Hello,
On 26 Jul 2024, at 13:39, Adolf Belka adolf.belka@ipfire.org wrote:
Hi Michael,
On 26/07/2024 10:35, Adolf Belka wrote:
Hi Michael,
On 26/07/2024 10:17, Michael Tremer wrote:
Hello,
Hmm, this might be a slight transitioning problem…
Yes, of course.
If you are now in next and build the distribution, it will likely build in build_x86_64/ and logs will be stored in logs_x86_64/. If you run ./make.sh clean, those directories will be removed.
I had forgotten that the new build system created the build and log dirs with the architecture included in the name now.
My next still had all the build and logs from the last build run and I did not do a ./make.sh clean before I did the pit pull. So the new clean was trying to remove the build_x86_64 but I still had the build dire.
If you however change back to master, it will assume that your build is in build/ and your logs are in logs/. If you then run clean, it will try to remove those directories and since they don’t exist, ./make.sh clean will return really quickly.> Is this maybe what happens?
Yes. That makes sense.
You can fix this by either removing the directories by hand or changing to next, run ./make.sh clean, then change to master and run it again. That should give you a clean tree.
I will run the clean in master which will get rid of all the old named dirs and then move to next with a clean structure for doing the build with the new system.
Everything worked fine for the build after I cleared out the old dirs.
Have noticed a couple of things. The new build process creates log_x86_64 and all log info is placed in there. However the log dir is still present and when I deleted it and started the build it was re-created but stayed empty the whole time. Not a big issue.
Oh, I did not notice this, but we should change that...
The other thing I found was that the following were listed in the untracked changes section.
doc/ChangeLog doc/packages-list.txt
We used to generate these files, but I don’t think they have any value any more, so I removed them. This was also necessary because the build environment can no longer write to the doc/ directory.
You can just delete them, but if you build master again, they will be created again.
I just did my build ignoring them but presumably they either need to be added somewhere to include them or they need to be added to the .gitignore
Apart from those two very minor observations, the new build process ran very nicely.
That is good to know!
Best, -Michael
Regards,
Adolf
Thanks.
Adolf.
Best, -Michael
On 26 Jul 2024, at 08:57, Adolf Belka adolf.belka@ipfire.org wrote:
Hi Michael,
I ran git pull origin next on my local repo and then went to try a package update build.
The gettoolchain and downloadsrc worked fine. However the ./make.sh clean just came straight back to the cursor without removing any of the directories in my repo.
I am now using my master repo version for doing the package update but something has gone wrong with the unshared migration because the clean command worked fine when it was in your own repo.
Regards,
Adolf.