* [Buildroot] [PATCH] package: fix 'local' site method for host packages @ 2013-10-12 10:15 Thomas Petazzoni 2013-10-14 19:59 ` Peter Korsgaard 0 siblings, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread From: Thomas Petazzoni @ 2013-10-12 10:15 UTC (permalink / raw) To: buildroot Using the 'local' site method works just fine for target packages. However, for host packages, when HOST_<pkg>_SITE is automatically defined by the package infrastructure to be equal to <pkg>_SITE, when defining the <pkg>_OVERRIDE_SRCDIR, the $($(2)_SITE) is empty, due to a missing additional dollar sign. This patch ensures that the <pkg>_OVERRIDE_SRCDIR gets the correct value, regardless of whether the HOST_<pkg>_SITE variable has been defined by the package itself, or inferred by the package infrastructure using the <pkg>_SITE value. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Reported-by: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/19311747/buildroot-cant-use-local-site-method-for-custom-host-packages --- package/pkg-generic.mk | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/package/pkg-generic.mk b/package/pkg-generic.mk index a46457c..4bba4b5 100644 --- a/package/pkg-generic.mk +++ b/package/pkg-generic.mk @@ -281,7 +281,7 @@ endif ifeq ($$($(2)_SITE_METHOD),local) ifeq ($$($(2)_OVERRIDE_SRCDIR),) -$(2)_OVERRIDE_SRCDIR = $($(2)_SITE) +$(2)_OVERRIDE_SRCDIR = $$($(2)_SITE) endif endif -- 1.8.1.2 ^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* [Buildroot] [PATCH] package: fix 'local' site method for host packages 2013-10-12 10:15 [Buildroot] [PATCH] package: fix 'local' site method for host packages Thomas Petazzoni @ 2013-10-14 19:59 ` Peter Korsgaard 2013-10-15 8:25 ` [Buildroot] About user support and the mailing list Thomas Petazzoni 0 siblings, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread From: Peter Korsgaard @ 2013-10-14 19:59 UTC (permalink / raw) To: buildroot >>>>> "Thomas" == Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> writes: Thomas> Using the 'local' site method works just fine for target Thomas> packages. However, for host packages, when HOST_<pkg>_SITE is Thomas> automatically defined by the package infrastructure to be equal to Thomas> <pkg>_SITE, when defining the <pkg>_OVERRIDE_SRCDIR, the $($(2)_SITE) Thomas> is empty, due to a missing additional dollar sign. Thomas> This patch ensures that the <pkg>_OVERRIDE_SRCDIR gets the correct Thomas> value, regardless of whether the HOST_<pkg>_SITE variable has been Thomas> defined by the package itself, or inferred by the package Thomas> infrastructure using the <pkg>_SITE value. Thomas> Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Thomas> Reported-by: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/19311747/buildroot-cant-use-local-site-method-for-custom-host-packages Heh, odd place to report such issues. Committed, thanks. -- Bye, Peter Korsgaard ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* [Buildroot] About user support and the mailing list 2013-10-14 19:59 ` Peter Korsgaard @ 2013-10-15 8:25 ` Thomas Petazzoni 2013-10-15 13:04 ` Thomas De Schampheleire 0 siblings, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread From: Thomas Petazzoni @ 2013-10-15 8:25 UTC (permalink / raw) To: buildroot Dear Peter Korsgaard, On Mon, 14 Oct 2013 21:59:12 +0200, Peter Korsgaard wrote: > Thomas> Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> > Thomas> Reported-by: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/19311747/buildroot-cant-use-local-site-method-for-custom-host-packages > > Heh, odd place to report such issues. Committed, thanks. Yes and no. Our mailing list is now having a *huge* traffic, mainly developer-oriented (patches and related discussions). For the user just starting up with Buildroot, not very familiar of open-source communities, not feeling necessarily at ease with subscribing to a 50-100 e-mails/day mailing list, searching other forms of support seems natural to me. Maybe it's a sign that we should have a more "user-oriented" support channel. A dedicated mailing list? An publicized usage of Stack Overflow or some other similar stuff? Not sure exactly about this, but might be worth a chat at the next Buildroot meeting, I believe. Best regards, Thomas -- Thomas Petazzoni, CTO, Free Electrons Embedded Linux, Kernel and Android engineering http://free-electrons.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* [Buildroot] About user support and the mailing list 2013-10-15 8:25 ` [Buildroot] About user support and the mailing list Thomas Petazzoni @ 2013-10-15 13:04 ` Thomas De Schampheleire 2013-10-15 13:16 ` Jeremy Rosen 2013-10-16 16:00 ` Thomas Petazzoni 0 siblings, 2 replies; 10+ messages in thread From: Thomas De Schampheleire @ 2013-10-15 13:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: buildroot Hi, On Tue, Oct 15, 2013 at 10:25 AM, Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> wrote: > Dear Peter Korsgaard, > > On Mon, 14 Oct 2013 21:59:12 +0200, Peter Korsgaard wrote: > >> Thomas> Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> >> Thomas> Reported-by: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/19311747/buildroot-cant-use-local-site-method-for-custom-host-packages >> >> Heh, odd place to report such issues. Committed, thanks. > > Yes and no. Our mailing list is now having a *huge* traffic, mainly > developer-oriented (patches and related discussions). For the user just > starting up with Buildroot, not very familiar of open-source > communities, not feeling necessarily at ease with subscribing to a > 50-100 e-mails/day mailing list, searching other forms of support seems > natural to me. > > Maybe it's a sign that we should have a more "user-oriented" support > channel. A dedicated mailing list? An publicized usage of Stack > Overflow or some other similar stuff? Not sure exactly about this, but > might be worth a chat at the next Buildroot meeting, I believe. The amount of traffic on the mailing list has indeed increased a lot. On a previous Buildroot meeting, we talked about a split of the mailing lists. At that time, we decided not to do this (yet). One of the advantages of a unified list is that new users also are 'exposed' to development, and are hopefully more likely to contribute too. There is no 'development elite' in this model. At the same time, a unified list also encourages developers to help users. It's not possible to subscribe to 'only the developer list'. A split mailing list model is mainly advantageous for users that only want to subscribe to a low-volume list, but other than that I don't yet see big advantages. If you have more, please let me know. Thomas: you seem to be active on StackOverflow. Can you give some more background how this would work for us? I've only used stackoverflow in a read-only mode, when googling a specific question. Other possibilities are a forum (don't really like it) and IRC (we have it already). Others? Best regards, Thomas ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* [Buildroot] About user support and the mailing list 2013-10-15 13:04 ` Thomas De Schampheleire @ 2013-10-15 13:16 ` Jeremy Rosen 2013-10-15 14:30 ` Ryan Barnett 2013-10-16 16:00 ` Thomas Petazzoni 1 sibling, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread From: Jeremy Rosen @ 2013-10-15 13:16 UTC (permalink / raw) To: buildroot > > One of the advantages of a unified list is that new users also are > 'exposed' to development, and are hopefully more likely to contribute > too. There is no 'development elite' in this model. > At the same time, a unified list also encourages developers to help > users. It's not possible to subscribe to 'only the developer list'. > hmm, compared to most FOSS projects I know buildroot is a bit special... There is no clear separation between users and developers as far as knowledge is concerned. All users should be able to compile stuff know about cross compilers and installing firmwares. So doing a separate -user vs -dev mailing list makes less sense her. However I would like to have a separate -discuss an -patch mailing list, one of them being for patch+reviews+commit messages and the other one being for actual discussions. That would separate the high traffic/fast reading parts from the low traffic/philosophical discussion parts. The important part is that mose people (everybody?) should logically subscribe to both, but mail filtering etc... would be much simpler. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* [Buildroot] About user support and the mailing list 2013-10-15 13:16 ` Jeremy Rosen @ 2013-10-15 14:30 ` Ryan Barnett 2013-10-15 16:07 ` Peter Korsgaard 0 siblings, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread From: Ryan Barnett @ 2013-10-15 14:30 UTC (permalink / raw) To: buildroot Jeremy, Thomas P and D, All, Jeremy Rosen <jeremy.rosen@openwide.fr> wrote on 10/15/2013 08:16:23 AM: > > One of the advantages of a unified list is that new users also are > > 'exposed' to development, and are hopefully more likely to contribute > > too. There is no 'development elite' in this model. > > At the same time, a unified list also encourages developers to help > > users. It's not possible to subscribe to 'only the developer list'. > > > > hmm, compared to most FOSS projects I know buildroot is a bit special... > > There is no clear separation between users and developers as far as > knowledge is concerned. All users should be able to compile stuff > know about cross compilers and installing firmwares. So doing a > separate -user vs -dev mailing list makes less sense her. > > However I would like to have a separate -discuss an -patch mailing > list, one of them being for patch+reviews+commit messages and the > other one being for actual discussions. > > That would separate the high traffic/fast reading parts from the > low traffic/philosophical discussion parts. I really like this idea as I believe it fits well with how this FOSS project works. The majority of the emails are related to patches and discussion surrounding them. I usually glance through these emails since I don't necessarily have time to read through all of the patches. So by having this separation would be nice as that way I don't accidentally glance over a philosophical discussion such as this. > The important part is that mose people (everybody?) should logically > subscribe to both, but mail filtering etc... would be much simpler. Thanks, -Ryan -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.busybox.net/pipermail/buildroot/attachments/20131015/3725fc1e/attachment-0001.html> ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* [Buildroot] About user support and the mailing list 2013-10-15 14:30 ` Ryan Barnett @ 2013-10-15 16:07 ` Peter Korsgaard 2013-10-15 19:44 ` Thomas De Schampheleire 0 siblings, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread From: Peter Korsgaard @ 2013-10-15 16:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: buildroot >>>>> "Ryan" == Ryan Barnett <rjbarnet@rockwellcollins.com> writes: Hi, >> That would separate the high traffic/fast reading parts from the >> low traffic/philosophical discussion parts. Ryan> I really like this idea as I believe it fits well with how this Ryan> FOSS project works. The majority of the emails are related to Ryan> patches and discussion surrounding them. I usually glance through Ryan> these emails since I don't necessarily have time to read through Ryan> all of the patches. So by having this separation would be nice Ryan> as that way I don't accidentally glance over a philosophical Ryan> discussion such as this. The problem is that these things are rarely nicely seperated. This thread started as a reply to a patch submission. -- Bye, Peter Korsgaard ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* [Buildroot] About user support and the mailing list 2013-10-15 16:07 ` Peter Korsgaard @ 2013-10-15 19:44 ` Thomas De Schampheleire 2013-10-16 21:56 ` Arnout Vandecappelle 0 siblings, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread From: Thomas De Schampheleire @ 2013-10-15 19:44 UTC (permalink / raw) To: buildroot Hi Peter, On Tue, Oct 15, 2013 at 6:07 PM, Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@uclibc.org> wrote: >>>>>> "Ryan" == Ryan Barnett <rjbarnet@rockwellcollins.com> writes: > > Hi, > > >> That would separate the high traffic/fast reading parts from the > >> low traffic/philosophical discussion parts. > > Ryan> I really like this idea as I believe it fits well with how this > Ryan> FOSS project works. The majority of the emails are related to > Ryan> patches and discussion surrounding them. I usually glance through > Ryan> these emails since I don't necessarily have time to read through > Ryan> all of the patches. So by having this separation would be nice > Ryan> as that way I don't accidentally glance over a philosophical > Ryan> discussion such as this. > > The problem is that these things are rarely nicely seperated. This > thread started as a reply to a patch submission. This is not necessarily a big problem. If a discussion occurs on the 'patch' mailing list that is no longer directly related with the actual patch, we should at least put the 'discussion' mailing list in copy (or use only that list). In the beginning this can be odd, but it's something we can learn. I think the patch / discussion mailing list split, although similar, is certainly better than a developer / user split. I'm not against it. But if there are other ideas, let's hear them :) Best regards, Thomas ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* [Buildroot] About user support and the mailing list 2013-10-15 19:44 ` Thomas De Schampheleire @ 2013-10-16 21:56 ` Arnout Vandecappelle 0 siblings, 0 replies; 10+ messages in thread From: Arnout Vandecappelle @ 2013-10-16 21:56 UTC (permalink / raw) To: buildroot On 15/10/13 21:44, Thomas De Schampheleire wrote: > On Tue, Oct 15, 2013 at 6:07 PM, Peter Korsgaard<jacmet@uclibc.org> wrote: >>>>>>> >>>>>>"Ryan" == Ryan Barnett<rjbarnet@rockwellcollins.com> writes: >> > >> >Hi, >> > >> > >> That would separate the high traffic/fast reading parts from the >> > >> low traffic/philosophical discussion parts. >> > >> > Ryan> I really like this idea as I believe it fits well with how this >> > Ryan> FOSS project works. The majority of the emails are related to >> > Ryan> patches and discussion surrounding them. I usually glance through >> > Ryan> these emails since I don't necessarily have time to read through >> > Ryan> all of the patches. So by having this separation would be nice >> > Ryan> as that way I don't accidentally glance over a philosophical >> > Ryan> discussion such as this. >> > >> >The problem is that these things are rarely nicely seperated. This >> >thread started as a reply to a patch submission. > This is not necessarily a big problem. If a discussion occurs on the > 'patch' mailing list that is no longer directly related with the > actual patch, we should at least put the 'discussion' mailing list in > copy (or use only that list). In the beginning this can be odd, but > it's something we can learn. I was first against the -patch / -discuss split for the same reasons as Peter's, but as you say, it's easy to add -discuss to a reply. If this split goes through, I'd keep buildroot at busybox.net as the -discuss list and create a new one for patches. Patchwork should probably listen to both, since people will (certainly in the beginning) still send patches to the normal list. Regards, Arnout -- Arnout Vandecappelle arnout at mind be Senior Embedded Software Architect +32-16-286500 Essensium/Mind http://www.mind.be G.Geenslaan 9, 3001 Leuven, Belgium BE 872 984 063 RPR Leuven LinkedIn profile: http://www.linkedin.com/in/arnoutvandecappelle GPG fingerprint: 7CB5 E4CC 6C2E EFD4 6E3D A754 F963 ECAB 2450 2F1F ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* [Buildroot] About user support and the mailing list 2013-10-15 13:04 ` Thomas De Schampheleire 2013-10-15 13:16 ` Jeremy Rosen @ 2013-10-16 16:00 ` Thomas Petazzoni 1 sibling, 0 replies; 10+ messages in thread From: Thomas Petazzoni @ 2013-10-16 16:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: buildroot Dear Thomas De Schampheleire, On Tue, 15 Oct 2013 15:04:44 +0200, Thomas De Schampheleire wrote: > > Yes and no. Our mailing list is now having a *huge* traffic, mainly > > developer-oriented (patches and related discussions). For the user just > > starting up with Buildroot, not very familiar of open-source > > communities, not feeling necessarily at ease with subscribing to a > > 50-100 e-mails/day mailing list, searching other forms of support seems > > natural to me. > > > > Maybe it's a sign that we should have a more "user-oriented" support > > channel. A dedicated mailing list? An publicized usage of Stack > > Overflow or some other similar stuff? Not sure exactly about this, but > > might be worth a chat at the next Buildroot meeting, I believe. > > The amount of traffic on the mailing list has indeed increased a lot. > On a previous Buildroot meeting, we talked about a split of the > mailing lists. At that time, we decided not to do this (yet). > > One of the advantages of a unified list is that new users also are > 'exposed' to development, and are hopefully more likely to contribute > too. There is no 'development elite' in this model. > At the same time, a unified list also encourages developers to help > users. It's not possible to subscribe to 'only the developer list'. Agreed. > A split mailing list model is mainly advantageous for users that only > want to subscribe to a low-volume list, but other than that I don't > yet see big advantages. If you have more, please let me know. That's mainly what I was concerned about. Subscribing to a 50-100 mails/day mailing list might be problematic for people who just want to use Buildroot, even though I agree that the boundary between "users" and "developers" is a lot less cut in Buildroot than it is for other software. > Thomas: you seem to be active on StackOverflow. Can you give some more > background how this would work for us? I've only used stackoverflow in > a read-only mode, when googling a specific question. I'm not so much active on stackoverflow actually. In fact I just subscribed to the tag "buildroot" so that whenever a Buildroot related question is asked, I receive an e-mail. I generally find Stack Overflow a bit better than web forums thanks to the scoring system which ensures "good" answers are the one getting the highest visibility. Stack Overflow also generally has a very high Google rank, so whenever you search something programming-related on Google, there's a high chance of having a hit on Stack Overflow. In this discussion, I don't really have one good solution to suggest, I'm merely interested in discussing the fact that the mailing list traffic has increased, which on one side is really great (the project is active) but on the other side may be problematic for users who just want to have a little bit of support. Best regards, Thomas -- Thomas Petazzoni, CTO, Free Electrons Embedded Linux, Kernel and Android engineering http://free-electrons.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2013-10-16 21:56 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 10+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2013-10-12 10:15 [Buildroot] [PATCH] package: fix 'local' site method for host packages Thomas Petazzoni 2013-10-14 19:59 ` Peter Korsgaard 2013-10-15 8:25 ` [Buildroot] About user support and the mailing list Thomas Petazzoni 2013-10-15 13:04 ` Thomas De Schampheleire 2013-10-15 13:16 ` Jeremy Rosen 2013-10-15 14:30 ` Ryan Barnett 2013-10-15 16:07 ` Peter Korsgaard 2013-10-15 19:44 ` Thomas De Schampheleire 2013-10-16 21:56 ` Arnout Vandecappelle 2013-10-16 16:00 ` Thomas Petazzoni
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