* Use subdirectory for depends cache in gitian builds
* Make timestamps of wrappers deterministic
* Use ccache in gitian builds
* Upgrade ccache to latest version (3.4.2)
* Build the branch that belongs to the Jenkins build instead of develop
* GCC-7 and glibc-2.27 compat code
* Statically link libstdc++ for GCC based builds
Makes sure binaries which are built on a newer build host still work
on older distros.
* Use python3 when installing MacOS native tools
* Move actual build logic out of Travis and upgrade to gcc-7
Travis will now simply call a few scripts which do the actual work.
These scripts will first create a "builder image" which contains the
necessary environment for the actual build. Then scripts are called
inside this builder image to do the build.
This should make us more independant from Travis and also allows us
to do local CI testing.
The build matrix is also moved out of .travis.yml and instead moved
into ci/matrix.sh. This script is sourced with only "BUILD_TARGET" being
set so that it internally can figure out which other environment
variables need to be set.
This commit also upgrades the used GCC version to 7. This is due to the
use of ubuntu:bionic as base image for the builder image.
* Add Jenkinsfiles for regular CI and nightly gitian builds
* Automatically download OSX SDK in gitian-build.sh
* Remove bogus "export MAKEJOBS=-j5"
* Forward cache/src dirs into builder container
Fixes caching issues on Travis.
* fix
* Fail build immediately when building depends took too long
Setting PKG_CONFIG_SYSROOT_DIR environment variable to "/"
for building Qt makes pkgconf behave strange
(remove "/" prefix instead of adding it).
And it makes no sense to set this variable for old pkgconfig anyway.
Signed-off-by: Oleg Girko <ol@infoserver.lv>
027fdb8 When/if the copyright line does not mention Bitcoin Core developers, add a second line to copyrights in -version, About dialog, and splash screen (Luke Dashjr)
cc2095e Rewrite FormatParagraph to handle newlines within input strings correctly (Luke Dashjr)
cddffaf Bugfix: Include COPYRIGHT_HOLDERS_SUBSTITUTION in Makefile substitutions so it gets passed to extract-strings correctly (Luke Dashjr)
29598e4 Move PACKAGE_URL to configure.ac (Luke Dashjr)
78ec83d splashscreen: Resize text to fit exactly (Luke Dashjr)
3cae140 Bugfix: Actually use _COPYRIGHT_HOLDERS_SUBSTITUTION everywhere (Luke Dashjr)
4d5a3df Bugfix: gitian-descriptors: Add missing python-setuptools requirement for OS X (biplist module) (Luke Dashjr)
e4ab5e5 Bugfix: Correct copyright year in Mac DMG background image (Luke Dashjr)
917b1d0 Set copyright holders displayed in notices separately from the package name (Luke Dashjr)
c39a6ff Travis & gitian-osx: Use depends for ds_store and mac_alias modules (Luke Dashjr)
902ccde depends: Add mac_alias to depends (Luke Dashjr)
82a2d98 depends: Add ds_store to depends (Cory Fields)
de619a3 depends: Pass PYTHONPATH along to configure (Cory Fields)
e611b6e macdeploy: Use rsvg-convert rather than cairosvg (Luke Dashjr)
63bcdc5 More complicated package name substitution for Mac deployment (Luke Dashjr)
1a6c67c Parameterise 2009 in translatable copyright strings (Luke Dashjr)
d5f4683 Unify package name to as few places as possible without major changes (Luke Dashjr)
* build: Enable C++11 build, require C++11 compiler
Implements #6211.
* depends: use c++11
* build: update ax_cxx_compile_stdcxx to serial 4
* build: force a c++ standard to be specified
Newer compilers may switch to newer standards by default. For example, gcc6
uses std=gnu++14 by default.
* c++11: fix libbdb build against libc++ in c++11 mode
atomic_init clashes with
* c++11: CAccountingEntry must be defined before use in a list
c++11ism. This fixes builds against libc++.
Remove sed-based qt PIDLIST_ABSOLUTE workaround, replace by a patch that
works for both old (such as used by Travis and Ubuntu Precise) and new
mingw (Ubuntu Trusty).
This passes `-Wa,--noexecstack` to the assembler when building
platform-specific assembly files, to signal that a non-executable stack
can be used. This is the same approach as used by Debian
(see https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=430583)
This version of miniupnpc fixes a buffer overflow in the XML (ugh)
parser during initial network discovery.
http://talosintel.com/reports/TALOS-2015-0035/
The commit fixing the vulnerability is:
79cca974a4
Reported by timothy on IRC.
This should fix the spurious comparison tool failures.
See discussion here: https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/6305
The race fix was cherry-picked on top of the version we're currently using, so
it should be functionally identical otherwise.
This should be functionally identical to what's in place now. It was built from
be0eef7744
That commit is the same as this pruned commit in TheBlueMatt's repo:
https://github.com/TheBlueMatt/bitcoinj/commit/0f7b5d8
Now we'll be able to trust the line numbers in the stack traces.
Boost assumes variadic templates are always available in GCC 4.4+, but
they aren't since we don't build with -std=c++11.
This applies the patch that fixed the issue in boost 1.57:
eec8085549
See also: https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/10500
In some cases (Travis), sources and build caches may be moved around in-between
builds, and we can't necessarily trust that everything is still intact.
This introduces pre-build checks that verify against stashed checksums.
Note that this will cause all sources to be re-downloaded, since cached sources
weren't trustworthy before this.
See here for background: https://bugreports.qt.io/browse/QTBUG-34748
libxcb temporarily had an abi breakage which caused crashes when qt was
compiled against a non-compatible version. Building qt with -qt-xcb should have
shielded us from this issue, except that incompatible headers were used when
building qt's wrapper.
Make sure those headers aren't picked up by qt's build.
Details:
qt's build adds a wrapper around the xcb libs when -qt-xcb is used. This is
done to avoid having to link to a handful of different libs, which may not be
api/abi stable. This build depends on include-order, so that its files are
found before the real libxcb headers.
Our build (for other reasons related to qt's complicated build-system) injects
our prefix into CXXFLAGS. Because libxcb is found in this path, that reverses
the include-order, negating the purpose of the wrapper.
To fix, libxcb's includes are simply moved to a subdir. pkg-config ensures that
they're still found properly when needed.
To make things even more interesting, this behavior in qt's .pro files is broken:
INCLUDEPATH += $$QMAKE_CFLAGS_XCB
The INCLUDEPATH variable is processed by qmake which automatically prefixes each
entry with "-I". The QMAKE_CFLAGS_XCB variable comes from pkg-config and
already contains -I, making the path look like "-I-I/path/to/xcb/headers".
To work around that, CFLAGS/CXXFLAGS are used here rather than INCLUDEPATH.
tl;dr: Update to the newer stable toolchain and SDK for OSX without giving up
any backwards compatibility. We can move to clang 3.5 as a next step which
allows use to use libc++ and the 10.10 sdk, but we'll need to find a build that
works in gitian/travis first.
Switch to a new, better maintained fork of cctools:
https://github.com/tpoechtrager/cctools-port
I've forked this and will be working on it some as well:
https://github.com/theuni/cctools-port
This brings in:
cctools v862
ld64: v241.9
It also fixes 64bit builds, so there's no longer any need to use a 32bit clang.
Since clang is no longer tied to an old/crusty 32bit build, clang has been
upgraded to 3.3. Unfortunately, there's a bug in 3.4 that breaks builds. 3.5
works fine, but there are no binary builds compatible with precise, which is
currently used for gitian and travis. We could always build our own if
necessary.
After updating to stable clang/linker/cctools, it's possible to use a more
recent SDK. The current SDK (10.7) through the most recent 10.10 have all been
built/tested successfully, both with and without 10.6 compatibility. However,
10.10 requires clang 3.5.
SDKs >= 10.9 use libc++ rather than libstdc++. This is verified working as well.
Fixes default hidden symbol visibility for our linux->osx cross build. Without
this change, the check for working -fvisibility=hidden fails, and all symbols
are visible by default.
Ugly as this is, it's just a simple find/replace to fix a bug in Qt's configure.
They assume in an "XPLATFORM_MAC" block that the builder is capable of running
osx programs. This should be "BUILD_ON_MAC" instead.
Descriptors now make use of the dependencies builder, so results are cached.
A very new version (>= e9741525c) of Gitian should be used in order to take
advantage of caching.
We're not ready to switch to a static qt5 for Linux yet due to missing plugin
support. This adds a recipe for building a shared qt4 that we build and link
against, but don't distribute.
make USE_LINUX_STATIC_QT5=1 can be used to build static qt5 as before.
tl;dr: This solves boost visibility problems for default/release build configs
on non-Linux platforms.
When Bitcoin builds against boost's header-only classes, it ends up with
objects containing symbols that the upstream boost libs also have. Since
Bitcoin builds by default with hidden symbol visibility, it can end up trying
to link against a copy of the same symbols with default visibility.
This is not a problem on Linux because 3rd party static libs are un-exported
by default (--exclude-libs,ALL), but that is not available for MinGW and OSX.
Those platforms (and maybe others?) end up confused about which version to use.
The OSX linker spews hundreds of: "ld: warning: direct access in <foo> to
global weak symbol guard variable for <bar> means the weak symbol cannot be
overridden at runtime. This was likely caused by different translation units
being compiled with different visibility settings."
MinGW's linker complains similarly.
Since the default symbol visibility for Bitcoin is hidden and releases are
built that way as well, build Boost with hidden visibility. Linux builds Boost
this way also, but only for the sake of continuity.
This means that the linker confusion logic is reversed, so the problem will
will now be encountered if Bitcoin is built with --disable-reduce-exports, but
that's better than the current situation.
Bumps the OpenSSL version to the latest release, and kills SSL2. (SSL3 was already killed here, so I'm not sure why SSL2 was left around?)
No other changes.
Newer mingw supports the features necessary to enable this api, whereas older
versions didn't. However once enabled (automatically by configure), it triggers
an unrelated build bug.
Since it was not enabled previously anyway, and we don't depend on the
functionality, just disable it across the board.
b144a74 depends: bump miniupnpc to 1.9.20140701. (Cory Fields)
f628127 depends: bump openssl to 1.0.1i (Cory Fields)
9f7f504 build: add -DMINIUPNP_STATICLIB for new version (Cory Fields)