'With-in' duplicate GPRBuild name files - gnat

I try to build a_project (3rd party) where:
a_project.gpr
--> with config.gpr
--> with a_lib.gpr
a_lib.gpr
--> with config.gpr
note 1: config.gpr in a_lib and a_project are distinct files.
note 2: both config.gpr are 'abstract project'.
The building process tells me:
config.gpr:15:18: duplicate project name "config"
config.gpr:15:18: already in "...\a_lib\config.gpr"
What should be done to make this work?
Thx.

Related

"No rule to make target" error when linking matlab's libraries

My cmake script is as follows:
FIND_PACKAGE(Matlab REQUIRED)
GET_FILENAME_COMPONENT(Matlab_BIN_DIRS ${Matlab_LIBRARIES} PATH)
SET(Matlab_LIBS "${Matlab_BIN_DIRS}/libmat.so ${Matlab_BIN_DIRS}/libmx.so")
INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES(${Matlab_INCLUDE_DIRS})
TARGET_LINK_LIBRARIES(myAPP ${Matlab_LIBRARIES} ${Matlab_LIBS})
following error information was printed when I built my projects.
:-1: error: No rule to make target '/usr/local/MATLAB/R2015b/bin/glnxa64/libmat.so /usr/local/MATLAB/R2015b/bin/glnxa64/libmx.so', needed by 'cimgio'. Stop.
But it worked after modifying the last line as
TARGET_LINK_LIBRARIES(myAPP ${Matlab_LIBRARIES} libmat.so libmx.so)
why full paths does not work here?

How can I get "HelloWorld - BitBake Style" working on a newer version of Yocto?

In the book "Embedded Linux Systems with the Yocto Project", Chapter 4 contains a sample called "HelloWorld - BitBake style". I encountered a bunch of problems trying to get the old example working against the "Sumo" release 2.5.
If you're like me, the first error you encountered following the book's instructions was that you copied across bitbake.conf and got:
ERROR: ParseError at /tmp/bbhello/conf/bitbake.conf:749: Could not include required file conf/abi_version.conf
And after copying over abi_version.conf as well, you kept finding more and more cross-connected files that needed to be moved, and then some relative-path errors after that... Is there a better way?
Here's a series of steps which can allow you to bitbake nano based on the book's instructions.
Unless otherwise specified, these samples and instructions are all based on the online copy of the book's code-samples. While convenient for copy-pasting, the online resource is not totally consistent with the printed copy, and contains at least one extra bug.
Initial workspace setup
This guide assumes that you're working with Yocto release 2.5 ("sumo"), installed into /tmp/poky, and that the build environment will go into /tmp/bbhello. If you don't the Poky tools+libraries already, the easiest way is to clone it with:
$ git clone -b sumo git://git.yoctoproject.org/poky.git /tmp/poky
Then you can initialize the workspace with:
$ source /tmp/poky/oe-init-build-env /tmp/bbhello/
If you start a new terminal window, you'll need to repeat the previous command which will get get your shell environment set up again, but it should not replace any of the files created inside the workspace from the first time.
Wiring up the defaults
The oe-init-build-env script should have just created these files for you:
bbhello/conf/local.conf
bbhello/conf/templateconf.cfg
bbhello/conf/bblayers.conf
Keep these, they supersede some of the book-instructions, meaning that you should not create or have the files:
bbhello/classes/base.bbclass
bbhello/conf/bitbake.conf
Similarly, do not overwrite bbhello/conf/bblayers.conf with the book's sample. Instead, edit it to add a single line pointing to your own meta-hello folder, ex:
BBLAYERS ?= " \
${TOPDIR}/meta-hello \
/tmp/poky/meta \
/tmp/poky/meta-poky \
/tmp/poky/meta-yocto-bsp \
"
Creating the layer and recipe
Go ahead and create the following files from the book-samples:
meta-hello/conf/layer.conf
meta-hello/recipes-editor/nano/nano.bb
We'll edit these files gradually as we hit errors.
Can't find recipe error
The error:
ERROR: BBFILE_PATTERN_hello not defined
It is caused by the book-website's bbhello/meta-hello/conf/layer.conf being internally inconsistent. It uses the collection-name "hello" but on the next two lines uses _test suffixes. Just change them to _hello to match:
# Set layer search pattern and priority
BBFILE_COLLECTIONS += "hello"
BBFILE_PATTERN_hello := "^${LAYERDIR}/"
BBFILE_PRIORITY_hello = "5"
Interestingly, this error is not present in the printed copy of the book.
No license error
The error:
ERROR: /tmp/bbhello/meta-hello/recipes-editor/nano/nano.bb: This recipe does not have the LICENSE field set (nano)
ERROR: Failed to parse recipe: /tmp/bbhello/meta-hello/recipes-editor/nano/nano.bb
Can be fixed by adding a license setting with one of the values that bitbake recognizes. In this case, add a line onto nano.bb of:
LICENSE="GPLv3"
Recipe parse error
ERROR: ExpansionError during parsing /tmp/bbhello/meta-hello/recipes-editor/nano/nano.bb
[...]
bb.data_smart.ExpansionError: Failure expanding variable PV_MAJOR, expression was ${#bb.data.getVar('PV',d,1).split('.')[0]} which triggered exception AttributeError: module 'bb.data' has no attribute 'getVar'
This is fixed by updating the special python commands being used in the recipe, because #bb.data was deprecated and is now removed. Instead, replace it with #d, ex:
PV_MAJOR = "${#d.getVar('PV',d,1).split('.')[0]}"
PV_MINOR = "${#d.getVar('PV',d,1).split('.')[1]}"
License checksum failure
ERROR: nano-2.2.6-r0 do_populate_lic: QA Issue: nano: Recipe file fetches files and does not have license file information (LIC_FILES_CHKSUM) [license-checksum]
This can be fixed by adding a directive to the recipe telling it what license-info-containing file to grab, and what checksum we expect it to have.
We can follow the way the recipe generates the SRC_URI, and modify it slightly to point at the COPYING file in the same web-directory. Add this line to nano.bb:
LIC_FILES_CHKSUM = "${SITE}/v${PV_MAJOR}.${PV_MINOR}/COPYING;md5=f27defe1e96c2e1ecd4e0c9be8967949"
The MD5 checksum in this case came from manually downloading and inspecting the matching file.
Done!
Now bitbake nano ought to work, and when it is complete you should see it built nano:
/tmp/bbhello $ find ./tmp/deploy/ -name "*nano*.rpm*"
./tmp/deploy/rpm/i586/nano-dbg-2.2.6-r0.i586.rpm
./tmp/deploy/rpm/i586/nano-dev-2.2.6-r0.i586.rpm
I have recently worked on that hands-on hello world project. As far as I am concerned, I think that the source code in the book contains some bugs. Below there is a list of suggested fixes:
Inheriting native class
In fact, when you build with bitbake that you got from poky, it builds only for the target, unless you mention in your recipe that you are building for the host machine (native). You can do the latter by adding this line at the end of your recipe:
inherit native
Adding license information
It is worth mentioning that the variable LICENSE is important to be set in any recipe, otherwise bitbake rises an error. In our case, we try to build the version 2.2.6 of the nano editor, its current license is GPLv3, hence it should be mentioned as follow:
LICENSE = "GPLv3"
Using os.system calls
As the book states, you cannot dereference metadata directly from a python function. Which means it is mandatory to access metadata through the d dictionary. Bellow, there is a suggestion for the do_unpack python function, you can use its concept to code the next tasks (do_configure, do_compile):
python do_unpack() {
workdir = d.getVar("WORKDIR", True)
dl_dir = d.getVar("DL_DIR", True)
p = d.getVar("P", True)
tarball_name = os.path.join(dl_dir, p+".tar.gz")
bb.plain("Unpacking tarball")
os.system("tar -x -C " + workdir + " -f " + tarball_name)
bb.plain("tarball unpacked successfully")
}
Launching the nano editor
After successfully building your nano editor package, you can find your nano executable in the following directory in case you are using Ubuntu (arch x86_64):
./tmp/work/x86_64-linux/nano/2.2.6-r0/src/nano
Should you have any comments or questions, Don't hesitate !

Unable to set the package name for classpath in randoop

Here the project structure cloned from github after compiling on Ubuntu successfully,
javaml
bin
net/sf/javaml/core/Dataset.class
javaml
src
net/sf/javaml/core/Dataset.java
When the following command wa given:
java -ea -classpath /home/shahid/git/javaml/bin:/home/shahid/a_f_w/randoop-3.1.5/randoop-all-3.1.5.jar randoop.main.Main gentests --testclass=net.sf.javaml.core.Dataset --literals-file=CLASSES
It generated the error: "Ignoring interface net.sf.javaml.core.Dataset specified via --classlist or --testclass.
No classes to test
".
while the other command java -ea -classpath /home/shahid/git/java-ml/bin:/home/shahid/a_f_w/randoop-3.1.5/randoop-all-3.1.5.jar randoop.main.Main gentests --testclass=DataSet --literals-file=CLASSESwithout package for other project working perfectly.
Any help will be appretiated.
The error message gives you the answer:
Ignoring interface net.sf.javaml.core.Dataset specified via --classlist or --testclass. No classes to test
You are supposed to provide a class, not an interface, to the --testclass command-line argument.
By passing --testclass=net.sf.javaml.core.Dataset to Randoop, you indicated that you only want Randoop to create objects of type net.sf.javaml.core.Dataset. However, since that is an interface, it cannot be instantiated, and Randoop cannot create any objects, nor any tests.
The following command worked for me:
java -ea -classpath ~/javaml/bin/:~/Randoop/randoop-all-3.1.4.jar randoop.main.Main gentests --testclass=net.sf.javaml.core.Complex --literals-file=CLASSES
#mernst thanks for your kind response.

Copy all files with given extension to output directory using CMake

I've seen that I can use this command in order to copy a directory using cmake:
file(COPY "myDir" DESTINATION "myDestination")
(from this post)
My problem is that I don't want to copy all of myDir, but only the .h files that are in there. I've tried with
file(COPY "myDir/*.h" DESTINATION "myDestination")
but I obtain the following error:
CMake Error at CMakeLists.txt:23 (file):
file COPY cannot find
"/full/path/to/myDIR/*.h".
How can I filter the files that I want to copy to a destination folder?
I've found the solution by myself:
file(GLOB MY_PUBLIC_HEADERS
"myDir/*.h"
)
file(COPY ${MY_PUBLIC_HEADERS} DESTINATION myDestination)
this also works for me:
install(DIRECTORY "myDir/"
DESTINATION "myDestination"
FILES_MATCHING PATTERN "*.h" )
The alternative approach provided by jepessen does not take into account the fact that sometimes the number of files to be copied is too high. I encountered the issue when doing such thing (more than 110 files)
Due to a limitation on Windows on the number of characters (2047 or 8191) in a single command line, this approach may randomly fail depending on the number of headers that are in the folder. More info here https://support.microsoft.com/en-gb/help/830473/command-prompt-cmd-exe-command-line-string-limitation
Here is my solution:
file(GLOB MY_HEADERS myDir/*.h)
foreach(CurrentHeaderFile IN LISTS MY_HEADERS)
add_custom_command(
TARGET MyTarget PRE_BUILD
COMMAND ${CMAKE_COMMAND} -E copy_if_different ${CurrentHeaderFile} ${myDestination}
COMMENT "Copying header: ${CurrentHeaderFile}")
endforeach()
This works like a charm on MacOS. However, if you have another target that depends on MyTarget and needs to use these headers, you may have some compile errors due to not found includes on Windows. Therefore you may want to prefer the following option that defines an intermediate target.
function (CopyFile ORIGINAL_TARGET FILE_PATH COPY_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY)
# Copy to the disk at build time so that when the header file changes, it is detected by the build system.
set(input ${FILE_PATH})
get_filename_component(file_name ${FILE_PATH} NAME)
set(output ${COPY_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY}/${file_name})
set(copyTarget ${ORIGINAL_TARGET}-${file_name})
add_custom_target(${copyTarget} DEPENDS ${output})
add_dependencies(${ORIGINAL_TARGET} ${copyTarget})
add_custom_command(
DEPENDS ${input}
OUTPUT ${output}
COMMAND ${CMAKE_COMMAND} -E copy_if_different ${input} ${output}
COMMENT "Copying file to ${output}."
)
endfunction ()
foreach(HeaderFile IN LISTS MY_HEADERS)
CopyFile(MyTarget ${HeaderFile} ${myDestination})
endforeach()
The downside indeed is that you end up with multiple target (one per copied file) but they should all end up together (alphabetically) since they start with the same prefix ORIGINAL_TARGET -> "MyTarget"

OMNET++/MIXIM : HOW CAN I CORRECT THE FOLLOWING COMPILER'S ERROR

Description Resource Path Location Type
make: * Config file '' does not exist -- add the OMNeT++ bin directory to the path so that opp_configfilepath can be found, or set the OMNETPP_CONFIGFILE variable to point to Makefile.inc. Stop. Makefile /IWF line 55 C/C++ Problem**
I had the same problem with OMNET++ 4.3.1, it turns out that i extracted the omnet source files to C:\Omnet rather than the default expected location c:/omnetpp-4.3.1 by the make script. So when you try to build the mixim, the build stops by giving two errors one of them being
make: *** Config file 'c:/omnetpp-4.3.1/Makefile.inc' does not exist --
To solve this issue, navigate to mixim(or whatever folder)>out>gcc-debug>.last-copts or you can search your workspace for something like omnetpp-4.3.1, remember the version, to locate the file. Then just change -Ic:/omnetpp-4../include to exact directory path where you have extracted omnet++.