Previously, attempting to update an ext2 inode with a UID or GID
larger than 65535 would overflow. We now write the high bits of UIDs
and GIDs to the same place that Linux does within the `osd2` struct.
We depend on GNU-specific du switch `--apparent-size`. Busybox has this
implemented, but as `-b` instead.
Another part of the build system uses `cp --preserve=timestamps`. This
can be replaced by `rsync -t`, and rsync is already used through the
file.
Thanks to those changes, Serenity can be built on a Busybox system,
without GNU coreutils.
This little program allows us to take the NetworkSettings app away
from being an elevated GUI app.
It receives a JsonObject on STDIN and writes it to the global
Network configuration file.
If the write was successfull it will apply the changes.
These symlinks' only purpose was to be copied into the rootfs along with
the rest of Base. Instead of storing symlinks to files that either
don't exist in the Base directory, or point to an absolute path outside
of the serenity folder, move these symlinks into the
build-root-filesystem.sh script.
This makes sure that the aarch64 disk image also contains the correct
dynamic shared objects, specifically libgcc_s.so.1, as that one is a
dynamic dependency of every aarch64 executable.
To unify the x86_64 and aarch64 code paths, this commit just installs
everything from the compilers lib directory into the disk image lib
directory. This also happens for the Clang toolchain. This copies a few
extra files related to libsupc++ and libstdc++, increasing the size of
the disk image by 1.6MB. However, we were already copying libstdc++.a
manually anyway.
Clean up the Wasm spec tests CMake rules to extract and compile the wat
files into wasm files in the LibWasm binary directory instead of its
source directory. Also make the rules more robust to missing host tools,
and use more CMake install rules for the test files rather than relying
on build-root-filesystem.sh. Add some FIXMEs for later, we really
shouldn't be doing installation of test files into /home/anon at the
build-root-filesystem stage in $CURRENT_YEAR. Tests go in /usr/Tests
This is a preparation to check if our users find noticeable bugs in the
x86-64 target, before we can decide if we want to remove the i686 target
for good.
The reason empty string was treated as JSON null was to paper over an
issue where UTMP would start out as the empty string and presumably
cause errors when trying to parse it as JSON. This was added in
commit a409b832.
This changes that by making UTMP start out as an empty JSON object
instead of the empty string.
This moves all code comprehension-related code to a new library,
LibCodeComprehension.
This also moves some types related to code comprehension tasks (such as
autocomplete, find declaration) out of LibGUI and into
LibCodeComprehension.
Besides a version bump, the following changes have been made to our
toolchain infrastructure:
- LLVM/Clang is now built with -march=native if the host compiler
supports it. An exception to this is CI, as the toolchain cache is
shared among many different machines there.
- The LLVM tarball is not re-extracted if the hash of the applied
patches doesn't differ.
- The patches have been split up into atomic chunks.
- Port-specific patches have been integrated into the main patches,
which will aid in the work towards self-hosting.
- <sysroot>/usr/local/lib is now appended to the linker's search path by
default.
- --pack-dyn-relocs=relr is appended to the linker command line by
default, meaning ports take advantage of RELR relocations without any
patches or additional compiler flags.
The formatting of LLVM port's package.sh has been bothering me, so I
also indented the arguments to the CMake invocation.
This directory has to be writable if we want to install ports that have
been built inside Serenity. It's owned by root anyway, so having it be
read-only does not provide many security benefits.
The fuse2fs tool that is part of e2fsprogs-1.46 has a 'fakeroot'
mount option. This allows a non-root users to modify file ownership
and permissions without actually being root. This package is
available in Debian bullseye and buster-backports.
If available, the script assumes the user wants to use it.
Otherwise, it falls back to the usual root requirements.
Now that root is not required, the root check in
build-root-filesystem.sh is not necessary. Since
build-root-filesystem.sh has 'set -e' enabled, removing this check
will not cause a change in functionality.
With this, we can now compile C++ programs with the LLVM port without
having to jump through hooks to build libc++ because it can't be
cross-compiled with our GNU toolchain.
If we do this, the LLVM port's Clang will pick up these paths, so we
won't have to compile libc++ twice. This does increase the size of
_disk_image by 5 MB, but that shouldn't be a problem.
To ensure everything works as expected, a unit test was added with
multiple scenarios.
This binary has to have the SetUID flag, and we also bind-mount the
/usr/Tests directory to allow running of SetUID binaries.
This commit updates the Clang toolchain's version to 13.0.0, which comes
with better C++20 support and improved handling of new features by
clang-format. Due to the newly enabled `-Bsymbolic-functions` flag, our
Clang binaries will only be 2-4% slower than if we dynamically linked
them, but we save hundreds of megabytes of disk space.
The `BuildClang.sh` script has been reworked to build the entire
toolchain in just three steps: one for the compiler, one for GNU
binutils, and one for the runtime libraries. This reduces the complexity
of the build script, and will allow us to modify the CI configuration to
only rebuild the libraries when our libc headers change.
Most of the compile flags have been moved out to a separate CMake cache
file, similarly to how the Android and Fuchsia toolchains are
implemented within the LLVM repo. This provides a nicer interface than
the heaps of command-line arguments.
We no longer build separate toolchains for each architecture, as the
same Clang binary can compile code for multiple targets.
The horrible mess that `SERENITY_CLANG_ARCH` was, has been removed in
this commit. Clang happily accepts an `i686-pc-serenity` target triple,
which matches what our GCC toolchain accepts.
Replace the old logic where we would start with a host build, and swap
all the CMake compiler and target variables underneath it to trick
CMake into building for Serenity after we configured and built the Lagom
code generators.
The SuperBuild creates two ExternalProjects, one for Lagom and one for
Serenity. The Serenity project depends on the install stage for the
Lagom build. The SuperBuild also generates a CMakeToolchain file for the
Serenity build to use that replaces the old toolchain file that was only
used for Ports.
To ensure that code generators are rebuilt when core libraries such as
AK and LibCore are modified, developers will need to direct their manual
`ninja` invocations to the SuperBuild's binary directory instead of the
Serenity binary directory.
This commit includes warning coalescing and option style cleanup for the
affected CMakeLists in the Kernel, top level, and runtime support
libraries. A large part of the cleanup is replacing USE_CLANG_TOOLCHAIN
with the proper CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER_ID variable, which will no longer be
confused by a host clang compiler.
This command copies the project's source tree to
/home/anon/Source/serenity in the built disk image.
This will be useful for working on serenity inside serenity :^)
Similarly to the LibCpp parser regression tests, these tests run the
preprocessor on the .cpp test files under
Userland/LibCpp/Tests/preprocessor, and compare the output with existing
.txt ground truth files.
This contains all the bits and pieces necessary to build a Clang binary
that will correctly compile SerenityOS.
I had some trouble with getting LLVM building with a single command, so
for now, I decided to build each LLVM component in a separate command
invocation. In the future, we can also make the main llvm build step
architecture-independent, but that would come with extra work to make
library and include paths work.
The binutils build invocation and related boilerplate is duplicated
because we only use `objdump` from GNU binutils in the Clang toolchain,
so most features can be disabled.
Previously we'd fall back to using cp if rsync wasn't available. Not
only is this considerably slower it also breaks when some of the files
in the target directory are symlinks because cp tries to dereference
them.
Fixes#8672.
Unfortunately we can't just use --chown everywhere because only rsync
version 3.1 and newer support it and the default rsync on macOS is
2.6.9.
Fixes#8711.
Since this program is setuid-root, it should be as simple as possible.
To that end, remove `/etc/plsusers` and use filesystem permissions to
achieve the same thing. `/bin/pls` is now only executable by `root` or
members of the `wheel` group.
Also remove all the logic that went to great lengths to `unveil()` a
minimal set of filesystem paths that may be used for the command.
The complexity-to-benefit ratio did not seem justified, and I think
we're better off keeping this simple.
Finally, remove pledge promises the moment they are no longer needed.
This only tests "can it be parsed", but the goal of this commit is to
provide a test framework that can be built upon :)
The conformance tests are downloaded, compiled* and installed only if
the INCLUDE_WASM_SPEC_TESTS cmake option is enabled.
(*) Since we do not yet have a wast parser, the compilation is delegated
to an external tool from binaryen, `wasm-as`, which is required for the
test suite download/install to succeed.
This *does* run the tests in CI, but it currently does not include the
spec conformance tests.