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authorAngel Pons <th3fanbus@gmail.com>2020-03-01 19:51:13 +0100
committerPatrick Georgi <pgeorgi@google.com>2020-03-03 07:47:31 +0000
commitc052ba0ac11914b8b1bf4dc190a1f6b8d9b6ace1 (patch)
tree95b51bc876e3e6d5049bbffe479712b8eccc7bba /.gitreview
parent8e9801380b57bb76bdc2a1f71e48c1605f881d3e (diff)
downloadcoreboot-c052ba0ac11914b8b1bf4dc190a1f6b8d9b6ace1.tar.xz
payloads/ext/Makefile.inc: Fix SeaBIOS race condition
For a very long time, SeaBIOS sometimes failed to build when using multiple threads. This known problem has been haunting everyone for a very long time. Until now. Unlike most other payloads, building SeaBIOS results in two files: the SeaBIOS payload itself and SeaVGABIOS. Each file has its own target, and there's a third target called "seabios", which has the same recipe as the SeaBIOS file, which calls `payloads/external/SeaBIOS/Makefile` with a bunch of arguments. In addition, SeaVGABIOS depends on "seabios". When executing serially, if the file of either SeaBIOS or SeaVGABIOS is needed, the SeaBIOS Makefile will be run. This will generate both files, so it is not necessary to run the Makefile more than once. However, when using multiple threads, it can happen that one thread wants to make the SeaBIOS file, while another one wants to make the SeaVGABIOS file, which depends on "seabios". This implies that both threads will execute the SeaBIOS Makefile at about the same time, only to collide when performing git operations. Since git uses a lock file when updating the index, one of the threads will fail to acquire the lock with an error, which will ultimately cause the build to fail. Whenever this happened, manually aborting with Ctrl-C made the build process fail again because of the same error. The only way to get past this problem, other than using one thread, was to let the unfinished jobs complete. The thread that acquired the lock on the SeaBIOS git repository would finish building SeaBIOS, so that target would not need to be remade. When restarting the build, only the target that failed is rebuilt, so it does not collide with any other thread. To address this issue, make the SeaVGABIOS file target depend directly on the SeaBIOS file instead, and remove the duplicate "seabios" target. Change-Id: I251190d3bb27052ff474f3cd1a45022dab6fac31 Signed-off-by: Angel Pons <th3fanbus@gmail.com> Reviewed-on: https://review.coreboot.org/c/coreboot/+/39188 Tested-by: build bot (Jenkins) <no-reply@coreboot.org> Reviewed-by: Arthur Heymans <arthur@aheymans.xyz> Reviewed-by: Nico Huber <nico.h@gmx.de>
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