On 4/5/2020 10:05 PM, Tomasz CEDRO wrote: > On Sun, Apr 5, 2020 at 4:59 PM Ruslan Garipov wrote: >> I'm sorry, I forgot to ask how do you call /usr/src/release/release.sh? >> Do you pass a configuration file to this script? >> >> By default /usr/src/release/release.sh checks out the source tree for >> the CURRENT branch (svn://svn.FreeBSD.org/base/head@rHEAD). In this >> case (if you doesn't change it) chrooted environment definitely will >> fail to run on STABLE and/or RELEASE. >> >> May be it's easy for you to use `make release` directly. > > Case solved! =) > > I wrongly assumed that release will simply update this svn repo that I > am working on.. but it fetches HEAD.. so I was trying to build > 13/HEAD/CURRENT on 12/STABLE/RELEASE that have different ABI thus bad > syscall.. and I need CURRENT to build CURRENT, right? :-) I believe in order to build the source tree you just need a compatible toolchain. So you can build the source tree for 13.0-CURRENT on 12.1-RELEASE system. But you need CURRENT to **run** userland with ABI from the CURRENT.
In order to build, for example, 12.1-RELEASE image with release(7) you should assign the SRCBRANCH variable to "base/release/12.1.0@rHEAD", and for 12.0-STABLE: SRCBRANCH="base/stable/12@rHEAD". Either in your configuration file for release(7) or directly in your shell: env SRCBRANCH="base/release/12.1.0@rHEAD" /usr/src/release/release.sh > > I will provide a release.conf, make.conf, src.conf and maybe KERNCONF > if I need something beyond GENERIC. For now I just need to work with > 12-STABLE. Good hint! :-) Sure. Just as a note, by default (when the caller doesn't provide a configuration file to release(7), or the file provided doesn't exists), release(7) builds GENERIC kernel and uses no make.conf and src.conf. Once again: for native build `make release` may be quite easy and fast. release(7) guarantees "absolutely clean build environment". > > Thank you Ruslan!! :-) > > Tomek > > ps/2: Can I provide a patch that will print out what actually is being > fetched by release.sh? That could save some time for first time users > :-) Why not :-) For me reading /usr/src/release/release.sh and default configs for ARM saved me a lot of time. _______________________________________________ freebsd-stable@freebsd.org mailing list https://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-stable-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"