2019-12-09 16:42:42

by Jeremy Cline

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: s390 depending on cc-options makes it difficult to configure

Hi folks,

Commit 5474080a3a0a ("s390/Kconfig: make use of 'depends on cc-option'")
makes it difficult to produce an s390 configuration for Fedora and Red
Hat kernels.

The issue is I have the following configurations:

CONFIG_MARCH_Z13=y
CONFIG_TUNE_Z14=y
# CONFIG_TUNE_DEFAULT is not set

When the configuration is prepared on a non-s390x host without a
compiler with -march=z* it changes CONFIG_TUNE_DEFAULT to y which, as
far as I can tell, leads to a kernel tuned for z13 instead of z14.
Fedora and Red Hat build processes produce complete configurations from
snippets on any available host in the build infrastructure which very
frequently is *not* s390.

I did a quick search and couldn't find any other examples of Kconfigs
depending on march or mtune compiler flags and it seems like it'd
generally problematic for people preparing configurations.

Regards,
Jeremy


2019-12-10 09:14:34

by Michal Kubecek

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: s390 depending on cc-options makes it difficult to configure

On Mon, Dec 09, 2019 at 11:41:55AM -0500, Jeremy Cline wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> Commit 5474080a3a0a ("s390/Kconfig: make use of 'depends on cc-option'")
> makes it difficult to produce an s390 configuration for Fedora and Red
> Hat kernels.
>
> The issue is I have the following configurations:
>
> CONFIG_MARCH_Z13=y
> CONFIG_TUNE_Z14=y
> # CONFIG_TUNE_DEFAULT is not set
>
> When the configuration is prepared on a non-s390x host without a
> compiler with -march=z* it changes CONFIG_TUNE_DEFAULT to y which, as
> far as I can tell, leads to a kernel tuned for z13 instead of z14.
> Fedora and Red Hat build processes produce complete configurations from
> snippets on any available host in the build infrastructure which very
> frequently is *not* s390.

We have exactly the same problem. Our developers need to update config
files for different architectures and different kernel versions on their
machines which are usually x86_64 but that often produces different
configs than the real build environment.

This is not an issue for upstream development as one usually updates
configs on the same system where the build takes place but it's a big
problem for distribution maintainers.

> I did a quick search and couldn't find any other examples of Kconfigs
> depending on march or mtune compiler flags and it seems like it'd
> generally problematic for people preparing configurations.

There are more issues like this. In general, since 4.17 or 4.18, the
resulting config depends on both architecture and compiler version.
Earlier, you could simply run "ARCH=... make oldconfig" (or menuconfig)
to update configs for all architectures and distribution versions.
Today, you need to use the right compiler version (results with e.g.
4.8, 7.4 and 9.2 differ) and architecture.

At the moment, I'm working around the issue by using chroot environments
with target distributions (e.g. openSUSE Tumbleweed) and set of cross
compilers for supported architectures but it's far from perfect and even
this way, there are problemantic points, e.g. BPFILTER_UMH which depends
on gcc being able to not only compile but also link.

IMHO the key problem is that .config mixes configuration with
description of build environment. I have an idea of a solution which
would consist of

- an option to extract "config" options which describe build
environment (i.e. their values are determined by running some
command, rather than reading from a file or asking user) into
a cache file
- an option telling "make *config" to use such cache file for these
environment "config" options instead of running the test scripts
(and probably issue an error if an environment option is missing)

This would be perhaps even easier if we also separated the environment
descripton into a different file so that we would only need an option
telling scripts/kconfig/conf not to update the environment description.
I'm not sure if that would be acceptable for upstream, though.

Unfortunately I didn't find time to implement this yet.

Michal Kubecek

2019-12-11 17:19:38

by Jeremy Cline

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: s390 depending on cc-options makes it difficult to configure

On Tue, Dec 10, 2019 at 10:01:08AM +0100, Michal Kubecek wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 09, 2019 at 11:41:55AM -0500, Jeremy Cline wrote:
> > Hi folks,
> >
> > Commit 5474080a3a0a ("s390/Kconfig: make use of 'depends on cc-option'")
> > makes it difficult to produce an s390 configuration for Fedora and Red
> > Hat kernels.
> >
> > The issue is I have the following configurations:
> >
> > CONFIG_MARCH_Z13=y
> > CONFIG_TUNE_Z14=y
> > # CONFIG_TUNE_DEFAULT is not set
> >
> > When the configuration is prepared on a non-s390x host without a
> > compiler with -march=z* it changes CONFIG_TUNE_DEFAULT to y which, as
> > far as I can tell, leads to a kernel tuned for z13 instead of z14.
> > Fedora and Red Hat build processes produce complete configurations from
> > snippets on any available host in the build infrastructure which very
> > frequently is *not* s390.
>
> We have exactly the same problem. Our developers need to update config
> files for different architectures and different kernel versions on their
> machines which are usually x86_64 but that often produces different
> configs than the real build environment.
>

Glad (or sad?) to hear we're not the only ones hitting this.

> This is not an issue for upstream development as one usually updates
> configs on the same system where the build takes place but it's a big
> problem for distribution maintainers.
>
> > I did a quick search and couldn't find any other examples of Kconfigs
> > depending on march or mtune compiler flags and it seems like it'd
> > generally problematic for people preparing configurations.
>
> There are more issues like this. In general, since 4.17 or 4.18, the
> resulting config depends on both architecture and compiler version.
> Earlier, you could simply run "ARCH=... make oldconfig" (or menuconfig)
> to update configs for all architectures and distribution versions.
> Today, you need to use the right compiler version (results with e.g.
> 4.8, 7.4 and 9.2 differ) and architecture.
>

Yeah, that's also troublesome. This is by no means the first problem
related to the environment at configuration time, but it the most
bothersome to work around (at least for Fedora kernel configuration).

> At the moment, I'm working around the issue by using chroot environments
> with target distributions (e.g. openSUSE Tumbleweed) and set of cross
> compilers for supported architectures but it's far from perfect and even
> this way, there are problemantic points, e.g. BPFILTER_UMH which depends
> on gcc being able to not only compile but also link.
>
> IMHO the key problem is that .config mixes configuration with
> description of build environment. I have an idea of a solution which
> would consist of
>
> - an option to extract "config" options which describe build
> environment (i.e. their values are determined by running some
> command, rather than reading from a file or asking user) into
> a cache file
> - an option telling "make *config" to use such cache file for these
> environment "config" options instead of running the test scripts
> (and probably issue an error if an environment option is missing)
>

I agree that the issue is mixing kernel configuration with build
environment. I suppose a cache file would work, but it still sounds like
a difficult process that is working around that fact that folks are
coupling the configuration step with the build step.

I would advocate that this patch be reverted and an effort made to not
mix build environment checks into the configuration. I'm much happier
for the build to fail because the configuration can't be satisfied by
the environment than I am for the configuration to quietly change or for
the tools to not allow me to make the configuration in the first place.
Ideally the tools would warn the user if their environment won't build
the configuration, but that's a nice-to-have.

- Jeremy

2020-02-10 18:51:40

by Philipp Rudo

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: s390 depending on cc-options makes it difficult to configure

Hey Jeremy,
Hey Michal,

sorry for the late response. The mail got lost in the pre-xmas rush...

In my opinion the problem goes beyond s390 and the commit you mentioned. So I'm
also adding Masahiro as Kconfig maintainer and author of cc-option.


On Wed, 11 Dec 2019 12:18:22 -0500
Jeremy Cline <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Tue, Dec 10, 2019 at 10:01:08AM +0100, Michal Kubecek wrote:
> > On Mon, Dec 09, 2019 at 11:41:55AM -0500, Jeremy Cline wrote:
> > > Hi folks,
> > >
> > > Commit 5474080a3a0a ("s390/Kconfig: make use of 'depends on cc-option'")
> > > makes it difficult to produce an s390 configuration for Fedora and Red
> > > Hat kernels.
> > >
> > > The issue is I have the following configurations:
> > >
> > > CONFIG_MARCH_Z13=y
> > > CONFIG_TUNE_Z14=y
> > > # CONFIG_TUNE_DEFAULT is not set
> > >
> > > When the configuration is prepared on a non-s390x host without a
> > > compiler with -march=z* it changes CONFIG_TUNE_DEFAULT to y which, as
> > > far as I can tell, leads to a kernel tuned for z13 instead of z14.
> > > Fedora and Red Hat build processes produce complete configurations from
> > > snippets on any available host in the build infrastructure which very
> > > frequently is *not* s390.
> >
> > We have exactly the same problem. Our developers need to update config
> > files for different architectures and different kernel versions on their
> > machines which are usually x86_64 but that often produces different
> > configs than the real build environment.
> >
> > This is not an issue for upstream development as one usually updates
> > configs on the same system where the build takes place but it's a big
> > problem for distribution maintainers.

If I recall correct the goal was to avoid trouble with clang, as it does not
support all processor types with -march. But yeah, in the original
consideration we only thought about upstream development and forgot the
distros.

> > > I did a quick search and couldn't find any other examples of Kconfigs
> > > depending on march or mtune compiler flags and it seems like it'd
> > > generally problematic for people preparing configurations.

True, but not the whole story. Power and Arm64 use cc-option to check for
-mstack-protector*, which do not exist on s390. So you have the same problem
when you prepare a config for any of them on s390. Thus simply reverting the
commit you mentioned above does not solve the problem but merely hides one
symptom. Which also means that the original problem will return over and over
again in the future.

An other reason why I don't think it makes sens to revert the commit is that it
would make cc-option as a whole useless. What's the benefit in having cc-option
when you are not allowed to use it? Or less provocative, in which use cases is
allowed to use cc-option?

> > There are more issues like this. In general, since 4.17 or 4.18, the
> > resulting config depends on both architecture and compiler version.
> > Earlier, you could simply run "ARCH=... make oldconfig" (or menuconfig)
> > to update configs for all architectures and distribution versions.
> > Today, you need to use the right compiler version (results with e.g.
> > 4.8, 7.4 and 9.2 differ) and architecture.
> >
>
> Yeah, that's also troublesome. This is by no means the first problem
> related to the environment at configuration time, but it the most
> bothersome to work around (at least for Fedora kernel configuration).
>
> > At the moment, I'm working around the issue by using chroot environments
> > with target distributions (e.g. openSUSE Tumbleweed) and set of cross
> > compilers for supported architectures but it's far from perfect and even
> > this way, there are problemantic points, e.g. BPFILTER_UMH which depends
> > on gcc being able to not only compile but also link.
> >
> > IMHO the key problem is that .config mixes configuration with
> > description of build environment. I have an idea of a solution which
> > would consist of
> >
> > - an option to extract "config" options which describe build
> > environment (i.e. their values are determined by running some
> > command, rather than reading from a file or asking user) into
> > a cache file
> > - an option telling "make *config" to use such cache file for these
> > environment "config" options instead of running the test scripts
> > (and probably issue an error if an environment option is missing)
> >
>
> I agree that the issue is mixing kernel configuration with build
> environment. I suppose a cache file would work, but it still sounds like
> a difficult process that is working around that fact that folks are
> coupling the configuration step with the build step.

An other solution would be a "I know better" switch which simply disables
cc-option for that run. That would allow the use of cc-option for upstream
development and provide a simple way for distros to turn it off.

> I would advocate that this patch be reverted and an effort made to not
> mix build environment checks into the configuration. I'm much happier
> for the build to fail because the configuration can't be satisfied by
> the environment than I am for the configuration to quietly change or for
> the tools to not allow me to make the configuration in the first place.
> Ideally the tools would warn the user if their environment won't build
> the configuration, but that's a nice-to-have.

I too would prefer to have a warning instead of the config being silently
changed. But again, the problem goes beyond what was reported.

@Masahiro: What do you think about it?

Thanks
Philipp

2020-02-14 03:32:14

by Masahiro Yamada

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: s390 depending on cc-options makes it difficult to configure

Hi.

On Tue, Feb 11, 2020 at 3:49 AM Philipp Rudo <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Hey Jeremy,
> Hey Michal,
>
> sorry for the late response. The mail got lost in the pre-xmas rush...
>
> In my opinion the problem goes beyond s390 and the commit you mentioned. So I'm
> also adding Masahiro as Kconfig maintainer and author of cc-option.


I did not notice the former discussion.
Thanks for CC'ing me.




> On Wed, 11 Dec 2019 12:18:22 -0500
> Jeremy Cline <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > On Tue, Dec 10, 2019 at 10:01:08AM +0100, Michal Kubecek wrote:
> > > On Mon, Dec 09, 2019 at 11:41:55AM -0500, Jeremy Cline wrote:
> > > > Hi folks,
> > > >
> > > > Commit 5474080a3a0a ("s390/Kconfig: make use of 'depends on cc-option'")
> > > > makes it difficult to produce an s390 configuration for Fedora and Red
> > > > Hat kernels.
> > > >
> > > > The issue is I have the following configurations:
> > > >
> > > > CONFIG_MARCH_Z13=y
> > > > CONFIG_TUNE_Z14=y
> > > > # CONFIG_TUNE_DEFAULT is not set
> > > >
> > > > When the configuration is prepared on a non-s390x host without a
> > > > compiler with -march=z* it changes CONFIG_TUNE_DEFAULT to y which, as
> > > > far as I can tell, leads to a kernel tuned for z13 instead of z14.
> > > > Fedora and Red Hat build processes produce complete configurations from
> > > > snippets on any available host in the build infrastructure which very
> > > > frequently is *not* s390.
> > >
> > > We have exactly the same problem. Our developers need to update config
> > > files for different architectures and different kernel versions on their
> > > machines which are usually x86_64 but that often produces different
> > > configs than the real build environment.
> > >
> > > This is not an issue for upstream development as one usually updates
> > > configs on the same system where the build takes place but it's a big
> > > problem for distribution maintainers.
>
> If I recall correct the goal was to avoid trouble with clang, as it does not
> support all processor types with -march. But yeah, in the original
> consideration we only thought about upstream development and forgot the
> distros.
> > > > I did a quick search and couldn't find any other examples of Kconfigs
> > > > depending on march or mtune compiler flags and it seems like it'd
> > > > generally problematic for people preparing configurations.
>
> True, but not the whole story. Power and Arm64 use cc-option to check for
> -mstack-protector*, which do not exist on s390. So you have the same problem
> when you prepare a config for any of them on s390. Thus simply reverting the
> commit you mentioned above does not solve the problem but merely hides one
> symptom. Which also means that the original problem will return over and over
> again in the future.
>
> An other reason why I don't think it makes sens to revert the commit is that it
> would make cc-option as a whole useless. What's the benefit in having cc-option
> when you are not allowed to use it? Or less provocative, in which use cases is
> allowed to use cc-option?


You are right.
Reverting the particular s390 commit is not the solution.


> > > There are more issues like this. In general, since 4.17 or 4.18, the
> > > resulting config depends on both architecture and compiler version.
> > > Earlier, you could simply run "ARCH=... make oldconfig" (or menuconfig)
> > > to update configs for all architectures and distribution versions.
> > > Today, you need to use the right compiler version (results with e.g.
> > > 4.8, 7.4 and 9.2 differ) and architecture.
> > >
> >
> > Yeah, that's also troublesome. This is by no means the first problem
> > related to the environment at configuration time, but it the most
> > bothersome to work around (at least for Fedora kernel configuration).
> >
> > > At the moment, I'm working around the issue by using chroot environments
> > > with target distributions (e.g. openSUSE Tumbleweed) and set of cross
> > > compilers for supported architectures but it's far from perfect and even
> > > this way, there are problemantic points, e.g. BPFILTER_UMH which depends
> > > on gcc being able to not only compile but also link.
> > >
> > > IMHO the key problem is that .config mixes configuration with
> > > description of build environment. I have an idea of a solution which
> > > would consist of
> > >
> > > - an option to extract "config" options which describe build
> > > environment (i.e. their values are determined by running some
> > > command, rather than reading from a file or asking user) into
> > > a cache file
> > > - an option telling "make *config" to use such cache file for these
> > > environment "config" options instead of running the test scripts
> > > (and probably issue an error if an environment option is missing)
> > >
> >
> > I agree that the issue is mixing kernel configuration with build
> > environment. I suppose a cache file would work, but it still sounds like
> > a difficult process that is working around that fact that folks are
> > coupling the configuration step with the build step.
>
> An other solution would be a "I know better" switch which simply disables
> cc-option for that run. That would allow the use of cc-option for upstream
> development and provide a simple way for distros to turn it off.
>
> > I would advocate that this patch be reverted and an effort made to not
> > mix build environment checks into the configuration. I'm much happier
> > for the build to fail because the configuration can't be satisfied by
> > the environment than I am for the configuration to quietly change or for
> > the tools to not allow me to make the configuration in the first place.
> > Ideally the tools would warn the user if their environment won't build
> > the configuration, but that's a nice-to-have.
>
> I too would prefer to have a warning instead of the config being silently
> changed. But again, the problem goes beyond what was reported.
>
> @Masahiro: What do you think about it?
>
> Thanks
> Philipp
>


The problem for Jeremy and Michal is,
it is difficult to get a full-feature cross-compiler
for every arch.

One idea to workaround this is
to use a fake script that accepts any flag,
and use it as $(CC) in Kconfig.

RFC patch is attached.

This is not a perfect solution, of course.


Evaluating the compiler in the Kconfig stage
conceptually has a conflict with the workflow
of distro maintainers.

I think the only way to solve it completely is,
ultimately, go back to pre 4.18 situation.
But, I am not sure if upstream people want to do it.
At least, Linus was happy to do compiler-tests
in Kconfig.

I already got several criticism about the
new feature in Kconfig because it broke the
workflow of distro maintainers. Sorry about that.


The idea from Michal, separation of the build environment
description, would work too.
IIRC, the crosstool-ng project generates some
Kconfig files based on the environment.
In hindsight, Kconfig did not need to have cc-option
but it was how I implemented. I just thought it would be cleaner to
put cc-option and the CONFIG option depending on it very close.

Anyway, comments to the attachment are appreciated.


--
Best Regards
Masahiro Yamada


Attachments:
0001-kbuild-add-dummy-toolchains-to-enable-all-cc-option-.patch (4.57 kB)

2020-02-14 20:37:12

by Jeremy Cline

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: s390 depending on cc-options makes it difficult to configure

On Fri, Feb 14, 2020 at 12:31:05PM +0900, Masahiro Yamada wrote:
> Hi.
>
> On Tue, Feb 11, 2020 at 3:49 AM Philipp Rudo <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > Hey Jeremy,
> > Hey Michal,
> >
> > sorry for the late response. The mail got lost in the pre-xmas rush...
> >
> > In my opinion the problem goes beyond s390 and the commit you mentioned. So I'm
> > also adding Masahiro as Kconfig maintainer and author of cc-option.
>
>
> I did not notice the former discussion.
> Thanks for CC'ing me.
>
>
>
>
> > On Wed, 11 Dec 2019 12:18:22 -0500
> > Jeremy Cline <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > > On Tue, Dec 10, 2019 at 10:01:08AM +0100, Michal Kubecek wrote:
> > > > On Mon, Dec 09, 2019 at 11:41:55AM -0500, Jeremy Cline wrote:
> > > > > Hi folks,
> > > > >
> > > > > Commit 5474080a3a0a ("s390/Kconfig: make use of 'depends on cc-option'")
> > > > > makes it difficult to produce an s390 configuration for Fedora and Red
> > > > > Hat kernels.
> > > > >
> > > > > The issue is I have the following configurations:
> > > > >
> > > > > CONFIG_MARCH_Z13=y
> > > > > CONFIG_TUNE_Z14=y
> > > > > # CONFIG_TUNE_DEFAULT is not set
> > > > >
> > > > > When the configuration is prepared on a non-s390x host without a
> > > > > compiler with -march=z* it changes CONFIG_TUNE_DEFAULT to y which, as
> > > > > far as I can tell, leads to a kernel tuned for z13 instead of z14.
> > > > > Fedora and Red Hat build processes produce complete configurations from
> > > > > snippets on any available host in the build infrastructure which very
> > > > > frequently is *not* s390.
> > > >
> > > > We have exactly the same problem. Our developers need to update config
> > > > files for different architectures and different kernel versions on their
> > > > machines which are usually x86_64 but that often produces different
> > > > configs than the real build environment.
> > > >
> > > > This is not an issue for upstream development as one usually updates
> > > > configs on the same system where the build takes place but it's a big
> > > > problem for distribution maintainers.
> >
> > If I recall correct the goal was to avoid trouble with clang, as it does not
> > support all processor types with -march. But yeah, in the original
> > consideration we only thought about upstream development and forgot the
> > distros.
> > > > > I did a quick search and couldn't find any other examples of Kconfigs
> > > > > depending on march or mtune compiler flags and it seems like it'd
> > > > > generally problematic for people preparing configurations.
> >
> > True, but not the whole story. Power and Arm64 use cc-option to check for
> > -mstack-protector*, which do not exist on s390. So you have the same problem
> > when you prepare a config for any of them on s390. Thus simply reverting the
> > commit you mentioned above does not solve the problem but merely hides one
> > symptom. Which also means that the original problem will return over and over
> > again in the future.
> >
> > An other reason why I don't think it makes sens to revert the commit is that it
> > would make cc-option as a whole useless. What's the benefit in having cc-option
> > when you are not allowed to use it? Or less provocative, in which use cases is
> > allowed to use cc-option?
>
>
> You are right.
> Reverting the particular s390 commit is not the solution.
>
>
> > > > There are more issues like this. In general, since 4.17 or 4.18, the
> > > > resulting config depends on both architecture and compiler version.
> > > > Earlier, you could simply run "ARCH=... make oldconfig" (or menuconfig)
> > > > to update configs for all architectures and distribution versions.
> > > > Today, you need to use the right compiler version (results with e.g.
> > > > 4.8, 7.4 and 9.2 differ) and architecture.
> > > >
> > >
> > > Yeah, that's also troublesome. This is by no means the first problem
> > > related to the environment at configuration time, but it the most
> > > bothersome to work around (at least for Fedora kernel configuration).
> > >
> > > > At the moment, I'm working around the issue by using chroot environments
> > > > with target distributions (e.g. openSUSE Tumbleweed) and set of cross
> > > > compilers for supported architectures but it's far from perfect and even
> > > > this way, there are problemantic points, e.g. BPFILTER_UMH which depends
> > > > on gcc being able to not only compile but also link.
> > > >
> > > > IMHO the key problem is that .config mixes configuration with
> > > > description of build environment. I have an idea of a solution which
> > > > would consist of
> > > >
> > > > - an option to extract "config" options which describe build
> > > > environment (i.e. their values are determined by running some
> > > > command, rather than reading from a file or asking user) into
> > > > a cache file
> > > > - an option telling "make *config" to use such cache file for these
> > > > environment "config" options instead of running the test scripts
> > > > (and probably issue an error if an environment option is missing)
> > > >
> > >
> > > I agree that the issue is mixing kernel configuration with build
> > > environment. I suppose a cache file would work, but it still sounds like
> > > a difficult process that is working around that fact that folks are
> > > coupling the configuration step with the build step.
> >
> > An other solution would be a "I know better" switch which simply disables
> > cc-option for that run. That would allow the use of cc-option for upstream
> > development and provide a simple way for distros to turn it off.
> >
> > > I would advocate that this patch be reverted and an effort made to not
> > > mix build environment checks into the configuration. I'm much happier
> > > for the build to fail because the configuration can't be satisfied by
> > > the environment than I am for the configuration to quietly change or for
> > > the tools to not allow me to make the configuration in the first place.
> > > Ideally the tools would warn the user if their environment won't build
> > > the configuration, but that's a nice-to-have.
> >
> > I too would prefer to have a warning instead of the config being silently
> > changed. But again, the problem goes beyond what was reported.
> >
> > @Masahiro: What do you think about it?
> >
> > Thanks
> > Philipp
> >
>
>
> The problem for Jeremy and Michal is,
> it is difficult to get a full-feature cross-compiler
> for every arch.
>

Indeed.

> One idea to workaround this is
> to use a fake script that accepts any flag,
> and use it as $(CC) in Kconfig.
>
> RFC patch is attached.
>
> This is not a perfect solution, of course.
>

The attached patch doesn't looks like it'd work for what we need,
although I wonder if it's easier to just check when cc-options is
defined for an environment variable or something and always return y
instead of calling out to $(CC) at all. Comes to the same thing, I
suppose.

>
> Evaluating the compiler in the Kconfig stage
> conceptually has a conflict with the workflow
> of distro maintainers.
>
> I think the only way to solve it completely is,
> ultimately, go back to pre 4.18 situation.
> But, I am not sure if upstream people want to do it.
> At least, Linus was happy to do compiler-tests
> in Kconfig.
>
> I already got several criticism about the
> new feature in Kconfig because it broke the
> workflow of distro maintainers. Sorry about that.
>

No worries, it's a tough balancing act between upstream users and
distros. It's not caused me *that* much bother.

>
> The idea from Michal, separation of the build environment
> description, would work too.
> IIRC, the crosstool-ng project generates some
> Kconfig files based on the environment.
> In hindsight, Kconfig did not need to have cc-option
> but it was how I implemented. I just thought it would be cleaner to
> put cc-option and the CONFIG option depending on it very close.
>
> Anyway, comments to the attachment are appreciated.
>

I believe it would solve our problem so from that perspective, it looks
good to me.

Thanks,
Jeremy

2020-02-16 04:09:53

by Masahiro Yamada

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: s390 depending on cc-options makes it difficult to configure

On Sat, Feb 15, 2020 at 5:35 AM Jeremy Cline <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> On Fri, Feb 14, 2020 at 12:31:05PM +0900, Masahiro Yamada wrote:
> > Hi.
> >
> > On Tue, Feb 11, 2020 at 3:49 AM Philipp Rudo <[email protected]> wrote:
> > >
> > > Hey Jeremy,
> > > Hey Michal,
> > >
> > > sorry for the late response. The mail got lost in the pre-xmas rush...
> > >
> > > In my opinion the problem goes beyond s390 and the commit you mentioned. So I'm
> > > also adding Masahiro as Kconfig maintainer and author of cc-option.
> >
> >
> > I did not notice the former discussion.
> > Thanks for CC'ing me.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > > On Wed, 11 Dec 2019 12:18:22 -0500
> > > Jeremy Cline <[email protected]> wrote:
> > >
> > > > On Tue, Dec 10, 2019 at 10:01:08AM +0100, Michal Kubecek wrote:
> > > > > On Mon, Dec 09, 2019 at 11:41:55AM -0500, Jeremy Cline wrote:
> > > > > > Hi folks,
> > > > > >
> > > > > > Commit 5474080a3a0a ("s390/Kconfig: make use of 'depends on cc-option'")
> > > > > > makes it difficult to produce an s390 configuration for Fedora and Red
> > > > > > Hat kernels.
> > > > > >
> > > > > > The issue is I have the following configurations:
> > > > > >
> > > > > > CONFIG_MARCH_Z13=y
> > > > > > CONFIG_TUNE_Z14=y
> > > > > > # CONFIG_TUNE_DEFAULT is not set
> > > > > >
> > > > > > When the configuration is prepared on a non-s390x host without a
> > > > > > compiler with -march=z* it changes CONFIG_TUNE_DEFAULT to y which, as
> > > > > > far as I can tell, leads to a kernel tuned for z13 instead of z14.
> > > > > > Fedora and Red Hat build processes produce complete configurations from
> > > > > > snippets on any available host in the build infrastructure which very
> > > > > > frequently is *not* s390.
> > > > >
> > > > > We have exactly the same problem. Our developers need to update config
> > > > > files for different architectures and different kernel versions on their
> > > > > machines which are usually x86_64 but that often produces different
> > > > > configs than the real build environment.
> > > > >
> > > > > This is not an issue for upstream development as one usually updates
> > > > > configs on the same system where the build takes place but it's a big
> > > > > problem for distribution maintainers.
> > >
> > > If I recall correct the goal was to avoid trouble with clang, as it does not
> > > support all processor types with -march. But yeah, in the original
> > > consideration we only thought about upstream development and forgot the
> > > distros.
> > > > > > I did a quick search and couldn't find any other examples of Kconfigs
> > > > > > depending on march or mtune compiler flags and it seems like it'd
> > > > > > generally problematic for people preparing configurations.
> > >
> > > True, but not the whole story. Power and Arm64 use cc-option to check for
> > > -mstack-protector*, which do not exist on s390. So you have the same problem
> > > when you prepare a config for any of them on s390. Thus simply reverting the
> > > commit you mentioned above does not solve the problem but merely hides one
> > > symptom. Which also means that the original problem will return over and over
> > > again in the future.
> > >
> > > An other reason why I don't think it makes sens to revert the commit is that it
> > > would make cc-option as a whole useless. What's the benefit in having cc-option
> > > when you are not allowed to use it? Or less provocative, in which use cases is
> > > allowed to use cc-option?
> >
> >
> > You are right.
> > Reverting the particular s390 commit is not the solution.
> >
> >
> > > > > There are more issues like this. In general, since 4.17 or 4.18, the
> > > > > resulting config depends on both architecture and compiler version.
> > > > > Earlier, you could simply run "ARCH=... make oldconfig" (or menuconfig)
> > > > > to update configs for all architectures and distribution versions.
> > > > > Today, you need to use the right compiler version (results with e.g.
> > > > > 4.8, 7.4 and 9.2 differ) and architecture.
> > > > >
> > > >
> > > > Yeah, that's also troublesome. This is by no means the first problem
> > > > related to the environment at configuration time, but it the most
> > > > bothersome to work around (at least for Fedora kernel configuration).
> > > >
> > > > > At the moment, I'm working around the issue by using chroot environments
> > > > > with target distributions (e.g. openSUSE Tumbleweed) and set of cross
> > > > > compilers for supported architectures but it's far from perfect and even
> > > > > this way, there are problemantic points, e.g. BPFILTER_UMH which depends
> > > > > on gcc being able to not only compile but also link.
> > > > >
> > > > > IMHO the key problem is that .config mixes configuration with
> > > > > description of build environment. I have an idea of a solution which
> > > > > would consist of
> > > > >
> > > > > - an option to extract "config" options which describe build
> > > > > environment (i.e. their values are determined by running some
> > > > > command, rather than reading from a file or asking user) into
> > > > > a cache file
> > > > > - an option telling "make *config" to use such cache file for these
> > > > > environment "config" options instead of running the test scripts
> > > > > (and probably issue an error if an environment option is missing)
> > > > >
> > > >
> > > > I agree that the issue is mixing kernel configuration with build
> > > > environment. I suppose a cache file would work, but it still sounds like
> > > > a difficult process that is working around that fact that folks are
> > > > coupling the configuration step with the build step.
> > >
> > > An other solution would be a "I know better" switch which simply disables
> > > cc-option for that run. That would allow the use of cc-option for upstream
> > > development and provide a simple way for distros to turn it off.
> > >
> > > > I would advocate that this patch be reverted and an effort made to not
> > > > mix build environment checks into the configuration. I'm much happier
> > > > for the build to fail because the configuration can't be satisfied by
> > > > the environment than I am for the configuration to quietly change or for
> > > > the tools to not allow me to make the configuration in the first place.
> > > > Ideally the tools would warn the user if their environment won't build
> > > > the configuration, but that's a nice-to-have.
> > >
> > > I too would prefer to have a warning instead of the config being silently
> > > changed. But again, the problem goes beyond what was reported.
> > >
> > > @Masahiro: What do you think about it?
> > >
> > > Thanks
> > > Philipp
> > >
> >
> >
> > The problem for Jeremy and Michal is,
> > it is difficult to get a full-feature cross-compiler
> > for every arch.
> >
>
> Indeed.
>
> > One idea to workaround this is
> > to use a fake script that accepts any flag,
> > and use it as $(CC) in Kconfig.
> >
> > RFC patch is attached.
> >
> > This is not a perfect solution, of course.
> >
>
> The attached patch doesn't looks like it'd work for what we need,

I thought turning all cc-options to y would work
for what you need.

With this, you can enable
CONFIG_MARCH_Z13=y and CONFIG_TUNE_Z14=y
instead of CONFIG_TUNE_DEFAULT.

If this approach does not work for you,
what is your requirement?



> although I wonder if it's easier to just check when cc-options is
> defined for an environment variable or something and always return y
> instead of calling out to $(CC) at all. Comes to the same thing, I
> suppose.


The macro definition in scripts/Kconfig.include
takes precedence over any environment variable.

So, if you want to hack it from the environment,
you need to change the code somehow.

The scripts/dummy-tools/ approach does not change
anything for the use-case in upstream.

The result is the same, of course.


Masahiro Yamada




> >
> > Evaluating the compiler in the Kconfig stage
> > conceptually has a conflict with the workflow
> > of distro maintainers.
> >
> > I think the only way to solve it completely is,
> > ultimately, go back to pre 4.18 situation.
> > But, I am not sure if upstream people want to do it.
> > At least, Linus was happy to do compiler-tests
> > in Kconfig.
> >
> > I already got several criticism about the
> > new feature in Kconfig because it broke the
> > workflow of distro maintainers. Sorry about that.
> >
>
> No worries, it's a tough balancing act between upstream users and
> distros. It's not caused me *that* much bother.
>
> >
> > The idea from Michal, separation of the build environment
> > description, would work too.
> > IIRC, the crosstool-ng project generates some
> > Kconfig files based on the environment.
> > In hindsight, Kconfig did not need to have cc-option
> > but it was how I implemented. I just thought it would be cleaner to
> > put cc-option and the CONFIG option depending on it very close.
> >
> > Anyway, comments to the attachment are appreciated.
> >
>
> I believe it would solve our problem so from that perspective, it looks
> good to me.
>
> Thanks,
> Jeremy
>


--
Best Regards
Masahiro Yamada

2020-02-16 18:58:36

by Jeremy Cline

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: s390 depending on cc-options makes it difficult to configure

On Sun, Feb 16, 2020 at 01:08:49PM +0900, Masahiro Yamada wrote:
> On Sat, Feb 15, 2020 at 5:35 AM Jeremy Cline <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > On Fri, Feb 14, 2020 at 12:31:05PM +0900, Masahiro Yamada wrote:
> > > Hi.
> > >
> > > On Tue, Feb 11, 2020 at 3:49 AM Philipp Rudo <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > >
> > > > Hey Jeremy,
> > > > Hey Michal,
> > > >
> > > > sorry for the late response. The mail got lost in the pre-xmas rush...
> > > >
> > > > In my opinion the problem goes beyond s390 and the commit you mentioned. So I'm
> > > > also adding Masahiro as Kconfig maintainer and author of cc-option.
> > >
> > >
> > > I did not notice the former discussion.
> > > Thanks for CC'ing me.
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > > On Wed, 11 Dec 2019 12:18:22 -0500
> > > > Jeremy Cline <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > >
> > > > > On Tue, Dec 10, 2019 at 10:01:08AM +0100, Michal Kubecek wrote:
> > > > > > On Mon, Dec 09, 2019 at 11:41:55AM -0500, Jeremy Cline wrote:
> > > > > > > Hi folks,
> > > > > > >
> > > > > > > Commit 5474080a3a0a ("s390/Kconfig: make use of 'depends on cc-option'")
> > > > > > > makes it difficult to produce an s390 configuration for Fedora and Red
> > > > > > > Hat kernels.
> > > > > > >
> > > > > > > The issue is I have the following configurations:
> > > > > > >
> > > > > > > CONFIG_MARCH_Z13=y
> > > > > > > CONFIG_TUNE_Z14=y
> > > > > > > # CONFIG_TUNE_DEFAULT is not set
> > > > > > >
> > > > > > > When the configuration is prepared on a non-s390x host without a
> > > > > > > compiler with -march=z* it changes CONFIG_TUNE_DEFAULT to y which, as
> > > > > > > far as I can tell, leads to a kernel tuned for z13 instead of z14.
> > > > > > > Fedora and Red Hat build processes produce complete configurations from
> > > > > > > snippets on any available host in the build infrastructure which very
> > > > > > > frequently is *not* s390.
> > > > > >
> > > > > > We have exactly the same problem. Our developers need to update config
> > > > > > files for different architectures and different kernel versions on their
> > > > > > machines which are usually x86_64 but that often produces different
> > > > > > configs than the real build environment.
> > > > > >
> > > > > > This is not an issue for upstream development as one usually updates
> > > > > > configs on the same system where the build takes place but it's a big
> > > > > > problem for distribution maintainers.
> > > >
> > > > If I recall correct the goal was to avoid trouble with clang, as it does not
> > > > support all processor types with -march. But yeah, in the original
> > > > consideration we only thought about upstream development and forgot the
> > > > distros.
> > > > > > > I did a quick search and couldn't find any other examples of Kconfigs
> > > > > > > depending on march or mtune compiler flags and it seems like it'd
> > > > > > > generally problematic for people preparing configurations.
> > > >
> > > > True, but not the whole story. Power and Arm64 use cc-option to check for
> > > > -mstack-protector*, which do not exist on s390. So you have the same problem
> > > > when you prepare a config for any of them on s390. Thus simply reverting the
> > > > commit you mentioned above does not solve the problem but merely hides one
> > > > symptom. Which also means that the original problem will return over and over
> > > > again in the future.
> > > >
> > > > An other reason why I don't think it makes sens to revert the commit is that it
> > > > would make cc-option as a whole useless. What's the benefit in having cc-option
> > > > when you are not allowed to use it? Or less provocative, in which use cases is
> > > > allowed to use cc-option?
> > >
> > >
> > > You are right.
> > > Reverting the particular s390 commit is not the solution.
> > >
> > >
> > > > > > There are more issues like this. In general, since 4.17 or 4.18, the
> > > > > > resulting config depends on both architecture and compiler version.
> > > > > > Earlier, you could simply run "ARCH=... make oldconfig" (or menuconfig)
> > > > > > to update configs for all architectures and distribution versions.
> > > > > > Today, you need to use the right compiler version (results with e.g.
> > > > > > 4.8, 7.4 and 9.2 differ) and architecture.
> > > > > >
> > > > >
> > > > > Yeah, that's also troublesome. This is by no means the first problem
> > > > > related to the environment at configuration time, but it the most
> > > > > bothersome to work around (at least for Fedora kernel configuration).
> > > > >
> > > > > > At the moment, I'm working around the issue by using chroot environments
> > > > > > with target distributions (e.g. openSUSE Tumbleweed) and set of cross
> > > > > > compilers for supported architectures but it's far from perfect and even
> > > > > > this way, there are problemantic points, e.g. BPFILTER_UMH which depends
> > > > > > on gcc being able to not only compile but also link.
> > > > > >
> > > > > > IMHO the key problem is that .config mixes configuration with
> > > > > > description of build environment. I have an idea of a solution which
> > > > > > would consist of
> > > > > >
> > > > > > - an option to extract "config" options which describe build
> > > > > > environment (i.e. their values are determined by running some
> > > > > > command, rather than reading from a file or asking user) into
> > > > > > a cache file
> > > > > > - an option telling "make *config" to use such cache file for these
> > > > > > environment "config" options instead of running the test scripts
> > > > > > (and probably issue an error if an environment option is missing)
> > > > > >
> > > > >
> > > > > I agree that the issue is mixing kernel configuration with build
> > > > > environment. I suppose a cache file would work, but it still sounds like
> > > > > a difficult process that is working around that fact that folks are
> > > > > coupling the configuration step with the build step.
> > > >
> > > > An other solution would be a "I know better" switch which simply disables
> > > > cc-option for that run. That would allow the use of cc-option for upstream
> > > > development and provide a simple way for distros to turn it off.
> > > >
> > > > > I would advocate that this patch be reverted and an effort made to not
> > > > > mix build environment checks into the configuration. I'm much happier
> > > > > for the build to fail because the configuration can't be satisfied by
> > > > > the environment than I am for the configuration to quietly change or for
> > > > > the tools to not allow me to make the configuration in the first place.
> > > > > Ideally the tools would warn the user if their environment won't build
> > > > > the configuration, but that's a nice-to-have.
> > > >
> > > > I too would prefer to have a warning instead of the config being silently
> > > > changed. But again, the problem goes beyond what was reported.
> > > >
> > > > @Masahiro: What do you think about it?
> > > >
> > > > Thanks
> > > > Philipp
> > > >
> > >
> > >
> > > The problem for Jeremy and Michal is,
> > > it is difficult to get a full-feature cross-compiler
> > > for every arch.
> > >
> >
> > Indeed.
> >
> > > One idea to workaround this is
> > > to use a fake script that accepts any flag,
> > > and use it as $(CC) in Kconfig.
> > >
> > > RFC patch is attached.
> > >
> > > This is not a perfect solution, of course.
> > >
> >
> > The attached patch doesn't looks like it'd work for what we need,
>
> I thought turning all cc-options to y would work
> for what you need.
>
> With this, you can enable
> CONFIG_MARCH_Z13=y and CONFIG_TUNE_Z14=y
> instead of CONFIG_TUNE_DEFAULT.
>
> If this approach does not work for you,
> what is your requirement?
>

Oof, this was an awful typo. It *would* work for what we need. Sorry for
the confusion :(.

>
>
> > although I wonder if it's easier to just check when cc-options is
> > defined for an environment variable or something and always return y
> > instead of calling out to $(CC) at all. Comes to the same thing, I
> > suppose.
>
>
> The macro definition in scripts/Kconfig.include
> takes precedence over any environment variable.
>
> So, if you want to hack it from the environment,
> you need to change the code somehow.
>
> The scripts/dummy-tools/ approach does not change
> anything for the use-case in upstream.
>
> The result is the same, of course.
>

Indeed. Since I'm not maintaining it I don't have a particularly strong
opinion about the approach. Whatever you like most works for me.

- Jeremy

2020-02-18 09:38:25

by Philipp Rudo

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: s390 depending on cc-options makes it difficult to configure

Hi Masahiro,


On Sun, 16 Feb 2020 13:57:59 -0500
Jeremy Cline <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Sun, Feb 16, 2020 at 01:08:49PM +0900, Masahiro Yamada wrote:
> > On Sat, Feb 15, 2020 at 5:35 AM Jeremy Cline <[email protected]> wrote:
> > >
> > > On Fri, Feb 14, 2020 at 12:31:05PM +0900, Masahiro Yamada wrote:
> > > > Hi.
> > > >
> > > > On Tue, Feb 11, 2020 at 3:49 AM Philipp Rudo <[email protected]> wrote:

[...]

> > > > One idea to workaround this is
> > > > to use a fake script that accepts any flag,
> > > > and use it as $(CC) in Kconfig.
> > > >
> > > > RFC patch is attached.
> > > >
> > > > This is not a perfect solution, of course.

I like the approach as it gives both sides what they need without blowing up
Kconfig.

> > > The attached patch doesn't looks like it'd work for what we need,
> >
> > I thought turning all cc-options to y would work
> > for what you need.
> >
> > With this, you can enable
> > CONFIG_MARCH_Z13=y and CONFIG_TUNE_Z14=y
> > instead of CONFIG_TUNE_DEFAULT.
> >
> > If this approach does not work for you,
> > what is your requirement?
> >
>
> Oof, this was an awful typo. It *would* work for what we need. Sorry for
> the confusion :(.
>
> >
> >
> > > although I wonder if it's easier to just check when cc-options is
> > > defined for an environment variable or something and always return y
> > > instead of calling out to $(CC) at all. Comes to the same thing, I
> > > suppose.
> >
> >
> > The macro definition in scripts/Kconfig.include
> > takes precedence over any environment variable.
> >
> > So, if you want to hack it from the environment,
> > you need to change the code somehow.
> >
> > The scripts/dummy-tools/ approach does not change
> > anything for the use-case in upstream.
> >
> > The result is the same, of course.
> >
>
> Indeed. Since I'm not maintaining it I don't have a particularly strong
> opinion about the approach. Whatever you like most works for me.

I agree with Jeremy. Just pick what you think is best.

Thanks a lot
Philipp