Hi Ben,
Due to the missing response we went for a workaround in the out-of-tree backports version of batman-adv for now.
However, it seems a similar issue now popped up with 4.11-rc1 again: [0] ("fatal error: sys/socket.h: No such file or directory")
Second try: Manoj, do you see a chance to fix these two issues ([0][1]) in kernel-package or is this package currently unmaintained?
Anything I can help with for further debugging in kernel-package?
Regards, Linus
[0]: https://www.open-mesh.org/issues/333 [1]: https://www.open-mesh.org/issues/322
On Sun, Jan 15, 2017 at 12:50:52AM +0000, Ben Hutchings wrote:
kernel-package is maintained by Manoj Srivastava (cc'd), not the kernel team.
Ben.
On Sat, 2017-01-14 at 22:28 +0100, Linus Lüssing wrote:
Hi Ben and others,
Recently we stumbled upon some compile errors when trying to build a backport version of the batman-adv kernel module for a 4.5 kernel [0]:
"implicit declaration of function ‘G_TC_AT’"
It seems VirtualBox has stumbled over this issue, too [1].
When trying to find the cause of these errors we noticed that the headers directory created via "$ make-kpkg kernel_headers" for 4.5 kernel resulted in two differing header files with the same guard, namely __LINUX_PKT_CLS_H:
https://metameute.de/~tux/batman-adv/net-sched-issues/linux-headers-4 .5.0%2b/include/uapi/linux/pkt_cls.h https://metameute.de/~tux/batman-adv/net-sched-issues/linux-headers-4 .5.0%2b/include/linux/pkt_cls.h
The latter, the non-uapi version, has the "#ifdef __KERNEL__" section stripped, causing the compile issue if it is included before the uapi variant.
Removing this non-uapi version from the unpacked linux-headers .deb package manually afterwards lets a batman-adv compilation succeed again.
Daniel (CC) has helped a lot with debugging so far and he expressed the suspicion that maybe make-kpkg might install "$ make headers_install" into the wrong directory?
Regards, Linus
PS: make-kpkg was invoked on a Debian Jessie (kernel-package 13.014+nmu1).
-- Ben Hutchings Hoare's Law of Large Problems: Inside every large problem is a small problem struggling to get out.