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[Solved]Find installed packages where filter-lto was applied
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costel78
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PostPosted: Fri Jul 12, 2024 4:01 pm    Post subject: [Solved]Find installed packages where filter-lto was applied Reply with quote

Hello,
I want to find out all packages installed on my system on which filter-lto was applied in ebuild. So far, came with this:

Code:
for f in `emerge -pe world | grep 'ebuild\|binary' | gawk '{print $4;}'` ; do
  n=`emerge --info =$f | grep -E '\bCFLAGS' --count` ;
  if [[ $n -gt 1 ]]; then
    m=`emerge --info =$f | tail -n 5 | grep CFLAGS | grep lto --count`
    if [[ $m -eq 0 ]]; then
      printf '%-65s: %s\t%s\n' "$f" "$n" "$m"
    fi
  fi
done


Instead of emerge -pe world | grep 'ebuild\|binary' | gawk '{print $4;} qlist -I could be use, but I needed exact version/slot.
Is there a better/faster way to archive this ?
Thank you!
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Last edited by costel78 on Fri Jul 12, 2024 5:06 pm; edited 1 time in total
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Hu
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PostPosted: Fri Jul 12, 2024 4:10 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

What about grep --files-without-match -e lto /var/db/pkg/*/*/CFLAGS? The resulting path will have the version embedded in it.
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grknight
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PostPosted: Fri Jul 12, 2024 4:18 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

costel78 wrote:
qlist -I could be use, but I needed exact version/slot.

Not withstanding Hu's answer, FWIW, if you need a version from qlist, add -v as it means version and not verbose.
e.g. qlist -Iv or qlist -IvS (for slot and version)
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Goverp
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PostPosted: Fri Jul 12, 2024 4:59 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Code:
grep -Rl filter-lto /var/db/pkg

You get a spurious /var/db/pkg on the front, and foo.ebuild on the back, both of which can be trimmed in various ways (exercise left to the reader).

Strictly, it's a list of ebuilds containing filter-lto, and if it's applied conditionally, it will still count even if not actually in effect.
It's faster if you have ripgrep:
Code:
rg -g '*.ebuild' -l filter-lto /var/db/pkg

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costel78
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PostPosted: Fri Jul 12, 2024 5:05 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hu wrote:
What about grep --files-without-match -e lto /var/db/pkg/*/*/CFLAGS? The resulting path will have the version embedded in it.

Using flto instead of just lto is the faster way.

Thank everyone for support!
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Hu
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PostPosted: Fri Jul 12, 2024 5:22 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Goverp wrote:
Code:
grep -Rl filter-lto /var/db/pkg
You get a spurious /var/db/pkg on the front, and foo.ebuild on the back, both of which can be trimmed in various ways (exercise left to the reader).

Strictly, it's a list of ebuilds containing filter-lto, and if it's applied conditionally, it will still count even if not actually in effect.
I think this will also miss packages where the filter-lto runs in an eclass. I see that the eclasses for meson, qt5-build, qt6-build, and toolchain all have the ability to filter-lto, without the corresponding ebuild containing that string. The meson one appears to be removing it as a side effect of telling Meson to enable LTO in some other way, so missing it is fine there.
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logrusx
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PostPosted: Fri Jul 12, 2024 6:54 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hu wrote:
What about grep --files-without-match -e lto /var/db/pkg/*/*/CFLAGS? The resulting path will have the version embedded in it.


man grep wrote:
-L, --files-without-match
Suppress normal output; instead print the name of each input file from which no output would normally have been printed.


This would rather match files that do not contain the search string. OP wants to find packages that contain it. Or am I misunderstanding both of you?

It matched all packages of my install and that's expected since I don't have anything related to lto.

Best Regards,
Georgi
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Hu
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PostPosted: Fri Jul 12, 2024 7:18 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

OP wants to find installed packages which used filter-lto. I took it as unstated that he set CFLAGS="-flto" (and presumably other, not relevant here, options). Therefore, every package which uses filter-lto should fail to have -flto in CFLAGS, because it was filtered; and every package which does not use filter-lto will have -flto in CFLAGS (because OP put it in make.conf, and without a call to filter-lto, it will be passed through the environment). Printing every package which fails to match lto in CFLAGS should find exactly those that actively removed it, which is the set the OP requested.
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logrusx
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PostPosted: Sat Jul 13, 2024 7:43 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hu wrote:
OP wants to find installed packages which used filter-lto. I took it as unstated that he set CFLAGS="-flto" (and presumably other, not relevant here, options). Therefore, every package which uses filter-lto should fail to have -flto in CFLAGS, because it was filtered; and every package which does not use filter-lto will have -flto in CFLAGS (because OP put it in make.conf, and without a call to filter-lto, it will be passed through the environment). Printing every package which fails to match lto in CFLAGS should find exactly those that actively removed it, which is the set the OP requested.


Thanks for the explanation!

Best Regards,
Georgi
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