meson's target has a few issues:
- Runs on all source files regardless if they're included in the
build or not
- Doesn't have any dependencies on generated sources which means we
have to do a full build first before we can run clang-tidy
- Doesn't allow us to pass any extra arguments
To work around these, let's define our own clang-tidy target instead
using llvm's run-clang-tidy script. Alongside the clang-tidy target,
let's start keeping track of all generated sources which we make the
clang-tidy target depend on. We also add a new target which will only
generate source files which is useful for setting up the source tree
for running code analysis against it.
Running within the build sandbox has a number of disadvantages:
- We have a separate clangd cache for each distribution/release combo
- It requires to build the full image before clangd can be used
- It breaks every time the image becomes out of date and requires a
rebuild
- We can't look at system headers as we don't have the knowledge to map
them from inside the build sandbox to the corresponding path on the host
Instead, let's have mkosi.clangd run clangd within the tools tree. We
already require building systemd for both the host and the target anyway,
and all the dependencies to build systemd are installed in the tools tree
already for that, as well as clangd since it's installed together with the
other clang tooling we install in the tools tree. Unlike the previous approach,
this approach only requires the mkosi tools tree to be built upfront, which has
a much higher chance of not invalidating its cache. We can also trivially map
system header lookups from within the sandbox to the path within mkosi.tools
on the host so that starts working as well.
Now that mkosi can automatically pick up its main configuration from
a mkosi/ subdirectory if it exists and there is no configuration in the
top level directory, let's make use of it to reduce the amount of clutter
in the top level directory of the repository.
This will also make it easier to install the mkosi configuration files as
part of the testing packages later on.
Instead of listing dependencies manually for the default tools tree,
let's reuse the prepare scripts from the build image. To make this work,
the sync script has to be configured for the tools tree as well so that
it's invoked both when building the tools tree and for the regular image,
otherwise, when doing the first build in a fresh checkout, the sync script
won't have executed yet as sync scripts for the regular images are executed
after building the default tools tree.
mkosi now supports -R to rerun build scripts without rebuilding the
image so let's document that instead of the current hack to prevent
the rebuild by changing the output format.
In https://github.com/systemd/mkosi/pull/3497, mkosi has started parsing
options passed after the verb as regular mkosi options instead of options
for the invoked command. We adapt to this change by adding '--' as a delimiter
everywhere where required.
HACKING.md should first and foremost tell someone how to hack on
systemd, installing packages from OBS isn't the most likely section
a new contributor will be interested in, so let's move it further
down.
With the latest mkosi, mkosi takes care of making sure it is
available within mkosi sandbox so we get rid of all the --preserve-env=
options when we invoke mkosi sandbox with sudo as these are not
required anymore. It also doesn't matter anymore if mkosi is installed
in /usr on the host so we get rid of the documentation around that as
well.
This takes up a lot of storage space and we're almost hitting the
limit so since nobody's actually using these and we just started
doing nightly builds in OBS, let's drop this and point people towards
OBS for nightly packages in the future.
"ninja -C build mkosi" doesn't actually work and fails because ninja
thinks the mkosi target does not exist. "meson compile -C build mkosi"
dpes work so let's use that instead.
Fixes#35741
Let's use "mkosi sandbox" in the docs so that users can build systemd
without having to install anything except mkosi. Using mkosi sandbox
will use tools and dependencies from the tools tree which is also used
in CI and thus has a higher chance of working from the first try compared
to whatever tools might be installed on the host system of a new contributor.
When building distribution packages without building an image, the
distribution packages will only be located in mkosi.builddir/ now and
not in mkosi.output/, so update the documentation to reflect that.
Also add installation instructions for distributions other than CentOS/Fedora
while we're at it.
Currently we need ukify with support for --profile and --join-profile
which isn't in an official release yet so mention that a local build
from source might be required.
- Add the required options to make the package managers non interactive
- Use apt-get instead of apt
- Remove --reinstall from apt-get command so we only install newer packages
- Add --needed to pacman command so we only install newer packages
Let's document in detail how to build the integration test image and run
the integration tests without building systemd. To streamline the process,
we stop automatically using binaries from build/ when invoking mkosi directly
and don't automatically use a tools tree anymore if systemd on the host is too
old. Instead, we document these options in HACKING.md and change the mkosi meson
target to automatically use the current build directory as an extra binary search
path for mkosi.
In https://github.com/systemd/mkosi/pull/2847, the '@' specifier is
removed, CLI arguments take priority over configuration files again
and the "main" image is defined at the top level instead of in
mkosi.images/. Additionally, not every setting from the top level
configuration is inherited by the images in mkosi.images/ anymore,
only settings which make sense to be inherited are inherited.
This commit gets rid of all the usages of '@', moves the "main" image
configuration from mkosi.images/system to the top level and gets rid
of various hacks we had in place to deal with quirks of the old
configuration parsing logic.
We also remove usages of Images= and --append as these options are
removed by the mentioned PR.
Otherwise fixfiles will try to relabel it which could potentially
lead to disaster. We also change the recommendation in HACKING.md
to set the default so that TEST-06-SELINUX can override it.
Let's mention the new way to install the latest changes without
rebuilding the image. Let's also remove the duplicate info about
distribution packages that is already mentioned in its own section.
Unfortunately, git submodules break in all sorts of ways:
- Various github workflows (dependabot, github pages) try to do a shallow
clone of git submodules which does not work at all when the git repository
is hosted on pagure (https://pagure.io/pagure/issue/5453,
https://github.com/dependabot/dependabot-core/issues/9391).
- If the git forge hosting the git repository uses SHA256, then it breaks our
usage of it as a submodule as SHA256 repositories cannot be used as submodules
in SHA1 repositories (src.opensuse.org moved to SHA256 which broke our usage of
opensuse's systemd spec as a submodule).
- git submodules completely break usage of git worktrees.
- ...
Let's avoid all these issues by just doing our own home grown implementation of
git submodules. We lose the automatic dependabot updates this way but since dependabot
fails to run more often that not with submodules we don't really lose anything.
Since 56b2970 has proven to be a no-go for us, as it breaks existing
links, let's embrace the trailing slash and use absolute links
everywhere for our pages. This way we'll get around browser cleverly
appending the relative link to the current location (since it ends with
a slash), and given our docs/ layout is flat it's not much of a hassle
either.
Converted using this beauty:
$ sed -ri 's/(\[.+\]\()([A-Z_]+\))/\1\/\2/g' *.md
Resolves: #32088 (again) and #32310
- We have ssh-generator now, so need for mkosi's Ssh= option anymore.
- By enabling RuntimeBuildSources= by default, we don't need the gdb
config file in the image anymore, since the build and source
directories will be mounted at the expected locations.
git rebase does not support a --recurse-submodules switch to automatically
check out the submodules at their registered commits during or after a rebase.
Instead, let's use the post-rewrite git hook to do this ourselves.