This causes IPC binaries (bitcoin-node, bitcoin-gui) to be included
in releases.
The effect on CI is that this causes more depends builds to build IPC
binaries, but still the only build running functional tests with them
is the i686_multiprocess one.
Except for Windows.
These scripts are not meant for general developer usage. They are for
use on the release binaries, which have been compiled in an environment
that makes various assumptions in regards to c library, compiler
options, hardening options, patching etc.
1f9b2e150c cmake: Require `zip` only for `deploy` target (Hennadii Stepanov)
0aeff29951 cmake: Check for `makensis` tool before using it (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
For `x86_64-w64-mingw32` and `*-apple-darwin` targets, the optional `deploy` target requires dedicated tools: `makensis` and `zip`, respectively.
This PR introduces a uniform checks for those tools when attempting to build the `deploy` target, ensuring they are not required for configuring and building any other targets.
Here is an example of workflow for `x86_64-w64-mingw32`:
```
$ # `nsis` is not installed
$ cmake -B build -G "GNU Makefiles" --toolchain depends/x86_64-w64-mingw32/toolchain.cmake
$ cmake --build build -j $(nproc)
$ cmake --build build -t deploy
Error: NSIS not found.
Please install NSIS and/or ensure that its executable is accessible to the find_program() command—
for example, by setting the MAKENSIS_EXECUTABLE variable or another relevant CMake variable.
Then re-run cmake to regenerate the build system.
Built target deploy
$ sudo apt install nsis
$ cmake -B build
$ cmake --build build -t deploy
...
[100%] Generating bitcoin-win64-setup.exe
[100%] Built target deploy
```
Fixes https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/32018.
ACKs for top commit:
hodlinator:
re-ACK 1f9b2e150c
fanquake:
ACK 1f9b2e150c
Tree-SHA512: 5e2bd28a13bd8fa7c4ba8cf1756d200a4651afe83c463d76ece10027cca343e124eff97012a5368028f761df60f420ab891106b4e33b50045051d57c7464ff98
This check is only used in release builds, where hardening should always
be enabled. I can't think of a reason we'd want to silently skip these
checks if hardening was inadvertently disabled.
9b033bebb1 cmake: rename Kernel component to bitcoinkernel for consistency (Cory Fields)
2e0c92558e cmake: add and use install_binary_component (Cory Fields)
0264c5d86c cmake: use per-target components for bitcoin-qt and bitcoin-gui (Cory Fields)
fb0546b1c5 ci: don't try to install for a fuzz build (Cory Fields)
Pull request description:
This makes it possible to build/install only the desired binaries regardless of the configuration.
For consistency, the component names match the binary names. `Kernel` and `GUI` have been renamed.
Additionally it fixes#31762 by installing only the manpages for the configured targets (and includes them in the component installs for each).
Also fixes#31745.
Alternative to #31765 which is (imo) more correct/thorough.
Can be tested using (for ex):
```bash
$ cmake -B build
$ cmake --build build -t bitcoind -t bitcoin-cli
$ cmake --install build --component bitcoind
$ cmake --install build --component bitcoin-cli
```
ACKs for top commit:
hebasto:
ACK 9b033bebb1.
TheCharlatan:
Re-ACK 9b033bebb1
stickies-v:
re-ACK 9b033bebb1
Tree-SHA512: fd4818e76f190dbeafbf0c246b466f829771902c9d6d7111ed917093b811c8a5536a4a45e20708f73e7f581d6cb77c8e61cfa69e065788dcf0886792f553a355
These scripts are becoming more of nuisance, than a value-add;
particularly since we've been building releases using Guix. Adding new
(release bin) tests can be harder, because it requires constructing a
failing test, which is becoming less easy e.g trying to disable a
feature or protection that has been built into the compiler/toolchain by
default.
In the pre-Guix days, these were valuable to sanity-check the environment,
because we were pulling that pre-built from Ubuntu, with little control.
At this point, it's less clear what these scripts are (sanity) checking.
Note that these also weren't completely ported to CMake (#31698), see
also #31715 which contains other fixes that would be needed for these
test-tests, to accomodate future changes.
The use of `PACKAGE_NAME` for the project's variable name is
problematic, as this name is commonly used in CMake's interface
variables. If third-party CMake code handles with scopes improperly,
our `PACKAGE_NAME` variable could end up with an unexpected value.
This change avoids such conflicts by renaming all `PACKAGE_*` variables
to `CLIENT_*`.