Commit Graph

23 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Sergey A. Osokin
c905d0d393 Update third-party components for the Java module. 2023-10-06 12:22:03 -04:00
Sergey A. Osokin
de885feb06 Update third-party components for Unit's Java module. 2023-07-07 09:54:23 -04:00
Alejandro Colomar
6e16d7ac5b Auto: mirroring installation structure in build tree.
This makes the build tree more organized, which is good for adding new
stuff.  Now, it's useful for example for adding manual pages in man3/,
but it may be useful in the future for example for extending the build
system to run linters (e.g., clang-tidy(1), Clang analyzer, ...) on the
C source code.

Previously, the build tree was quite flat, and looked like this (after
`./configure && make`):

    $ tree -I src build
    build
    ├── Makefile
    ├── autoconf.data
    ├── autoconf.err
    ├── echo
    ├── libnxt.a
    ├── nxt_auto_config.h
    ├── nxt_version.h
    ├── unitd
    └── unitd.8

    1 directory, 9 files

And after this patch, it looks like this:

    $ tree -I src build
    build
    ├── Makefile
    ├── autoconf.data
    ├── autoconf.err
    ├── bin
    │   └── echo
    ├── include
    │   ├── nxt_auto_config.h
    │   └── nxt_version.h
    ├── lib
    │   ├── libnxt.a
    │   └── unit
    │       └── modules
    ├── sbin
    │   └── unitd
    ├── share
    │   └── man
    │       └── man8
    │           └── unitd.8
    └── var
        ├── lib
        │   └── unit
        ├── log
        │   └── unit
        └── run
            └── unit

    17 directories, 9 files

It also solves one issue introduced in
5a37171f73 ("Added default values for pathnames.").  Before that
commit, it was possible to run unitd from the build system
(`./build/unitd`).  Now, since it expects files in a very specific
location, that has been broken.  By having a directory structure that
mirrors the installation, it's possible to trick it to believe it's
installed, and run it from there:

    $ ./configure --prefix=./build
    $ make
    $ ./build/sbin/unitd

Fixes: 5a37171f73 ("Added default values for pathnames.")
Reported-by: Liam Crilly <liam@nginx.com>
Reviewed-by: Konstantin Pavlov <thresh@nginx.com>
Reviewed-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
Cc: Andrei Zeliankou <zelenkov@nginx.com>
Cc: Zhidao Hong <z.hong@f5.com>
Signed-off-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com>
2023-03-29 00:41:08 +02:00
Alejandro Colomar
5a37171f73 Added default values for pathnames.
This allows one to simply run `./configure` and expect it to
produce sane defaults for an install.

Previously, without specifying `--prefix=...`, `make install`
would simply fail, recommending to set `--prefix` or `DESTDIR`,
but that recommendation was incomplete at best, since it didn't
set many of the subdirs needed for a good organization.

Setting `DESTDIR` was even worse, since that shouldn't even affect
an installation (it is required to be transparent to the
installation).

/usr/local is the historic Unix standard path to use for
installations from source made manually by the admin of the
system.  Some package managers (Homebrew, I'm looking specifically
at you) have abused that path to install their things, but 1) it's
not our fault that someone else incorrectly abuses that path (and
they seem to be fixing it for newer archs; e.g., they started
using /opt/homebrew for Apple Silicon), 2) there's no better path
than /usr/local, 3) we still allow changing it for systems where
this might not be the desired path (MacOS Intel with hombrew), and
4) it's _the standard_.

See a related conversation with Ingo (OpenBSD maintainer):

On 7/27/22 16:16, Ingo Schwarze wrote:
> Hi Alejandro,
[...]
>
> Alejandro Colomar wrote on Sun, Jul 24, 2022 at 07:07:18PM +0200:
>> On 7/24/22 16:57, Ingo Schwarze wrote:
>>> Alejandro Colomar wrote on Sun, Jul 24, 2022 at 01:20:46PM +0200:
>
>>>> /usr/local is for sysadmins to build from source;
>
>>> Doing that is *very* strongly discouraged on OpenBSD.
>
>> I guess that's why the directory was reused in the BSDs to install ports
>> (probably ports were installed by the sysadmin there, and by extension,
>> ports are now always installed there, but that's just a guess).
>
> Maybe.  In any case, the practice of using /usr/local for packages
> created from ports is significantly older than the recommendation
> to refrain from using upstream "make install" outside the ports
> framework.
>
>   * The FreeBSD ports framework was started by Jordan Hubbard in 1993.
>   * The ports framework was ported from FreeBSD to OpenBSD
>     by Niklas Hallqvist in 1996.
>   * NetBSD pkgsrc was forked from FreeBSD ports by Alistair G. Crooks
>     and Hubert Feyrer in 1997.
>
> I failed to quickly find Jordan's original version, but rev. 1.1
> of /usr/ports/infrastructure/mk/bsd.port.mk in OpenBSD (dated Jun 3
> 22:47:10 1996 UTC) already said
>
>    LOCALBASE ?= /usr/local
>    PREFIX    ?= ${LOCALBASE}
>
[...]
>> I had a discussion in NGINX Unit about it, and
>> the decission for now has been: "support prefix=/usr/local for default
>> manual installation through the Makefile, and let BSD users adjust to
>> their preferred path".
>
> That's an *excellent* solution for the task, thanks for doing it
> the right way.  By setting PREFIX=/usr/local by default in the
> upstream Makefile, you are minimizing the work for *BSD porters.
>
> The BSD ports frameworks will typically run the upstreak "make install"
> with the variable DESTDIR set to a custom value, for example
>
>    DESTDIR=/usr/ports/pobj/groff-1.23.0/fake-amd64
>
> so if the upstream Makefile sets PREFIX=/usr/local ,
> that's perfect, everything gets installed to the right place
> without an intervention by the person doing the porting.
>
> Of course, if the upstream Makefile would use some other PREFIX,
> that would not be a huge obstacle.  All we have to do in that case
> is pass the option --prefix=/usr/local to the ./configure script,
> or something equivalent if the software isn't using GNU configure.
>
>> We were concerned that we might get collisions
>> with the BSD port also installing in /usr/local, but that's the least
>> evil (and considering BSD users don't typically run `make install`, it's
>> not so bad).
>
> It's not bad at all.  It's perfect.
>
> Of course, if a user wants to install *without* the ports framework,
> they have to provide their own --prefix.  But that's not an issue
> because it is easy to do, and installing without a port is discouraged
> anyway.

===

Directory variables should never contain a trailing slash (I've
learned that the hard way, where some things would break
unexpectedly).  Especially, make(1) is likely to have problems
when things have double slashes or a trailing slash, since it
treats filenames as text strings.  I've removed the trailing slash
from the prefix, and added it to the derivate variables just after
the prefix.  pkg-config(1) also expects directory variables to have
no trailing slash.

===

I also removed the code that would set variables as depending on
the prefix if they didn't start with a slash, because that is a
rather non-obvious behavior, and things should not always depend
on prefix, but other dirs such as $(runstatedir), so if we keep
a similar behavior it would be very unreliable.  Better keep
variables intact if set, or use the default if unset.

===

Print the real defaults for ./configure --help, rather than the actual
values.

===

I used a subdirectory under the standard /var/lib for NXT_STATE,
instead of a homemade "state" dir that does the same thing.

===

Modified the Makefile to create some dirs that weren't being
created, and also remove those that weren't being removed in
uninstall, probably because someone forgot to add them.

===

Add new options for setting the new variables, and rename some to be
consistent with the standard names.  Keep the old ones at configuration
time for compatibility, but mark them as deprecated.  Don't keep the old
ones at exec time.

===

A summary of the default config is:

Unit configuration summary:

  bin directory: ............. "/usr/local/bin"
  sbin directory: ............ "/usr/local/sbin"
  lib directory: ............. "/usr/local/lib"
  include directory: ......... "/usr/local/include"
  man pages directory: ....... "/usr/local/share/man"
  modules directory: ......... "/usr/local/lib/unit/modules"
  state directory: ........... "/usr/local/var/lib/unit"
  tmp directory: ............. "/tmp"

  pid file: .................. "/usr/local/var/run/unit/unit.pid"
  log file: .................. "/usr/local/var/log/unit/unit.log"

  control API socket: ........ "unix:/usr/local/var/run/unit/control.unit.sock"

Link: <https://www.gnu.org/prep/standards/html_node/Directory-Variables.html>
Link: <https://refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/FHS_3.0/fhs/index.html>
Reviewed-by: Artem Konev <a.konev@f5.com>
Reviewed-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
Tested-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
Reviewed-by: Konstantin Pavlov <thresh@nginx.com>
Signed-off-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com>
2023-01-31 23:47:53 +01:00
Sergey A. Osokin
c9c001ee16 Java: upgrading third-party components. 2022-12-14 01:43:24 +00:00
Andrew Clayton
8f0dd9478e Fixed main() prototypes in auto tests.
Future releases of GCC are planning to remove[0] default support for
some old features that were removed from C99 but GCC still accepts.

We can test for these changes by using the following -Werror=
directives

  -Werror=implicit-int
  -Werror=implicit-function-declaration
  -Werror=int-conversion
  -Werror=strict-prototypes
  -Werror=old-style-definition

Doing so revealed an issue with the auto/ tests in that the test
programs always define main as

  int main()

rather than

  int main(void)

which results in a bunch of errors like

build/autotest.c:3:23: error: function declaration isn't a prototype [-Werror=strict-prototypes]
    3 |                   int main() {
      |                       ^~~~
build/autotest.c: In function 'main':
build/autotest.c:3:23: error: old-style function definition [-Werror=old-style-definition]

The fix was easy, it only required fixing the main prototype with

  find -type f -exec sed -i 's/int main() {/int main(void) {/g' {} \;

Regardless of these upcoming GCC changes, this is probably a good thing
to do anyway for correctness.

[0]: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Changes/PortingToModernC

Link: <https://lists.fedoraproject.org/archives/list/devel@lists.fedoraproject.org/message/CJXKTLXJUPZ4F2C2VQOTNMEA5JAUPMBD/>
Link: <https://lists.fedoraproject.org/archives/list/devel@lists.fedoraproject.org/message/6SGHPHPAXKCVJ6PUZ57WVDQ5TDBVIRMF/>
Reviewed-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
2022-10-28 03:17:31 +01:00
Max Romanov
b586707c86 Java: upgrading third-party components. 2021-08-12 14:55:51 +03:00
Max Romanov
1a85ad378f Java: upgrading third-party components. 2021-08-09 10:14:57 +03:00
Sergey A. Osokin
175ef1c1db Java: upgrading third-party components. 2021-03-22 17:15:12 +03:00
Max Romanov
4ca9ba3408 Java: fixing isolation mounts for Alpine musl.
Thanks to @wujjpp.

This closes #490 PR on GitHub.
2020-11-10 22:27:08 +03:00
Max Romanov
4ba9e1d005 Java: upgrading 3rd-party components. 2020-11-02 21:05:04 +03:00
Tiago Natel de Moura
0390cb3a61 Isolation: mounting of procfs by default when using "rootfs". 2020-10-29 20:30:53 +00:00
Valentin Bartenev
84136eb49d Configure: using comma instead of space for passing -rpath value.
This variant will be more interoperable across various systems
and it's already used in Ruby module.

Otherwise, configure tests fail on NetBSD with:

  gcc: Missing argument for -Wl,-rpath
2020-10-26 22:24:32 +03:00
Tiago Natel de Moura
b65a8636bb Isolation: added "automount" option.
Now it's possible to disable default bind mounts of
languages by setting:

  {
      "isolation": {
           "automount": {
               "language_deps": false
           }
     }
  }

In this case, the user is responsible to provide a "rootfs"
containing the language libraries and required files for
the application.
2020-08-25 15:25:51 +01:00
Tiago Natel de Moura
b28b4459b0 Isolation: fixed the generation of mounts table.
Since the introduction of rootfs feature, some language modules
can't be configured multiple times.

Now the configure generates a separate nxt_<module>_mounts.h for
each module compiled.
2020-07-31 12:21:21 +01:00
Tiago Natel de Moura
d3ca5fb47a Packages: fixed java configure script.
Now the configure script appends /server to --lib-path argument.
2020-05-28 17:04:00 +01:00
Tiago Natel de Moura
e2b53e16c6 Added "rootfs" feature. 2020-05-28 14:57:41 +01:00
Max Romanov
4e0a2002fe Java: fixing configure errors reporting. 2020-01-28 17:03:19 +03:00
Max Romanov
1949be644c Java: introducing SHA512 sum validation for external JARs. 2020-01-28 17:02:51 +03:00
Max Romanov
04bf6457c6 Java: fixing maven repository URL.
It is required to use https scheme and different host to download
packages from maven repository.
2020-01-28 17:01:21 +03:00
Max Romanov
9b4e45cafc Fixed "make tests" build without preceding "make".
Currently almost all Unit object files depends on generated nxt_version.h.
This patch adds missing dependence and fixes running make with multiple
jobs.

This closes #318 issue on GitHub.
2019-10-02 19:11:10 +03:00
Max Romanov
2b8cab1e24 Java: introducing websocket support. 2019-09-05 15:27:32 +03:00
Max Romanov
5bfdebb9e4 Introducing Java Servlet Container beta. 2019-02-28 18:02:42 +03:00