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- #!/bin/sh
- # This contains the COMPLETE list of binaries that this script needs
- # to function. The only exception is the QEMU binary since it is not
- # known in advance which one wil be required.
- readonly LIBTOOLS="cp echo cat printf which mountpoint mount umount modprobe"
- info_msg() {
- # This function handles the printing that is bold within all
- # scripts. This is a convenience function so that the rather ugly
- # looking ASCII escape codes live in only one place.
- printf "\033[1m%s\n\033[m" "$@"
- }
- die() {
- # This function is registered in all the scripts to make sure that
- # the important mounts get cleaned up and the $ROOTFS location is
- # removed.
- printf "FATAL: %s\n" "$@"
- umount_pseudofs
- [ -d "$ROOTFS" ] && rm -rf "$ROOTFS"
- exit 1
- }
- check_tools() {
- # All scripts within mklive declare the tools they will use in a
- # variable called "REQTOOLS". This function checks that these
- # tools are available and prints out the path to each tool that
- # will be used. This can be useful to figure out what is broken
- # if a different version of something is used than was expected.
- for tool in $LIBTOOLS $REQTOOLS ; do
- if ! which "$tool" > /dev/null ; then
- die "Required tool $f is not available on this system!"
- fi
- done
- info_msg "The following tools will be used:"
- for tool in $LIBTOOLS $REQTOOLS ; do
- which "$tool"
- done
- }
- mount_pseudofs() {
- # This function ensures that the psuedofs mountpoints are present
- # in the chroot. Strictly they are not necessary to have for many
- # commands, but bind-mounts are cheap and it isn't too bad to just
- # mount them all the time.
- for f in dev proc sys; do
- # In a naked chroot there is nothing to bind the mounts to, so
- # we need to create directories for these first.
- [ ! -d "$ROOTFS/$f" ] && mkdir -p "$ROOTFS/$f"
- if ! mountpoint -q "$ROOTFS/$f" ; then
- # It is VERY important that this only happen if the
- # pseudofs isn't already mounted. If it already is then
- # this is virtually impossible to troubleshoot because it
- # looks like the subsequent umount just isn't working.
- mount -r --bind /$f "$ROOTFS/$f"
- fi
- done
- }
- umount_pseudofs() {
- # This function cleans up the mounts in the chroot. Failure to
- # clean up these mounts will prevent the tmpdir from being
- # deletable instead throwing the error "Device or Resource Busy".
- # The '-f' option is passed to umount to account for the
- # contingency where the psuedofs mounts are not present.
- if [ -d "${ROOTFS}" ]; then
- for f in dev proc sys; do
- umount -f "$ROOTFS/$f" >/dev/null 2>&1
- done
- fi
- }
- run_cmd_target() {
- info_msg "Running $* for target $XBPS_TARGET_ARCH ..."
- if [ "$XBPS_TARGET_ARCH" = "$(xbps-uhelper arch)" ] ; then
- # This is being run on the same architecture as the host,
- # therefore we should set XBPS_ARCH.
- if ! eval XBPS_ARCH="$XBPS_TARGET_ARCH" "$@" ; then
- die "Could not run command $*"
- fi
- else
- # This is being run on a foriegn arch, therefore we should set
- # XBPS_TARGET_ARCH. In this case XBPS will not attempt
- # certain actions and will require reconfiguration later.
- if ! eval XBPS_TARGET_ARCH="$XBPS_TARGET_ARCH" "$@" ; then
- die "Could not run command $*"
- fi
- fi
- }
- run_cmd() {
- # This is a general purpose function to run commands that a user
- # may wish to see. For example its useful to see the tar/xz
- # pipeline to not need to delve into the scripts to see what
- # options its set up with.
- info_msg "Running $*"
- eval "$@"
- }
- run_cmd_chroot() {
- # General purpose chroot function which makes sure the chroot is
- # prepared. This function takes 2 arguments, the location to
- # chroot to and the command to run.
- # This is an idempotent function, it is safe to call every time
- # before entering the chroot. This has the advantage of making
- # execution in the chroot appear as though it "Just Works(tm)".
- register_binfmt
- # Before we step into the chroot we need to make sure the
- # pseudo-filesystems are ready to go. Not all commands will need
- # this, but its still a good idea to call it here anyway.
- mount_pseudofs
- # With assurance that things will run now we can jump into the
- # chroot and run stuff!
- chroot "$1" sh -c "$2"
- }
- cleanup_chroot() {
- # This function cleans up the chroot shims that are used by QEMU
- # to allow builds on alien platforms. It takes no arguments but
- # expects the global $ROOTFS variable to be set.
- # Un-Mount the pseudofs mounts if they were mounted
- umount_pseudofs
- # If a QEMU binary was copied in, remove that as well
- if [ -x "$ROOTFS/usr/bin/$QEMU_BIN" ] ; then
- rm "$ROOTFS/usr/bin/$QEMU_BIN"
- fi
- }
- # TODO: Figure out how to register the binfmt for x86_64 and for i686
- # to facilitate building on alien build systems.
- register_binfmt() {
- # This function sets up everything that is needed to be able to
- # chroot into a ROOTFS and be able to run commands there. This
- # really matters on platforms where the host architecture is
- # different from the target, and you wouldn't be able to run
- # things like xbps-reconfigure -a. This function is idempotent
- # (You can run it multiple times without modifying state). This
- # function takes no arguments, but does expect the global variable
- # $XBPS_TARGET_ARCH to be set.
- # This select sets up the "magic" bytes in /proc that let the
- # kernel select an alternate interpreter. More values for this
- # map can be obtained from here:
- # https://github.com/qemu/qemu/blob/master/scripts/qemu-binfmt-conf.sh
- case "${XBPS_TARGET_ARCH}" in
- armv*)
- _cpu=arm
- _magic="\x7fELF\x01\x01\x01\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x02\x00\x28\x00"
- _mask="\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\x00\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\xfe\xff\xff\xff"
- QEMU_BIN=qemu-arm-static
- ;;
- aarch64*)
- _cpu=aarch64
- _magic="\x7fELF\x02\x01\x01\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x02\x00\xb7"
- _mask="\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\x00\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\xfe\xff\xff"
- QEMU_BIN=qemu-aarch64-static
- ;;
- mipsel*)
- _cpu=mipsel
- _magic="\x7fELF\x01\x01\x01\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x02\x00\x08\x00"
- _mask="\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\x00\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\xfe\xff\xff\xff"
- QEMU_BIN=qemu-mipsel-static
- ;;
- *86*)
- info_msg "FIXME: Assuming that x86 instructions are native"
- QEMU_BIN=NATIVE
- ;;
- *)
- die "Unknown target architecture!"
- ;;
- esac
- # In the special case where the build is native we can return
- # without doing anything else
- if [ "$QEMU_BIN" = "NATIVE" ] ; then
- return
- fi
- # For builds that do not match the host architecture, the correct
- # qemu binary will be required.
- if ! $QEMU_BIN -version >/dev/null 2>&1; then
- die "$QEMU_BIN binary is missing in your system, exiting."
- fi
- # In order to use the binfmt system the binfmt_misc mountpoint
- # must exist inside of proc
- if ! mountpoint -q /proc/sys/fs/binfmt_misc ; then
- modprobe -q binfmt_misc
- mount -t binfmt_misc binfmt_misc /proc/sys/fs/binfmt_misc 2>/dev/null
- fi
- # Only register if the map is incomplete
- if [ ! -f /proc/sys/fs/binfmt_misc/qemu-$_cpu ] ; then
- echo ":qemu-$_cpu:M::$_magic:$_mask:/usr/bin/$QEMU_BIN:" > /proc/sys/fs/binfmt_misc/register 2>/dev/null
- fi
- # If the static binary isn't in the chroot then the chroot will
- # fail. The kernel knows about the map but without the static
- # version there's no interpreter in the chroot, only the
- # dynamically linked one in the host. To simplify things we just
- # use the static one always and make sure it shows up at the same
- # place in the host and the chroot.
- if [ ! -x "$ROOTFS/usr/bin/$QEMU_BIN" ] ; then
- cp -f "$(which "$QEMU_BIN")" "$ROOTFS/usr/bin" ||
- die "Could not install $QEMU_BIN to $ROOTFS/usr/bin/"
- fi
- }
- # These should all resolve even if they won't have the appropriate
- # repodata files for the selected architecture.
- : "${XBPS_REPOSITORY:=--repository=http://repo.voidlinux.eu/current \
- --repository=http://repo.voidlinux.eu/current/musl \
- --repository=http://repo.voidlinux.eu/current/aarch64}"
- # The package artifacts are cacheable, but they need to be isolated
- # from the host cache.
- : "${XBPS_CACHEDIR:=--cachedir=$PWD/xbps-cache/${XBPS_TARGET_ARCH}}"
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