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@@ -5,33 +5,82 @@
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Understanding when a full rebuild is necessary
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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-A full rebuild is achieved by running:
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+Buildroot does not attempt to detect what parts of the system should
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+be rebuilt when the system configuration is changed through +make
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+menuconfig+, +make xconfig+ or one of the other configuration
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+tools. In some cases, Buildroot should rebuild the entire system, in
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+some cases, only a specific subset of packages. But detecting this in
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+a completely reliable manner is very difficult, and therefore the
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+Buildroot developers have decided to simply not attempt to do this.
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+
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+Instead, it is the responsibility of the user to know when a full
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+rebuild is necessary. As a hint, here are a few rules of thumb that
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+can help you understand how to work with Buildroot:
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+
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+ * When the target architecture configuration is changed, a complete
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+ rebuild is needed. Changing the architecture variant, the binary
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+ format or the floating point strategy for example has an impact on
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+ the entire system.
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+
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+ * When the toolchain configuration is changed, a complete rebuild
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+ generally is needed. Changing the toolchain configuration often
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+ involves changing the compiler version, the type of C library or
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+ its configuration, or some other fundamental configuration item,
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+ and these changes have an impact on the entire system.
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+
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+ * When an additional package is added to the configuration, a full
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+ rebuild is not necessarily needed. Buildroot will detect that this
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+ package has never been built, and will build it. However, if this
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+ package is a library that can optionally be used by packages that
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+ have already been built, Buildroot will not automatically rebuild
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+ those. Either you know which packages should be rebuilt, and you
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+ can rebuild them manually, or you should do a full rebuild. For
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+ example, let's suppose you have built a system with the +ctorrent+
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+ package, but without +openssl+. Your system works, but you realize
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+ you would like to have SSL support in +ctorrent+, so you enable the
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+ +openssl+ package in Buildroot configuration and restart the
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+ build. Buildroot will detect that +openssl+ should be built and
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+ will be build it, but it will not detect that +ctorrent+ should be
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+ rebuilt to benefit from +openssl+ to add OpenSSL support. You will
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+ either have to do a full rebuild, or rebuild +ctorrent+ itself.
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+
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+ * When a package is removed from the configuration, Buildroot does
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+ not do anything special. It does not remove the files installed by
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+ this package from the target root filesystem or from the toolchain
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+ _sysroot_. A full rebuild is needed to get rid of this
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+ package. However, generally you don't necessarily need this package
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+ to be removed right now: you can wait for the next lunch break to
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+ restart the build from scratch.
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+
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+ * When the sub-options of a package are changed, the package is not
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+ automatically rebuilt. After making such changes, rebuilding only
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+ this package is often sufficient, unless enabling the package
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+ sub-option adds some features to the package that are useful for
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+ another package which has already been built. Again, Buildroot does
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+ not track when a package should be rebuilt: once a package has been
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+ built, it is never rebuilt unless explicitly told to do so.
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+
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+ * When a change to the root filesystem skeleton is made, a full
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+ rebuild is needed. However, when changes to the root filesystem
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+ overlay, to a post-build script or a post-image script are made,
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+ there is no need for a full rebuild: a simple +make+ invocation
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+ will take the changes into account.
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+
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+Generally speaking, when you're facing a build error and you're unsure
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+of the potential consequences of the configuration changes you've
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+made, do a full rebuild. If you get the same build error, then you are
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+sure that the error is not related to partial rebuilds of packages,
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+and if this error occurs with packages from the official Buildroot, do
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+not hesitate to report the problem! As your experience with Buildroot
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+progresses, you will progressively learn when a full rebuild is really
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+necessary, and you will save more and more time.
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+
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+For reference, a full rebuild is achieved by running:
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---------------
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$ make clean all
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---------------
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-In some cases, a full rebuild is mandatory:
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-
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-* each time the toolchain properties are changed, this includes:
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-
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-** after changing any toolchain option under the _Toolchain_ menu (if
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- the internal Buildroot backend is used);
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-** after running +make uclibc-menuconfig+.
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-
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-* after removing some libraries from the package selection.
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-
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-In some cases, a full rebuild is recommended:
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-
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-* after adding some libraries to the package selection (otherwise,
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- packages that can be optionally linked against those libraries
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- won't be rebuilt, so they won't support those new available
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- features).
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-
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-In other cases, it is up to you to decide if you should run a
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-full rebuild, but you should know what is impacted and understand what
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-you are doing anyway.
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-
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[[rebuild-pkg]]
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Understanding how to rebuild packages
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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