The find_realexec_path function was used for finding the toolchain path mostly
because of two reasons:
1) We couldn't really use CXX or CC variables because the user could set those
from the OS's environment and Waf wouldn't look for the executable file in
that case.
2) Our CI configuration sets up symlinks for ccache and find_realexec_path
works around that issue.
The bad side about using find_realexec_path() is that, besides working aroung
symlinks, it does the same thing that is done by Waf. This patch removes the
dependency for such a function by addressing each of the reasons above stated:
1) We create a local copy of os.environ and, if there's a variable with the
same name we are using, we remove it from the local copy.
2) As done before, we are looking for the cross ar program instead of gcc
program, since that is not used for ccache symlinks.
This is a better approach than checking command line options
--check-cxx-compiler and --check-c-compiler. Those values expect a list of
compilers to try instead of the compiler to use.
The benefits of this approach are:
- Allowing correct use of options --check-cxx-compiler and --check-c-compiler.
- Allowing user to pass CXX and CC environment variables, which is a common
way of selecting the compiler.
- Configuration is done *and committed* only for the specific compiler.
This is a better approach than checking command line options
--check-cxx-compiler and --check-c-compiler. Those values expect a list of
compilers to try instead of the compiler to use.
The benefits of this approach are:
- Allowing correct use of options --check-cxx-compiler and --check-c-compiler.
- Allowing user to pass CXX and CC environment variables, which is a common
way of selecting the compiler.
- Configuration is done *and committed* only for the specific compiler.
It makes more sense the toolchain Waf tool to be responsible of loading the
compilers. Furthermore, that allows toolchain tool to have control on doing
configuration before and after loading compiler tools.
- Use early return and reduce one indentation level.
- Set AR for both GNU compilers and clang just once and reduce redundancy.
- Reduce indentation level for clang-specific setup. There's no need to nest it
inside check if compilers are GNU or clang.
PX4 isn't supported at the moment and sitltest always use GCC, so we include the only ones that build
Travis has old LLVM installed and old Clang in a strange path (not a package) which interfere with the use of clang-3.7
Copy the program library to the place where PX4Firmware CMake build will look
for and trigger the firmware build. There isn't really a real output defined
for px4_copy_lib because Waf would complain about multiple tasks having same
output when building multiple programs.
After the firmware build, copy it to the correct place (from program group and
name perspective) and add git hashes.
Since the place where the library is placed is shared by different target
programs, we need to synchronize the firmware build, that's why the use of
_firmware_semaphorish_tasks. That variable is set as a list because of the
upcoming upload task.
Recursively collect objects from dependency libraries and create a single
library. That way we just need to pass down one single library to PX4Firmware
build system.
In the upcoming build for PX4 boards, we will pass down the program a single
static library to PX4 Firmware's cmake build system. This patch is partially
providing a way to do that: the configuration for PX4 will define the
AP_PROGRAM_AS_STLIB environment variable.
The function ap_program() was the only one that was using it, so let's just
inline it. Besides, the name was misleading, since the (only) feature added was
for programs instead of general task generators.
Firstly build.All was failing as the submodules had not been updated
so the 'git submodule update' in this commit resovles that.
Secondly, now that the dependant projects like PX4Firmware etc are git
submodules of ardupilot we no longer need to check them out separately
and update them so I have removed all those.
I left MAVProxy as it isn't a submodule of ardupilot.
Two things are fixed with this patch:
1. We sort dictionaries' keys if they aren't OrderedDict instances. Since
dict objects don't guarantee order, environment variables may have contents
in wrong order, causing unnecessary rebuilds.
2. We only use prepend_value() if there's already a value set for the key
and that value is list. Before this change, boards couldn't set
non-iterable values.
This should actually use the install-prereq script so we don't duplicate
effort on the maintenance of these scripts. But let's at least install
the correct version for now.
That will make platform specific naming be ignored. We use a string instead, to
let Waf tweak the target name correctly for us. The '#' prefix is to tell Waf
that the path is relative to bld.bldnode (instead of bld.path, which is the
default).
We need to remove CMakeCache.txt, otherwise cached variables would remain the
old value when they are removed from cmake_vars parameter.
We use `os.remove()` instead of `Node.delete()` because the latter removes the
node instance from its parent's children list. That makes the node be ignored
when storing persistent information after the build, thus the node signature
wouldn't be saved with that approach, which would make waf always think that
the task should be executed.
The default implementation takes into account the task's output and input
nodes. That isn't very well applicable for cmake tasks, so we define proper
uid() methods.
That allows options being declared where they're really used. Additionally, we
load ardupilotwaf after the other tools so that we can create our groups after
all non-ardupilot option groups are created. That makes our groups appear as
the last ones in the help message, which makes it easier to locate them.
The gtest header uses lots of undefined macros, showing lots of warnings
if we enable -Wundef. Ideally we could use a #pragma to ignore the
warning only from the correct header, but this currently doesn't work
with g++ - see https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=53431
So for now we disable the warning completely when compiling gtest or any
test that uses its header.
Thanks Gustavo Sousa
Copy the missing warnings from AP_Common.h and reorder the warnings to
be more clear on intent. This will later let us remove the warnings from
the header.
By running waf with option -v, waf was complaining about the update_submodule
tasks having the same identifier. That happened because the default uid()
method depended on the class name, inputs and outputs. Since this type of task
doesn't have input nor output file, we need to override uid() so that it uses
the submodule path for the task identifier.
With this change, there's no need to verify if the submodule is initialized,
because the submodules in GIT_SUBMODULES are automatically initialized and
updated if necessary before the build tasks are performed.
One downside of this change is that Google Benchmark configuration is now done
only during build. However that is minor, since now there are easy ways to
separately build different targets and program groups, so that a fail in
benchmark build doesn't really affect the other targets.
That is a workaround so that one can use `waf bin tests`, for example. In our
context, the only restriction to the task generators creation is values defined
during configuration. Thus, ideally, the recursion and task generators creation
should be done only once for multiple build calls. We should do that in the
future.
Rationale:
1. That function creates a separate build context class instead of just
creating a wrapper for calling build (previous approach).
2. The check command isn't a build shortcut since there's no way of calling it
without using 'check' explicitly.
The following fixes where applied:
- Value for APM_BUILD_DIRECTORY must be prefixed with APM_BUILD_
- Renamed parameter name to sketchname, so we differentiate the real program
name from the legacy sketch name
- Use directory name instead of program name as argument for
_get_legacy_defines()
Bind functions used in wscripts to build context. Additionally, a new function
is created and also decorated with @conf, common_vehicle_libraries(), which
returns COMMON_VEHICLE_DEPENDENT_LIBRARIES. This patch is a preparation for
making wscripts use methods bound to the build context instead of using them
directly from ardupilotwaf.
The destination directory for binaries should be
<build_dir>/<board>/bin/ and not
<build_dir>/<board>/<where-wscript-file-is>/bin
The same reasoning can be applied for others: tools, examples, etc
should follow the same rule.
Before this patch, compiling for example ArduPlane for navio we would
have:
[339/339] Linking build/navio/ArduPlane/bin/ArduPlane
And now we have:
[339/339] Linking build/navio/bin/ArduPlane
Use platform-neutral way in python to join path components to improve
readability. Both will work when passing down to waf's Node object, even
on Windows.
waf's terminology might be a bit confusing regarding the word 'target'. As an
attribute for a task generator, it means the paths of the files supposed to be
built. As a command line option (--target), it means the list of names of the
task generators to be used in the build.
Before this commit, only vehicles programs had their task generators' target
parameter value different from the name parameter. Now, there's no distinction
between those two parameters for the case of programs.
That enable the easy creation of custom build commands with the purpose of
creating "shortcuts" for execution from command line.
For example, consider the following code fragment from a wscript:
```
copter = ardupilotwaf.build_shortcut(targets='ArduCopter')
```
With that, one can just issue `waf copter` instead of
`waf --target ArduCopter`.
The parameter target is made optional because more parameters might be added to
this function in the future.
Benchmarks now go to `build/<board>/benchmarks/` and tests to
`build/<board>/tests/`. That's done by using ardupilotwaf.program() and passing
blddestdir and program_name.
The only exception is for binaries that go in 'bin', like vehicles.
That way, partial builds follow the rule:
- If building a vehicle or some helper that goes into 'bin', just use the
binary name as the argument for --target. Example: `waf --target
ArduCopter`.
- For other binaries, the name of the directory they are placed in must be
used. Example: `waf --target tests/test_vectors`.
That param defines where the binary will be saved in the build directory,
namely `build/<board>/<blddestdir>`. The default is 'bin', for binaries that are
to be shipped for installation.
The configure function was reorganized for:
- removing variables that are not used
- making it more general, i.e., not relying in ardupilotmega.xml, so that this
tool can be used for generating other headers in the future
The option target for the waf task generator is meant for actual files that are
going to be build. Since our target files are dynamic, let's change the code to
use a new parameter output_dir instead.
By setting env.env during configure time makes changes be for the whole build
system scope and persistently, which may cause problems for other tasks and
tools.
Since the output list for mavgen is dynamic, in the sense that we don't have
the information of what files will be generated by the task, that is not
captured by default by waf and post_run can't save the task signature for those
files. Although that doesn't cause build errors, the build time increase
significantly for when tasks that use the generate files are included (for
example, vehicles builds).
This patch search for the headers that were created by the task and set the
task signature for them. Using ant_glob isn't a very good solution, since there
may be stray file in the local build directory, but let's use that for now
until we find a better approach.
There is an issue with gbenchmark and waf on Ubuntu (15.04 and 15.10, ). Waf doesn't link pthread to gbenchmark and linking failed :
````
[1652/1652] Linking build/linux/libraries/AP_Math/benchmarks/benchmark_matrix.linux
/home/khancyr/Workspace/APM/ardupilot/build/linux/gbenchmark/lib/libbenchmark.a(benchmark.cc.o): dans la fonction « benchmark::RunSpecifiedBenchmarks(benchmark::BenchmarkReporter*) »:
benchmark.cc:(.text+0x2e21): référence indéfinie vers « pthread_create »
/usr/bin/ld generated: référence indéfinie vers « pthread_create »
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
Waf: Leaving directory `/home/khancyr/Workspace/APM/ardupilot/build/linux'
Build failed
-> task in 'benchmark_matrix.linux' failed (exit status 1):
{task 139784788162576: cxxprogram benchmark_matrix.cpp.1.o -> benchmark_matrix.linux}
['/usr/lib/ccache/g++', '-Wl,--gc-sections', 'libraries/AP_Math/benchmarks/benchmark_matrix.cpp.1.o', '-o', '/home/khancyr/Workspace/APM/ardupilot/build/linux/libraries/AP_Math/benchmarks/benchmark_matrix.linux', '-Wl,-Bstatic', '-L.', '-lap', '-Wl,-Bdynamic', '-L/home/khancyr/Workspace/APM/ardupilot/build/linux/gbenchmark/lib', '-lm', '-lpthread', '-lrt', '-lbenchmark']
`````
Adding 'pthread' to env.LIB_GBENCHMARK solve the issue
see https://github.com/diydrones/ardupilot/pull/3460 and https://github.com/diydrones/ardupilot/issues/3461
Some platforms (e.g. bebop) might need to create fully statically linked
binaries. This serves to force a program to be statically linked. It has only
been tested on GNU compilers, other compilers may have unexpected behavior.
The cmake checks for gbenchmark need to run some code. Calling
_configure_cmake() only during build can potentially fail build. That would
happen in some cross-compilations for example.
Those environment variables are set by default by Travis. That fails cross
compilation with waf. There is a GitHub issue open related to that behavior at
https://github.com/travis-ci/travis-ci/issues/4682 . This change can be
reverted if eventually that is fixed.
The TODOs removed with this patch were already fixed. Below is the explanation
for each.
- TODO: add support for unit tests.
- Supported already added.
- TODO: Check if we should simply use the signed 'waf' "binary" (after
verifying it) instead of generating it ourselves from the sources.
- We're using a submodule for waf.
- TODO: evaluate if we need shortcut commands for the common targets
(vehicles). currently using waf --targets=NAME the target name must contain
the board extension so make it less convenient, maybe hook to support
automatic filling this extension?
- There's no need of adding the extension anymore.
- TODO: Once HAL patches get in, need to filter out the HAL based on the
bld.env.BOARD.
- The board-specific HAL library folders is indicated in
bld.env.AP_LIBRARIES.
If there's no variant configuration, then cfg.variant will be '', which will
make bldnode be cfg.bldnode. Thus, this patch prepare gbenchmark build for
variant builds and doesn't break the current build.
We can pass a list of possible binaries to find_program. This gives us a
better output while configuring:
Checking for program 'ninja, ninja-build' : /usr/bin/ninja-build
instead of:
Checking for program 'ninja' : not found
Checking for program 'ninja-build' : /usr/bin/ninja-build
If the attribute name is passed, then it is the one used to process the option
--target[s] of waf build. The board name should be used only in configuration
time. The build targets should be board/platform agnostic.
Now, instead of using `waf --target ArduCopter.sitl`, we use `waf --target
ArduCopter` and the binary continues named as "ArduCopter.sitl".
Instead of a dictionary of dictionaries, have a dictionary of
ConfigSets. Using ConfigSet have two benefits: (1) allow easily copying
values from other, (2) have syntax for specifying the keys directly as
attributes.
With this change now it's easier to specify minlure without
repetition. New boards can override a value, append or prepend depending
on the need.
DEFINES attribute is treated as a dictionary instead of a list, so
that's easier to override values (at expense of ordering). When reading
the board environment, the code converts back to a list.
The board configuration is now stored in a separate file, there's also a
function to get the boards names.
Currently, an associative array variable waf_supported_boards is used to
trigger waf build only the currently supported boards. After the transition to
the new build system is done, that variable can be removed.
We're just building for now - there is a current issue related to the rotation
for solo, and it turns out that the first unit test added as an example is for
vector rotations. After that is solved we can use waf check, so that unit tests
are run as well.
It was implemented in such a way that gtest is required only if the user wants
to build and run tests. Initially we're considering all tests should be gtests.
We can change that assumption in the future if necessary.
We're currently using the tests standard error for reporting tests. We can add
TAP later to integrate with other tools.
Additionally, this patch simplifies the exclude patterns passed to
collect_dirs_to_recurse.
The problem with using min() and max() is that they conflict with some
C++ headers. Name the macros in uppercase instead. We may go case by
case later converting them to be typesafe.
Changes generated with:
git ls-files '*.cpp' '*.h' -z | xargs -0 sed -i 's/\([^_[:alnum:]]\)max(/\1MAX(/g'
git ls-files '*.cpp' '*.h' -z | xargs -0 sed -i 's/\([^_[:alnum:]]\)min(/\1MIN(/g'
This useful when using X forwarding, as mavproxy can start to quickly, and then break the sim enviorment. If the argument isn't used there is no change in behaviour
In order to use the container infrastructure we can't use sudo to
install packages. Now Travis has a way to install packages by specifying
them in the .travis.yml. This greatly simplifies how we install the
packages and there's no need for a separate script anymore.
This also removes several outdated packages that aren't needed anymore.
Blink status led if there's no input in more than (2 * NUM_INPUT) ms. That's
useful to show the user that the program is working, but not receiving proper
input.
That code for serial configuration was not really setting TXSTA register, since
the selected bank is 2. Looking at the datasheet, it seems that we were
actually messing with a register named VRCON (full name "VOLTAGE REFERENCE
CONTROL REGISTER").
This is probably a leftover from a copy/paste, since the same is done (in the
right place) previously.
This patch adds the assembly source code for the PIC firmware responsible for
processing PWM input from the RC Receiver and pushing the values to the serial
output.
Most of AP_Progmem is already gone so we can stop including it in most
of the places. The only places that need it are the ones using
pgm_read_*() APIs.
In some cases the header needed to be added in the .cpp since it was
removed from the .h to reduce scope. In those cases the headers were
also reordered.
Now variables don't have to be declared with PROGMEM anymore, so remove
them. This was automated with:
git grep -l -z PROGMEM | xargs -0 sed -i 's/ PROGMEM / /g'
git grep -l -z PROGMEM | xargs -0 sed -i 's/PROGMEM//g'
The 2 commands were done so we don't leave behind spurious spaces.
AVR-specific places were not changed.
The PSTR is already define as a NOP for all supported platforms. It's
only needed for AVR so here we remove all the uses throughout the
codebase.
This was automated with a simple python script so it also converts
places which spans to multiple lines, removing the matching parentheses.
AVR-specific places were not changed.
Include board-specific files only when the board is used. Since these
should be exceptional cases, let the includer handle the ifdef instead
of putting ifdefs in every platform-specific header.
In the future we should evaluate whether the HAL for the board should
instantiate this.
Instead of requiring every program to specify the HAL related modules,
let the build system do it (in practice everything we compiled depended
on HAL anyway). This allow including only the necessary files in the
compilation.
The switching between different AP_HAL was happening by giving different
definitions of AP_HAL_BOARD_DRIVER, and the programs would use it to
instantiate.
A program or library code would have to explicitly include (and depend)
on the concrete implementation of the HAL, even when using it only via
interface.
The proposed change move this dependency to be link time. There is a
AP_HAL::get_HAL() function that is used by the client code. Each
implementation of HAL provides its own definition of this function,
returning the appropriate concrete instance.
Since this replaces the job of AP_HAL_BOARD_DRIVER, the definition was
removed.
The static variables for PX4 and VRBRAIN were named differently to avoid
shadowing the extern symbol 'hal'.
We changed from ArduCopter to APM:Copter, breaking parts of the LogAnalyzer
This change has LogAnalyzer canonicalise its output to Ardu{Plane,Rover,Copter}
Also account for change in MODE message - ThrCrs has gone away
The driver for this is to separate the Copter and TradHeli builds so
Copter and TradHeli do not have to be released at the same time. This
will also work for all frame times but it is anticipated only required
by Heli.
The realpath tool may be missing on a Ubuntu distro and we use it in
sim_vehicle.sh. Make sure it's also installed as part of sitl packages.
On Archlinux it's part of the coreutils package which is part of the
base group. Therefore it's guaranteed to be available.
Fix#2730.
Instead of always trying to fix the entire tree, accept paths in the
command line so it only fixes that paths. This allows to easily rebase a
branch after the header changes, without touching the rest of the tree.
This commit changes the way libraries headers are included in source files:
- If the header is in the same directory the source belongs to, so the
notation '#include ""' is used with the path relative to the directory
containing the source.
- If the header is outside the directory containing the source, then we use
the notation '#include <>' with the path relative to libraries folder.
Some of the advantages of such approach:
- Only one search path for libraries headers.
- OSs like Windows may have a better lookup time.
This way we can group together the builds that are fast so we pay the
"setup price" just once. Let the long PX4 build on its own VM because
it's the one that takes most of the time building NuttX.
By grouping the projects by target it's also easier to split the build
in more VMs if we want to speed up the build.
Travis build is timing out because it's taking too much time. Let's
split the build so 1) they can run concurrently and 2) we don't timeout.
We still lose some time due to multiple checkouts, but at least we don't
fail the build due to timeout.
In ArduPlane "make all" is the same as "make sitl" and both sitl and
linux are already covered by the loop below. Don't build the same
configuration multiple times.
These parameters can be used to configure ardupilot to control a SToRM32
3-axis gimbal attached to Pixhawk Telem2 port using the MAVLink
protocol. Gimbal Tilt is controlled using the RC6 input
Python 3 is stricter with regard to using tabs instead of space (PEP8):
Spaces are the preferred indentation method.
Tabs should be used solely to remain consistent with code that
is already indented with tabs.
Python 3 disallows mixing the use of tabs and spaces for
indentation.
Python 2 code indented with a mixture of tabs and spaces should
be converted to using spaces exclusively.
this helps to set a custom home location on sim, if the location is
outside of the locations in Tools/autotest/locations.txt
Usage:
sim_vehicle.sh -l 37.872991,-122.302348,20,260
The location needs to be in the same format as the locations defined in
locations.txt inside autotest
dataflash logs have been self-describing since 2013. Replay now uses the descriptions supplied in the dataflash log to understand the format of any particular message.
This change should allow fields to be added to messages with no impact on Replay.
We are failing to execute arm-none-eabi-gcc due to missing 32 bits
libraries in travis. Install gcc-multilib so we get all of them.
This commit also calls this version of gcc in the end of
install-travis-env.sh so if it's to fail, force it to fail early on.
sim_vehicle.sh code was modified to call the ROS/runsim.py file
instead of the default /jsbsim/runsim.py. ROS/runsim.py uses roslaunch
command to launch the last_letter simulator
https://github.com/Georacer/last_letter, which should be cloned
and compiled in the system.
GIT_Success.txt file was modified to depict the author's current
mindstate.
The location LGAT (Former National Airport of Athens, now an unofficial
model park) was added in the locations.txt file, since this is my
base of operations and start for my missions.
This adds (more) correct join rate limiting based on Pauls maths. It
avoids the coupling of the axes inherent in the last implementation
Pair-Programmed-With: Paul Riseborough <p_riseborough@live.com.au>