[OE-core] [PATCH] package_rpm.bbclass: fix /etc/rpm/platform generation

Richard Purdie richard.purdie at linuxfoundation.org
Fri Apr 19 12:18:25 UTC 2013


On Thu, 2013-04-18 at 12:32 -0500, Mark Hatle wrote:
> On 4/18/13 11:59 AM, Richard Purdie wrote:
> > On Thu, 2013-04-18 at 10:10 -0500, Mark Hatle wrote:
> >> On 4/18/13 9:46 AM, Mark Hatle wrote:
> >>> On 4/18/13 9:27 AM, Bogdan Marinescu wrote:
> >>>> For some platforms (for example emenlow) the RPM installer prefers
> >>>> an invalid package architecture (for example i586 over core2) because
> >>>> /etc/rpm/platform is not properly generated (for example, i586 is
> >>>> listed before core2 in /etc/rpm/platform).
> >>>>
> >>>> [YOCTO #3864]
> >>>>
> >>>> Signed-off-by: Bogdan Marinescu <bogdan.a.marinescu at intel.com>
> >>>> ---
> >>>>     meta/classes/package_rpm.bbclass |    1 -
> >>>>     1 file changed, 1 deletion(-)
> >>>>
> >>>> diff --git a/meta/classes/package_rpm.bbclass b/meta/classes/package_rpm.bbclass
> >>>> index 3a29976..1bee4b1 100644
> >>>> --- a/meta/classes/package_rpm.bbclass
> >>>> +++ b/meta/classes/package_rpm.bbclass
> >>>> @@ -276,7 +276,6 @@ package_install_internal_rpm () {
> >>>>     		# Setup base system configuration
> >>>>     		echo "Note: configuring RPM platform settings"
> >>>>     		mkdir -p ${target_rootfs}/etc/rpm/
> >>>> -		echo "$INSTALL_PLATFORM_RPM" > ${target_rootfs}/etc/rpm/platform
> >>>
> >>> I think this is wrong.  The /etc/rpm/platform file's first line is supposed to
> >>> be the equivalent of: [uname -m]-vendor-os.   While uname -m doesn't match our
> >>> tune namings, the concept is the same.  The first line simply defines the "tune"
> >>> of the platform, subsequent lines define alternative names that will run on this
> >>> system.
> >>>
> >>> The INSTALL_PLATFORM_RPM value should be the expected value for the platform as
> >>> a whole, as it's the default tune value.  (Default tune value is expected to be
> >>> the most accurate value.
> >>>
> >>> Looking at the defect:
> >>>
> >>> i586-poky-linux
> >>> emenlow-.*-linux
> >>> core2-.*-linux
> >>> i686-.*-linux
> >>> i586-.*-linux
> >>> i486-.*-linux
> >>> i386-.*-linux
> >>> x86-.*-linux
> >>> noarch-.*-linux.*
> >>> any-.*-linux.*
> >>> all-.*-linux.*
> >>>
> >>> The default tune value for that machine was set to i586 by "something".
> >>>
> >>> INSTALL_PLATFORM_RPM="$(echo ${TARGET_ARCH} | tr - _)${TARGET_VENDOR}-${TARGET_OS}"
> >>>
> >>> ${TARGET_ARCH} is similar to the output of uname -m.  The error is that this
> >>> particular BSP should have returned 'core2' as the TARGET_ARCH from what I can tell.
> >>>
> >>> Default for TARGET_ARCH is: TARGET_ARCH = "${TUNE_ARCH}"
> >>>
> >>> So the TUNE_ARCH is being set to i586.  So the end result is..  Is 'TUNE_ARCH'
> >>> set to i586 appropriate?  It probably is, because the majority of the system
> >>> seems to have a limited set of expected values for TARGET_ARCH.
> >>>
> >>> So, perhaps the right fix is instead of using 'TARGET_ARCH' in
> >>> INSTALL_PLATFORM_RPM, 'TUNE_PKGARCH_${DEFAULTTUNE}' may be more appropriate.
> >>>
> >>> I'd suggest trying that.  (But the first line is the system architecture,
> >>> following lines are alternative packages that are considered compatible.)
> >>
> >> Forgot one thing.  The first line must be fully expanded.  Subsequent lines are
> >> regex matched by the system.
> >
> > We have a problem here since the machine specific packages are meant to
> > be preferred over the "tune" specific ones by definition of the way OE
> > has long since worked, the structure of the PACKAGE_ARCHS variable and
> > so on.
> >
> > As I understand it, this will not happen with this file setup in this
> > way.
> 
> Ordering is defined by the lines -after- the first one.. the first line is 
> defined as the system arch.
> 
> The function rpmPlaform(...) in lib/rpmrc.c controls the loading of this data.
> 
> The first time through is reads the first line and sets:
> 
> _platform_cpu
> _platform_vendor
> _platform_os
> _platform_gnu
> 
> The _platform items are used by the "_host_*" requivalent macros.. this defines 
> the core system items.
> 
> Subsequent lines are then loaded and added to the regex for 'supported' 
> platforms/package archs.  (The 'arch' field in a package is useless.. it's just 
> a key but doesn't really mean anything in RPM 5.  It's the 'platform' field 
> embedded into the package that is actually used for compatibility.)
> 
> The machine ordering SHOULD come from the 'platformScore' function (also in 
> lib/rpmrc.c).  That only uses the regex to figure out the proper 'score' for a 
> component.  (roughly matches the line number in the file)
> 
> That being said, this stuff doesn't actually affect smart -directly-, it only 
> affects it indirectly.  When a package is selected by smart (which has it's own 
> ordering tools) it verified compatibility using these components.
> 
> For image generate, the package order is defined by us adding the places to look 
> one at a time.  The only place I've seen a similar problem is when someone moves 
> all of the packages into a single directory and says 'here ya go'.  I don't know 
> how smart selects which packages to favor in that case.  If someone could point 
> that out, it may turn out it's a bug in smart -- or a problem we need to fix in 
> another way.
> 
> There is a python function 'archScore'.  What this does is take the package arch 
> passed into the function, add the vendor/os from the platform (first line).  It 
> then calls the rpmPlatformScore function to get a response.
> 
> But the first of removing the first line is simply wrong.  It has to be set to 
> something that represents the system and is 'similar' to uname -m, as that value 
> may be attempted to be passed into configure or other tools if someone uses 
> 'rpmbuild' on their target.

Ok, if rpm is using the first line as the thing you'd pass to configure,
then it is correct as it stands right now.

However it should not be getting used by smart, or rpm as a "feed"
preference. We need to find out why its doing that and stop it as it
*must* honour the lower list to match how we construct the rootfs.

All the evidence is that it is using that first line and hence things
are breaking.

Cheers,

Richard





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