* [gentoo-dev] interactive packages? @ 2001-02-05 7:01 Pete Gavin 2001-02-05 7:30 ` Achim Gottinger 0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread From: Pete Gavin @ 2001-02-05 7:01 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-dev Hi, I was wondering... Is it required that an ebuild script be completely non-interactive? I have a few ideas for the kernel configuration scripts. I think it might be cool for the for the ebuild to ask the installer if he/she wants to load a .config file from somewhere else, then run make menuconfig. That way all the modules and stuff can be removed with portage-unmerge. What do you guys think? Pete ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-dev] interactive packages? 2001-02-05 7:01 [gentoo-dev] interactive packages? Pete Gavin @ 2001-02-05 7:30 ` Achim Gottinger 2001-02-05 11:20 ` pbg1854 0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread From: Achim Gottinger @ 2001-02-05 7:30 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-dev Pete Gavin wrote: > Hi, > > I was wondering... Is it required that an ebuild script be completely > non-interactive? Yes, otherwise there would be no autobuild. > I have a few ideas for the kernel configuration > scripts. I think it might be cool for the for the ebuild to ask the > installer if he/she wants to load a .config file from somewhere else, then > run make menuconfig. That way all the modules and stuff can be removed > with portage-unmerge. You can do this. After running "ebuild linux.... unpack" cd to /tmp/portage/linux.../work/linux run "make menuconfig/xconfig" Then continue with ebuild linux... compile Another possibility would be using the "config" function in ebuild. This was normaly intedet to be used for an opional additional configuration-layer. And should normaly modify the package configuration files from templates/databses whatever. Normaly this functions hsould be called after pkg_merge. But since we have no configuration layer right now and config is only used by a few packages (for example qmail runs config-fast from within the config function) we could use the config function for such an interactive thing. Another solution could be using a USE variable to decide if the manual configuration you described should be run or a variable that just triggers if a private config file should be used instead of the default one. Or we could make a sepearate kernel package that does these manual steps. But what do you think about that. The kernel ebuild looks if a file (for example /etc/kernel/[version].config) exists. If so it uses this instead of the default one. If you want to configure the kernel for the first time you can do it as I described above. The copy the .config file to /etc/kernel/[version].config and the next time you compile the kernel your private config file gets used. achim~ > > Pete > > _______________________________________________ > gentoo-dev mailing list > gentoo-dev@gentoo.org > http://www.gentoo.org/mailman/listinfo/gentoo-dev ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-dev] interactive packages? 2001-02-05 7:30 ` Achim Gottinger @ 2001-02-05 11:20 ` pbg1854 2001-02-05 15:09 ` Achim Gottinger 0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread From: pbg1854 @ 2001-02-05 11:20 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-dev Ok... How about we make an option to ebuild that makes the build process interactive. We could make that option set a variable in the ebuild script, which we would then check during the individual steps in the process.. for example, if [ "${INTERACTIVE}" ]; then make menuconfig else cp "${FILESDIR}/config-${KV}" ${WORKDIR}/linux/.config yes "" | make oldconfig fi Then you could run ebuild -i merge or something like that. A few notes: I like using make oldconfig, because it automatically takes care of autoconf.h, and version.h for you, and makes sure everything is configured right. I'd use yes "" | make oldconfig in the non-interactive version, that way if there are any variables missing in the .config file, they will get the default value. I also thought it would be a good idea if the kernels were installed with a suffix determining the version of the kernel, i.e. bzImage-2.4.0 rather than just bzImage; that way multiple kernels can be installed at the same time. I like to do this, especially when installing a new kernel, in case the new one won't boot or has some kind of bug in it, I can go back to the old one. Then you could merge the new kernel, reboot, and unmerge the old one after you're satisfied the new one works. If you want, I'll try to modify the ebuild script to add interactive building support, and work on a sample kernel ebuild. Adding interactive support shouldn't require any modifications in the packages, I'm pretty sure. Oh... and one more thing... I'm having problems w/ the make check stage while building glibc-2.2.1. I'm trying to figure out why right now. It just says "Timed out" or something like that. I'll give you more info after I run make check again. Pete On Mon, Feb 05, 2001 at 03:03:38PM +0100, Achim Gottinger wrote: > Pete Gavin wrote: > > > Hi, > > > > I was wondering... Is it required that an ebuild script be completely > > non-interactive? > > Yes, otherwise there would be no autobuild. > > > I have a few ideas for the kernel configuration > > scripts. I think it might be cool for the for the ebuild to ask the > > installer if he/she wants to load a .config file from somewhere else, then > > run make menuconfig. That way all the modules and stuff can be removed > > with portage-unmerge. > > You can do this. > After running "ebuild linux.... unpack" cd to > /tmp/portage/linux.../work/linux > run "make menuconfig/xconfig" > Then continue with ebuild linux... compile > > Another possibility would be using the "config" function in ebuild. This was > normaly intedet to be used > for an opional additional configuration-layer. And should normaly modify the > package configuration > files from templates/databses whatever. Normaly this functions hsould be > called after pkg_merge. > But since we have no configuration layer right now and config is only used by > a few packages (for example > qmail runs config-fast from within the config function) we could use the > config function for such an > interactive thing. > Another solution could be using a USE variable to decide if the manual > configuration you described should be > run or a variable that just triggers if a private config file should be used > instead of the default one. Or we could make a sepearate kernel package that > does these manual steps. > > But what do you think about that. The kernel ebuild looks if a file (for > example /etc/kernel/[version].config) exists. If so it uses this instead of > the default one. > If you want to configure the kernel for the first time you can do it as I > described above. The copy the .config file to /etc/kernel/[version].config > and the next time you compile the kernel your private config file gets used. > > achim~ > > > > > Pete > > > > _______________________________________________ > > gentoo-dev mailing list > > gentoo-dev@gentoo.org > > http://www.gentoo.org/mailman/listinfo/gentoo-dev > > > _______________________________________________ > gentoo-dev mailing list > gentoo-dev@gentoo.org > http://www.gentoo.org/mailman/listinfo/gentoo-dev ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-dev] interactive packages? 2001-02-05 11:20 ` pbg1854 @ 2001-02-05 15:09 ` Achim Gottinger 0 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread From: Achim Gottinger @ 2001-02-05 15:09 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-dev pbg1854@garnet.acns.fsu.edu wrote: > Ok... > > How about we make an option to ebuild that makes the build process > interactive. We could make that option set a variable in the ebuild > script, which we would then check during the individual steps in the > process.. for example, > > if [ "${INTERACTIVE}" ]; then > make menuconfig > else > cp "${FILESDIR}/config-${KV}" ${WORKDIR}/linux/.config > yes "" | make oldconfig > fi Thats what I ment by the USE variable method. > > Then you could run ebuild -i merge or something like that. > We do not use flags for ebuild at the moment. Maybe in future > > A few notes: > I like using make oldconfig, because it automatically takes care of > autoconf.h, and version.h for you, and makes sure everything is > configured right. I'd use yes "" | make oldconfig in the > non-interactive version, that way if there are any variables missing > in the .config file, they will get the default value. That sounds good. I think I saw that option last week in some magazine. > > > I also thought it would be a good idea if the kernels were installed > with a suffix determining the version of the kernel, > i.e. bzImage-2.4.0 rather than just bzImage; that way multiple kernels > can be installed at the same time. I like to do this, especially when > installing a new kernel, in case the new one won't boot or has some > kind of bug in it, I can go back to the old one. Then you could merge > the new kernel, reboot, and unmerge the old one after you're satisfied > the new one works. But what if you configure manual and have different kernels of the same version? > > > If you want, I'll try to modify the ebuild script to add interactive > building support, and work on a sample kernel ebuild. Adding > interactive support shouldn't require any modifications in the > packages, I'm pretty sure. > > Oh... and one more thing... I'm having problems w/ the make check > stage while building glibc-2.2.1. I'm trying to figure out why right > now. It just says "Timed out" or something like that. I'll give you > more info after I run make check again. Hmm, sounds like LFS <-> low latency problem. I saw that over here once but at that time I had a lot of parallel build processes running. > > achim~ > > Pete > > On Mon, Feb 05, 2001 at 03:03:38PM +0100, Achim Gottinger wrote: > > Pete Gavin wrote: > > > > > Hi, > > > > > > I was wondering... Is it required that an ebuild script be completely > > > non-interactive? > > > > Yes, otherwise there would be no autobuild. > > > > > I have a few ideas for the kernel configuration > > > scripts. I think it might be cool for the for the ebuild to ask the > > > installer if he/she wants to load a .config file from somewhere else, then > > > run make menuconfig. That way all the modules and stuff can be removed > > > with portage-unmerge. > > > > You can do this. > > After running "ebuild linux.... unpack" cd to > > /tmp/portage/linux.../work/linux > > run "make menuconfig/xconfig" > > Then continue with ebuild linux... compile > > > > Another possibility would be using the "config" function in ebuild. This was > > normaly intedet to be used > > for an opional additional configuration-layer. And should normaly modify the > > package configuration > > files from templates/databses whatever. Normaly this functions hsould be > > called after pkg_merge. > > But since we have no configuration layer right now and config is only used by > > a few packages (for example > > qmail runs config-fast from within the config function) we could use the > > config function for such an > > interactive thing. > > Another solution could be using a USE variable to decide if the manual > > configuration you described should be > > run or a variable that just triggers if a private config file should be used > > instead of the default one. Or we could make a sepearate kernel package that > > does these manual steps. > > > > But what do you think about that. The kernel ebuild looks if a file (for > > example /etc/kernel/[version].config) exists. If so it uses this instead of > > the default one. > > If you want to configure the kernel for the first time you can do it as I > > described above. The copy the .config file to /etc/kernel/[version].config > > and the next time you compile the kernel your private config file gets used. > > > > achim~ > > > > > > > > Pete > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > > > gentoo-dev mailing list > > > gentoo-dev@gentoo.org > > > http://www.gentoo.org/mailman/listinfo/gentoo-dev > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > > gentoo-dev mailing list > > gentoo-dev@gentoo.org > > http://www.gentoo.org/mailman/listinfo/gentoo-dev > > _______________________________________________ > gentoo-dev mailing list > gentoo-dev@gentoo.org > http://www.gentoo.org/mailman/listinfo/gentoo-dev ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2001-02-05 22:08 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 4+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2001-02-05 7:01 [gentoo-dev] interactive packages? Pete Gavin 2001-02-05 7:30 ` Achim Gottinger 2001-02-05 11:20 ` pbg1854 2001-02-05 15:09 ` Achim Gottinger
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