On 9/19/19 11:40 PM, Laszlo Ersek wrote: > On 09/19/19 21:56, Philippe Mathieu-Daudé wrote: >> On 9/19/19 9:08 PM, Laszlo Ersek wrote: >>> On 09/19/19 18:39, Philippe Mathieu-Daudé wrote: >>>> On 9/18/19 7:11 PM, Laszlo Ersek wrote: >>>>> It turns out that forcing python2 for running the edk2 "build" utility is >>>>> neither necessary nor sufficient. >>>>> >>>>> Forcing python2 is not sufficient for two reasons: >>>>> >>>>> - QEMU is moving away from python2, with python2 nearing EOL, >>>>> >>>>> - according to my most recent testing, the lacking dependency information >>>>> in the makefiles that are generated by edk2's "build" utility can cause >>>>> parallel build failures even when "build" is executed by python2. >>>>> >>>>> And forcing python2 is not necessary because we can still return to the >>>>> original idea of filtering out jobserver-related options from MAKEFLAGS. >>>>> So do that. >>>> >>>> FYI I tried uninstalling python2 on Fedora 29, >>>> >>>> $ make -C roms efi -j8 >>>> make: Entering directory '/home/phil/source/qemu/roms' >>>> make -C edk2/BaseTools \ >>>> EXTRA_OPTFLAGS='' \ >>>> EXTRA_LDFLAGS='' >> >> ^ this is the 'edk2-basetools' target from roms/Makefile. >> >>>> make[1]: Entering directory '/home/phil/source/qemu/roms/edk2/BaseTools' >>>> [...] >>>> make -C Tests >>>> make[2]: Entering directory >>>> '/home/phil/source/qemu/roms/edk2/BaseTools/Tests' >>>> /bin/sh: python: command not found >>>> make[2]: *** [GNUmakefile:11: test] Error 127 >>>> >>>> 'python' seems to be provided by python-unversioned-command which is >>>> wired to Python2: >>>> >>>> $ dnf info python-unversioned-command >>>> Last metadata expiration check: 0:03:08 ago on Thu 19 Sep 2019 04:21:21 >>>> PM UTC. >>>> Available Packages >>>> Name : python-unversioned-command >>>> Version : 2.7.16 >>>> Release : 2.fc29 >>>> Arch : noarch >>>> Size : 13 k >>>> Source : python2-2.7.16-2.fc29.src.rpm >>>> Repo : updates >>>> Summary : The "python" command that runs Python 2 >>>> URL : https://www.python.org/ >>>> License : Python >>>> Description : This package contains /usr/bin/python - the "python" >>>> command that runs Python 2. >>>> >>>> I had to manually run update-alternatives to continue: >>>> >>>> $ sudo update-alternatives --install /usr/bin/python python >>>> /usr/bin/python3 69 >>>> >>>> Not sure this is the expected behavior, it is confusing. >>>> >>> >>> The python detection is not fool-proof in edk2. A description is given at: >>> >>> https://github.com/tianocore/tianocore.github.io/wiki/BaseTools-Support-Python2-Python3 >>> >>> To summarize that, it works like this, on Linux: >>> >>> - if you set PYTHON_COMMAND, then the binary pointed to by >>> PYTHON_COMMAND will be used. The edk2 build infrastructure will >>> determine whether the pointed-to binary is python 2 or python 3, and >>> branch to the corresponding implementation of the build tools. >>> >>> - Otherwise, *minor* version auto-detection is attempted. With >>> PYTHON3_ENABLE unset, or set to "TRUE", this minor version autodetection >>> will aim at minor versions of python3. >>> >>> - Otherwise (= PYTHON3_ENABLE set to a string different from "TRUE"), >>> the minor version auto-detection will focus on python2. >> >> What you document regarding PYTHON3_ENABLE is valid once we sourced >> edksetup.sh which is done in Makefile.edk2, one step after the previous >> call: >> >> efi: edk2-basetools # call 1 (python failing) >> $(MAKE) -f Makefile.edk2 # call 2 sourcing edksetup.sh >> >>> With this patch applied, the middle case is active. Apparently it fails, >>> because the edk2 build tools developers could not foresee the situations >>> that you've exposed the auto-detection to, on Ubuntu and Fedora. Back >>> when I tested the python3 enablement in edk2, I checked the patches in >>> the following environments: >>> >>> - on RHEL-7 with the system python 2, >>> - on RHEL-7 with python3.4 from EPEL-7, >>> - on RHEL-8 with python3.6, >>> - on RHEL-8 with platform-python. >>> >>> Everything worked fine for me. I have no clue what's going on in Ubuntu >>> and in Fedora. >>> >>> Can we require all build host installations -- where we expect to run >>> "make efi" -- to provide a Python 3 binary on $PATH that is plainly >>> called "python3"? >> >> Kevin recently suggested a similar patch (in another area): >> https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2019-09/msg04377.html >> >>> Then I think this patch should work. (If necessary, I could set >>> "PYTHON_COMMAND=python3", too.) >> >> Yes, I confirm forcing "PYTHON_COMMAND=python3 make -C roms efi" works. >> >> Not sure what is the cleaner way to fix this although... > > Thanks for the analysis! > > I understand the issue now. > > - "edk2/BaseTools/GNUmakefile" runs $(MAKE) in three subdirs: > - Source/C, > - Source/Python, > - Tests (which depends on the former two) > > - "edk2/BaseTools/Source/C/GNUmakefile" builds fine > - "edk2/BaseTools/Source/Python/GNUmakefile" does nothing > - "edk2/BaseTools/Tests/GNUmakefile" depends on PYTHON_COMMAND -- which > should either come from the user, or from sourcing "edksetup.sh" > > Therefore the issue is: > > - the "edk2-basetools" target in "roms/Makefile" does not > run (more precisely, does not "source") edksetup.sh > > - the "build-edk2-tools" target in "tests/uefi-test-tools/Makefile" > does not run (more precisely, does not "source") edksetup.sh > > I don't think I will reorganize the dependencies in those makefiles. Nor
Exactly, nor do I. > will I source edksetup.sh in the makefile recipes. Instead, I'll > directly set PYTHON_COMMAND=python3 in the "tools" recipes, and in the > build wrapper shell scripts. I notice this: $ git grep -i python configure ... configure:1832:python="$python -B" ... configure:7287:echo "PYTHON=$python" >> $config_host_mak ... configure:7863:echo "export PYTHON='$python'" >> "$iotests_common_env" While config-host.mak is too QEMU specific, the iotest common.env is very simple: $ cat tests/qemu-iotests/common.env # Automatically generated by configure - do not modify export PYTHON='python3 -B' I'm not sure we need to run ./configure to run any make target in the roms/ directory (since we use 'make -C roms ...'), this script doesn't even clone the required submodules, we need to call 'make git-submodule-update' first. Note that when there is no 'python3' in $PATH, the ./configure script checks for python2, but does not use generic 'python': configure:901:for binary in "${PYTHON-python3}" python python2 configure:905: python="$binary" > I'll try to post v2 soon. While forcing PYTHON_COMMAND in roms/Makefile would help, I think part of the proper way to fix this is generic to QEMU. Not sure what is the cleaner way yet :/ Regards, Phil.