The Portage packages that need to be built and/or installed are now
specified in the `build.packages` and `install.packages` files,
respectively. Similarly, packages to be installed on the host system
are specified in `host-tools.packages`. Finally, the
`installonly.packages` file contains a list of packages that are
installed in the destination root, but not built in the sysroot
beforehand.
This allows `make` to better track when the package sets change. It
will also make it easier to maintain different sets for different
variants in the future.
When running inside a QEMU microvm with the source directory shared
via 9pfs, the kernel build process fails
> Error: Could not mmap file: vmlinux
Thus, we need to run the build in a path on a local filesystem. To
support this, the Makefile now supports an `O` option, and all the build
scripts have been adjusted to make use of it as needed.
Since building in a local filesystem would ultimately discard the final
artifacts when the VM terminates, we need yet a different location for
the files we want to keep. The `IMAGESDIR` option can be used to
specify this path. This path can be on a shared filesystem, thus
saving the artifacts outside the microvm.
Building the OS is now as simple as running `make` on a Gentoo system.
Interestingly, when `make` is executed as a (grand)child process of
another `make` process, it always prints an `Entering directory ...`
message. This breaks the `make kernelversion` command, by adding
extraneous text to the output.