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If mkosi.kernel/ exists, the mkosi script will try to build a kernel
image from it. We use the architecture defconfig as a base and add
our own extra configuration on top.
We also add some extra tooling to the build image required to build
the kernel and include some documentation in HACKING.md on how to
use this new feature.
To avoid the kernel sources from being copied into the build or
final image (which we don't want because it takes a while), we put
the mkosi.kernel/ directory in .gitignore and use
"SourceFileTransfer=mount" so that the sources are still accessible
in the build image.
Our source and build directories are nicely separated, so we should
have no issues with using SourceFileTransfer=mount, since the build
won't create any files owned by root in the source directory.
Some packages were removed from the OpenSUSE build, which broke the
unit tests. Add them back.
Fixes: 37d35150cb ("mkosi: Ensure we build all features/components in mkosi")
Explicitly enable all features/components in the mkosi build to
ensure they all get built and we get an error if they can't be built.
We also rework the packages sections of all mkosi configs to reduce
duplication and cover all the dependencies necessary to build/use all
systemd features.
Note that for the final image, since systemd is installed by default
in base images, we rely on that to install the base library dependencies
and we only list extra optional dependencies and tools that aren't already
installed by default into the base image.
We also drop the centos stream 8 mkosi build as dependencies on that
distro are too out-of-date to be able to build all systemd features.
Since centos stream 9 has been out for a while, let's focus on that
and leave it to downstream to keep systemd building on centos stream 8.
Finally, there's a few additions to the mkosi scripts to make sure
services don't start by default on boot.
While this provides some marginal speedup, the disadvantage is
that files are never removed when doing cached builds, which can
sometimes lead to hard to debug issues. So let's not do this by
default.
- Extra memory because ASAN needs it
- The environment variables to make the sanitizers more useful
- LD_PRELOAD because the ASAN DSO needs to be the first in the list
- The sanitizer library packages
- Disable syscall filters because they interfere with ASAN
- Disable systemd-hwdb-update because it's super slow when systemd-hwdb
is built with sanitizers
- Take the value for meson's b_sanitize option from the SANITIZERS
environment variable
Now that mkosi has centos-stream 9 support, let's add a config in
the repo so that the mkosi CI tests that configuration as well.
Centos doesn't support btrfs so we use xfs instead. For some reason,
building --hostonly-initrd centos images breaks the qemu boot so I
disabled that option for centos.
We update the mkosi commit hash to 0dd39c20a4
which adds the PowerTools repo to CentOS Stream 8 which is required
to make all the necessary packages required to build systemd on
CentOS Stream 8 available.
Let's also add the required packages to run systemd-networkd-tests.py
for Ubuntu and Debian. The Fedora and Arch lists are also updated to
include python which is also required to run the tests.
We're actually falling back to `more` in the mkosi image which doesn't
behave quite the same as less which is somewhat annoying. Let's make
sure `less` is installed so systemd can use it as the pager.
We ship the mkosi files to make sure we can test our own code. A good
chunk of our code (and the main reason to use qemu rather than nspawn)
is the EFI code, i.e. in sd-boot and the EFI stub. Hence it's bad idea
to use qemu headless mode, since that means we bypass all that.
Let's hence toggle the defaults here, but keep the line in place, to
make it easy to switch back if someone wants the speed, rather than the
testing.
With this change, "mkosi build" will automatically build systemd for the
current distro without any further configuration. If people want to do a
cross-distro build by default, they can still create mkosi.default, but I
assume that this is relatively rare.
If people have symlinked mkosi.default to one of the files in .mkosi/, they'll
need to adjust the symlink.
(Building without configuration would always fail, since systemd has many many
required dependencies. I think it's nicer to do the most commonly expected
thing by default, i.e. rebuild for the current distro.)
Mkosi is nowadays packaged for most distros, so recommend installing of distro
packages as the primary installation mechanism.
- InstallDirectory caches the install part of the build process
which speeds up incremental builds a little and allows inspecting
the installed components in mkosi.installdir.
- SourceFileTransferFinal copies the source files to the final
image which makes the gdb experience in qemu/systemd-nspawn a bit
nicer as it can now find the source files and show the source code
in the gdb cli itself.