No description
ab1785b1b2
When generating per-device rootfs directories, the ./etc/opkg/ directory is moved away prior to calling opkg install, opkg remove and rootfs_prepare. After the opkg invocations and the rootfs_prepare macro call, the saved opkg config directory is supposed to be moved back to its previous ./etc/opkg location. The mv command however can fail to properly restore the directory under certain circumstances, e.g. when the prior opkg or files/ overlay copy operations caused a new ./etc/opkg/ directory to be created. In this case, the backed up directory (named target-dir-$hash.opkg) will be moved into the preexisting ./etc/opkg/ directory instead, causing the opkg configuration to be located in a wrong path on the final rootfs, e.g. in /etc/opkg/target-dir-$hash.opkg/distfeeds.conf instead of /etc/opkg/distfeeds.conf. Solve this problem by replacing the naive "mv" command with a recursive "cp -T" invocation which causes the backed up directory tree to get merged with the destination directory in case it already exists. Also perform the rootfs_prepare macro call after restoring the opkg configuration, to allow users to override it again by using the files/ overlay mechanism. Signed-off-by: Jo-Philipp Wich <jo@mein.io> |
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.github | ||
config | ||
include | ||
package | ||
scripts | ||
target | ||
toolchain | ||
tools | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
BSDmakefile | ||
Config.in | ||
feeds.conf.default | ||
LICENSE | ||
Makefile | ||
README | ||
rules.mk |
This is the buildsystem for the OpenWrt Linux distribution. Please use "make menuconfig" to choose your preferred configuration for the toolchain and firmware. You need to have installed gcc, binutils, bzip2, flex, python, perl, make, find, grep, diff, unzip, gawk, getopt, subversion, libz-dev and libc headers. Run "./scripts/feeds update -a" to get all the latest package definitions defined in feeds.conf / feeds.conf.default respectively and "./scripts/feeds install -a" to install symlinks of all of them into package/feeds/. Use "make menuconfig" to configure your image. Simply running "make" will build your firmware. It will download all sources, build the cross-compile toolchain, the kernel and all choosen applications. To build your own firmware you need to have access to a Linux, BSD or MacOSX system (case-sensitive filesystem required). Cygwin will not be supported because of the lack of case sensitiveness in the file system. Sunshine! Your OpenWrt Community http://www.openwrt.org