On 2023-07-18 21:43:23+0800, Zhangjin Wu wrote: > Hi, Willy, Thomas > > I have prepared the powerpc + powerpc64 support together with the > tinyconfig for them, still have some questions for more discussion. > > > On Wed, Jul 12, 2023 at 01:18:26AM +0800, Zhangjin Wu wrote: > [...] > > > > Reading the beginning of the sentence made me immediately think that it's > > what doc is for. You know, if you give a fish to a hungry man he eats one > > day, if you teach him to fish he eats every day. Knowing what to download > > from where is much more instructive than running "make download" or even > > worse, "make" and having the downloads secretly succeed (or fail). If you > > think the doc is hard to find I'm also fine with a patch for makefile > > and/or nolibc-test passing a pointer to its location as a reminding > > comment for example. > > > > The whole tinyconfig support for every architecture is 'huge', I plan to > send them one by one, if required, will document them with the required > bios and/or toolchain. Which part is huge? This is surprising. > The first architectures plan to support are powerpc + powerpc64, powerpc does > require extra kernel config options even with defconfig, so, it is a very good > first example, and the extconfig target will be added together. Are you planning to do powerpc and tinyconfig support in one series? Splitting it would be better in my opinion. > The left question from me is that if is it ok to just use tinyconfig instead of > defconfig after we enable tinyconfig for a new architecture, I mean just add a > new DEFCONFIG_<ARCH>=tinyconfig line for the new architecture, don't use the > 'defconfig' any more, let's take a look at the powerpc/powerpc64 lines below: > > # default kernel configurations that appear to be usable > DEFCONFIG_i386 = defconfig > DEFCONFIG_x86_64 = defconfig > DEFCONFIG_x86 = defconfig > DEFCONFIG_arm64 = defconfig > DEFCONFIG_arm = multi_v7_defconfig > DEFCONFIG_mips = malta_defconfig > DEFCONFIG_powerpc = tinyconfig > DEFCONFIG_powerpc64 = tinyconfig > DEFCONFIG_riscv = defconfig > DEFCONFIG_s390 = defconfig > DEFCONFIG_loongarch = defconfig > DEFCONFIG = $(DEFCONFIG_$(XARCH)) > > Of course, we need to customize the EXTCONFIG for them (about ~5 options for > all of the architectures): > > # extra kernel configs by architecture > EXTCONFIG_powerpc = $(addprefix -e ,COMPAT_32BIT_TIME PPC_PMAC PPC_OF_BOOT_TRAMPOLINE SERIAL_PMACZILOG SERIAL_PMACZILOG_TTYS SERIAL_PMACZILOG_CONSOLE) > EXTCONFIG_powerpc64 = $(addprefix -e ,PPC64 CPU_LITTLE_ENDIAN PPC_POWERNV HVC_OPAL) > EXTCONFIG_XARCH = $(EXTCONFIG_$(XARCH)) These could also be put into dedicated config files. Then they don't clutter the makefile and it's easier to maintain. nolibc.config: Generic configs on top of tinyconfig nolibc.arm64.config: Arch-specific configs for arm64 Also the extra parameter could also be passed via command line arguments to make. This way we don't have to modify the configuration options at all. The user can provide a config (or we use a tinyconfig) and everything required by nolibc-test is enabled on top when building. make CONFIG_COMPAT_32BIT_TIME=y ... tools/testing/selftests/wireguard/qemu/ seems to be doing something similar as nolibc-test. > The extra common options (based on default kernel tinyconfig) are also required > to make nolibc-test.c passes without failures (~2 skips are procfs related, so, > procfs is not added) are minimal: > > # extra kernel configs shared among architectures > EXTCONFIG_COMMON = -e BLK_DEV_INITRD --set-str INITRAMFS_SOURCE $(CURDIR)/initramfs > EXTCONFIG_COMMON += -e BINFMT_ELF > EXTCONFIG_COMMON += -e PRINTK -e TTY > > Compare to defconfig, tinyconfig not only allows test all of the nolibc > functions, but also is faster (around ~1-2 minutes, defconfig may cost ~30 > minutes and even more) and brings us with smaller image size. > > To only test nolibc itself, I do think tinyconfig with the above > extconfig support is enough, even if we need more, we can update the > EXTCONFIG_COMMON and EXTCONFIG_<ARCH> in the future. IMO tinyconfig is enough, defconfig doesn't seem to be necessary then. > I have prepared tinyconfig for all of the supported architectures > locally, If you agree with only reserve the DEFCONFIG_<ARCH>=tinyconfig > line, I will send a series of patchset to add tinyconfig for every > architecture with it, at last, it will become: > > # default kernel configurations that appear to be usable > DEFCONFIG_i386 = tinyconfig > DEFCONFIG_x86_64 = tinyconfig > DEFCONFIG_x86 = tinyconfig > DEFCONFIG_arm64 = tinyconfig > DEFCONFIG_arm = tinyconfig > DEFCONFIG_mips = tinyconfig > DEFCONFIG_powerpc = tinyconfig > DEFCONFIG_powerpc64 = tinyconfig > DEFCONFIG_riscv = tinyconfig > DEFCONFIG_s390 = tinyconfig > DEFCONFIG_loongarch = tinyconfig > DEFCONFIG = $(DEFCONFIG_$(XARCH)) > > So, perhaps it is better to simply use tinyconfig as the default DEFCONFIG, and > therefore there is no need to add powerpc and powerpc64 specific lines: > > # default kernel configurations that appear to be usable > DEFCONFIG_i386 = defconfig > DEFCONFIG_x86_64 = defconfig > DEFCONFIG_x86 = defconfig > DEFCONFIG_arm64 = defconfig > DEFCONFIG_arm = multi_v7_defconfig > DEFCONFIG_mips = malta_defconfig > DEFCONFIG_riscv = defconfig > DEFCONFIG_s390 = defconfig > DEFCONFIG_loongarch = defconfig > DEFCONFIG = $(or $(DEFCONFIG_$(XARCH)),tinyconfig) > > To support tinyconfig for a new architecture, we can simply remove the > 'DEFCONFIG_<ARCH> = defconfig' line and get the core options from > defconfig to customize the EXTCONFIG_ARCH, with tinyconfig, it is very > fast and easy to verify the run target for a new architecture. > > At last, we will have many EXTCONFIG_<ARCH> lines and only a DEFCONFIG line: > > # default kernel configurations that appear to be usable > DEFCONFIG = $(or $(DEFCONFIG_$(XARCH)),tinyconfig) > > Or at last, we remove the above line and the defconfig target and only reserve > a tinyconfig target: > > tinyconfig: > $(Q)$(MAKE_KERNEL) tinyconfig prepare > > Welcome your suggestion. Looks fine to me either way. > > > > And I think that helping the user > > > > prepare certain steps or iterate over architectures *is* useful. When > > > > you do it in two layers (the script replacing the user, the makefile > > > > doing the build job), it remains easy and convenient to use, and you > > > > can pick only what you need (e.g. "please build musl for me"). And if > > > > something goes wrong, it's simple for the user to takeover and complete > > > > that failed task by changing an arch name, a directory or anything, and > > > > have their tools ready. Let's just never make that automatic for the > > > > sake of everyone's health! > > > > > > Ok, the revision will align with the original Makefile and remove the automatic > > > parts and no change about the OUTPUT. > > > > Just check that you can force it from your script on the make command > > line. If you see that it's not possible, we should do something because > > I don't want to force you to make distclean all the time if not needed. > > But if you find that passing certain options (O=, OUTPUT= or anything > > else) does the job, it only needs to be documented. > > Yeah, I have used objtree intead of srctree to fix up the O= argument > support, it fills my requirement to build kernel for every architecture > in their own output directory. > > Best regards, > Zhangjin > > > > > Thanks, > > Willy