* [edk2-platforms] [RFC] Compatibility Expectations in edk2-platforms @ 2020-10-05 22:36 Michael Kubacki 2020-10-06 6:20 ` Laszlo Ersek 2020-10-07 4:19 ` [edk2-devel] " Nate DeSimone 0 siblings, 2 replies; 7+ messages in thread From: Michael Kubacki @ 2020-10-05 22:36 UTC (permalink / raw) To: devel@edk2.groups.io Cc: Leif Lindholm, Laszlo Ersek, Ard Biesheuvel, Ray Ni, Sai Chaganty, Eric Dong, Dandan Bi, Michael D Kinney, Kelly Steele, Zailiang Sun, Yi Qian, Chasel Chiu, Nate DeSimone, Agyeman Prince, Bob Feng, Liming Gao, Abner Chang, Daniel Schaefer, Gilbert Chen Hi all, First, I'd like to clarify that I completely support the development of open source edk2 platforms and this observation is only intended to suggest an improvement for interoperability with edk2 development and not to detract from the great work happening in open source platforms. There's currently an expectation that edk2-platforms must build with edk2/master. I'd like to address the present lack of infrastructure and uniformity in edk2-platforms that, in my opinion, makes this perpetually painful. 1. Inconsistent maintainer support * Some packages currently do not build. Some packages are not getting updated often. * Example: Last week I had to update Vlv2TbltDevicePkg which did not build. * Example: Many packages only document support for old toolchains. 2. Inconsistent toolchain support To build these according to instruction, a developer needs to install Visual Studio dating back to 2015 (though it is 2020), and multiple versions of iASL, NASM, a separate host OS for Linux/Windows builds, etc. Just a few quick examples: * Vlv2TbltDevicePkg documented supported toolchains: https://github.com/tianocore/edk2-platforms/blob/master/Platform/Intel/Vlv2TbltDevicePkg/Readme.md * Compilers: VS13, VS15 * Windows DDK: 3790.1830 in C:\WINDDK\3790.1830 * Python: 3 * iASL: iasl-win-20160527 in C:\ASL * NASM: 2.12.02 in C:\NASM * OpenSSL: Latest version in C:\Openssl (add OPENSSL_PATH) * Platform/ARM supported toolchains: https://github.com/tianocore/edk2-platforms/blob/master/Platform/ARM/Readme.md * OS: A 32-bit or 64-bit Linux host machine. * Compilers: Visual Studio is not officially supported, experimental support can be found here: [https://git.linaro.org/people/leif.lindholm/edk2.git/log/?h=aarch64-vs] * Platform/Intel (MinPlatformPkg): * Compilers: VS15 * Python: 3.7.3 * iASL compiler: latest in C:\ASL * NASM: latest in C:\NASM 3. Inconsistent build requirements Many builds use the "build" command. Others have script wrappers with unique parameters. Platforms are free to choose what they do and do not support and developers have to figure it out. 4. Lack of build health indicators Basically, there is no public CI across platforms. It is not clear exactly what platform builds are broken, what configurations they are broken against, how long they have been broken, etc. 6. Lack of community testing capability An edk2 contributor cannot be expected to understand the nuances of every platform in edk2-platforms to always make the right integration decision for a change in edk2. Platform objectives like performance and security vary and are not clearly documented. In turn, this slows progress in edk2. In many cases, edk2 contributors do not have a way to check for runtime regressions in edk2-platforms as they do not possess the platform they're requested to update. Within the purview of an individual edk2-platforms maintainer, these problems are relatively insignificant, largely due to the somewhat isolated nature of platform development. However, it does not scale well to edk2 contributors that need to build and test N platforms. While community alignment on build tools, toolchain support, keeping current, and other areas would help, I believe many of the concerns can be mitigated with publicly accessible CI that proves current build support, build health, build commands, allows developer build testing, and potentially even device boot regression testing for those without platforms on hand. Without such support, I believe platforms can only have a dependency on edk2 (not vice versa). Maintainers move their edk2 pointer when they have verified that their platform properly integrates the latest changes. This is relatively common in relationships with package-based dependencies and how this is typically handled outside edk2-platforms. I believe this is reasonable even with public CI in place unless maintainers understand and accept the challenges and additional support that is involved with being on edk2/master. I just wanted to give my observation of some recent challenges and see if the community can align on some practices to help simplify edk2-platforms integration and testing. Thanks, Michael ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: [edk2-platforms] [RFC] Compatibility Expectations in edk2-platforms 2020-10-05 22:36 [edk2-platforms] [RFC] Compatibility Expectations in edk2-platforms Michael Kubacki @ 2020-10-06 6:20 ` Laszlo Ersek 2020-10-07 4:19 ` [edk2-devel] " Nate DeSimone 1 sibling, 0 replies; 7+ messages in thread From: Laszlo Ersek @ 2020-10-06 6:20 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Michael Kubacki, devel@edk2.groups.io Cc: Leif Lindholm, Ard Biesheuvel, Ray Ni, Sai Chaganty, Eric Dong, Dandan Bi, Michael D Kinney, Kelly Steele, Zailiang Sun, Yi Qian, Chasel Chiu, Nate DeSimone, Agyeman Prince, Bob Feng, Liming Gao, Abner Chang, Daniel Schaefer, Gilbert Chen On 10/06/20 00:36, Michael Kubacki wrote: > Hi all, > > First, I'd like to clarify that I completely support the development of > open source edk2 platforms and this observation is only intended to > suggest an improvement for interoperability with edk2 development and > not to detract from the great work happening in open source platforms. > > There's currently an expectation that edk2-platforms must build with > edk2/master. I'd like to address the present lack of infrastructure and > uniformity in edk2-platforms that, in my opinion, makes this perpetually > painful. > > 1. Inconsistent maintainer support > * Some packages currently do not build. Some packages are not getting > updated often. > > * Example: Last week I had to update Vlv2TbltDevicePkg which did not > build. > * Example: Many packages only document support for old toolchains. > > 2. Inconsistent toolchain support > > To build these according to instruction, a developer needs to install > Visual Studio dating back to 2015 (though it is 2020), and multiple > versions of iASL, NASM, a separate host OS for Linux/Windows builds, etc. > > Just a few quick examples: > > * Vlv2TbltDevicePkg documented supported toolchains: > > https://github.com/tianocore/edk2-platforms/blob/master/Platform/Intel/Vlv2TbltDevicePkg/Readme.md > > > * Compilers: VS13, VS15 > * Windows DDK: 3790.1830 in C:\WINDDK\3790.1830 > * Python: 3 > * iASL: iasl-win-20160527 in C:\ASL > * NASM: 2.12.02 in C:\NASM > * OpenSSL: Latest version in C:\Openssl (add OPENSSL_PATH) > > * Platform/ARM supported toolchains: > > https://github.com/tianocore/edk2-platforms/blob/master/Platform/ARM/Readme.md > > > * OS: A 32-bit or 64-bit Linux host machine. > * Compilers: Visual Studio is not officially supported, > experimental support can be found here: > [https://git.linaro.org/people/leif.lindholm/edk2.git/log/?h=aarch64-vs] > > * Platform/Intel (MinPlatformPkg): > * Compilers: VS15 > * Python: 3.7.3 > * iASL compiler: latest in C:\ASL > * NASM: latest in C:\NASM > > 3. Inconsistent build requirements > > Many builds use the "build" command. Others have script wrappers with > unique parameters. Platforms are free to choose what they do and do not > support and developers have to figure it out. > > 4. Lack of build health indicators > > Basically, there is no public CI across platforms. It is not clear > exactly what platform builds are broken, what configurations they are > broken against, how long they have been broken, etc. > > 6. Lack of community testing capability > > An edk2 contributor cannot be expected to understand the nuances of > every platform in edk2-platforms to always make the right integration > decision for a change in edk2. Platform objectives like performance and > security vary and are not clearly documented. In turn, this slows > progress in edk2. In many cases, edk2 contributors do not have a way to > check for runtime regressions in edk2-platforms as they do not possess > the platform they're requested to update. > > > Within the purview of an individual edk2-platforms maintainer, these > problems are relatively insignificant, largely due to the somewhat > isolated nature of platform development. However, it does not scale well > to edk2 contributors that need to build and test N platforms. > > While community alignment on build tools, toolchain support, keeping > current, and other areas would help, I believe many of the concerns can > be mitigated with publicly accessible CI that proves current build > support, build health, build commands, allows developer build testing, > and potentially even device boot regression testing for those without > platforms on hand. > > Without such support, I believe platforms can only have a dependency on > edk2 (not vice versa). Maintainers move their edk2 pointer when they > have verified that their platform properly integrates the latest > changes. This is relatively common in relationships with package-based > dependencies and how this is typically handled outside edk2-platforms. I > believe this is reasonable even with public CI in place unless > maintainers understand and accept the challenges and additional support > that is involved with being on edk2/master. > > I just wanted to give my observation of some recent challenges and see > if the community can align on some practices to help simplify > edk2-platforms integration and testing. Yes, a builder CI would be nice. Thanks, Laszlo ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: [edk2-devel] [edk2-platforms] [RFC] Compatibility Expectations in edk2-platforms 2020-10-05 22:36 [edk2-platforms] [RFC] Compatibility Expectations in edk2-platforms Michael Kubacki 2020-10-06 6:20 ` Laszlo Ersek @ 2020-10-07 4:19 ` Nate DeSimone 2020-10-07 5:01 ` Michael Kubacki 1 sibling, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread From: Nate DeSimone @ 2020-10-07 4:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: devel@edk2.groups.io, michael.kubacki@outlook.com Cc: Leif Lindholm, Laszlo Ersek, Ard Biesheuvel, Ni, Ray, Chaganty, Rangasai V, Dong, Eric, Bi, Dandan, Kinney, Michael D, Steele, Kelly, Sun, Zailiang, Qian, Yi, Chiu, Chasel, Agyeman, Prince, Feng, Bob C, Liming Gao, Abner Chang, Daniel Schaefer, Gilbert Chen, Christian Walter Hey Michael, On 10/5/20, 3:36 PM, Michael Kubacki <michael.kubacki@outlook.com> wrote: > > 1. Inconsistent maintainer support > * Some packages currently do not build. Some packages are not getting > updated often. > > * Example: Last week I had to update Vlv2TbltDevicePkg which did not > build. > * Example: Many packages only document support for old toolchains. 100% agreed here. > > 2. Inconsistent toolchain support > > To build these according to instruction, a developer needs to install Visual > Studio dating back to 2015 (though it is 2020), and multiple versions of iASL, > NASM, a separate host OS for Linux/Windows builds, etc. IMHO, the best way forward would be to finish the EDK II native clang port that Liming started some time ago. This would need to include robust support for Windows, Linux, and Mac host systems. From what I remember the last status update was issues with stability of the LLVM linker's support for PE/COFF output. Otherwise build reproducibility will always be a problem since the binary generated will be different depending on which OS/compiler the developer was using at the time. The coreboot community handles this issue by only supporting GCC, which I think is inappropriate for TianoCore since Windows ports of GCC differ greatly from Linux versions. While I think the goal of supporting many different C toolchains is admirable and definitely appropriate for edk2 core code... for edk2-platforms I think it would be better to have everyone agree on a single cross-platform toolchain; at least for x86 and ARM since clang supports those architectures well (maybe other architectures depending on the clang's maturity.) > > 3. Inconsistent build requirements > > Many builds use the "build" command. Others have script wrappers with > unique parameters. Platforms are free to choose what they do and do not > support and developers have to figure it out. We solved that for MinPlatform based boards with build_bios.py, but agreed that that at an overall project level this is still an issue. I believe Bob and Liming were working on adding extensibility to BaseTools needed for "build" to work everywhere, but I'm not sure what the status of that work is. > > 4. Lack of build health indicators > > Basically, there is no public CI across platforms. It is not clear exactly what > platform builds are broken, what configurations they are broken against, > how long they have been broken, etc. Public CI seems like a great idea. Public automated testing would also be awesome. I believe 9elements has been working on building a pool of hardware for automated testing of Open System Firmware, maybe we should check and see if they would be interested in supporting automated testing for TianoCore. We would also need to see what the intersection is between what they have in their pool and what boards are supported in edk2-platforms. > Without such support, I believe platforms can only have a dependency on > edk2 (not vice versa). Maintainers move their edk2 pointer when they have > verified that their platform properly integrates the latest changes. This is > relatively common in relationships with package-based dependencies and > how this is typically handled outside edk2-platforms. I believe this is > reasonable even with public CI in place unless maintainers understand and > accept the challenges and additional support that is involved with being on > edk2/master. Coreboot handles this problem by auditing the how good the maintenance is of boards over time. If a given board becomes stale, then the board becomes a candidate for getting deleted from master and moved to a legacy branch. Sometimes entire technologies are dropped, for example FSP v1.0 is only supported up to coreboot 4.11, for that reason there is a long-lived 4.11_branch in coreboot git to maintain platforms dependent on FSP v1.0 binaries. I think we need some sort of deprecation process for edk2-platforms as well because as you note, the Bay Trail Minnow Max is not receiving particularly good maintenance at this point. A similar issue happened with PurleyOpenBoardPkg last year and you actually sent the patch series to delete it. > > I just wanted to give my observation of some recent challenges and see if > the community can align on some practices to help simplify edk2-platforms > integration and testing. > > Thanks, > Michael > > > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: [edk2-devel] [edk2-platforms] [RFC] Compatibility Expectations in edk2-platforms 2020-10-07 4:19 ` [edk2-devel] " Nate DeSimone @ 2020-10-07 5:01 ` Michael Kubacki 2020-10-07 5:42 ` Andrew Fish 0 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread From: Michael Kubacki @ 2020-10-07 5:01 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Desimone, Nathaniel L, devel@edk2.groups.io Cc: Leif Lindholm, Laszlo Ersek, Ard Biesheuvel, Ni, Ray, Chaganty, Rangasai V, Dong, Eric, Bi, Dandan, Kinney, Michael D, Steele, Kelly, Sun, Zailiang, Qian, Yi, Chiu, Chasel, Agyeman, Prince, Feng, Bob C, Liming Gao, Abner Chang, Daniel Schaefer, Gilbert Chen, Christian Walter Hi Nate, On 10/6/2020 9:19 PM, Desimone, Nathaniel L wrote: > Hey Michael, > > On 10/5/20, 3:36 PM, Michael Kubacki <michael.kubacki@outlook.com> wrote: >> >> 1. Inconsistent maintainer support >> * Some packages currently do not build. Some packages are not getting >> updated often. >> >> * Example: Last week I had to update Vlv2TbltDevicePkg which did not >> build. >> * Example: Many packages only document support for old toolchains. > > 100% agreed here. > >> >> 2. Inconsistent toolchain support >> >> To build these according to instruction, a developer needs to install Visual >> Studio dating back to 2015 (though it is 2020), and multiple versions of iASL, >> NASM, a separate host OS for Linux/Windows builds, etc. > > IMHO, the best way forward would be to finish the EDK II native clang port that Liming started some time ago. This would need to include robust support for Windows, Linux, and Mac host systems. From what I remember the last status update was issues with stability of the LLVM linker's support for PE/COFF output. Aligning on Clang support would be great. It's worth noting that current CI support in edk2 does not support Clang so that needs to be enabled - https://github.com/tianocore/edk2/blob/master/.pytool/Readme.md. Is anyone looking at those LLVM issues now? > > Otherwise build reproducibility will always be a problem since the binary generated will be different depending on which OS/compiler the developer was using at the time. The coreboot community handles this issue by only supporting GCC, which I think is inappropriate for TianoCore since Windows ports of GCC differ greatly from Linux versions. While I think the goal of supporting many different C toolchains is admirable and definitely appropriate for edk2 core code... for edk2-platforms I think it would be better to have everyone agree on a single cross-platform toolchain; at least for x86 and ARM since clang supports those architectures well (maybe other architectures depending on the clang's maturity.) > >> >> 3. Inconsistent build requirements >> >> Many builds use the "build" command. Others have script wrappers with >> unique parameters. Platforms are free to choose what they do and do not >> support and developers have to figure it out. > > We solved that for MinPlatform based boards with build_bios.py, but agreed that that at an overall project level this is still an issue. I believe Bob and Liming were working on adding extensibility to BaseTools needed for "build" to work everywhere, but I'm not sure what the status of that work is. I've always liked the simplicity of build_bios.py. There's also a lot of effort put into edk2-pytool-extensions. I'm not partial to any particular solution as I've had positive experiences with both but having more consistency at a repo level would be awesome. Perhaps a community discussion around leveraging existing tool support for open source platforms would help with adoption. Apart from consistency across open source platforms, usage could also serve as a practical example to closed source consumers on how to better integrate such tools into their environments. > >> >> 4. Lack of build health indicators >> >> Basically, there is no public CI across platforms. It is not clear exactly what >> platform builds are broken, what configurations they are broken against, >> how long they have been broken, etc. > > Public CI seems like a great idea. Public automated testing would also be awesome. I believe 9elements has been working on building a pool of hardware for automated testing of Open System Firmware, maybe we should check and see if they would be interested in supporting automated testing for TianoCore. We would also need to see what the intersection is between what they have in their pool and what boards are supported in edk2-platforms. I look forward to hearing from 9elements. Do you think it would be feasible for Intel to support something like KabylakeOpenBoardPkg/GalagoPro3 and/or WhiskeylakeOpenBoardPkg/UpXtreme in public CI? > >> Without such support, I believe platforms can only have a dependency on >> edk2 (not vice versa). Maintainers move their edk2 pointer when they have >> verified that their platform properly integrates the latest changes. This is >> relatively common in relationships with package-based dependencies and >> how this is typically handled outside edk2-platforms. I believe this is >> reasonable even with public CI in place unless maintainers understand and >> accept the challenges and additional support that is involved with being on >> edk2/master. > > Coreboot handles this problem by auditing the how good the maintenance is of boards over time. If a given board becomes stale, then the board becomes a candidate for getting deleted from master and moved to a legacy branch. Sometimes entire technologies are dropped, for example FSP v1.0 is only supported up to coreboot 4.11, for that reason there is a long-lived 4.11_branch in coreboot git to maintain platforms dependent on FSP v1.0 binaries. > > I think we need some sort of deprecation process for edk2-platforms as well because as you note, the Bay Trail Minnow Max is not receiving particularly good maintenance at this point. A similar issue happened with PurleyOpenBoardPkg last year and you actually sent the patch series to delete it. Deprecation branches sound reasonable to me personally. I'm not aware of prior documentation or discussion around platform deprecation in edk2-platforms. Is anyone else? > >> >> I just wanted to give my observation of some recent challenges and see if >> the community can align on some practices to help simplify edk2-platforms >> integration and testing. >> >> Thanks, >> Michael >> >> >> >> > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: [edk2-devel] [edk2-platforms] [RFC] Compatibility Expectations in edk2-platforms 2020-10-07 5:01 ` Michael Kubacki @ 2020-10-07 5:42 ` Andrew Fish 2020-10-13 2:29 ` 回复: " gaoliming 0 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread From: Andrew Fish @ 2020-10-07 5:42 UTC (permalink / raw) To: edk2-devel-groups-io, michael.kubacki Cc: Desimone, Nathaniel L, Leif Lindholm, Laszlo Ersek, Ard Biesheuvel, Ni, Ray, Chaganty, Rangasai V, Dong, Eric, Bi, Dandan, Mike Kinney, Steele, Kelly, Sun, Zailiang, Qian, Yi, Chiu, Chasel, Agyeman, Prince, Feng, Bob C, Liming Gao, Abner Chang, Daniel Schaefer, Gilbert Chen, Christian Walter [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 6175 bytes --] > On Oct 6, 2020, at 10:01 PM, Michael Kubacki <michael.kubacki@outlook.com> wrote: > > Hi Nate, > > On 10/6/2020 9:19 PM, Desimone, Nathaniel L wrote: >> Hey Michael, >> On 10/5/20, 3:36 PM, Michael Kubacki <michael.kubacki@outlook.com> wrote: >>> >>> 1. Inconsistent maintainer support >>> * Some packages currently do not build. Some packages are not getting >>> updated often. >>> >>> * Example: Last week I had to update Vlv2TbltDevicePkg which did not >>> build. >>> * Example: Many packages only document support for old toolchains. >> 100% agreed here. >>> >>> 2. Inconsistent toolchain support >>> >>> To build these according to instruction, a developer needs to install Visual >>> Studio dating back to 2015 (though it is 2020), and multiple versions of iASL, >>> NASM, a separate host OS for Linux/Windows builds, etc. >> IMHO, the best way forward would be to finish the EDK II native clang port that Liming started some time ago. This would need to include robust support for Windows, Linux, and Mac host systems. From what I remember the last status update was issues with stability of the LLVM linker's support for PE/COFF output. > > Aligning on Clang support would be great. It's worth noting that current CI support in edk2 does not support Clang so that needs to be enabled - https://github.com/tianocore/edk2/blob/master/.pytool/Readme.md <https://github.com/tianocore/edk2/blob/master/.pytool/Readme.md>. > Is adding a new toolchain just a documenting the config, and testing? Thanks, Andrew Fish > Is anyone looking at those LLVM issues now? > >> Otherwise build reproducibility will always be a problem since the binary generated will be different depending on which OS/compiler the developer was using at the time. The coreboot community handles this issue by only supporting GCC, which I think is inappropriate for TianoCore since Windows ports of GCC differ greatly from Linux versions. While I think the goal of supporting many different C toolchains is admirable and definitely appropriate for edk2 core code... for edk2-platforms I think it would be better to have everyone agree on a single cross-platform toolchain; at least for x86 and ARM since clang supports those architectures well (maybe other architectures depending on the clang's maturity.) >>> >>> 3. Inconsistent build requirements >>> >>> Many builds use the "build" command. Others have script wrappers with >>> unique parameters. Platforms are free to choose what they do and do not >>> support and developers have to figure it out. >> We solved that for MinPlatform based boards with build_bios.py, but agreed that that at an overall project level this is still an issue. I believe Bob and Liming were working on adding extensibility to BaseTools needed for "build" to work everywhere, but I'm not sure what the status of that work is. > > I've always liked the simplicity of build_bios.py. There's also a lot of effort put into edk2-pytool-extensions. I'm not partial to any particular solution as I've had positive experiences with both but having more consistency at a repo level would be awesome. > > Perhaps a community discussion around leveraging existing tool support for open source platforms would help with adoption. Apart from consistency across open source platforms, usage could also serve as a practical example to closed source consumers on how to better integrate such tools into their environments. > >>> >>> 4. Lack of build health indicators >>> >>> Basically, there is no public CI across platforms. It is not clear exactly what >>> platform builds are broken, what configurations they are broken against, >>> how long they have been broken, etc. >> Public CI seems like a great idea. Public automated testing would also be awesome. I believe 9elements has been working on building a pool of hardware for automated testing of Open System Firmware, maybe we should check and see if they would be interested in supporting automated testing for TianoCore. We would also need to see what the intersection is between what they have in their pool and what boards are supported in edk2-platforms. > > I look forward to hearing from 9elements. > > Do you think it would be feasible for Intel to support something like KabylakeOpenBoardPkg/GalagoPro3 and/or WhiskeylakeOpenBoardPkg/UpXtreme in public CI? > >>> Without such support, I believe platforms can only have a dependency on >>> edk2 (not vice versa). Maintainers move their edk2 pointer when they have >>> verified that their platform properly integrates the latest changes. This is >>> relatively common in relationships with package-based dependencies and >>> how this is typically handled outside edk2-platforms. I believe this is >>> reasonable even with public CI in place unless maintainers understand and >>> accept the challenges and additional support that is involved with being on >>> edk2/master. >> Coreboot handles this problem by auditing the how good the maintenance is of boards over time. If a given board becomes stale, then the board becomes a candidate for getting deleted from master and moved to a legacy branch. Sometimes entire technologies are dropped, for example FSP v1.0 is only supported up to coreboot 4.11, for that reason there is a long-lived 4.11_branch in coreboot git to maintain platforms dependent on FSP v1.0 binaries. >> I think we need some sort of deprecation process for edk2-platforms as well because as you note, the Bay Trail Minnow Max is not receiving particularly good maintenance at this point. A similar issue happened with PurleyOpenBoardPkg last year and you actually sent the patch series to delete it. > > Deprecation branches sound reasonable to me personally. I'm not aware of prior documentation or discussion around platform deprecation in edk2-platforms. Is anyone else? > >>> >>> I just wanted to give my observation of some recent challenges and see if >>> the community can align on some practices to help simplify edk2-platforms >>> integration and testing. >>> >>> Thanks, >>> Michael >>> >>> >>> > > > [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 21818 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* 回复: [edk2-devel] [edk2-platforms] [RFC] Compatibility Expectations in edk2-platforms 2020-10-07 5:42 ` Andrew Fish @ 2020-10-13 2:29 ` gaoliming 2020-10-16 0:55 ` Nate DeSimone 0 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread From: gaoliming @ 2020-10-13 2:29 UTC (permalink / raw) To: devel, afish, michael.kubacki Cc: 'Desimone, Nathaniel L', 'Leif Lindholm', 'Laszlo Ersek', 'Ard Biesheuvel', 'Ni, Ray', 'Chaganty, Rangasai V', 'Dong, Eric', 'Bi, Dandan', 'Mike Kinney', 'Steele, Kelly', 'Sun, Zailiang', 'Qian, Yi', 'Chiu, Chasel', 'Agyeman, Prince', 'Feng, Bob C', 'Abner Chang', 'Daniel Schaefer', 'Gilbert Chen', 'Christian Walter' [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 7719 bytes --] CLANG tool issue has been resolved. CLANGPDB tool chain has been added in Edk2. OVMF IA32X64 platform has been verified on Windows/Linux/Mac with CLANGPDB tool chain. On release build, OVMF IA32X64 can generates the same binary BIOS images on Windows/Linux/Mac OS. Here is wiki page https://github.com/tianocore/tianocore.github.io/wiki/CLANG9-Tools-Chain. Thanks Liming 发件人: bounce+27952+65963+4905953+8761045@groups.io <bounce+27952+65963+4905953+8761045@groups.io> 代表 Andrew Fish via groups.io 发送时间: 2020年10月7日 13:42 收件人: edk2-devel-groups-io <devel@edk2.groups.io>; michael.kubacki@outlook.com 抄送: Desimone, Nathaniel L <nathaniel.l.desimone@intel.com>; Leif Lindholm <leif@nuviainc.com>; Laszlo Ersek <lersek@redhat.com>; Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@arm.com>; Ni, Ray <ray.ni@intel.com>; Chaganty, Rangasai V <rangasai.v.chaganty@intel.com>; Dong, Eric <eric.dong@intel.com>; Bi, Dandan <dandan.bi@intel.com>; Mike Kinney <michael.d.kinney@intel.com>; Steele, Kelly <kelly.steele@intel.com>; Sun, Zailiang <zailiang.sun@intel.com>; Qian, Yi <yi.qian@intel.com>; Chiu, Chasel <chasel.chiu@intel.com>; Agyeman, Prince <prince.agyeman@intel.com>; Feng, Bob C <bob.c.feng@intel.com>; Liming Gao <gaoliming@byosoft.com.cn>; Abner Chang <abner.chang@hpe.com>; Daniel Schaefer <daniel.schaefer@hpe.com>; Gilbert Chen <gilbert.chen@hpe.com>; Christian Walter <christian.walter@9elements.com> 主题: Re: [edk2-devel] [edk2-platforms] [RFC] Compatibility Expectations in edk2-platforms On Oct 6, 2020, at 10:01 PM, Michael Kubacki <michael.kubacki@outlook.com <mailto:michael.kubacki@outlook.com> > wrote: Hi Nate, On 10/6/2020 9:19 PM, Desimone, Nathaniel L wrote: Hey Michael, On 10/5/20, 3:36 PM, Michael Kubacki <michael.kubacki@outlook.com <mailto:michael.kubacki@outlook.com> > wrote: 1. Inconsistent maintainer support * Some packages currently do not build. Some packages are not getting updated often. * Example: Last week I had to update Vlv2TbltDevicePkg which did not build. * Example: Many packages only document support for old toolchains. 100% agreed here. 2. Inconsistent toolchain support To build these according to instruction, a developer needs to install Visual Studio dating back to 2015 (though it is 2020), and multiple versions of iASL, NASM, a separate host OS for Linux/Windows builds, etc. IMHO, the best way forward would be to finish the EDK II native clang port that Liming started some time ago. This would need to include robust support for Windows, Linux, and Mac host systems. From what I remember the last status update was issues with stability of the LLVM linker's support for PE/COFF output. Aligning on Clang support would be great. It's worth noting that current CI support in edk2 does not support Clang so that needs to be enabled - <https://github.com/tianocore/edk2/blob/master/.pytool/Readme.md> https://github.com/tianocore/edk2/blob/master/.pytool/Readme.md. Is adding a new toolchain just a documenting the config, and testing? Thanks, Andrew Fish Is anyone looking at those LLVM issues now? Otherwise build reproducibility will always be a problem since the binary generated will be different depending on which OS/compiler the developer was using at the time. The coreboot community handles this issue by only supporting GCC, which I think is inappropriate for TianoCore since Windows ports of GCC differ greatly from Linux versions. While I think the goal of supporting many different C toolchains is admirable and definitely appropriate for edk2 core code... for edk2-platforms I think it would be better to have everyone agree on a single cross-platform toolchain; at least for x86 and ARM since clang supports those architectures well (maybe other architectures depending on the clang's maturity.) 3. Inconsistent build requirements Many builds use the "build" command. Others have script wrappers with unique parameters. Platforms are free to choose what they do and do not support and developers have to figure it out. We solved that for MinPlatform based boards with build_bios.py, but agreed that that at an overall project level this is still an issue. I believe Bob and Liming were working on adding extensibility to BaseTools needed for "build" to work everywhere, but I'm not sure what the status of that work is. I've always liked the simplicity of build_bios.py. There's also a lot of effort put into edk2-pytool-extensions. I'm not partial to any particular solution as I've had positive experiences with both but having more consistency at a repo level would be awesome. Perhaps a community discussion around leveraging existing tool support for open source platforms would help with adoption. Apart from consistency across open source platforms, usage could also serve as a practical example to closed source consumers on how to better integrate such tools into their environments. 4. Lack of build health indicators Basically, there is no public CI across platforms. It is not clear exactly what platform builds are broken, what configurations they are broken against, how long they have been broken, etc. Public CI seems like a great idea. Public automated testing would also be awesome. I believe 9elements has been working on building a pool of hardware for automated testing of Open System Firmware, maybe we should check and see if they would be interested in supporting automated testing for TianoCore. We would also need to see what the intersection is between what they have in their pool and what boards are supported in edk2-platforms. I look forward to hearing from 9elements. Do you think it would be feasible for Intel to support something like KabylakeOpenBoardPkg/GalagoPro3 and/or WhiskeylakeOpenBoardPkg/UpXtreme in public CI? Without such support, I believe platforms can only have a dependency on edk2 (not vice versa). Maintainers move their edk2 pointer when they have verified that their platform properly integrates the latest changes. This is relatively common in relationships with package-based dependencies and how this is typically handled outside edk2-platforms. I believe this is reasonable even with public CI in place unless maintainers understand and accept the challenges and additional support that is involved with being on edk2/master. Coreboot handles this problem by auditing the how good the maintenance is of boards over time. If a given board becomes stale, then the board becomes a candidate for getting deleted from master and moved to a legacy branch. Sometimes entire technologies are dropped, for example FSP v1.0 is only supported up to coreboot 4.11, for that reason there is a long-lived 4.11_branch in coreboot git to maintain platforms dependent on FSP v1.0 binaries. I think we need some sort of deprecation process for edk2-platforms as well because as you note, the Bay Trail Minnow Max is not receiving particularly good maintenance at this point. A similar issue happened with PurleyOpenBoardPkg last year and you actually sent the patch series to delete it. Deprecation branches sound reasonable to me personally. I'm not aware of prior documentation or discussion around platform deprecation in edk2-platforms. Is anyone else? I just wanted to give my observation of some recent challenges and see if the community can align on some practices to help simplify edk2-platforms integration and testing. Thanks, Michael [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 16988 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: [edk2-devel] [edk2-platforms] [RFC] Compatibility Expectations in edk2-platforms 2020-10-13 2:29 ` 回复: " gaoliming @ 2020-10-16 0:55 ` Nate DeSimone 0 siblings, 0 replies; 7+ messages in thread From: Nate DeSimone @ 2020-10-16 0:55 UTC (permalink / raw) To: devel@edk2.groups.io, gaoliming@byosoft.com.cn, afish@apple.com, michael.kubacki@outlook.com Cc: 'Leif Lindholm', 'Laszlo Ersek', 'Ard Biesheuvel', Ni, Ray, Chaganty, Rangasai V, Dong, Eric, Bi, Dandan, Kinney, Michael D, Steele, Kelly, Sun, Zailiang, Qian, Yi, Chiu, Chasel, Agyeman, Prince, Feng, Bob C, 'Abner Chang', 'Daniel Schaefer', 'Gilbert Chen', 'Christian Walter' [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 9449 bytes --] Liming, That is awesome, thank you! My recommendation is moving all of our MinPlatform builds to this new toolchain then! Thanks, Nate From: devel@edk2.groups.io <devel@edk2.groups.io> On Behalf Of gaoliming Sent: Monday, October 12, 2020 7:29 PM To: devel@edk2.groups.io; afish@apple.com; michael.kubacki@outlook.com Cc: Desimone, Nathaniel L <nathaniel.l.desimone@intel.com>; 'Leif Lindholm' <leif@nuviainc.com>; 'Laszlo Ersek' <lersek@redhat.com>; 'Ard Biesheuvel' <ard.biesheuvel@arm.com>; Ni, Ray <ray.ni@intel.com>; Chaganty, Rangasai V <rangasai.v.chaganty@intel.com>; Dong, Eric <eric.dong@intel.com>; Bi, Dandan <dandan.bi@intel.com>; Kinney, Michael D <michael.d.kinney@intel.com>; Steele, Kelly <kelly.steele@intel.com>; Sun, Zailiang <zailiang.sun@intel.com>; Qian, Yi <yi.qian@intel.com>; Chiu, Chasel <chasel.chiu@intel.com>; Agyeman, Prince <prince.agyeman@intel.com>; Feng, Bob C <bob.c.feng@intel.com>; 'Abner Chang' <abner.chang@hpe.com>; 'Daniel Schaefer' <daniel.schaefer@hpe.com>; 'Gilbert Chen' <gilbert.chen@hpe.com>; 'Christian Walter' <christian.walter@9elements.com> Subject: 回复: [edk2-devel] [edk2-platforms] [RFC] Compatibility Expectations in edk2-platforms CLANG tool issue has been resolved. CLANGPDB tool chain has been added in Edk2. OVMF IA32X64 platform has been verified on Windows/Linux/Mac with CLANGPDB tool chain. On release build, OVMF IA32X64 can generates the same binary BIOS images on Windows/Linux/Mac OS. Here is wiki page https://github.com/tianocore/tianocore.github.io/wiki/CLANG9-Tools-Chain. Thanks Liming 发件人: bounce+27952+65963+4905953+8761045@groups.io<mailto:bounce+27952+65963+4905953+8761045@groups.io> <bounce+27952+65963+4905953+8761045@groups.io<mailto:bounce+27952+65963+4905953+8761045@groups.io>> 代表 Andrew Fish via groups.io 发送时间: 2020年10月7日 13:42 收件人: edk2-devel-groups-io <devel@edk2.groups.io<mailto:devel@edk2.groups.io>>; michael.kubacki@outlook.com<mailto:michael.kubacki@outlook.com> 抄送: Desimone, Nathaniel L <nathaniel.l.desimone@intel.com<mailto:nathaniel.l.desimone@intel.com>>; Leif Lindholm <leif@nuviainc.com<mailto:leif@nuviainc.com>>; Laszlo Ersek <lersek@redhat.com<mailto:lersek@redhat.com>>; Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@arm.com<mailto:ard.biesheuvel@arm.com>>; Ni, Ray <ray.ni@intel.com<mailto:ray.ni@intel.com>>; Chaganty, Rangasai V <rangasai.v.chaganty@intel.com<mailto:rangasai.v.chaganty@intel.com>>; Dong, Eric <eric.dong@intel.com<mailto:eric.dong@intel.com>>; Bi, Dandan <dandan.bi@intel.com<mailto:dandan.bi@intel.com>>; Mike Kinney <michael.d.kinney@intel.com<mailto:michael.d.kinney@intel.com>>; Steele, Kelly <kelly.steele@intel.com<mailto:kelly.steele@intel.com>>; Sun, Zailiang <zailiang.sun@intel.com<mailto:zailiang.sun@intel.com>>; Qian, Yi <yi.qian@intel.com<mailto:yi.qian@intel.com>>; Chiu, Chasel <chasel.chiu@intel.com<mailto:chasel.chiu@intel.com>>; Agyeman, Prince <prince.agyeman@intel.com<mailto:prince.agyeman@intel.com>>; Feng, Bob C <bob.c.feng@intel.com<mailto:bob.c.feng@intel.com>>; Liming Gao <gaoliming@byosoft.com.cn<mailto:gaoliming@byosoft.com.cn>>; Abner Chang <abner.chang@hpe.com<mailto:abner.chang@hpe.com>>; Daniel Schaefer <daniel.schaefer@hpe.com<mailto:daniel.schaefer@hpe.com>>; Gilbert Chen <gilbert.chen@hpe.com<mailto:gilbert.chen@hpe.com>>; Christian Walter <christian.walter@9elements.com<mailto:christian.walter@9elements.com>> 主题: Re: [edk2-devel] [edk2-platforms] [RFC] Compatibility Expectations in edk2-platforms On Oct 6, 2020, at 10:01 PM, Michael Kubacki <michael.kubacki@outlook.com<mailto:michael.kubacki@outlook.com>> wrote: Hi Nate, On 10/6/2020 9:19 PM, Desimone, Nathaniel L wrote: Hey Michael, On 10/5/20, 3:36 PM, Michael Kubacki <michael.kubacki@outlook.com<mailto:michael.kubacki@outlook.com>> wrote: 1. Inconsistent maintainer support * Some packages currently do not build. Some packages are not getting updated often. * Example: Last week I had to update Vlv2TbltDevicePkg which did not build. * Example: Many packages only document support for old toolchains. 100% agreed here. 2. Inconsistent toolchain support To build these according to instruction, a developer needs to install Visual Studio dating back to 2015 (though it is 2020), and multiple versions of iASL, NASM, a separate host OS for Linux/Windows builds, etc. IMHO, the best way forward would be to finish the EDK II native clang port that Liming started some time ago. This would need to include robust support for Windows, Linux, and Mac host systems. From what I remember the last status update was issues with stability of the LLVM linker's support for PE/COFF output. Aligning on Clang support would be great. It's worth noting that current CI support in edk2 does not support Clang so that needs to be enabled - https://github.com/tianocore/edk2/blob/master/.pytool/Readme.md. Is adding a new toolchain just a documenting the config, and testing? Thanks, Andrew Fish Is anyone looking at those LLVM issues now? Otherwise build reproducibility will always be a problem since the binary generated will be different depending on which OS/compiler the developer was using at the time. The coreboot community handles this issue by only supporting GCC, which I think is inappropriate for TianoCore since Windows ports of GCC differ greatly from Linux versions. While I think the goal of supporting many different C toolchains is admirable and definitely appropriate for edk2 core code... for edk2-platforms I think it would be better to have everyone agree on a single cross-platform toolchain; at least for x86 and ARM since clang supports those architectures well (maybe other architectures depending on the clang's maturity.) 3. Inconsistent build requirements Many builds use the "build" command. Others have script wrappers with unique parameters. Platforms are free to choose what they do and do not support and developers have to figure it out. We solved that for MinPlatform based boards with build_bios.py, but agreed that that at an overall project level this is still an issue. I believe Bob and Liming were working on adding extensibility to BaseTools needed for "build" to work everywhere, but I'm not sure what the status of that work is. I've always liked the simplicity of build_bios.py. There's also a lot of effort put into edk2-pytool-extensions. I'm not partial to any particular solution as I've had positive experiences with both but having more consistency at a repo level would be awesome. Perhaps a community discussion around leveraging existing tool support for open source platforms would help with adoption. Apart from consistency across open source platforms, usage could also serve as a practical example to closed source consumers on how to better integrate such tools into their environments. 4. Lack of build health indicators Basically, there is no public CI across platforms. It is not clear exactly what platform builds are broken, what configurations they are broken against, how long they have been broken, etc. Public CI seems like a great idea. Public automated testing would also be awesome. I believe 9elements has been working on building a pool of hardware for automated testing of Open System Firmware, maybe we should check and see if they would be interested in supporting automated testing for TianoCore. We would also need to see what the intersection is between what they have in their pool and what boards are supported in edk2-platforms. I look forward to hearing from 9elements. Do you think it would be feasible for Intel to support something like KabylakeOpenBoardPkg/GalagoPro3 and/or WhiskeylakeOpenBoardPkg/UpXtreme in public CI? Without such support, I believe platforms can only have a dependency on edk2 (not vice versa). Maintainers move their edk2 pointer when they have verified that their platform properly integrates the latest changes. This is relatively common in relationships with package-based dependencies and how this is typically handled outside edk2-platforms. I believe this is reasonable even with public CI in place unless maintainers understand and accept the challenges and additional support that is involved with being on edk2/master. Coreboot handles this problem by auditing the how good the maintenance is of boards over time. If a given board becomes stale, then the board becomes a candidate for getting deleted from master and moved to a legacy branch. Sometimes entire technologies are dropped, for example FSP v1.0 is only supported up to coreboot 4.11, for that reason there is a long-lived 4.11_branch in coreboot git to maintain platforms dependent on FSP v1.0 binaries. I think we need some sort of deprecation process for edk2-platforms as well because as you note, the Bay Trail Minnow Max is not receiving particularly good maintenance at this point. A similar issue happened with PurleyOpenBoardPkg last year and you actually sent the patch series to delete it. Deprecation branches sound reasonable to me personally. I'm not aware of prior documentation or discussion around platform deprecation in edk2-platforms. Is anyone else? I just wanted to give my observation of some recent challenges and see if the community can align on some practices to help simplify edk2-platforms integration and testing. Thanks, Michael [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 19660 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2020-10-16 0:56 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 7+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2020-10-05 22:36 [edk2-platforms] [RFC] Compatibility Expectations in edk2-platforms Michael Kubacki 2020-10-06 6:20 ` Laszlo Ersek 2020-10-07 4:19 ` [edk2-devel] " Nate DeSimone 2020-10-07 5:01 ` Michael Kubacki 2020-10-07 5:42 ` Andrew Fish 2020-10-13 2:29 ` 回复: " gaoliming 2020-10-16 0:55 ` Nate DeSimone
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