On 27/06/18 18:41, Maxim Uvarov wrote:
> Ubuntu 14.04.5 which I run in container uses gcc 4.8 but on host I use more
> fresh Ubuntu kernel compiled with stack protector. That makes dpdk modules
> not compatible. But it's not clear why dpdk modules inherit kernels
> compiler options. Is there any w
On Wed, Jun 27, 2018 at 2:03 PM Maxim Uvarov
wrote:
> On 27.06.2018 19:41, Bill Fischofer wrote:
> > Is this an ODP question or a DPDK question? Is this unique to Ubuntu
> > 14.04? I notice that release goes out of support in April 2019 so I'm
> > wondering if it's still an important release to
On 27.06.2018 19:41, Bill Fischofer wrote:
Is this an ODP question or a DPDK question? Is this unique to Ubuntu
14.04? I notice that release goes out of support in April 2019 so I'm
wondering if it's still an important release to carry.
I'm trying to build dependencies for linux-generic odp
Is this an ODP question or a DPDK question? Is this unique to Ubuntu
14.04? I notice that release goes out of support in April 2019 so I'm
wondering if it's still an important release to carry.
On Wed, Jun 27, 2018 at 10:41 AM Maxim Uvarov
wrote:
> Ubuntu 14.04.5 which I run in container uses g
Ubuntu 14.04.5 which I run in container uses gcc 4.8 but on host I use more
fresh Ubuntu kernel compiled with stack protector. That makes dpdk modules
not compatible. But it's not clear why dpdk modules inherit kernels
compiler options. Is there any workaround for that?
LD
/root/dpdk/x86_64-nat
Branch: refs/heads/master
Home: https://github.com/Linaro/odp
Commit: eaf3b566293fa2bc10bb5b99b38ad75f4914b1ab
https://github.com/Linaro/odp/commit/eaf3b566293fa2bc10bb5b99b38ad75f4914b1ab
Author: Maxim Uvarov
Date: 2018-06-27 (Wed, 27 Jun 2018)
Changed paths:
M test/va