On 12/2/21 11:51, Richard Purdie wrote:
> On Thu, 2021-12-02 at 11:19 +0100, Jacob Kroon wrote:
>> On 12/2/21 00:11, Richard Purdie wrote:
>>> On Tue, 2021-11-30 at 23:37 +0100, Jacob Kroon wrote:
>>>> Try to make sure that the RUNTIME dynamic entry size is the same for all
>>>> binaries produced with the native compiler. This is necessary in order to
>>>> produce identical binaries when using differently sized buildpaths. I've
>>>> tried using only patchelf, and keeping the linker flags as they are, but
>>>> I am unable to produce identical binaries. Has anyone else managed to do
>>>> this with patchelf ? If not, maybe we can write a new tool that can handle 
>>>> it ?
>>>>
>>>> The build-id also needs to be removed since it is calculated based on
>>>> the data present at link time. This includes STAGING_LIBDIR_NATIVE
>>>> and STAGING_BASE_LIBDIR_NATIVE. Both will differ and they need to be 
>>>> temporarily
>>>> preserved since some recipes will execute the binaries during do_install()
>>>> (for example python3-native). Later on these are removed in 
>>>> chrpath.bbclass.
>>>>
>>>> This hack is the first step for producing identical native binaries when 
>>>> using
>>>> different build paths. 'zstd-native' is a working example.
>>>>
>>>> Signed-off-by: Jacob Kroon <[email protected]>
>>>> ---
>>>>  meta/classes/chrpath.bbclass | 3 +++
>>>>  meta/conf/bitbake.conf       | 5 ++++-
>>>>  2 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
>>>
>>> I'm a little torn on this. Our other option would be to hardcoded a specific
>>> dummy path and then edit it later to the correct value. That may be neater 
>>> than
>>> adding the padding. It will change the end binaries but hopefully only after
>>> they're installed so should give the same net end result more neatly?
>>>
>>
>> Hmm not sure I follow. This patch adds a new dummy rpath entry,
>> "/rpath-padding-xxx...", then we remove it in chrpath. I don't know what
>> other value we would like to put there. If I understand you correctly,
>> we could perhaps pad one of the ones we already pass
>>
>> -Wl,-rpath,${STAGING_LIBDIR_NATIVE}
>> -Wl,-rpath,${STAGING_BASE_LIBDIR_NATIVE}
>>
>> with spaces, like:
>>
>> -Wl,-rpath,${STAGING_LIBDIR_NATIVE}
>> -Wl,-rpath,"${STAGING_BASE_LIBDIR_NATIVE}${RPATH_PADDING}"
> 
> 
> I'm wondering if:
> 
> -Wl,-rpath,/not/exist/our-native-libdir-marker
> -Wl,-rpath,/not/exist/our-native-base-libdir-marker
> 
> would work.
> 

Right, I'll give it a try.

>> If that works that would be less intrusive I think.
>>
>>> If we separate out the build-id patch we could hopefully get that piece 
>>> merged
>>> as that shouldn't be controversial? 
>>>
>>
>> Yes, I can split it out into a separate patch.
>>
>> But now that I've looked at this for a while, I've asked myself what
>> good does all this do ? The only optimization I can think of is that if
>> we rebuild a native recipes, and the sysroot component turns out the
>> same, then we don't need to create a new sstate cache entry. So we save
>> disk space, but disk space is cheap. We still need to build it. What I
>> would like is to have a common sstate dir for multiple build
>> directories. So if I build libtool-native in one build path, then at my
>> other build path it would just pick it up from sstate cache when I build
>> there. In the end, is that something that would be possible ?
> 
> We originally started here with gcc-cross so lets consider that and multiple
> build directories where a patch changes gcc-cross in a way that is irrelavent 
> to
> the output.
> 
> The "win" is that regardless of whether I build in location A or B, I get the
> same gcc-cross binary. Hash-equiv will then not rebuild the target binaries.
> Yes, I pay the price of a gcc-cross rebuild but hashequiv saves the targets
> rebuilding.
> 
> Currently it would only happen if you always build gcc-cross in a specific 
> build
> path.
> 

I know the build path will change if I upgrade to a new version of gcc,
but then the output is most definitely gonna change as well.

> Like everything, it is a question of looking at the changes and deciding 
> whether
> they are worth any maintenance burden/code complication or additional overhead
> they generate. I don't know the answer here yet but I do appreciate the 
> research
> in helping get us data to make decisions on!
> 

I was thinking if it was possible to add a "build-path-does-not-matter"
.bbclass that would make the signatures independent of build path and
then scan the output to make sure it didn't contain any references to
the build path. Then those recipes who didn't depend on build path could
inherit from that class, and then maybe their sstate could be reused
from multiple build directories ? Not sure reliable it would be though..

Jacob
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