u-boot/tools/moveconfig.py

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#!/usr/bin/env python2
#
# Author: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
#
# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+
#
"""
Move config options from headers to defconfig files.
Since Kconfig was introduced to U-Boot, we have worked on moving
config options from headers to Kconfig (defconfig).
This tool intends to help this tremendous work.
Usage
-----
First, you must edit the Kconfig to add the menu entries for the configs
you are moving.
And then run this tool giving CONFIG names you want to move.
For example, if you want to move CONFIG_CMD_USB and CONFIG_SYS_TEXT_BASE,
simply type as follows:
$ tools/moveconfig.py CONFIG_CMD_USB CONFIG_SYS_TEXT_BASE
The tool walks through all the defconfig files and move the given CONFIGs.
The log is also displayed on the terminal.
The log is printed for each defconfig as follows:
<defconfig_name>
<action1>
<action2>
<action3>
...
<defconfig_name> is the name of the defconfig.
<action*> shows what the tool did for that defconfig.
It looks like one of the followings:
- Move 'CONFIG_... '
This config option was moved to the defconfig
tools: moveconfig: do not rely on type and default value given by users Commit 96464badc794 ("moveconfig: Always run savedefconfig on the moved config") changed the work flow of this tool a lot from the original intention when this tool was designed first. Since then, before running this tool, users must edit the Kconfig to add the menu entries for the configs they are moving. It means users had already specified the type and the default value for each CONFIG via its Kconfig entry. Nevertheless, users are still required to dictate the same type and the default value in the input file. This is tedious to use. So, my idea here is to deprecate the latter. Before moving forward with it, there is one issue worth mentioning; since the savedefconfig re-sync was introduced, this tool has not been able to move bool options with "default y". Joe sent a patch to solve this problem about a year ago, but it was not applied for some reasons. Now, he came back with an updated patch, so this problem will be fixed soon. For other use cases, I see no reason to require redundant dictation in the input file. Instead, the tool can know the types and default values by parsing the .config file. This commit changes the tool to use the CONFIG names, but ignore the types and default values given by the input file. This commit also fixes one bug. Prior to this commit, it could not move an integer-typed CONFIG with value 1. For example, assume we are moving CONFIG_CONS_INDEX. Please note this is an integer type option. Many board headers define this CONFIG as 1. #define CONFIG_CONS_INDEX 1 It will be converted to CONFIG_CONS_INDEX=y and moved to include/autoconf.mk, by the tools/scripts/define2mk.sed. It will cause "make savedefconfig" to fail due to the type conflict. This commit takes care of it by detecting the type and converting the CONFIG value correctly. Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com> Reviewed-by: Joe Hershberger <joe.hershberger@ni.com>
2016-05-19 06:51:56 +00:00
- CONFIG_... is not defined in Kconfig. Do nothing.
The entry for this CONFIG was not found in Kconfig.
There are two common cases:
- You forgot to create an entry for the CONFIG before running
this tool, or made a typo in a CONFIG passed to this tool.
- The entry was hidden due to unmet 'depends on'.
This is correct behavior.
- 'CONFIG_...' is the same as the define in Kconfig. Do nothing.
The define in the config header matched the one in Kconfig.
We do not need to touch it.
- Undefined. Do nothing.
This config option was not found in the config header.
Nothing to do.
- Compiler is missing. Do nothing.
The compiler specified for this architecture was not found
in your PATH environment.
(If -e option is passed, the tool exits immediately.)
- Failed to process.
An error occurred during processing this defconfig. Skipped.
(If -e option is passed, the tool exits immediately on error.)
Finally, you will be asked, Clean up headers? [y/n]:
If you say 'y' here, the unnecessary config defines are removed
from the config headers (include/configs/*.h).
It just uses the regex method, so you should not rely on it.
Just in case, please do 'git diff' to see what happened.
How does it work?
-----------------
This tool runs configuration and builds include/autoconf.mk for every
defconfig. The config options defined in Kconfig appear in the .config
file (unless they are hidden because of unmet dependency.)
On the other hand, the config options defined by board headers are seen
in include/autoconf.mk. The tool looks for the specified options in both
of them to decide the appropriate action for the options. If the given
config option is found in the .config, but its value does not match the
one from the board header, the config option in the .config is replaced
with the define in the board header. Then, the .config is synced by
"make savedefconfig" and the defconfig is updated with it.
For faster processing, this tool handles multi-threading. It creates
separate build directories where the out-of-tree build is run. The
temporary build directories are automatically created and deleted as
needed. The number of threads are chosen based on the number of the CPU
cores of your system although you can change it via -j (--jobs) option.
Toolchains
----------
Appropriate toolchain are necessary to generate include/autoconf.mk
for all the architectures supported by U-Boot. Most of them are available
at the kernel.org site, some are not provided by kernel.org.
The default per-arch CROSS_COMPILE used by this tool is specified by
the list below, CROSS_COMPILE. You may wish to update the list to
use your own. Instead of modifying the list directly, you can give
them via environments.
Available options
-----------------
-c, --color
Surround each portion of the log with escape sequences to display it
in color on the terminal.
-d, --defconfigs
Specify a file containing a list of defconfigs to move
-n, --dry-run
Perform a trial run that does not make any changes. It is useful to
see what is going to happen before one actually runs it.
-e, --exit-on-error
Exit immediately if Make exits with a non-zero status while processing
a defconfig file.
-s, --force-sync
Do "make savedefconfig" forcibly for all the defconfig files.
If not specified, "make savedefconfig" only occurs for cases
where at least one CONFIG was moved.
-H, --headers-only
Only cleanup the headers; skip the defconfig processing
-j, --jobs
Specify the number of threads to run simultaneously. If not specified,
the number of threads is the same as the number of CPU cores.
-v, --verbose
Show any build errors as boards are built
To see the complete list of supported options, run
$ tools/moveconfig.py -h
"""
import filecmp
import fnmatch
import multiprocessing
import optparse
import os
import re
import shutil
import subprocess
import sys
import tempfile
import time
SHOW_GNU_MAKE = 'scripts/show-gnu-make'
SLEEP_TIME=0.03
# Here is the list of cross-tools I use.
# Most of them are available at kernel.org
# (https://www.kernel.org/pub/tools/crosstool/files/bin/), except the followings:
# arc: https://github.com/foss-for-synopsys-dwc-arc-processors/toolchain/releases
# blackfin: http://sourceforge.net/projects/adi-toolchain/files/
# nds32: http://osdk.andestech.com/packages/nds32le-linux-glibc-v1.tgz
# nios2: https://sourcery.mentor.com/GNUToolchain/subscription42545
# sh: http://sourcery.mentor.com/public/gnu_toolchain/sh-linux-gnu
#
# openrisc kernel.org toolchain is out of date, download latest one from
# http://opencores.org/or1k/OpenRISC_GNU_tool_chain#Prebuilt_versions
CROSS_COMPILE = {
'arc': 'arc-linux-',
'aarch64': 'aarch64-linux-',
'arm': 'arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi-',
'avr32': 'avr32-linux-',
'blackfin': 'bfin-elf-',
'm68k': 'm68k-linux-',
'microblaze': 'microblaze-linux-',
'mips': 'mips-linux-',
'nds32': 'nds32le-linux-',
'nios2': 'nios2-linux-gnu-',
'openrisc': 'or1k-elf-',
'powerpc': 'powerpc-linux-',
'sh': 'sh-linux-gnu-',
'sparc': 'sparc-linux-',
'x86': 'i386-linux-'
}
STATE_IDLE = 0
STATE_DEFCONFIG = 1
STATE_AUTOCONF = 2
STATE_SAVEDEFCONFIG = 3
ACTION_MOVE = 0
tools: moveconfig: do not rely on type and default value given by users Commit 96464badc794 ("moveconfig: Always run savedefconfig on the moved config") changed the work flow of this tool a lot from the original intention when this tool was designed first. Since then, before running this tool, users must edit the Kconfig to add the menu entries for the configs they are moving. It means users had already specified the type and the default value for each CONFIG via its Kconfig entry. Nevertheless, users are still required to dictate the same type and the default value in the input file. This is tedious to use. So, my idea here is to deprecate the latter. Before moving forward with it, there is one issue worth mentioning; since the savedefconfig re-sync was introduced, this tool has not been able to move bool options with "default y". Joe sent a patch to solve this problem about a year ago, but it was not applied for some reasons. Now, he came back with an updated patch, so this problem will be fixed soon. For other use cases, I see no reason to require redundant dictation in the input file. Instead, the tool can know the types and default values by parsing the .config file. This commit changes the tool to use the CONFIG names, but ignore the types and default values given by the input file. This commit also fixes one bug. Prior to this commit, it could not move an integer-typed CONFIG with value 1. For example, assume we are moving CONFIG_CONS_INDEX. Please note this is an integer type option. Many board headers define this CONFIG as 1. #define CONFIG_CONS_INDEX 1 It will be converted to CONFIG_CONS_INDEX=y and moved to include/autoconf.mk, by the tools/scripts/define2mk.sed. It will cause "make savedefconfig" to fail due to the type conflict. This commit takes care of it by detecting the type and converting the CONFIG value correctly. Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com> Reviewed-by: Joe Hershberger <joe.hershberger@ni.com>
2016-05-19 06:51:56 +00:00
ACTION_NO_ENTRY = 1
ACTION_NO_CHANGE = 2
COLOR_BLACK = '0;30'
COLOR_RED = '0;31'
COLOR_GREEN = '0;32'
COLOR_BROWN = '0;33'
COLOR_BLUE = '0;34'
COLOR_PURPLE = '0;35'
COLOR_CYAN = '0;36'
COLOR_LIGHT_GRAY = '0;37'
COLOR_DARK_GRAY = '1;30'
COLOR_LIGHT_RED = '1;31'
COLOR_LIGHT_GREEN = '1;32'
COLOR_YELLOW = '1;33'
COLOR_LIGHT_BLUE = '1;34'
COLOR_LIGHT_PURPLE = '1;35'
COLOR_LIGHT_CYAN = '1;36'
COLOR_WHITE = '1;37'
### helper functions ###
def get_devnull():
"""Get the file object of '/dev/null' device."""
try:
devnull = subprocess.DEVNULL # py3k
except AttributeError:
devnull = open(os.devnull, 'wb')
return devnull
def check_top_directory():
"""Exit if we are not at the top of source directory."""
for f in ('README', 'Licenses'):
if not os.path.exists(f):
sys.exit('Please run at the top of source directory.')
def check_clean_directory():
"""Exit if the source tree is not clean."""
for f in ('.config', 'include/config'):
if os.path.exists(f):
sys.exit("source tree is not clean, please run 'make mrproper'")
def get_make_cmd():
"""Get the command name of GNU Make.
U-Boot needs GNU Make for building, but the command name is not
necessarily "make". (for example, "gmake" on FreeBSD).
Returns the most appropriate command name on your system.
"""
process = subprocess.Popen([SHOW_GNU_MAKE], stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
ret = process.communicate()
if process.returncode:
sys.exit('GNU Make not found')
return ret[0].rstrip()
def color_text(color_enabled, color, string):
"""Return colored string."""
if color_enabled:
# LF should not be surrounded by the escape sequence.
# Otherwise, additional whitespace or line-feed might be printed.
return '\n'.join([ '\033[' + color + 'm' + s + '\033[0m' if s else ''
for s in string.split('\n') ])
else:
return string
def update_cross_compile(color_enabled):
"""Update per-arch CROSS_COMPILE via environment variables
The default CROSS_COMPILE values are available
in the CROSS_COMPILE list above.
You can override them via environment variables
CROSS_COMPILE_{ARCH}.
For example, if you want to override toolchain prefixes
for ARM and PowerPC, you can do as follows in your shell:
export CROSS_COMPILE_ARM=...
export CROSS_COMPILE_POWERPC=...
Then, this function checks if specified compilers really exist in your
PATH environment.
"""
archs = []
for arch in os.listdir('arch'):
if os.path.exists(os.path.join('arch', arch, 'Makefile')):
archs.append(arch)
# arm64 is a special case
archs.append('aarch64')
for arch in archs:
env = 'CROSS_COMPILE_' + arch.upper()
cross_compile = os.environ.get(env)
if not cross_compile:
cross_compile = CROSS_COMPILE.get(arch, '')
for path in os.environ["PATH"].split(os.pathsep):
gcc_path = os.path.join(path, cross_compile + 'gcc')
if os.path.isfile(gcc_path) and os.access(gcc_path, os.X_OK):
break
else:
print >> sys.stderr, color_text(color_enabled, COLOR_YELLOW,
'warning: %sgcc: not found in PATH. %s architecture boards will be skipped'
% (cross_compile, arch))
cross_compile = None
CROSS_COMPILE[arch] = cross_compile
def cleanup_one_header(header_path, patterns, dry_run):
"""Clean regex-matched lines away from a file.
Arguments:
header_path: path to the cleaned file.
patterns: list of regex patterns. Any lines matching to these
patterns are deleted.
dry_run: make no changes, but still display log.
"""
with open(header_path) as f:
lines = f.readlines()
matched = []
for i, line in enumerate(lines):
for pattern in patterns:
m = pattern.search(line)
if m:
print '%s: %s: %s' % (header_path, i + 1, line),
matched.append(i)
break
if dry_run or not matched:
return
with open(header_path, 'w') as f:
for i, line in enumerate(lines):
if not i in matched:
f.write(line)
def cleanup_headers(configs, dry_run):
"""Delete config defines from board headers.
Arguments:
configs: A list of CONFIGs to remove.
dry_run: make no changes, but still display log.
"""
while True:
choice = raw_input('Clean up headers? [y/n]: ').lower()
print choice
if choice == 'y' or choice == 'n':
break
if choice == 'n':
return
patterns = []
for config in configs:
patterns.append(re.compile(r'#\s*define\s+%s\W' % config))
patterns.append(re.compile(r'#\s*undef\s+%s\W' % config))
for dir in 'include', 'arch', 'board':
for (dirpath, dirnames, filenames) in os.walk(dir):
for filename in filenames:
if not fnmatch.fnmatch(filename, '*~'):
cleanup_one_header(os.path.join(dirpath, filename),
patterns, dry_run)
### classes ###
class Progress:
"""Progress Indicator"""
def __init__(self, total):
"""Create a new progress indicator.
Arguments:
total: A number of defconfig files to process.
"""
self.current = 0
self.total = total
def inc(self):
"""Increment the number of processed defconfig files."""
self.current += 1
def show(self):
"""Display the progress."""
print ' %d defconfigs out of %d\r' % (self.current, self.total),
sys.stdout.flush()
class KconfigParser:
"""A parser of .config and include/autoconf.mk."""
re_arch = re.compile(r'CONFIG_SYS_ARCH="(.*)"')
re_cpu = re.compile(r'CONFIG_SYS_CPU="(.*)"')
def __init__(self, configs, options, build_dir):
"""Create a new parser.
Arguments:
configs: A list of CONFIGs to move.
options: option flags.
build_dir: Build directory.
"""
self.configs = configs
self.options = options
self.dotconfig = os.path.join(build_dir, '.config')
self.autoconf = os.path.join(build_dir, 'include', 'autoconf.mk')
self.config_autoconf = os.path.join(build_dir, 'include', 'config',
'auto.conf')
self.defconfig = os.path.join(build_dir, 'defconfig')
def get_cross_compile(self):
"""Parse .config file and return CROSS_COMPILE.
Returns:
A string storing the compiler prefix for the architecture.
Return a NULL string for architectures that do not require
compiler prefix (Sandbox and native build is the case).
Return None if the specified compiler is missing in your PATH.
Caller should distinguish '' and None.
"""
arch = ''
cpu = ''
for line in open(self.dotconfig):
m = self.re_arch.match(line)
if m:
arch = m.group(1)
continue
m = self.re_cpu.match(line)
if m:
cpu = m.group(1)
if not arch:
return None
# fix-up for aarch64
if arch == 'arm' and cpu == 'armv8':
arch = 'aarch64'
return CROSS_COMPILE.get(arch, None)
def parse_one_config(self, config, dotconfig_lines, autoconf_lines):
"""Parse .config, defconfig, include/autoconf.mk for one config.
This function looks for the config options in the lines from
defconfig, .config, and include/autoconf.mk in order to decide
which action should be taken for this defconfig.
Arguments:
config: CONFIG name to parse.
tools: moveconfig: do not rely on type and default value given by users Commit 96464badc794 ("moveconfig: Always run savedefconfig on the moved config") changed the work flow of this tool a lot from the original intention when this tool was designed first. Since then, before running this tool, users must edit the Kconfig to add the menu entries for the configs they are moving. It means users had already specified the type and the default value for each CONFIG via its Kconfig entry. Nevertheless, users are still required to dictate the same type and the default value in the input file. This is tedious to use. So, my idea here is to deprecate the latter. Before moving forward with it, there is one issue worth mentioning; since the savedefconfig re-sync was introduced, this tool has not been able to move bool options with "default y". Joe sent a patch to solve this problem about a year ago, but it was not applied for some reasons. Now, he came back with an updated patch, so this problem will be fixed soon. For other use cases, I see no reason to require redundant dictation in the input file. Instead, the tool can know the types and default values by parsing the .config file. This commit changes the tool to use the CONFIG names, but ignore the types and default values given by the input file. This commit also fixes one bug. Prior to this commit, it could not move an integer-typed CONFIG with value 1. For example, assume we are moving CONFIG_CONS_INDEX. Please note this is an integer type option. Many board headers define this CONFIG as 1. #define CONFIG_CONS_INDEX 1 It will be converted to CONFIG_CONS_INDEX=y and moved to include/autoconf.mk, by the tools/scripts/define2mk.sed. It will cause "make savedefconfig" to fail due to the type conflict. This commit takes care of it by detecting the type and converting the CONFIG value correctly. Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com> Reviewed-by: Joe Hershberger <joe.hershberger@ni.com>
2016-05-19 06:51:56 +00:00
dotconfig_lines: lines from the .config file.
autoconf_lines: lines from the include/autoconf.mk file.
Returns:
A tupple of the action for this defconfig and the line
matched for the config.
"""
not_set = '# %s is not set' % config
tools: moveconfig: do not rely on type and default value given by users Commit 96464badc794 ("moveconfig: Always run savedefconfig on the moved config") changed the work flow of this tool a lot from the original intention when this tool was designed first. Since then, before running this tool, users must edit the Kconfig to add the menu entries for the configs they are moving. It means users had already specified the type and the default value for each CONFIG via its Kconfig entry. Nevertheless, users are still required to dictate the same type and the default value in the input file. This is tedious to use. So, my idea here is to deprecate the latter. Before moving forward with it, there is one issue worth mentioning; since the savedefconfig re-sync was introduced, this tool has not been able to move bool options with "default y". Joe sent a patch to solve this problem about a year ago, but it was not applied for some reasons. Now, he came back with an updated patch, so this problem will be fixed soon. For other use cases, I see no reason to require redundant dictation in the input file. Instead, the tool can know the types and default values by parsing the .config file. This commit changes the tool to use the CONFIG names, but ignore the types and default values given by the input file. This commit also fixes one bug. Prior to this commit, it could not move an integer-typed CONFIG with value 1. For example, assume we are moving CONFIG_CONS_INDEX. Please note this is an integer type option. Many board headers define this CONFIG as 1. #define CONFIG_CONS_INDEX 1 It will be converted to CONFIG_CONS_INDEX=y and moved to include/autoconf.mk, by the tools/scripts/define2mk.sed. It will cause "make savedefconfig" to fail due to the type conflict. This commit takes care of it by detecting the type and converting the CONFIG value correctly. Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com> Reviewed-by: Joe Hershberger <joe.hershberger@ni.com>
2016-05-19 06:51:56 +00:00
for line in dotconfig_lines:
line = line.rstrip()
if line.startswith(config + '=') or line == not_set:
tools: moveconfig: do not rely on type and default value given by users Commit 96464badc794 ("moveconfig: Always run savedefconfig on the moved config") changed the work flow of this tool a lot from the original intention when this tool was designed first. Since then, before running this tool, users must edit the Kconfig to add the menu entries for the configs they are moving. It means users had already specified the type and the default value for each CONFIG via its Kconfig entry. Nevertheless, users are still required to dictate the same type and the default value in the input file. This is tedious to use. So, my idea here is to deprecate the latter. Before moving forward with it, there is one issue worth mentioning; since the savedefconfig re-sync was introduced, this tool has not been able to move bool options with "default y". Joe sent a patch to solve this problem about a year ago, but it was not applied for some reasons. Now, he came back with an updated patch, so this problem will be fixed soon. For other use cases, I see no reason to require redundant dictation in the input file. Instead, the tool can know the types and default values by parsing the .config file. This commit changes the tool to use the CONFIG names, but ignore the types and default values given by the input file. This commit also fixes one bug. Prior to this commit, it could not move an integer-typed CONFIG with value 1. For example, assume we are moving CONFIG_CONS_INDEX. Please note this is an integer type option. Many board headers define this CONFIG as 1. #define CONFIG_CONS_INDEX 1 It will be converted to CONFIG_CONS_INDEX=y and moved to include/autoconf.mk, by the tools/scripts/define2mk.sed. It will cause "make savedefconfig" to fail due to the type conflict. This commit takes care of it by detecting the type and converting the CONFIG value correctly. Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com> Reviewed-by: Joe Hershberger <joe.hershberger@ni.com>
2016-05-19 06:51:56 +00:00
old_val = line
break
else:
tools: moveconfig: do not rely on type and default value given by users Commit 96464badc794 ("moveconfig: Always run savedefconfig on the moved config") changed the work flow of this tool a lot from the original intention when this tool was designed first. Since then, before running this tool, users must edit the Kconfig to add the menu entries for the configs they are moving. It means users had already specified the type and the default value for each CONFIG via its Kconfig entry. Nevertheless, users are still required to dictate the same type and the default value in the input file. This is tedious to use. So, my idea here is to deprecate the latter. Before moving forward with it, there is one issue worth mentioning; since the savedefconfig re-sync was introduced, this tool has not been able to move bool options with "default y". Joe sent a patch to solve this problem about a year ago, but it was not applied for some reasons. Now, he came back with an updated patch, so this problem will be fixed soon. For other use cases, I see no reason to require redundant dictation in the input file. Instead, the tool can know the types and default values by parsing the .config file. This commit changes the tool to use the CONFIG names, but ignore the types and default values given by the input file. This commit also fixes one bug. Prior to this commit, it could not move an integer-typed CONFIG with value 1. For example, assume we are moving CONFIG_CONS_INDEX. Please note this is an integer type option. Many board headers define this CONFIG as 1. #define CONFIG_CONS_INDEX 1 It will be converted to CONFIG_CONS_INDEX=y and moved to include/autoconf.mk, by the tools/scripts/define2mk.sed. It will cause "make savedefconfig" to fail due to the type conflict. This commit takes care of it by detecting the type and converting the CONFIG value correctly. Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com> Reviewed-by: Joe Hershberger <joe.hershberger@ni.com>
2016-05-19 06:51:56 +00:00
return (ACTION_NO_ENTRY, config)
for line in autoconf_lines:
line = line.rstrip()
if line.startswith(config + '='):
tools: moveconfig: do not rely on type and default value given by users Commit 96464badc794 ("moveconfig: Always run savedefconfig on the moved config") changed the work flow of this tool a lot from the original intention when this tool was designed first. Since then, before running this tool, users must edit the Kconfig to add the menu entries for the configs they are moving. It means users had already specified the type and the default value for each CONFIG via its Kconfig entry. Nevertheless, users are still required to dictate the same type and the default value in the input file. This is tedious to use. So, my idea here is to deprecate the latter. Before moving forward with it, there is one issue worth mentioning; since the savedefconfig re-sync was introduced, this tool has not been able to move bool options with "default y". Joe sent a patch to solve this problem about a year ago, but it was not applied for some reasons. Now, he came back with an updated patch, so this problem will be fixed soon. For other use cases, I see no reason to require redundant dictation in the input file. Instead, the tool can know the types and default values by parsing the .config file. This commit changes the tool to use the CONFIG names, but ignore the types and default values given by the input file. This commit also fixes one bug. Prior to this commit, it could not move an integer-typed CONFIG with value 1. For example, assume we are moving CONFIG_CONS_INDEX. Please note this is an integer type option. Many board headers define this CONFIG as 1. #define CONFIG_CONS_INDEX 1 It will be converted to CONFIG_CONS_INDEX=y and moved to include/autoconf.mk, by the tools/scripts/define2mk.sed. It will cause "make savedefconfig" to fail due to the type conflict. This commit takes care of it by detecting the type and converting the CONFIG value correctly. Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com> Reviewed-by: Joe Hershberger <joe.hershberger@ni.com>
2016-05-19 06:51:56 +00:00
new_val = line
break
else:
tools: moveconfig: do not rely on type and default value given by users Commit 96464badc794 ("moveconfig: Always run savedefconfig on the moved config") changed the work flow of this tool a lot from the original intention when this tool was designed first. Since then, before running this tool, users must edit the Kconfig to add the menu entries for the configs they are moving. It means users had already specified the type and the default value for each CONFIG via its Kconfig entry. Nevertheless, users are still required to dictate the same type and the default value in the input file. This is tedious to use. So, my idea here is to deprecate the latter. Before moving forward with it, there is one issue worth mentioning; since the savedefconfig re-sync was introduced, this tool has not been able to move bool options with "default y". Joe sent a patch to solve this problem about a year ago, but it was not applied for some reasons. Now, he came back with an updated patch, so this problem will be fixed soon. For other use cases, I see no reason to require redundant dictation in the input file. Instead, the tool can know the types and default values by parsing the .config file. This commit changes the tool to use the CONFIG names, but ignore the types and default values given by the input file. This commit also fixes one bug. Prior to this commit, it could not move an integer-typed CONFIG with value 1. For example, assume we are moving CONFIG_CONS_INDEX. Please note this is an integer type option. Many board headers define this CONFIG as 1. #define CONFIG_CONS_INDEX 1 It will be converted to CONFIG_CONS_INDEX=y and moved to include/autoconf.mk, by the tools/scripts/define2mk.sed. It will cause "make savedefconfig" to fail due to the type conflict. This commit takes care of it by detecting the type and converting the CONFIG value correctly. Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com> Reviewed-by: Joe Hershberger <joe.hershberger@ni.com>
2016-05-19 06:51:56 +00:00
new_val = not_set
if old_val == new_val:
return (ACTION_NO_CHANGE, new_val)
# If this CONFIG is neither bool nor trisate
if old_val[-2:] != '=y' and old_val[-2:] != '=m' and old_val != not_set:
# tools/scripts/define2mk.sed changes '1' to 'y'.
# This is a problem if the CONFIG is int type.
# Check the type in Kconfig and handle it correctly.
if new_val[-2:] == '=y':
new_val = new_val[:-1] + '1'
tools: moveconfig: do not rely on type and default value given by users Commit 96464badc794 ("moveconfig: Always run savedefconfig on the moved config") changed the work flow of this tool a lot from the original intention when this tool was designed first. Since then, before running this tool, users must edit the Kconfig to add the menu entries for the configs they are moving. It means users had already specified the type and the default value for each CONFIG via its Kconfig entry. Nevertheless, users are still required to dictate the same type and the default value in the input file. This is tedious to use. So, my idea here is to deprecate the latter. Before moving forward with it, there is one issue worth mentioning; since the savedefconfig re-sync was introduced, this tool has not been able to move bool options with "default y". Joe sent a patch to solve this problem about a year ago, but it was not applied for some reasons. Now, he came back with an updated patch, so this problem will be fixed soon. For other use cases, I see no reason to require redundant dictation in the input file. Instead, the tool can know the types and default values by parsing the .config file. This commit changes the tool to use the CONFIG names, but ignore the types and default values given by the input file. This commit also fixes one bug. Prior to this commit, it could not move an integer-typed CONFIG with value 1. For example, assume we are moving CONFIG_CONS_INDEX. Please note this is an integer type option. Many board headers define this CONFIG as 1. #define CONFIG_CONS_INDEX 1 It will be converted to CONFIG_CONS_INDEX=y and moved to include/autoconf.mk, by the tools/scripts/define2mk.sed. It will cause "make savedefconfig" to fail due to the type conflict. This commit takes care of it by detecting the type and converting the CONFIG value correctly. Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com> Reviewed-by: Joe Hershberger <joe.hershberger@ni.com>
2016-05-19 06:51:56 +00:00
return (ACTION_MOVE, new_val)
def update_dotconfig(self):
"""Parse files for the config options and update the .config.
tools: moveconfig: do not rely on type and default value given by users Commit 96464badc794 ("moveconfig: Always run savedefconfig on the moved config") changed the work flow of this tool a lot from the original intention when this tool was designed first. Since then, before running this tool, users must edit the Kconfig to add the menu entries for the configs they are moving. It means users had already specified the type and the default value for each CONFIG via its Kconfig entry. Nevertheless, users are still required to dictate the same type and the default value in the input file. This is tedious to use. So, my idea here is to deprecate the latter. Before moving forward with it, there is one issue worth mentioning; since the savedefconfig re-sync was introduced, this tool has not been able to move bool options with "default y". Joe sent a patch to solve this problem about a year ago, but it was not applied for some reasons. Now, he came back with an updated patch, so this problem will be fixed soon. For other use cases, I see no reason to require redundant dictation in the input file. Instead, the tool can know the types and default values by parsing the .config file. This commit changes the tool to use the CONFIG names, but ignore the types and default values given by the input file. This commit also fixes one bug. Prior to this commit, it could not move an integer-typed CONFIG with value 1. For example, assume we are moving CONFIG_CONS_INDEX. Please note this is an integer type option. Many board headers define this CONFIG as 1. #define CONFIG_CONS_INDEX 1 It will be converted to CONFIG_CONS_INDEX=y and moved to include/autoconf.mk, by the tools/scripts/define2mk.sed. It will cause "make savedefconfig" to fail due to the type conflict. This commit takes care of it by detecting the type and converting the CONFIG value correctly. Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com> Reviewed-by: Joe Hershberger <joe.hershberger@ni.com>
2016-05-19 06:51:56 +00:00
This function parses the generated .config and include/autoconf.mk
searching the target options.
Move the config option(s) to the .config as needed.
Arguments:
defconfig: defconfig name.
Returns:
Return a tuple of (updated flag, log string).
The "updated flag" is True if the .config was updated, False
otherwise. The "log string" shows what happend to the .config.
"""
results = []
updated = False
with open(self.dotconfig) as f:
tools: moveconfig: do not rely on type and default value given by users Commit 96464badc794 ("moveconfig: Always run savedefconfig on the moved config") changed the work flow of this tool a lot from the original intention when this tool was designed first. Since then, before running this tool, users must edit the Kconfig to add the menu entries for the configs they are moving. It means users had already specified the type and the default value for each CONFIG via its Kconfig entry. Nevertheless, users are still required to dictate the same type and the default value in the input file. This is tedious to use. So, my idea here is to deprecate the latter. Before moving forward with it, there is one issue worth mentioning; since the savedefconfig re-sync was introduced, this tool has not been able to move bool options with "default y". Joe sent a patch to solve this problem about a year ago, but it was not applied for some reasons. Now, he came back with an updated patch, so this problem will be fixed soon. For other use cases, I see no reason to require redundant dictation in the input file. Instead, the tool can know the types and default values by parsing the .config file. This commit changes the tool to use the CONFIG names, but ignore the types and default values given by the input file. This commit also fixes one bug. Prior to this commit, it could not move an integer-typed CONFIG with value 1. For example, assume we are moving CONFIG_CONS_INDEX. Please note this is an integer type option. Many board headers define this CONFIG as 1. #define CONFIG_CONS_INDEX 1 It will be converted to CONFIG_CONS_INDEX=y and moved to include/autoconf.mk, by the tools/scripts/define2mk.sed. It will cause "make savedefconfig" to fail due to the type conflict. This commit takes care of it by detecting the type and converting the CONFIG value correctly. Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com> Reviewed-by: Joe Hershberger <joe.hershberger@ni.com>
2016-05-19 06:51:56 +00:00
dotconfig_lines = f.readlines()
with open(self.autoconf) as f:
autoconf_lines = f.readlines()
for config in self.configs:
result = self.parse_one_config(config, dotconfig_lines,
autoconf_lines)
results.append(result)
log = ''
for (action, value) in results:
if action == ACTION_MOVE:
actlog = "Move '%s'" % value
log_color = COLOR_LIGHT_GREEN
tools: moveconfig: do not rely on type and default value given by users Commit 96464badc794 ("moveconfig: Always run savedefconfig on the moved config") changed the work flow of this tool a lot from the original intention when this tool was designed first. Since then, before running this tool, users must edit the Kconfig to add the menu entries for the configs they are moving. It means users had already specified the type and the default value for each CONFIG via its Kconfig entry. Nevertheless, users are still required to dictate the same type and the default value in the input file. This is tedious to use. So, my idea here is to deprecate the latter. Before moving forward with it, there is one issue worth mentioning; since the savedefconfig re-sync was introduced, this tool has not been able to move bool options with "default y". Joe sent a patch to solve this problem about a year ago, but it was not applied for some reasons. Now, he came back with an updated patch, so this problem will be fixed soon. For other use cases, I see no reason to require redundant dictation in the input file. Instead, the tool can know the types and default values by parsing the .config file. This commit changes the tool to use the CONFIG names, but ignore the types and default values given by the input file. This commit also fixes one bug. Prior to this commit, it could not move an integer-typed CONFIG with value 1. For example, assume we are moving CONFIG_CONS_INDEX. Please note this is an integer type option. Many board headers define this CONFIG as 1. #define CONFIG_CONS_INDEX 1 It will be converted to CONFIG_CONS_INDEX=y and moved to include/autoconf.mk, by the tools/scripts/define2mk.sed. It will cause "make savedefconfig" to fail due to the type conflict. This commit takes care of it by detecting the type and converting the CONFIG value correctly. Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com> Reviewed-by: Joe Hershberger <joe.hershberger@ni.com>
2016-05-19 06:51:56 +00:00
elif action == ACTION_NO_ENTRY:
actlog = "%s is not defined in Kconfig. Do nothing." % value
log_color = COLOR_LIGHT_BLUE
tools: moveconfig: do not rely on type and default value given by users Commit 96464badc794 ("moveconfig: Always run savedefconfig on the moved config") changed the work flow of this tool a lot from the original intention when this tool was designed first. Since then, before running this tool, users must edit the Kconfig to add the menu entries for the configs they are moving. It means users had already specified the type and the default value for each CONFIG via its Kconfig entry. Nevertheless, users are still required to dictate the same type and the default value in the input file. This is tedious to use. So, my idea here is to deprecate the latter. Before moving forward with it, there is one issue worth mentioning; since the savedefconfig re-sync was introduced, this tool has not been able to move bool options with "default y". Joe sent a patch to solve this problem about a year ago, but it was not applied for some reasons. Now, he came back with an updated patch, so this problem will be fixed soon. For other use cases, I see no reason to require redundant dictation in the input file. Instead, the tool can know the types and default values by parsing the .config file. This commit changes the tool to use the CONFIG names, but ignore the types and default values given by the input file. This commit also fixes one bug. Prior to this commit, it could not move an integer-typed CONFIG with value 1. For example, assume we are moving CONFIG_CONS_INDEX. Please note this is an integer type option. Many board headers define this CONFIG as 1. #define CONFIG_CONS_INDEX 1 It will be converted to CONFIG_CONS_INDEX=y and moved to include/autoconf.mk, by the tools/scripts/define2mk.sed. It will cause "make savedefconfig" to fail due to the type conflict. This commit takes care of it by detecting the type and converting the CONFIG value correctly. Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com> Reviewed-by: Joe Hershberger <joe.hershberger@ni.com>
2016-05-19 06:51:56 +00:00
elif action == ACTION_NO_CHANGE:
actlog = "'%s' is the same as the define in Kconfig. Do nothing." \
% value
log_color = COLOR_LIGHT_PURPLE
else:
sys.exit("Internal Error. This should not happen.")
log += color_text(self.options.color, log_color, actlog) + '\n'
with open(self.dotconfig, 'a') as f:
for (action, value) in results:
if action == ACTION_MOVE:
f.write(value + '\n')
updated = True
self.results = results
os.remove(self.config_autoconf)
os.remove(self.autoconf)
return (updated, log)
def check_defconfig(self):
"""Check the defconfig after savedefconfig
Returns:
Return additional log if moved CONFIGs were removed again by
'make savedefconfig'.
"""
log = ''
with open(self.defconfig) as f:
defconfig_lines = f.readlines()
for (action, value) in self.results:
if action != ACTION_MOVE:
continue
if not value + '\n' in defconfig_lines:
log += color_text(self.options.color, COLOR_YELLOW,
"'%s' was removed by savedefconfig.\n" %
value)
return log
class Slot:
"""A slot to store a subprocess.
Each instance of this class handles one subprocess.
This class is useful to control multiple threads
for faster processing.
"""
def __init__(self, configs, options, progress, devnull, make_cmd):
"""Create a new process slot.
Arguments:
configs: A list of CONFIGs to move.
options: option flags.
progress: A progress indicator.
devnull: A file object of '/dev/null'.
make_cmd: command name of GNU Make.
"""
self.options = options
self.progress = progress
self.build_dir = tempfile.mkdtemp()
self.devnull = devnull
self.make_cmd = (make_cmd, 'O=' + self.build_dir)
self.parser = KconfigParser(configs, options, self.build_dir)
self.state = STATE_IDLE
self.failed_boards = []
def __del__(self):
"""Delete the working directory
This function makes sure the temporary directory is cleaned away
even if Python suddenly dies due to error. It should be done in here
because it is guaranteed the destructor is always invoked when the
instance of the class gets unreferenced.
If the subprocess is still running, wait until it finishes.
"""
if self.state != STATE_IDLE:
while self.ps.poll() == None:
pass
shutil.rmtree(self.build_dir)
def add(self, defconfig):
"""Assign a new subprocess for defconfig and add it to the slot.
If the slot is vacant, create a new subprocess for processing the
given defconfig and add it to the slot. Just returns False if
the slot is occupied (i.e. the current subprocess is still running).
Arguments:
defconfig: defconfig name.
Returns:
Return True on success or False on failure
"""
if self.state != STATE_IDLE:
return False
self.defconfig = defconfig
self.log = ''
self.do_defconfig()
return True
def poll(self):
"""Check the status of the subprocess and handle it as needed.
Returns True if the slot is vacant (i.e. in idle state).
If the configuration is successfully finished, assign a new
subprocess to build include/autoconf.mk.
If include/autoconf.mk is generated, invoke the parser to
parse the .config and the include/autoconf.mk, moving
config options to the .config as needed.
If the .config was updated, run "make savedefconfig" to sync
it, update the original defconfig, and then set the slot back
to the idle state.
Returns:
Return True if the subprocess is terminated, False otherwise
"""
if self.state == STATE_IDLE:
return True
if self.ps.poll() == None:
return False
if self.ps.poll() != 0:
self.handle_error()
elif self.state == STATE_DEFCONFIG:
self.do_autoconf()
elif self.state == STATE_AUTOCONF:
self.do_savedefconfig()
elif self.state == STATE_SAVEDEFCONFIG:
self.update_defconfig()
else:
sys.exit("Internal Error. This should not happen.")
return True if self.state == STATE_IDLE else False
def handle_error(self):
"""Handle error cases."""
self.log += color_text(self.options.color, COLOR_LIGHT_RED,
"Failed to process.\n")
if self.options.verbose:
self.log += color_text(self.options.color, COLOR_LIGHT_CYAN,
self.ps.stderr.read())
self.finish(False)
def do_defconfig(self):
"""Run 'make <board>_defconfig' to create the .config file."""
cmd = list(self.make_cmd)
cmd.append(self.defconfig)
self.ps = subprocess.Popen(cmd, stdout=self.devnull,
stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
self.state = STATE_DEFCONFIG
def do_autoconf(self):
"""Run 'make include/config/auto.conf'."""
self.cross_compile = self.parser.get_cross_compile()
if self.cross_compile is None:
self.log += color_text(self.options.color, COLOR_YELLOW,
"Compiler is missing. Do nothing.\n")
self.finish(False)
return
cmd = list(self.make_cmd)
if self.cross_compile:
cmd.append('CROSS_COMPILE=%s' % self.cross_compile)
cmd.append('KCONFIG_IGNORE_DUPLICATES=1')
cmd.append('include/config/auto.conf')
self.ps = subprocess.Popen(cmd, stdout=self.devnull,
stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
self.state = STATE_AUTOCONF
def do_savedefconfig(self):
"""Update the .config and run 'make savedefconfig'."""
(updated, log) = self.parser.update_dotconfig()
self.log += log
if not self.options.force_sync and not updated:
self.finish(True)
return
if updated:
self.log += color_text(self.options.color, COLOR_LIGHT_GREEN,
"Syncing by savedefconfig...\n")
else:
self.log += "Syncing by savedefconfig (forced by option)...\n"
cmd = list(self.make_cmd)
cmd.append('savedefconfig')
self.ps = subprocess.Popen(cmd, stdout=self.devnull,
stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
self.state = STATE_SAVEDEFCONFIG
def update_defconfig(self):
"""Update the input defconfig and go back to the idle state."""
self.log += self.parser.check_defconfig()
orig_defconfig = os.path.join('configs', self.defconfig)
new_defconfig = os.path.join(self.build_dir, 'defconfig')
updated = not filecmp.cmp(orig_defconfig, new_defconfig)
if updated:
self.log += color_text(self.options.color, COLOR_LIGHT_GREEN,
"defconfig was updated.\n")
if not self.options.dry_run and updated:
shutil.move(new_defconfig, orig_defconfig)
self.finish(True)
def finish(self, success):
"""Display log along with progress and go to the idle state.
Arguments:
success: Should be True when the defconfig was processed
successfully, or False when it fails.
"""
# output at least 30 characters to hide the "* defconfigs out of *".
log = self.defconfig.ljust(30) + '\n'
log += '\n'.join([ ' ' + s for s in self.log.split('\n') ])
# Some threads are running in parallel.
# Print log atomically to not mix up logs from different threads.
print >> (sys.stdout if success else sys.stderr), log
if not success:
if self.options.exit_on_error:
sys.exit("Exit on error.")
# If --exit-on-error flag is not set, skip this board and continue.
# Record the failed board.
self.failed_boards.append(self.defconfig)
self.progress.inc()
self.progress.show()
self.state = STATE_IDLE
def get_failed_boards(self):
"""Returns a list of failed boards (defconfigs) in this slot.
"""
return self.failed_boards
class Slots:
"""Controller of the array of subprocess slots."""
def __init__(self, configs, options, progress):
"""Create a new slots controller.
Arguments:
configs: A list of CONFIGs to move.
options: option flags.
progress: A progress indicator.
"""
self.options = options
self.slots = []
devnull = get_devnull()
make_cmd = get_make_cmd()
for i in range(options.jobs):
self.slots.append(Slot(configs, options, progress, devnull,
make_cmd))
def add(self, defconfig):
"""Add a new subprocess if a vacant slot is found.
Arguments:
defconfig: defconfig name to be put into.
Returns:
Return True on success or False on failure
"""
for slot in self.slots:
if slot.add(defconfig):
return True
return False
def available(self):
"""Check if there is a vacant slot.
Returns:
Return True if at lease one vacant slot is found, False otherwise.
"""
for slot in self.slots:
if slot.poll():
return True
return False
def empty(self):
"""Check if all slots are vacant.
Returns:
Return True if all the slots are vacant, False otherwise.
"""
ret = True
for slot in self.slots:
if not slot.poll():
ret = False
return ret
def show_failed_boards(self):
"""Display all of the failed boards (defconfigs)."""
failed_boards = []
for slot in self.slots:
failed_boards += slot.get_failed_boards()
if len(failed_boards) > 0:
msg = [ "The following boards were not processed due to error:" ]
msg += failed_boards
for line in msg:
print >> sys.stderr, color_text(self.options.color,
COLOR_LIGHT_RED, line)
with open('moveconfig.failed', 'w') as f:
for board in failed_boards:
f.write(board + '\n')
def move_config(configs, options):
"""Move config options to defconfig files.
Arguments:
configs: A list of CONFIGs to move.
options: option flags
"""
if len(configs) == 0:
if options.force_sync:
print 'No CONFIG is specified. You are probably syncing defconfigs.',
else:
print 'Neither CONFIG nor --force-sync is specified. Nothing will happen.',
else:
print 'Move ' + ', '.join(configs),
print '(jobs: %d)\n' % options.jobs
if options.defconfigs:
defconfigs = [line.strip() for line in open(options.defconfigs)]
for i, defconfig in enumerate(defconfigs):
if not defconfig.endswith('_defconfig'):
defconfigs[i] = defconfig + '_defconfig'
if not os.path.exists(os.path.join('configs', defconfigs[i])):
sys.exit('%s - defconfig does not exist. Stopping.' %
defconfigs[i])
else:
# All the defconfig files to be processed
defconfigs = []
for (dirpath, dirnames, filenames) in os.walk('configs'):
dirpath = dirpath[len('configs') + 1:]
for filename in fnmatch.filter(filenames, '*_defconfig'):
defconfigs.append(os.path.join(dirpath, filename))
progress = Progress(len(defconfigs))
slots = Slots(configs, options, progress)
# Main loop to process defconfig files:
# Add a new subprocess into a vacant slot.
# Sleep if there is no available slot.
for defconfig in defconfigs:
while not slots.add(defconfig):
while not slots.available():
# No available slot: sleep for a while
time.sleep(SLEEP_TIME)
# wait until all the subprocesses finish
while not slots.empty():
time.sleep(SLEEP_TIME)
print ''
slots.show_failed_boards()
def main():
try:
cpu_count = multiprocessing.cpu_count()
except NotImplementedError:
cpu_count = 1
parser = optparse.OptionParser()
# Add options here
parser.add_option('-c', '--color', action='store_true', default=False,
help='display the log in color')
parser.add_option('-d', '--defconfigs', type='string',
help='a file containing a list of defconfigs to move')
parser.add_option('-n', '--dry-run', action='store_true', default=False,
help='perform a trial run (show log with no changes)')
parser.add_option('-e', '--exit-on-error', action='store_true',
default=False,
help='exit immediately on any error')
parser.add_option('-s', '--force-sync', action='store_true', default=False,
help='force sync by savedefconfig')
parser.add_option('-H', '--headers-only', dest='cleanup_headers_only',
action='store_true', default=False,
help='only cleanup the headers')
parser.add_option('-j', '--jobs', type='int', default=cpu_count,
help='the number of jobs to run simultaneously')
parser.add_option('-v', '--verbose', action='store_true', default=False,
help='show any build errors as boards are built')
parser.usage += ' CONFIG ...'
(options, configs) = parser.parse_args()
if len(configs) == 0 and not options.force_sync:
parser.print_usage()
sys.exit(1)
# prefix the option name with CONFIG_ if missing
configs = [ config if config.startswith('CONFIG_') else 'CONFIG_' + config
for config in configs ]
check_top_directory()
check_clean_directory()
update_cross_compile(options.color)
if not options.cleanup_headers_only:
move_config(configs, options)
if configs:
cleanup_headers(configs, options.dry_run)
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()