Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Wed, 7 Aug 2019 15:27:48 -0500
From:      Pedro Giffuni <pfg@FreeBSD.org>
To:        rgrimes@freebsd.org
Cc:        src-committers@freebsd.org, svn-src-all@freebsd.org, svn-src-head@freebsd.org, freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org, freebsd-arch@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: svn commit: r350550 - head/share/mk
Message-ID:  <a476e68d-813a-5c18-e1fc-38012f5f2dd0@FreeBSD.org>
In-Reply-To: <201908072012.x77KCObt089132@gndrsh.dnsmgr.net>
References:  <201908072012.x77KCObt089132@gndrsh.dnsmgr.net>

next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help

On 07/08/2019 15:12, Rodney W. Grimes wrote:
>> On 07/08/2019 11:00, John Baldwin wrote:
>>> On 8/6/19 9:56 AM, Glen Barber wrote:
>>>> On Sat, Aug 03, 2019 at 01:06:18AM +0000, John Baldwin wrote:
>>>>> Author: jhb
>>>>> Date: Sat Aug  3 01:06:17 2019
>>>>> New Revision: 350550
>>>>> URL: https://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/base/350550
>>>>>
>>>>> Log:
>>>>>     Flip REPRODUCIBLE_BUILD back to off by default in head.
>>>>>     
>>>>>     Having the full uname output can be useful on head even with
>>>>>     unmodified trees or trees that newvers.sh fails to recognize as
>>>>>     modified.
>>>>>     
>>>>>     Reviewed by:	emaste
>>>>>     Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20895
>>>>>
>>>> I would like to request this commit be reverted.  While the original
>>>> commit message to enable this knob stated the commit would be reverted
>>>> after stable/12 branched, I have seen no public complaints about
>>>> enabling REPRODUCIBLE_BUILD by default (and quite honestly, do not see
>>>> the benefit of disabling it by default -- why wouldn't we want
>>>> reproducibility?).
>>>>
>>>> To me, this feels like a step backwards, with no tangible benefit.
>>>> Note, newvers.sh does properly detect a modified tree if it can find
>>>> the VCS metadata directory (i.e., .git, .svn) -- I know this because
>>>> I personally helped with it.
>>>>
>>>> In my opinion, those that want the non-reproducible metadata included in
>>>> output from 'uname -a' should set WITHOUT_REPRODUCIBLE_BUILDS in their
>>>> src.conf.  Turning off a sane default for the benefit of what I suspect
>>>> is likely a short list of use cases feels like a step in the wrong
>>>> direction.
>>> My arguments for flipping this in head (and head only) are that the data
>>> provided in uname -a when this is disabled is useful for development, and
>>> that in head we do tailor settings towards development (e.g. GENERIC in
>>> head vs GENERIC in stable).
>>>
>>> The logic to handle modified trees has an inherent assumption that I think
>>> is false, at least for my workflow and I suspect many others.  I do builds
>>> and tests of kernels on separate machines (VMs or bare metal) from where I
>>> use VCS to manage sources so that a kernel crash doesn't toast my source
>>> tree.  The trees are then shared to the build/test machines via NFS.  As
>>> a result, the build/test machines are not always able to detect that the
>>> tree is modified either because a subset of the checkout is exported via
>>> NFS, or the VCS tool isn't installed on the build/test machines because
>>> they are generally barebones systems with only a base installed.  This
>>> does mean that flipping the knob off doesn't provide all of the same info,
>>> but it does provide the path, and the path matters because 'kgdb -n last'
>>> uses it, and because if you use separate directories for separate projects
>>> (e.g. git worktrees), then the path tells you which test kernel you booted.
>>> (It is not uncommon for me to have several test projects in flight on a
>>> single test machine for different branches.)
>>>
>>> In the original discussion on arch, we collectively recognized that
>>> developer builds vs release builds were different and needed different
>>> defaults.  The compromise reached at that time was to depend on the VCS
>>> to detect developer builds to choose the policy.  What I have found is that
>>> in practice for at least my workflow that doesn't actually work.  I posit
>>> that the majority of kernels built from head are developer builds, not
>>> releases, and that the default should cater to that.  You could also always
>>> patch release.sh to set WITH_REPRODUCIBLE_BUILD in the environment which I
>>> think would give a more accurate sense of when builds are releases or not.
>>>
>>> However, I will yield to whatever the consensus is.
>> +1 keeping metadata in head.
> I am conflicted on this one, and I think there is a reasonable argument
> on both sides, but from what I have read here this appears to be mostly
> the kernel that is at issue, loss of the meta data from newvers.sh in
> the kernel is infact a PITA, even on stable or production release
> systems.
>
> I propose a compromise, add 2 knobs:
> WITHOUT_REPRODUCIBLE_KERNEL	(aka get your metadata in uname)
> WITH_REPRODUCIBLE_USERLAND	(aka reproducible userland)
>
> WITH{,OUT}_REPRODUCIBLE_BUILD overrides both, for backwards compat,
> and neither should be defined by default.
Too complex IMHO. Either the system is reproducible or it isn't.
> Somehow set WITH_REPRODUCIBLE_KERNEL for builds of GENERIC
> for releases/snapshots, but do not ship the system with it
> set (I can here a growl from Glen on this)  Thus we build
> a reproducible kernel and ship it with the system but if
> the user builds a kernel it gets meta data to indicate it
> is no longer a stock kernel.
> FYI, upon finding I could not figure out what kernel I was running
> after installing 12.0 release I turnd off REPRODUCIBLE on my kernel
> build VM for 12.0.  I do leave it on if I am building userland.
>
> Thoughts?

Among other things, reproducible builds implies that pkg upgrades are 
smaller. I see it makes sense to make releases, and in fact -stable, 
completely reproducible. For -current I am fine with it not being 
reproducible,

All just IMHO.

Pedro.




Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?a476e68d-813a-5c18-e1fc-38012f5f2dd0>