On 07/04/2014 02:37 PM, Michal Marek wrote: > Dne 18.6.2014 23:13, Randy Dunlap napsal(a): >> On 06/18/14 12:52, Sam Ravnborg wrote: >>> On Wed, Jun 18, 2014 at 09:47:28PM +0200, Michal Marek wrote: >>>> Dne 18.6.2014 17:58, Randy Dunlap napsal(a): >>>>> On 06/18/14 06:14, J. Bruce Fields wrote: >>>>>> On Wed, Jun 18, 2014 at 02:33:22PM +0200, Michal Marek wrote: >>>>>>> Dne 18.6.2014 14:20, J. Bruce Fields napsal(a): >>>>>>>> On Wed, Jun 18, 2014 at 11:06:12AM +0200, Michal Marek wrote: >>>>>>>>> Dne 18.6.2014 00:38, J. Bruce Fields napsal(a): >>>>>>>>>> The changelog there says >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> The main Makefile sets its working directory to the object tree >>>>>>>>>> and never changes it again. Therefore, we can use '.' instead of >>>>>>>>>> the absolute path. >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> But the main Makefile also exports objtree, and a quick grep suggests >>>>>>>>>> lots of other uses outside the main Makefile. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Do you have examples? Besides your report, I'm only aware of make >>>>>>>>> deb-pkg and make *docs. What else? >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> I haven't looked. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> I only note that grep finds 47 files referencing that variable, and >>>>>>>> absent some argument that the remaining ones are correct, I'd be >>>>>>>> inclined to revert. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Do these 47 files change the working directory before referencing the >>>>>>> variable? >>>>>> >>>>>> Sorry, I'm not volunteering to check. >>>>>> >>>>>> Note also that other variables are defined in terms of objtree, and they >>>>>> may be exported or passed to other scripts. >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> I'll note one side effect that I really dislike: >>>>> If not in silent mode, scripts/mkmakefile tells me that the it is >>>>> generating ./Makefile. I want to see the real path there instead of '.'. >>>> >>>> The idea is that one should be able to compare as much as possible >>>> between the build of /usr/src/linux-<version_a> built in >>>> /usr/src/linux-<version_a>/build and /usr/src/linux-<version_b> built in >>>> /usr/src/linux-<version_b>/build. One can now even compare the build log >>>> with -j1, although that was not the primary goal. So if the changed >>>> message is considered problematic, I can change it to show the full path >>>> again, like >>>> >>>> diff --git a/scripts/mkmakefile b/scripts/mkmakefile >>>> index 84af27b..9d291f5 100644 >>>> --- a/scripts/mkmakefile >>>> +++ b/scripts/mkmakefile >>>> @@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ then >>>> exit 0 >>>> fi >>>> if [ "${quiet}" != "silent_" ]; then >>>> - echo " GEN $2/Makefile" >>>> + echo " GEN $(cd $2 && /bin/pwd)/Makefile" >>>> fi >>>> >>>> cat << EOF > $2/Makefile >>>> >>>> Opinions? >>> I agree with Randy - the full path is more informative. >>> >>> Sam >> >> Yes, just '.' discards some very useful information. > > With commit c2e28dc9 ("kbuild: Print the name of the build directory"), > it now prints the full path at the beginning of each make invocation. So > I think it is not necessary to repeat the full path a few lines later, > do you agree? Sounds possible, but I'll test it early next week. BTW, you are offline. :) -- ~Randy -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kbuild" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html