Thank you Maria! When will that update reach the Debian source repo, so I can build the package?
On Sat, Apr 4, 2020 at 7:27 PM Maria Matějka <maria.mate...@nic.cz> wrote: > Hello! > Hopefully fixed in current master, commit 2928c5bcc7 > The affected test was broken itself, yet it accidentally somehow worked on > little endian. > Maria > > On April 4, 2020 1:42:58 AM GMT+02:00, "Maria Matějka" < > maria.mate...@nic.cz> wrote: >> >> Hello! >> >> I've just replicated the bug via the proot approach. Thank you a lot for >> your help! >> >> Maria >> >> On April 2, 2020 1:47:32 PM GMT+02:00, Clemens Schrimpe < >> clemens.schri...@gmail.com> wrote: >>> >>> Hallo all - >>> >>> I built BIRD (1.x and 2.x) for the EdgeRouter platforms(!) myself for >>> many years now and I still do. At first I used a "proot" environment with >>> QEMU on a Ubuntu environment, but I have moved on to compiling it directly >>> on the machines in question a while ago. EdgeRouters (especially the "XG" >>> or "Infinity" types) have more than enough CPU and RAM to do it there, it's >>> just the "local storage" and the way their firmware is updated, which >>> prevents you from "just doing it". >>> >>> The solution is simple, though: Current EdgeOS versions support the >>> USB-Port on those routers and you can just plug in a cheap thumb drive or >>> even a real SSD/HD with a USB-Interface. Format it with ext3/ext4, mount it >>> to /mnt for example, clone the current OS onto it, like so: >>> >>> rsync -aAXv >>> --exclude={"/dev/*","/proc/*","/sys/*","/tmp/*","/run/*","/mnt/*","/media/*","/lost+found","/ >>> root.dev/*"} / /mnt/ >>> >>> create shadow-mounts for the special kernel filesystems: >>> >>> mount --rbind /dev /mnt/dev >>> mount --rbind /proc /mnt/proc >>> mount --rbind /sys /mnt/sys >>> >>> and now you can chroot into your development environment: >>> >>> chroot /mnt /bin/bash --login >>> >>> and (bonus track) even start an sshd *within* this environment for >>> easier access later: >>> >>> mkdir /var/run/sshd /run/sshd # may fail on either >>> >>> /usr/sbin/sshd -p 222 -o Protocol=2 >>> >>> which runs on port 222 now (vs. the "normal" sshd, running on port 22). >>> >>> Depending on the EdgeOS Version (1.x or 2.x) you install additional >>> packages need for development. Here are some suggestions >>> (non-comprehensive): >>> >>> Packages for 2.x: >>> >>> wget >>> git >>> build-essential >>> autoconf >>> locales-all >>> cscope >>> ncurses-dev >>> libssl-dev >>> libev-dev >>> liblzo2-dev >>> libpam-dev >>> minizip >>> flex >>> bison >>> libperl-dev >>> libreadline-dev >>> libpcre3-dev >>> libpcap-dev >>> libldap-dev >>> libtalloc-dev >>> libcap2-dev >>> libmemcached-dev >>> libjson-c-dev >>> libgdbm-dev >>> libsqlite3-dev >>> libssh-dev >>> libssh2-1-dev >>> >>> binutils manuell nachinstallieren! (dpkg -i ...) >>> >>> >>> ------ >>> >>> Packages for 1.x: >>> >>> >>> autoconf >>> locales-all >>> cscope >>> ncurses-dev >>> libssl-dev >>> libev-dev >>> liblzo2-dev >>> libpam-dev >>> flex >>> bison >>> libperl-dev >>> libreadline-dev >>> libpcre3-dev >>> libpcap-dev >>> libldap-dev >>> libtalloc-dev >>> libcap2-dev >>> libmemcached-dev >>> libgdbm-dev >>> libsqlite3-dev >>> libssh-dev >>> libssh2-1-dev >>> >>> >>> Why am I doing this on this "shadow root" again? Because every EdgeOS >>> update wipes *everything*, except for /config (which is why I place my >>> compiled "modules" (binaries), like BIRD, into /config/opt/bird/... for >>> example → *./configure -prefix=/config/opt/bird* . >>> >>> This has been working very well for me in a while and I am compiling all >>> sorts of tools all the time within this "Build jail". >>> >>> Tools needed to start this off (mkfs, rsync, etc.) are either already on >>> the platform or can be installed through the officially supported "apt-get" >>> mechanism. >>> >>> The above was quickly copy&pasted together from what I have on my >>> terminal windows right now and and is surely lacking a step or two along >>> the way, sorry. Please feel free to ask for more detailed instructions if >>> you get stuck somewhere. >>> >>> Greeting, >>> >>> Clemens >>> >>> PS: If you want to cover the whole EdgeRouter platform you'll need to do >>> this *twice* - once on an ER-Pro/ER-Infinity and once on an ER-10X (the >>> only X-router with an open USB port), as the former is MIPS-BE and the >>> latter is MIPS-LE ... yes, all of these can somehow be "emulated", but I >>> just found it much easier to create/operate/maintain those build >>> environments on their respective *native* platforms - besides: They are >>> incredibly cheap - even the Infinity router (8 x SFP+, 116 CPUs - 16G RAM - >>> bored beyond belief) is comparatively cheap. >>> >>> We've not been able to build ourselves on MIPS yet, we went into some >>> strange problems last time (don't remember exactly). Were you so kind >>> please and could you please help us setting up Debian for MIPS in QEMU if I >>> fail to manage it once more? >>> The main issue was, what hardware to choose and how to boot it. But I'll >>> try once more before asking any detailed question. Then we can replicate >>> your issue and probably even build and test for MIPS. >>> >>> >>> > -- > Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity. >