* Ported Marvell armhf build on x86 for debian buster to use cross-compilation instead of qemu emulation
Current armhf Sonic build on amd64 host uses qemu emulation. Due to the
nature of the emulation it takes a very long time, about 22-24 hours to
complete the build. The change I did to reduce the building time by
porting Sonic armhf build on amd64 host for Marvell platform for debian
buster to use cross-compilation on arm64 host for armhf target. The
overall Sonic armhf building time using cross-compilation reduced to
about 6 hours.
Signed-off-by: marvell <marvell@cpss-build3.marvell.com>
* Fixed final Sonic image build with dockers inside
* Update Dockerfile.j2
Fixed qemu-user-static:x86_64-aarch64-5.0.0-2 .
* Update cross-build-arm-python-reqirements.sh
Added support for both armhf and arm64 cross-build platform using $PY_PLAT environment variable.
* Update Makefile
Added TARGET=<cross-target> for armhf/arm64 cross-compilation.
* Reviewer's @qiluo-msft requests done
Signed-off-by: marvell <marvell@cpss-build3.marvell.com>
* Added new radius/pam patch for arm64 support
* Update slave.mk
Added missing back tick.
* Added libgtest-dev: libgmock-dev: to the buster Dockerfile.j2. Fixed arm perl version to be generic
* Added missing armhf/arm64 entries in /etc/apt/sources.list
* fix libc-bin core dump issue from xumia:fix-libc-bin-install-issue commit
* Removed unnecessary 'apt-get update' from sonic-slave-buster/Dockerfile.j2
* Fixed saiarcot895 reviewer's requests
* Fixed README and replaced 'sed/awk' with patches
* Fixed ntp build to use openssl
* Unuse sonic-slave-buster/cross-build-arm-python-reqirements.sh script (put all prebuilt python packages cross-compilation/install inside Dockerfile.j2). Fixed src/snmpd/Makefile to use -j1 in all cases
* Clean armhf cross-compilation build fixes
* Ported cross-compilation armhf build to bullseye
* Additional change for bullseye
* Set CROSS_BUILD_ENVIRON default value n
* Removed python2 references
* Fixes after merge with the upstream
* Deleted unused sonic-slave-buster/cross-build-arm-python-reqirements.sh file
* Fixed 2 @saiarcot895 requests
* Fixed @saiarcot895 reviewer's requests
* Removed use of prebuilt python wheels
* Incorporated saiarcot895 CC/CXX and other simplification/generalization changes
Signed-off-by: marvell <marvell@cpss-build3.marvell.com>
* Fixed saiarcot895 reviewer's additional requests
* src/libyang/patch/debian-packaging-files.patch
* Removed --no-deps option when installing wheels. Removed unnecessary lazy_object_proxy arm python3 package instalation
Co-authored-by: marvell <marvell@cpss-build3.marvell.com>
Co-authored-by: marvell <marvell@cpss-build2.marvell.com>
The current instructions cannot be used on e.g. Ubuntu 20.04.
This commit reformats the steps to be more natural to read when
first getting started building SONiC.
* Add SONIC_BUILD_JOBS=$(nproc) to usage guide
* Explain disk usage w.r.t. SONIC_BUILD_JOBS
* Set BUILD JOBS to 4
More than 4 can cause race issues right now, and setting to nproc
might be too much as every job spawns multiple threads.
Signed-off-by: Christian Svensson <blue@cmd.nu>
Lack of having the support for no_proxy in SONiC build environment limits enterprise companies to put some internal hacks to ensure the proxy's dont refer to some Intranet site for artifactory downloads etc. Today. Using no_proxy is familiar in proxy settings terminology and excludes traffic destined to certain hosts.
Most Web clients hence support connection to proxy servers via environment variables:
http_proxy / HTTP_PROXY
https_proxy / HTTPS_PROXY
no_proxy / NO_PROXY
These variables tell the client what URL should be used to access the proxy servers and which exceptions should be made.
How to verify it
Simply set up the variable in the bash shell at build time.
export no_proxy=internal.example.com, internal2.example.com
Usage is:
no_proxy is a comma- or space-separated list of machine or domain names, with optional :port part. If no :port
part is present, it applies to all ports on that domain.
Somehow this was missed in april, I added the icons for 201904 so that
the branch is not forgotten
Signed-off-by: Michel Moriniaux <m.moriniaux@criteo.com>
Users can install docker with sudo, and it requires sudo to issue docker command. This will cause few errors in Makefile.work which need use docker without sudo.
ARM Architecture support in SONIC
make configure platform=[ASIC_VENDOR_ARCH] PLATFORM_ARCH=[ARM_ARCH]
SONIC_ARCH: default amd64
armhf - arm32bit
arm64 - arm64bit
Signed-off-by: Antony Rheneus <arheneus@marvell.com>
* Add switch ASIC vendor and platforms for Nephos
- What I did
Add switch ASIC vendor: Nephos
Add Nephos platforms: Ingrasys S9130-32X, Ingrasys S9230-64X
- How I did it
Add platform/nephos files
Add platform/nephos/sonic-platform-modules-ingrasys submodule
Add device/ingrasys/x86_64-ingrasys_s9130_32x-r0 files
Add device/ingrasys/x86_64-ingrasys_s9230_64x-r0 files
Add SONiC to support Nephos platform
- How to verify it
To build SONiC installer image and docker images, run the following commands:
make configure PLATFORM=nephos
make target/sonic-nephos.bin
Check system and network feature is worked as well
- Description for the changelog
Add switch ASIC vendor and platforms for Nephos
- A picture of a cute animal (not mandatory but encouraged)
Signed-off-by: Sam Yang <yang.kaiyu@gmail.com>
* Advance sonic-sairedis submodule to include #271 (Add Nephos ASIC)