If a kernel package was defined where all KCONFIG symbols were dynamic,
and versioned, no FILES would be installed, as the foreach evaluation was
providing the value of the variable defined by the KCONFIG symbol name
including the version test
Fix this by calling the version_filter function on the list of KCONFIG
variable names run through by foreach
Example, kernel 6.1:
KCONFIG:=CONFIG_OLD@lt6.1 CONFIG_NEW@ge6.1
filter-out any KCONFIG settings forced by package:
CONFIG_OLD@lt6.1 CONFIG_NEW@ge6.1
there are dynamic settings, so for each of them,
get the value of the make variable defined by symbol name:
CONFIG_OLD@lt6.1 is not set
CONFIG_NEW@ge6.1 is not set
versus
CONFIG_OLD is not set
CONFIG_NEW=m
test if any of these are m, or y
if yes, install files, otherwise, nothing to install
Signed-off-by: John Thomson <git@johnthomson.fastmail.com.au>
KERNEL_MAKEOPTS will get expanded when it is used and not when it is
defined in the kernel.mk file now. This fixes problems finding dependent
kernel modules when it is used by a kernel module package.
Without this change the build of packages which depend on other out of
tree modules failed when they used KERNEL_MAKE because some symbols could
not be found. This happened because KERNEL_MAKE_FLAGS which contains a
"if $(__package_mk)" was evaluated where KERNEL_MAKEOPTS was defined
and not when the KERNEL_MAKE was used. For packages which included
kernel.mk before package.mk we saw this problem. One workaround
was to use the correct include order and the other one was to not
use KERNEL_MAKE_FLAGS, but copy its content.
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>