[OE-core] Add 3.7 version of linux-libc-headers

Marcin Juszkiewicz marcin.juszkiewicz at linaro.org
Tue Dec 18 13:41:48 UTC 2012


W dniu 18.12.2012 14:32, Bruce Ashfield pisze:
> On Tue, Dec 18, 2012 at 6:07 AM, Richard Purdie On Tue, 2012-12-11 at
>> 05:52 -0500, Bruce Ashfield wrote:
>>> On Tue, Dec 11, 2012 at 5:12 AM, Marcin Juszkiewicz

>>> I would like to know are there plans to use 3.7 kernel for libc
>>> headers. This will allow me to drop own copy which I need to keep
>>> due to AArch64 stuff which got added in 3.7 cycle.

>> As I understand things we agreed that we'd not bump for point
>> releases on the headers unless there was some pressing reason too.
>> The rest of the policy for kernel headers is a bit more fuzzy.
>> 
>> For actual major version increments like this, I'm tempted to accept 
>> that in this case we have a good argument for updating to 3.7 and
>> even though the linux-yocto kernels will lag behind this for a
>> (short) while, it shouldn't make any real world difference to
>> anything, certainly not cause breakage.

> Right, they'll lag, but then jump and increment it to 3.8+. The dev
> kernel is already on 3.7 and currently building and working fine
> against the 3.4.x libc-headers.

I need 3.7 for AArch64 as this is first version which has support for it.

>> There isn't any technical reason we have to keep in lockstep, or any 
>> known issues with doing that with these versions, right? I know you
>> have been burnt in the past but that was quite a while ago and the 
>> kernel/toolchain communities have moved to address that?

> I've definitely been burt in the past, I admit to being a little
> nervous about 3.7 sideffects due to the uapi split in the kernel ..
> and right around the Holidays, I'm a bit more paranoid about bringing
> this in. I'd rather be full time at my keyboard, just in case
> something subtle breaks.

Remember that even when l-l-h 3.7 will be present in repo 3.4 can be
still used as default one.

> If we bring this in, I'd prefer to completely drop the 3.4 kernel 
> headers, since having just one recipe in the tree make sense, and it
> won't tempt us to start having a trail of one libc-header per kernel
> version (since there's always a layer somewhere that's using a given
> version).

> What about a middle ground ? I can pull this into my tree, since I'm
> doing some 3.8 and 3.4-stable work at the moment, I'll remove the 3.4
> kernel headers and then submit it again as part of my queue with some
> extra tests run ?

I am fine with it.




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