Hi,
Thanks, I have Vlads patches as he kindly emailed them to me and have been starting to add them to alpine to get 32bit working here (currently not building):
https://gitlab.alpinelinux.org/alpine/aports/-/merge_requests/14888

Vlad says he only applies the “arm32bit” prefix patches on armv7, he is working on merge requests to ceph also.

So it needs a way to detect 64/32bit in cmake or I saw a way with <cstdint> that is portable for applying the changes with "#ifdef” for 32bit only fixes that are not needed for 64bit.

Thanks,

Duncan

On 24 Nov 2020, at 09:22, Anthony Davies <anthony.t.davies@gmail.com> wrote:

Hi All,

I had a similar idea to Vlad here but using the Olimex Lime2 as a platform, great minds think alike. My interest was mainly to use it with Rook for my low power kubernetes cluster.

The last successful build I had running using Rook-ceph was 15.2.0, I doubled my kids around that time (1 to 2) and time disappeared.

Having said that I had an issue #44197 which Brad was planning to take a look at before he had a shift in priorities.

I would love to see this up and working but have very little time to spend on it at the moment unfortunately, sounds like Vlad is more a dev then I am and can contribute PRs which I struggle with when it comes to C.

Armv7 is a subset of armv8 and so any armv8 architecture can be used to compile, I personally used a 32 bit armv7 alpine image on high powered armv8 infrastructure.

Vlad, I was using cloud.drone.io to automate my builds, that may be an option for you also? They offer it free for open source projects.

Happy to help out however I can with the limited time I have.

Cheers,

Tony

On Tue, 24 Nov 2020 at 19:50, kefu chai <tchaikov@gmail.com> wrote:
hi Duncan and Vladimir,

we don't have the hardware or dedicated resource for supporting armv7,
i586, i686 or other 32bits architectures. but patches enabling us to
support more architectures are always welcomed.

cypress is only used for testing the dashboard. would be better if we
could disable it conditionally based on platform / archs.

+Tony Davies. as he's been testing Ceph on armv7 and aarch64 recently.

On Mon, Nov 23, 2020 at 8:33 PM Duncan Bellamy <a.16bit.sysop@icloud.com> wrote:
>
> Yes please, if you could email me as well as PRs I can see if I can get it to build for Alpine Linux.
>
> On 23 Nov 2020, at 12:20, Vladimir Bashkirtsev <vladimir@bashkirtsev.com> wrote:
>
> I have checked their patches and they are just not enough of getting everything up and running. They have patched two files which I patched as well but I also patched number of other files which are vital for correct operation. I'll do PRs soon or if you'd like I can email my patches directly.
>
> On 23/11/20 11:09 pm, Duncan Bellamy wrote:
>
> Thanks for that, ubuntu has it building for all arches, they have patches for 32bit and arm in the patches directory here:
>
> http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/pool/main/c/ceph/ceph_15.2.5-0ubuntu1.1.debian.tar.xz
>
>
> On 23 Nov 2020, at 08:48, Vladimir Bashkirtsev <vladimir@bashkirtsev.com> wrote:
>
> I doubt that Cypress will build necessary stuff. Much faster:
>
> diff -uNr ceph-15.2.4/src/pybind/mgr/dashboard/frontend/package.json ceph-15.2.4-arm32_fix/src/pybind/mgr/dashboard/frontend/package.json
> --- ceph-15.2.4/src/pybind/mgr/dashboard/frontend/package.json    2020-07-01 01:10:51.000000000 +0930
> +++ ceph-15.2.4-arm32_fix/src/pybind/mgr/dashboard/frontend/package.json    2020-11-21 22:11:16.065796889 +1030
> @@ -122,7 +122,6 @@
>      "@types/node": "12.12.34",
>      "@types/simplebar": "5.1.1",
>      "codelyzer": "5.2.2",
> -    "cypress": "4.4.0",
>      "html-linter": "1.1.1",
>      "htmllint-cli": "0.0.7",
>      "jest": "25.2.4",
>
>
> On 23/11/20 7:37 pm, Duncan Bellamy wrote:
>
> Thanks for the info, I have opened an issue about it on cypress github:
> https://github.com/cypress-io/cypress/issues/9272
>
> I don’t think the alpine build is running the test suite, cypress is installed and for the test step it does a cd into the build directory and runs “ctest” but looking at the build logs and searching for “ctest” returns 0 results.
>
> Duncan
>
> On 22 Nov 2020, at 23:18, Vladimir Bashkirtsev <vladimir@bashkirtsev.com> wrote:
>
> There no cypress for ARM 32 bit at all. As it is used just for testing I have removed it from package.json and then dropped relevant test to avoid test failure. Not the best solution but because I do build 64 bits as well I can sleep relatively easy knowing that it should work. Node is used to create mgr frontend and it should generate pretty much the same JS regardless of architecture.
>
> Explicit use of cypress also tells me that 32 bit support was dropped by Ceph silently. But I can say that after some patching ceph does pass full test suite on armv7l. I will provide them as PRs soon - hopefully they will be accepted and Ceph will run on 32 bits again.
>
> On 23 November 2020 4:01:18 am AEDT, Duncan Bellamy <a.16bit.sysop@icloud.com> wrote:
> I have been updating the Alpine Linux version to 15.2.6 and it fails on armv7 and x86 because cypress install fails with not found, how did you get cypress to work on arm 32bit?
>
> Duncan
>
> On 22 Nov 2020, at 08:49, Vladimir Bashkirtsev <vladimir@bashkirtsev.com> wrote:
>
> 
> Yeah, that's exactly because of this document I am kinda wondering. This document is latest dev and thus one may expect that 32 bits builds are still a thing. But after I have went through considerable effort building it on 32 bit ARM I am sure that current Ceph release is not buildable out of the box. Say in options.h Options::size_t (notion of SIZE option) uses std::size_t (largest counter available - 32 bits on 32 bit arches) as store of value. It automatically implies that smoke.sh test which tries to create 100G OSD fails as 100G value just does not fit into 32 bits and trimmed to become just 0 (zero). And the same story with other SIZE options which may exceed 2^32. So clearly Ceph in its current form cannot pass testing on 32 bit systems making me think that 32 bit target was silently dropped at some point.
>
> On 22/11/20 7:39 pm, Yuval Lifshitz wrote:
>
> I don't know if it is built and tested regularly on 32bit arch, but according to this:
> https://docs.ceph.com/en/latest/dev/release-process/
> 32bit arch is a valid target for ceph.
>
> On Sun, Nov 22, 2020 at 10:30 AM Vladimir Bashkirtsev <vladimir@bashkirtsev.com> wrote:
> Hi Yuval,
>
>
>
> Thank you for pointing me into right direction. I am planning to provide PRs as I already have relevant patches.
>
>
>
> BTW: am I right in my thinking that Ceph no longer does building and testing on 32 bit architectures?
>
>
>
> Regards,
>
> Vladimir
>
> On 22/11/20 7:18 pm, Yuval Lifshitz wrote:
>
> Hi Vladimir,
> We use PRs to github for code contributions to Ceph. For more details see here: [1].
> If you find issues that need fixing, but you don't plan on fixing right away you can open tracker issues here [2].
>
> Yuval
>
> [1] https://github.com/ceph/ceph/blob/master/SubmittingPatches.rst
> [2] https://tracker.ceph.com/projects
>
> On Sun, Nov 22, 2020 at 5:45 AM Vladimir Bashkirtsev <vladimir@bashkirtsev.com> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
>
> Over last few weeks I was working on making Ceph 15.2.4 to build and run
> on ARM 32 bit system. It appears that Ceph no longer supports 32 bit
> systems. But I wanted to run it on Odroid HC-2 which makes a very good
> cheap OSD basically turning SATA disk into ethernet enabled disk. So I
> stuck my teeth into getting current Ceph up and running on 32 bit
> architecture. While doing so I have encountered number of bugs in Ceph
> codebase which I now want to put back for everyone to use.
>
> For example I found a bug in EC code which attempts to malloc around 4GB
> - this bug is not noticeable on 64 bit systems as malloc happily
> allocates 4GB but it of course failed on 32 bit system and digging into
> the issue shown that this malloc was just a bug - it should not be
> happening at all in the first place.
>
> Or wrong include (.cc instead of .h) which caused compilation hard
> error. Or python threading timeout was specified as int while it should
> be a float and basically timeout was not happening. And so on. Small
> inaccuracies peppered around code base. It is certainly should not be
> done as one huge patch and I am happy to put these patches one by one.
> But which way it should be done? As number of PR requests on github? Or
> patch files emailed to someone?
>
> May someone from the list enlighten me on acceptable procedure I need to
> follow?
>
>
> Regards,
>
> Vladimir
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--
Regards
Kefu Chai