nov 19, 2020 at 12:51 AM David Gow <davidgow@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> >>> If BPF_PRELOAD is enabled, and an out-of-tree build is requested with >>> make O=<path>, compilation seems to fail with: >>> >>> tools/scripts/Makefile.include:4: *** O=.kunit does not exist. Stop. >>> make[4]: *** [../kernel/bpf/preload/Makefile:8: kernel/bpf/preload/libbpf.a] Error 2 >>> make[3]: *** [../scripts/Makefile.build:500: kernel/bpf/preload] Error 2 >>> make[2]: *** [../scripts/Makefile.build:500: kernel/bpf] Error 2 >>> make[2]: *** Waiting for unfinished jobs.... >>> make[1]: *** [.../Makefile:1799: kernel] Error 2 >>> make[1]: *** Waiting for unfinished jobs.... >>> make: *** [Makefile:185: __sub-make] Error 2 >>> >>> By the looks of things, this is because the (relative path) O= passed on >>> the command line is being passed to the libbpf Makefile, which then >>> can't find the directory. Given OUTPUT= is being passed anyway, we can >>> work around this by explicitly setting an empty O=, which will be >>> ignored in favour of OUTPUT= in tools/scripts/Makefile.include. >> >> Strange, but I can't repro it. I use make O=<absolute path> all the >> time with no issues. I just tried specifically with a make O=.build, >> where .build is inside Linux repo, and it still worked fine. See also >> be40920fbf10 ("tools: Let O= makes handle a relative path with -C >> option") which was supposed to address such an issue. So I'm wondering >> what exactly is causing this problem. >> > [+ linux-um list] > > Hmm... From a quick check, I can't reproduce this on x86, so it's > possibly a UML-specific issue. > > The problem here seems to be that $PWD is, for whatever reason, equal > to the srcdir on x86, but not on UML. In general, $PWD behaves pretty > weirdly -- I don't fully understand it -- but if I add a tactical "PWD > := $(shell pwd)" or use $(CURDIR) instead, the issue shows up on x86 > as well. I guess this is because PWD only gets updated when set by a > shell or something, and UML does this somewhere? > > Thoughts? > > Cheers, > -- David Hi David, Andrii, David, did you use a different command for building for UML and x86? I'm asking because I reproduce on x86, but only for some targets, in particular when I tried bindeb-pkg. With "make O=.build vmlinux", I have: - $(O) for "dummy" check in tools/scripts/Makefile.include set to /linux/.build - $(PWD) for same check set to /linux/tools - Since $(O) is an absolute path, the "dummy" check passes With "make O=.build bindeb-pkg", I have instead: - $(O) set to .build (relative path) - $(PWD) set to /linux/.build - "dummy" check changes to /linux/.build and searches for .build in it, which fails and aborts the build (tools/scripts/Makefile.include is included from libbpf's Makefile, called from kernel/bpf/preload/Makefile.) I'm not sure how exactly the bindeb-pkg target ends up passing these values. For what it's worth, I have been solving this (before finding this thread) with a fix close to yours, I pass "O=$(abspath .)" on the command line for building libbpf in kernel/bpf/preload/Makefile. It looked consistent to me with the "tools/:" target from the main Makefile, where "O=$(abspath $(objtree))" is passed (and $(objtree) is "."). I hope this helps, Quentin