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* flua: kick out the remaining builtin modulesKyle Evans2025-10-041-0/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | Bootstrap flua has some magic now to handle modules by building them in and discovering them via linker sets. This is slightly cleaner than always building them in and baking them into loadedlibs for both bootstrap and system flua. Adjust the stand build now that these three libs have their own new homes. Reviewed by: bapt, emaste Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D51891
* flua: support our flua modules in the bootstrap fluaKyle Evans2025-10-043-4/+8
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This version builds every module into the flua binary itself, since all of the bootstrap tools are built -DNO_SHARED. As a result, we also cannot dlsym(), so we can't really discover the names of our newly builtin modules. Instead, just build out a linker set with all of our luaopen_*() functions to register everything up-front. Building in all of the modules isn't strictly necessary, but it means that we have an example of how to add a bootstrap module everywhere you go and one doesn't need to consider whether bootstrap flua can use a module when writing scripts. On my build machine, the consequence on our binary size is an increase from around 1.6M -> 1.9M, which isn't really that bad. .lua modules can install into their usual path below $WORLDTMP/legacy and we'll pick them up automagically by way of the ctor that sets up LUA_PATH early on. This re-lands bootstrap module support with a more sensible subset, and after having verified that it cross-builds fine on macOS and Linux -- we cannot do libfreebsd on !FreeBSD because it's more system header dependant. We also need to bootstrap libmd to bring in libhash, and libucl + libyaml. Reviewed by: bapt, emaste (both previous version) Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D51890
* Revert "flua: support our flua modules in the bootstrap flua"Kyle Evans2025-10-043-8/+4
| | | | | | | This reverts commit 1953a12ee2cde1afacb3e3f7612d89695c96e04f, because it cannot work at all on macOS without more work, at a minimum. We use linker sets for module discovery, but we don't have a version of this that works for mach-o at the moment.
* Revert "flua: kick out the remaining builtin modules"Kyle Evans2025-10-041-2/+0
| | | | | This reverts commit 80ada959004c4386880e47b11618f8abfc2d80e1, because bootstrap flua is about to get backed out.
* flua: kick out the remaining builtin modulesKyle Evans2025-10-031-0/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | Bootstrap flua has some magic now to handle modules by building them in and discovering them via linker sets. This is slightly cleaner than always building them in and baking them into loadedlibs for both bootstrap and system flua. Adjust the stand build now that these three libs have their own new homes. Reviewed by: bapt, emaste Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D51891
* flua: support our flua modules in the bootstrap fluaKyle Evans2025-10-033-4/+8
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This version builds every module into the flua binary itself, since all of the bootstrap tools are built -DNO_SHARED. As a result, we also cannot dlsym(), so we can't really discover the names of our newly builtin modules. Instead, just build out a linker set with all of our luaopen_*() functions to register everything up-front. Building in all of the modules isn't strictly necessary, but it means that we have an example of how to add a bootstrap module everywhere you go and one doesn't need to consider whether bootstrap flua can use a module when writing scripts. On my build machine, the consequence on our binary size is an increase from around 1.6M -> 1.9M, which isn't really that bad. .lua modules can install into their usual path below $WORLDTMP/legacy and we'll pick them up automagically by way of the ctor that sets up LUA_PATH early on. Reviewed by: bapt, emaste Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D51890
* flua: move modules source into the main source directoryBaptiste Daroussin2024-09-124-0/+251
Follow the path of what is done with bsnmp, build the modules along with the main binary, this allows to build the modules at a moment where all needed libraries are already built and available in the linker path instead of having to declare all the libraries which a flua module will be linked to in _prebuild_libs. Discused with: markj Reviewed by: markj, jrtc27, kevans, imp Accepted by: kevans, imp Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D46610