Add KERNEL_KEYS_REQUEST_CACHE option.
'tristate' (ie. module builds) are not valid in Config-kernel.in, hence
remove tristate KERNEL_ENCRYPTED_KEYS. It will be readded as a kernel
module in a follow-up commit.
Fixes: 39d817cf38 ("Add config symbols for kernel keyring support")
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
As discussed in the today's (2020-12-10) meeting, add a new option to
menuconfig to group the selection of all experimental features to be
selected by default.
Developers are recommended to make use of this new symbol to guard
new features.
Other developers and community members should feel encouraged to
build with this flag enabled to help testing and provide feedback.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
This is a neat project, but offers no benefit to OpenWrt. The initial
reason for it was to be a replacement for libstdcpp as it is smaller
and lacks compatibility for C++98. Unfortunately, compiling several
packages with it results in larger ipk sizes.
While not a member of the packages feed, this will be moved to
packages-abandoned to keep it somewhere.
Signed-off-by: Rosen Penev <rosenp@gmail.com>
Drop our local sstrip copy and use the current ELFKickers upstream
version.
Patch the original makefile in order to avoid building elftoc, since it
fails with musl's elf.h. This is fine, since we only need sstrip anyway.
Finally, add the possibility to pass additional arguments to sstrip and
pass -z (remove trailing zeros) by default, which matches the behaviour
of the previous version.
Signed-off-by: Rui Salvaterra <rsalvaterra@gmail.com>
[shorten long commit msg lines]
Signed-off-by: Paul Spooren <mail@aparcar.org>
Trivial cosmetic cleanup. This also helps for script that parse for
options in Config files.
Signed-off-by: Paul Spooren <mail@aparcar.org>
Reviewed-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
This reverts commit 9eb9943f82.
Building the 'modular' variant requires 'semodule_package' from
'selinux-python' to be installed on the buildhost.
Apart from that, this change also broke the monolithic refpolicy
'targeted' build.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
This adds a variant of refpolicy that builds the modular form of the
policy. While this requires more memory on the target device, along with
some tricks to deal with OpenWrt's volatile /var directory, it is useful
for experiementing with SELinux policy.
Signed-off-by: W. Michael Petullo <mike@flyn.org>
The pistachio target uses a MIPS CPU with FPU and OpenWrt uses a
toolchain with hard FPU support. MIPS FPU support needs the FPU
emulation code in the kernel.
Fixes: ac5671f46c ("kernel: remove obsolete kernel version switches for 4.19")
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
This removes switches dependent on kernel version 4.19 as well as
several packages/modules selected only for that version.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
In order to make it easier for users to build with SELinux, have a
single option in 'Global build settings' to enable all necessary
kernel features, userland packages and build-system hooks.
Also add better descriptions and help messages while at it.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
The LSM (Linux security mechanism) list is the successor of the now
legacy *major LSM*. Instead of defining a single security mechanism the
LSM symbol is a comma separated list of mechanisms to load.
Until recently OpenWrt would only support DAC (Unix discretionary access
controls) which don't require an additional entry in the LSM list. With
the newly introduced SELinux support the LSM needs to be extended else
only a manual modified Kernel cmdline (`security=selinux`) would
activate SELinux.
As the default OpenWrt Kernel config sets DAC as default security
mechanism, SELinux is stripped from the LSM list, even if
`KERNEL_DEFAULT_SECURITY_SELINUX` is activated. To allow SELinux without
a modified cmdline this commit sets a specific LSM list if
`KERNEL_SECURITY_SELINUX` is enabled.
The upstream Kconfig adds even more mechanisms
(smack,selinux,tomoyo,apparmor), but until they're ported to OpenWrt,
these can be ignored.
To compile SELinux Kernel support but disable it from loading, the
already present options `KERNEL_SECURITY_SELINUX_DISABLE` or
`KERNEL_SECURITY_SELINUX_BOOTPARAM` (with custom cmdline `selinux=0`)
can be used. Further it's possible to edit `/etc/selinux/config`.
Signed-off-by: Paul Spooren <mail@aparcar.org>
This removes switches dependent on kernel version 4.14 as well as
several packages/modules selected only for that version.
This also removes sched-cake-virtual, which is not required anymore
now that we have only one variant of cake.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
This target is still on kernel 4.14, and recent attempts to move it to
kernel 5.4 have not led to success. The device tester reported that it
wouldn't boot with the following messages:
From sysupgrade:
Press any key within 4 seconds to enter setup....
loading kernel from nand... OK
setting up elf image... OK
jumping to kernel code
At this point the system hangs.
From CompactFlash:
Press any key within 4 seconds to enter setup....
Booting CF
Loading kernel... done
setting up elf image... kernel out of range kernel loading failed
The tester reported that the same was observed with current master
(kernel 4.14) as well. This looks like some kernel size restriction.
Since this target is quite old and only supports one device, and since
nobody else seemed interested in working on this for quite some time,
I decided to not put further work into analyzing the problem and drop
this together with the other 4.14-only targets.
Patchwork series:
https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/project/openwrt/list/?series=197066&state=*
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
This adds a number of options to config/Config-kernel.in so that
packages related to SELinux support can enable the appropriate Linux
kernel support.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
[rebase; add ext4, F2FS, UBIFS, and JFFS2 support; add commit message]
Signed-off-by: W. Michael Petullo <mike@flyn.org>
This allows the build process to prepare a squashfs filesystem for use
with SELinux.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
[rebase, add commit message]
Signed-off-by: W. Michael Petullo <mike@flyn.org>
This target has been mostly replaced by ath79 and won't be included
in the upcoming release anymore. Finally put it to rest.
This also removes all references in packages, tools, etc. as well as
the uboot-ar71xx and vsc73x5-ucode packages.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
The symbol KERNEL_CGROUP_HUGETLB is always used whenever KERNEL_CGROUPS is enabled.
The absence of this notation will cause the user to be asked to enter this parameter the first time it is compiled.
Signed-off-by: Yuan Tao <ty@wevs.org>
Remove `if !SMALL_FLASH` in places which are anyway already augmented
by `if !SMALL_FLASH`.
Always enable CONFIG_BLK_DEV_THROTTLING on !SMALL_FLASH devices rather
than just enabling it on bcm27xx.
Enabled CPU bandwidth provisioning for FAIR_GROUP_SCHED on !SMALL_FLASH
devices as CONFIG_FAIR_GROUP_SCHED is already enabled and becomes more
useful for cgroups with that option enbled as well.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Remapping the local build path in debug information makes debugging
using ./scripts/remote-gdb harder, because files no longer refer to the full
path on the build host.
For local builds, debug information does not need to be reproducible,
since it will be stripped out of packages anyway.
For buildbot builds, it makes sense to keep debug information reproducible,
since the full path is not needed (nor desired) anywhere.
Signed-off-by: Felix Fietkau <nbd@nbd.name>
Enabling KERNEL_TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE exposes 2 missing symbols:
* CONFIG_READ_ONLY_THP_FOR_FS
* TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE_ALWAYS
* TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE_MADVISE
The first one was added in 5.4, and is marked experimental there so just
disable it in the generic config.
For the latter two, we should not force the user to use either of them,
so add them as build-configurable kernel options.
Fixes: d1a8217d87 ("kernel: clean-up build-configurable kernel config symbols")
Signed-off-by: Stijn Tintel <stijn@linux-ipv6.be>
It was removed from target defaults though it didn't exist in the
build-systems kernel configuration options. Add it there.
Fixes: d1a8217d87 ("kernel: clean-up build-configurable kernel config symbols")
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
By specifying "BROKEN := 1" or "BROKEN := y" for a device, it will be
hidden (and deselected) by default. By that, it provides a stronger
option to "disable" a device beyond just using DEFAULT := n.
To make these devices visible, just enable the BROKEN option in
developer settings as already implemented for targets and packages.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
Don't explicitely disable options in target/linux/generic/config-* if
they are already controlled in config/Config-kernel.in.
Add a bunch of new symbols and prepare defaults for using only unified
hierarchy (ie. cgroup2). Update symbol dependencies while at it
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Currently the user space stack cookies work well also when the kernel
stack cookies are not activated. This is handled completely in user
space and does not need kernel support.
This dependency was probably needed some years ago when the libc did not
support stack cookies.
Reviewed-by: Ian Cooper <iancooper@hotmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
Set CCACHE_DIR to $(TOPDIR)/.ccache and CCACHE_BASEDIR to $(TOPDIR).
This allows to do clean and dirclean. Cache hit rate for test build
after dirclean is ~65%.
If CCACHE is enabled stats are printed out at the end of building process.
CCACHE_DIR config variable allows to override default, which could be useful
when sharing cache with many builds.
cacheclean make target allows to clean the cache.
Changes from v1:
- remove ccache directory using CCACHE_DIR variable
- remove ccache leftovers from sdk and toolchain make files
- introduce CONFIG_CCACHE_DIR variable
- introduce cacheclean make target
Signed-off-by: Roman Yeryomin <roman@advem.lv>
Removes the standalone implementation of stack smashing protection
in gcc's libssp in favour of the native implementation available
in glibc and uclibc. Musl libc already uses its native ssp, so this
patch does not affect musl-based toolchains.
Stack smashing protection configuration options are now uniform
across all supported libc variants.
This also makes kernel-level stack smashing protection available
for x86_64 and i386 builds using non-musl libc.
Signed-off-by: Ian Cooper <iancooper@hotmail.com>
This patch adds support for the MikroTik RouterBOARD RB493G, ported
from the ar71xx target.
See https://routerboard.com/RB493G for details
Specification:
- SoC Qualcomm Atheros AR7161
- RAM: 256 MiB
- Storage: 128MiB NAND
- Ethernet: 9x 1000/100/10 Mbps
- USB 1x 2.0 / 1.0 type A
- PCIe: 3x Mini slot
- MicroSD slot
Working:
- Board/system detection
- Ethernet
- SPI
- NAND
- LEDs
- USB
- Sysupgrade
Enabled (but untested due to lack of hardware):
- PCIe - ath79_pci_irq struct has the slot/pin/IRQ mappings if needed
Installation methods:
- tftp boot initramfs image, scp then flash via "sysupgrade -n"
- nand boot existing OpenWrt, scp then flash via "sysupgrade -n"
Notes:
- initramfs image will not work if uncompressed image size over ~8.5Mb
- The "rb4xx" drivers have been enabled
Signed-off-by: Christopher Hill <ch6574@gmail.com>
JSON info files contain machine readable information of built profiles
and resulting images. These files were added in commit 881ed09ee6
("build: create JSON files containing image info").
They are useful for firmware wizards and script checking for
reproducibility.
Currently all JSON files are stored next to the built images, resulting
in up to 168 individual files for the ath79/generic target.
This patch refactors the JSON creation to store individual per image
(not per profile) files in $(BUILD_DIR)/json_info_files and create an
single overview file called `profiles.json` in the target directory.
Storing per image files and not per profile solves the problem of
parallel file writes. If a profiles sysupgrade and factory image are
finished at the same time both processes would write to the same JSON
file, resulting in randomly broken outputs.
Some target like x86/64 do not use the image code yet, resulting in
missing JSON files. If no JSON info files were created, no
`profiles.json` files is created as it would be empty anyway.
As before, this creation is enabled by default only if `BUILDBOT` is set.
Tested via buildroot & ImageBuilder on ath79/generic, imx6 and x86/64.
Signed-off-by: Paul Spooren <mail@aparcar.org>
[json_info_files dir handling in Make, if case refactoring]
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Add EFI platform bootable images for x86 platforms. These images can
also boot from legacy BIOS platform.
EFI System Partition need to be fat12/fat16/fat32 (not need to load
filesystem drivers), so the first partition of EFI images are not ext4
filesystem any more.
GPT partition table has an alternate partition table, we did not
generate it. This may cause problems when use these images as qemu disk
(kernel can not find rootfs), we pad enough sectors will be ok.
Signed-off-by: 李国 <uxgood.org@gmail.com>
[part_magic_* refactoring, removed genisoimage checks]
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
This commit introduces few related changes which need to be done in
single commit to keep images buildable between git revisions. In result
it retains all previous image creation possibilities with slight name
change of generated images. Brief summary of the commit:
* Split up image generation recipe to smaller chunks to make it more
generic and reusable.
* Make iso images x86 specific and drop their definition as root
filesystem.
* Convert image creation process to generic code specified in image.mk.
* Make geode subtarget inherit features from the main target instead of
redefining them.
* For subtargets create device definitions with basic packages set.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Maciej Nowak <tomek_n@o2.pl>
[rebased]
Signed-off-by: Paul Spooren <mail@aparcar.org>
1. KERNEL_CRASH_DUMP should depends on KERNEL_PROC_KCORE (kexec use it)
2. select crashkernel mem size by totalmem
mem <= 256M disable crashkernel by default
mem >= 4G use 256M for crashkernel
mem >= 8G use 512M for crashkernel
default use 128M
3. set BOOT_IMAGE in kdump.init
4. resolve a "Unhandled rela relocation: R_X86_64_PLT32" error
Tested on x86_64
Signed-off-by: Chen Minqiang <ptpt52@gmail.com>
With kernel 5.4 the upstream kernel supports deactivating the FPU
support on MIPS. Use this new upstream feature instead of our older
patch which was removed when porting the kernel patches to kernel 5.4.
This way both options are set which should work for older kernel
versions and also new ones.
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
CONFIG_INCLUDE_CONFIG option is helpful for being able to rebuild the
exact same firmware as you see on a live OpenWRT instance, but it's
crucially missing feeds information, so we can't rebuild the exact same
package versions. This commit fixes this by adding the remaining feeds
(and version) buildinfo files to the image.
Signed-off-by: Xu Wang <xwang1498@gmx.com>
Make it possible to activate some additional kernel debug options.
This can be used to debug some problems in kernel drivers.
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke.mehrtens@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexandru Ardelean <ardeleanalex@gmail.com>
The adds an option to activate KCOV (Code coverage for fuzzing).
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke.mehrtens@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexandru Ardelean <ardeleanalex@gmail.com>
The kernel kernel address sanitizer is able to detect some memory
bugs in the kernel like out of range array accesses.
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke.mehrtens@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexandru Ardelean <ardeleanalex@gmail.com>
The kernel Undefined Behavior Sanitizer is able to detect some memory
bugs in the kernel like out of range array accesses.
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke.mehrtens@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexandru Ardelean <ardeleanalex@gmail.com>
This change makes the names of Broadcom targets consistent by using
the common notation based on SoC/CPU ID (which is used internally
anyway), bcmXXXX instead of brcmXXXX.
This is even used for target TITLE in make menuconfig already,
only the short target name used brcm so far.
Despite, since subtargets range from bcm2708 to bcm2711, it seems
appropriate to use bcm27xx instead of bcm2708 (again, as already done
for BOARDNAME).
This also renames the packages brcm2708-userland and brcm2708-gpu-fw.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
Acked-by: Álvaro Fernández Rojas <noltari@gmail.com>
This tristate choose allows to select to build only some applications
with PIE enabled. On MIPS binaries are getting about 30% bigger when PIE
is activated for the, which is a huge increase.
Network exposed applications like dnsmasq should then be build with PIE
enabled, but some applications which are normally not parsing data from
the network do not have it activated. The regular option should give a
good trade off between extra flash and RAM memory usage and security.
This changes the default from building no applications with PIE to build
some specifically marked applications with PIE enabled. This option is
only activated for targets with bigger flash and RAM to not consume
extra memory on the very small targets. On SDK builds the Regular option
should always be selected, because some tiny targets share the
applications with big targets and only the images for the tiny targets
should contain the none PIE applications, but the images for the normal
targets should use PIE. The shared packages should always use PIE when
it should be normally activated.
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
Acked-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
Don't build with uClibc-ng. It's totally unsupported as several functions
are missing.
Make the musl libc support conditional.
Fix hash with make check FIXUP=1. Apparently I based the Makefile off of
libedit and forgot to fix the hash.
Signed-off-by: Rosen Penev <rosenp@gmail.com>
Fixes: 856ea2bad3 ("libcxx: Add package")
Currently in OpenWrt, there are two libc++: libstdcpp and uClibc++. The
former is huge and the latter supports only C++98 with some basic support
for C++11. Those C++ versions seem to be specific to the compiler version
libcxx supports C++11 and above while being much smaller than libstdcpp.
On mt7621, these are the sizes of the ipks that I get:
libstdcpp: 460786
libcxx: 182881
uClibc++:67720
libcxx is faster than uClibc++ and is under active development as part of
the LLVM project while uClibc++ is effectively dead.
This PR modifies uclibc++.mk to expose the make menuconfig option. Further
cleanup is beyond the scope of this PR. What that means is, this is not
used by default.
A g++-libcxx wrapper based on the uClibc++ one was added. Works the same
way.
Compile tested with all packages that use uclibc++.mk in their Makefiles
under mipsel_24kc. kismet fails compilation but that package needs to be
cleaned up and updated.
Runtime tested with gddrescue, gdisk, dcwapd, bonnie++, and aircrack-ng
on a TP-Link Archer C7v2.
Signed-off-by: Rosen Penev <rosenp@gmail.com>
This separates the options for signature creation and verification
* SIGNED_PACKAGES create Packages.sig
* SIGNED_IMAGES add ucert signature to created images
* CHECK_SIGNATURE add verification capabilities to images
* INSTALL_LOCAL_KEY add local key-build to /etc/opkg/keys
Right now the buildbot.git contains some hacks to create images that
have signature verification capabilities while not storing private keys
on buildbot slaves. This commit allows to disable these steps for the
buildbots and only perform signing on the master.
Signed-off-by: Paul Spooren <mail@aparcar.org>
Lets remove unused GCC_VERSION_4_8 symbol after the series of patches
which has switched to target gcc-8 by default.
Signed-off-by: Paul Spooren <mail@aparcar.org>
[refactored into separate commit]
Signed-off-by: Petr Štetiar <ynezz@true.cz>
The JSON info files contain details about the created firmware images
per device and are stored next to the created images.
The JSON files are stored as "$(IMAGE_PREFIX).json" and contain some
device/image meta data as well as a list of created firmware images.
An example of openwrt-ramips-rt305x-aztech_hw550-3g.json
{
"id": "aztech_hw550-3g",
"image_prefix": "openwrt-ramips-rt305x-aztech_hw550-3g",
"images": [
{
"name": "openwrt-ramips-rt305x-aztech_hw550-3g-squashfs-sysupgrade.bin",
"sha256": "db2b34b0ec4a83d9bf612cf66fab0dc3722b191cb9bedf111e5627a4298baf20",
"type": "sysupgrade"
}
],
"metadata_version": 1,
"supported_devices": [
"aztech,hw550-3g",
"hw550-3g"
],
"target": "ramips/rt305x",
"titles": [
{
"model": "HW550-3G",
"vendor": "Aztech"
},
{
"model": "ALL0239-3G",
"vendor": "Allnet"
}
],
"version_commit": "r10920+123-0cc87b3bac",
"version_number": "SNAPSHOT"
}
Signed-off-by: Paul Spooren <mail@aparcar.org>