81 lines
2.9 KiB
Markdown
81 lines
2.9 KiB
Markdown
# coreboot kconfig
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This is coreboot's copy of kconfig which tracks Linux as upstream but comes
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with a few patches for portability but also a few semantic changes.
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The patches that lead to this tree can be found in the patches/ subdirectory
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in a [quilt](http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/quilt) friendly format that
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is also simple enough to manage manually with Unix tooling.
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## Updating kconfig
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The first step is to unapply the patches. This can either be done with quilt
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in an already-configured tree (`quilt pop -a` should cleanly unapply them all)
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or manually if quilt doesn't have its tracking metadata around yet:
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$ for i in `ls patches/*.patch | tac`; do patch -p1 -R -i "$i"; done
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The result should be a subtree that, apart from a few coreboot specific
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files on our side (e.g. documentation, integration in our build system)
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and a few files on the upstream end that we don't carry (e.g. the tests),
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is identical to the scripts/kconfig/ directory of Linux as of the most recent
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uprev we did. Check the uprev version by looking through
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`git log util/kconfig` output in our tree.
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Assuming that you want to uprev from Linux 5.13 to 5.14, with a Linux git tree
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available in ~/linux,
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$ cd util/kconfig && (cd ~/linux/ && git diff v5.13..v5.14 scripts/kconfig) | patch -p2`
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applies the changes to your local tree.
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Then reapply our patch train, which might be as simple as
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`quilt push -a --refresh` but might also require some meddling with the
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patches to make them apply again with the changes you just imported from
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Linux.
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Check that kconfig still works, `git add` and `git commit` the changes and
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write a meaningful commit message that documents what Linux kconfig version
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the tree has been upreved to.
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## Adding a new patch
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The format of the patches to kconfig is a mix of the headers produced by `git
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format-patch` and the patch format of quilt. However neither git nor quilt
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seems to have any functionality to directly produce a file in such a format
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To add a patch in this format:
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1. Add your changes to the sources and `git commit` them
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2. Generate a git patch for the commit:
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$ git format-patch HEAD~
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3. Reverse apply the newly created patch file to restore the tree back to the
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state quilt thinks it is in:
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$ git apply -R <the patch file>
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4. Import the patch info quilt:
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$ quilt import <the patch file>
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5. Force push the change to the top of quilt's patch stack (quilt won't like
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the git diff style and would normally refuse to apply the patch):
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$ quilt push -f <the patch file>
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6. Add the changed files to be tracked against the quilt:
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$ quilt add <the files you changed>
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7. Re-apply your changes from the patch file:
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$ git apply <the patch file>
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8. Add the changes to quilt to regenerate the patch file in a quilt compatible
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format while keeping the git header:
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$ quilt refresh
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9. The new patch file and updated patches/series files can now be added to the
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git commit
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