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    pfSense compile requirements for 3rd party software

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    • bmeeksB
      bmeeks @encrypt1d
      last edited by bmeeks

      @encrypt1d said in pfSense compile requirements for 3rd party software:

      @bmeeks
      Much appreciated again.

      Sounds like I was approaching this all wrong. I had simply cloned the miniupnpd tree from: https://github.com/miniupnp/miniupnp
      I ran their ./configure & make, then swapped out the binary on the firewall. So much for the quick path :)

      I now have a package built: miniupnpd-2.2.1_1,1.pkg
      It did not end up in the folder you mentioned, but was in ./work/pkg, and it doesn't have a .txz extension - so I am assuming something went wrong? Neither the make or the make package produced any errors, they ran clean.

      Is this as simple as making a compressed tarball from the .pkg file, and then ...

      pkg add -f miniupnpd-2.2.1_1,1.txz
      
      To back it out if it doesn't work?
      
      pkg delete -fy miniupnpd
      pkg install -y miniupnpd
      

      I don't think you will need the "-f -y" arguments with the delete and install commands -- at least typically you would not.

      If you have a virtual environment of some sort, I would quickly install a pfSense VM and do my install testing there. That way you don't risk corrupting your production firewall if something goes wrong.

      Also don't think zipping the package and adding the *.txz extension is mandatory.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
      • bmeeksB
        bmeeks
        last edited by bmeeks

        You have to be very careful just cloning source from GitHub when using FreeBSD and/or pfSense. That's because FreeBSD has its own binary ports tree, and the packages available there are not always the latest and greatest version from GitHub. Additionally, many times there are "adjustments" needed to the configure scripts in order for the source to properly compile on FreeBSD and for the resulting binary to run. This includes things like tweaks for specific versions of shared libraries.

        Because pfSense is a customized FreeBSD operating system, the same caveats apply when just grabbing code from GitHub for one of the add-on binary packages. You must use the source code info from the FreeBSD port. And more specifically, it must be from the FreeBSD-ports tree maintained by the pfSense team.

        FreeBSD ports don't have the source stored with the port. Instead, the Makefile will contain the name (and version) of the source.tar.gz file to download and unpack. So when you run the make command in the port's directory, that kicks off a process of downloading the source tarball, unpacking it into a ./work/ subdirectory structure in the port's directory, applying any patches available in the files subdirectory of the port, and then actually running the configure, compile, and link processes to produce the final binary.

        So if you are actually patching the C source code of the port, you will need to separately unpack your own copy of the correct source tarball for the port. You actually will want two identical copies of the unpacked source tarball in two separate subdirectories. Name one of them whatever_port.orig. That one is the master gold reference copy. Make your source code edits in the other subdirectory (the whatever_port directory). When finished editing you need to produce a patch file using diff that contains all of your changes. I run this command to do that after changing into the parent directory containing my two source code subdirectories:

        diff -ruN ./whatever_port.orig/ ./whatever_port/ > ./my_patch.diff
        

        When that is done, edit the resulting my_patch.diff file to fix up the relative directory paths. You will need to remove the leading subdirectory names that came from your local structure. I think that will make sense when you see it in the file.

        E 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
        • E
          encrypt1d @bmeeks
          last edited by

          @bmeeks
          It all makes much more sense now, thanks!

          I have a diff file now, and placed it in the ./net/miniupnpd/files folder, then ran a make from ./net/miniupnpd

          The output did not show the patch getting applied, should it?

          ===>  Applying FreeBSD patches for miniupnpd-2.2.1_1,1 from /usr/home/admin/git/FreeBSD-ports/net/miniupnpd/files
          /usr/bin/sed -i.bak -e 's|\(-lssl -lcrypto\)|$(LDFLAGS) \1|g'  /usr/home/admin/git/FreeBSD-ports/net/miniupnpd/work/miniupnpd-2.2.1/Makefile.bsd
          

          The one line of output isn't mine.

          bmeeksB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • bmeeksB
            bmeeks @encrypt1d
            last edited by bmeeks

            @encrypt1d said in pfSense compile requirements for 3rd party software:

            @bmeeks
            It all makes much more sense now, thanks!

            I have a diff file now, and placed it in the ./net/miniupnpd/files folder, then ran a make from ./net/miniupnpd

            The output did not show the patch getting applied, should it?

            ===>  Applying FreeBSD patches for miniupnpd-2.2.1_1,1 from /usr/home/admin/git/FreeBSD-ports/net/miniupnpd/files
            /usr/bin/sed -i.bak -e 's|\(-lssl -lcrypto\)|$(LDFLAGS) \1|g'  /usr/home/admin/git/FreeBSD-ports/net/miniupnpd/work/miniupnpd-2.2.1/Makefile.bsd
            

            The one line of output isn't mine.

            If it compiled without error when running the make command, it should be fine. If it can't apply a patch due to an error, the console output will show that and compilation will halt if you are doing it interactively by running make.

            So are you saying that line of screen output you posted is not from your run, or is it? That line shows it read the ./files/ subdirectory and applied all the patches it found there successfully.

            If you want to actually see the patches, look in the ./work/ subdirectory that gets created in the port's directory when you build it. In the source code folder under work you will find all of the modified and original source code files. The original ones get a special extension but the same first name.

            By the way, between build cycles it is customary to clean the build directory tree under ./work using this command:

            make clean
            

            That insures you are starting fresh each time and not using something from an earlier run. I like to always use clean between build cycles when I'm working on something new in code.

            E 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
            • E
              encrypt1d @bmeeks
              last edited by

              @bmeeks
              Hmm. I don't think it is picking up my patch - I don't see any evidence of it in ./work/miniupnpd-2.2.1. I was hoping that the output of make would show it picking up my file specifically (positive affirmation). To answer your question, that is the output of my make run, and the line that is there is coming from a post-patch action in the make file itself, and it should be there.

              This is what my diff looks like. Perhaps it is a relative path issue. Is it using the work directory as the starting point?

              diff -ruN ./miniupnpd_port.orig/miniupnpd.c ./miniupnpd_port/miniupnpd.c
              --- ./miniupnpd.c	2020-10-30 17:38:06.000000000 -0400
              +++ ./miniupnpd.c	2022-02-10 11:12:04.026100000 -0500
              @@ -2144,6 +2144,7 @@
               	}
               
               	syslog(LOG_INFO, "version " MINIUPNPD_VERSION " starting%s%sext if %s BOOTID=%u",
              +	syslog(LOG_INFO, "CUSTOM version " MINIUPNPD_VERSION " starting%s%sext if %s BOOTID=%u",
               #ifdef ENABLE_NATPMP
               #ifdef ENABLE_PCP
               	       GETFLAG(ENABLENATPMPMASK) ? " NAT-PMP/PCP " : " ",
              

              I tried 2 versions, one with all of the leading paths remove as you suggested, and this one where they were still in the diff command itself.

              My folder structure looks like this:

              ./FreeBSD-ports/net/miniupnpd (from port tree - copied patch into files subfolder within, and ran make from here)
              ./FreeBSD-ports/net/miniupnpd_port.orig (golden copy)
              ./FreeBSD-ports/net/miniupnpd_port (changed code)
              
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              • E encrypt1d referenced this topic on
              • bmeeksB
                bmeeks
                last edited by bmeeks

                I'm not sure I understand your directory structure. Or perhaps you misunderstood what I meant. I don't think your patch file has the correct directory paths.

                You will need the actual source tarball. Where did you obtain the source tarball file? Since you have built the package once already on your FreeBSD box, go look in /usr/ports/distfiles for the miniupnpd source tarball. Copy that *.tar.gz file to /tmp to make things easier.

                I do my modifications in a structure under /tmp, but you could do it under any directory you created.

                Now change to the /tmp directory and run this sequence of commands to extract the content of the source tarball into two subdirectories (renaming one of them as an intermediate step):

                tar -xvzf whatever_src.tar.gz
                mv whatever_src what_ever_src.orig
                tar -xvzf whatever_src.tar.gz
                

                In the above, "whatever_src.tar.gz" is the name of the source tarball. When you extract it, it should create a subdirectory in /tmp and put all the C source files, configure files, and other stuff needed to compile the binary in there.

                The second command in the sequence above renames the source subdirectory to the same name but appends ".orig" to show it is the reference copy of the port.

                Now make your source code changes in the other directory. When finished, run that diff command I provided earlier. Don't forget to go in and fix the relative paths.

                Now copy the resulting *.diff patch into the ./files subdirectory of miniupnpd in /usr/ports/net/miniupnpd/files.

                Run make again in the port subdirectory /usr/ports/net/miniupnpd and see what happens. It should pick up and apply your patch.

                To illustrate, I frequently build custom binaries for Suricata and Snort for use on pfSense as part of my package maintainer duties. To begin, I obtain the suricata-6.0.4.tar.gz source tarball (for the current binary as of this date). When I unzip that file in my /tmp directory it will create a subdirectory called suricata-6.0.4 in /tmp -- so the full path is /tmp/suricata-6.0.4/. And in that subdirectory it will create several other nested subdirectories containing all the files needed to build the binary. The C source code files will be in /tmp/suricata-6.0.4/src/. I rename the directory from the first extraction to suricata-6.0.4.orig, then I extract the tarball contents a second time. I then have two identical subdirectories as follows: /tmp/suricata-6.0.4.orig/ and /tmp/suricata-6.0.4/. I make my source code modifications in the /tmp/suricata-6.0.4/src directory where Suricata places the C source files. Your port may do something else with its C source files.

                Once I have my new or modified C source files ready, I run this command to create a patch file in the top-level of /tmp:

                diff -ruN ./suricata-6.0.4.orig/ ./suricata-6.0.4/ > /tmp/my_patch.diff
                

                The file header line for each file modified by the patch will contain this path: /tmp/suricata-6.0.4/src/some_file. I modify that line to read ./src/some_file, because the Suricata tarball puts all the C source code files in a ./src subdirectory inside the main suricata-6.0.4 directory. I then copy my patch file to the ./files subdirectory of the Suricata port and run make.

                Don't worry about the work directory structure you see left over after building the port. When the build process unpacks the source tarball, it will handle adding any necessary leading directory names. Your patch file just needs to reflect the paths stored within the source tarball. Or in other words, how it looks when you just unzip the tarball in some directory.

                E 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • jimpJ jimp referenced this topic on
                • E
                  encrypt1d @bmeeks
                  last edited by

                  @bmeeks
                  Just to keep things clean, I used your exact same directory structure.

                  admin@devbox:/tmp $ ls
                  miniupnpd-2.2.1		miniupnpd-2.2.1.orig
                  admin@devbox:/tmp $ diff -ruN ./miniupnpd-2.2.1.orig/ ./miniupnpd-2.2.1/ > /tmp/my_patch.diff
                  admin@devbox:/tmp $ cat /tmp/my_patch.diff 
                  diff -ruN ./miniupnpd-2.2.1.orig/miniupnpd.c ./miniupnpd-2.2.1/miniupnpd.c
                  --- ./miniupnpd-2.2.1.orig/miniupnpd.c	2020-10-30 17:38:06.000000000 -0400
                  +++ ./miniupnpd-2.2.1/miniupnpd.c	2022-02-11 07:46:28.667533000 -0500
                  @@ -1822,6 +1822,7 @@
                   
                   #ifdef TOMATO
                   	syslog(LOG_NOTICE, "version " MINIUPNPD_VERSION " started");
                  +	syslog(LOG_NOTICE, "CUSTOM version " MINIUPNPD_VERSION " started");
                   #endif /* TOMATO */
                   
                   	set_startup_time();
                  

                  I then removed the leading paths (miniupnpd has no subfolders in its tarball):

                  diff -ruN ./miniupnpd.c ./miniupnpd.c
                  --- ./miniupnpd.c       2020-10-30 17:38:06.000000000 -0400
                  +++ ./miniupnpd.c       2022-02-11 07:46:28.667533000 -0500
                  @@ -1822,6 +1822,7 @@
                  
                   #ifdef TOMATO
                          syslog(LOG_NOTICE, "version " MINIUPNPD_VERSION " started");
                  +       syslog(LOG_NOTICE, "CUSTOM version " MINIUPNPD_VERSION " started");
                   #endif /* TOMATO */
                  
                          set_startup_time();
                  

                  I then place the my_patch.diff file in file here, along with the ones miniupnpd ships with:

                  dmin@devbox:~/git/FreeBSD-ports/net/miniupnpd/files $ ls -l
                  total 20
                  -rw-r--r--  1 admin  admin   527 Feb 10 13:21 miniupnpd.c
                  -rw-r--r--  1 admin  admin  2037 Feb 10 11:02 miniupnpd.conf.sample.in
                  -rw-r--r--  1 admin  admin   558 Feb 10 11:02 miniupnpd.in
                  -rw-r--r--  1 admin  admin   400 Feb 11 07:52 my_patch.diff
                  -rw-r--r--  1 admin  admin   512 Feb 10 11:02 patch-Makefile.bsd
                  

                  I ran make clean, and make.

                  admin@devbox:~/git/FreeBSD-ports/net/miniupnpd $ make clean
                  admin@devbox:~/git/FreeBSD-ports/net/miniupnpd $ make 
                  

                  The patch isn't being merged in. I verified that by testing in a VM, and by inspection of the work directory, the source files in there are the originals except for the compiled outputs (date agrees):

                  -rwxr-xr-x  1 admin  wheel  - 177016 Feb 11 07:54 work/miniupnpd-2.2.1/miniupnpd*
                  -rw-r--r--  1 admin  admin  -   2735 Oct  5  2019 work/miniupnpd-2.2.1/miniupnpd.8
                  -rw-r--r--  1 admin  admin  -  80744 Oct 30  2020 work/miniupnpd-2.2.1/miniupnpd.c
                  -rw-r--r--  1 admin  admin  -   6490 Feb 11 07:54 work/miniupnpd-2.2.1/miniupnpd.conf
                  -rw-r--r--  1 admin  admin  -  44680 Feb 11 07:54 work/miniupnpd-2.2.1/miniupnpd.o
                  

                  So its seems the build is ignoring my patch. I have to assume I have done something wrong, but I have no idea what it could be.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • jimpJ
                    jimp Rebel Alliance Developer Netgate
                    last edited by jimp

                    The easiest thing to do when hacking on ports like this is to use the ports tree features.

                    If you have a copy of the ports tree from the same branch as pfSense (e.g. clone the copy from the RELENG_2_6_0 branch of the copy of the FreeBSD ports repo on the pfSense github account) you can do something like this:

                    $ cd ~/devel/pfsense-ports/net/miniupnpd
                    $ make extract
                    $ cd work/miniupnpd<whatever version it is>
                    <copy original file to `<name>.orig`>
                    <edit file>
                    <repeat for each file>
                    $ make makepatch
                    $ make clean
                    $ make package
                    

                    makepatch will automatically do the diff and such and create properly formatted patch files. No need to do any of that by hand.

                    Also by default the pfSense make.conf for ports sets PF_FILTER_RULES IPV6 CHECK_PORTINUSE for the options.

                    Remember: Upvote with the ๐Ÿ‘ button for any user/post you find to be helpful, informative, or deserving of recognition!

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                    bmeeksB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                    • bmeeksB
                      bmeeks @jimp
                      last edited by

                      @jimp said in pfSense compile requirements for 3rd party software:

                      The easiest thing to do when hacking on ports like this is to use the ports tree features.

                      If you have a copy of the ports tree from the same branch as pfSense (e.g. clone the copy from the RELENG_2_6_0 branch of the copy of the FreeBSD ports repo on the pfSense github account) you can do something like this:

                      $ cd ~/devel/pfsense-ports/net/miniupnpd
                      $ make extract
                      $ cd work/miniupnpd<whatever version it is>
                      <edit files>
                      $ make makepatch
                      $ make clean
                      $ make package
                      

                      makepatch will automatically do the diff and such and create properly formatted patch files. No need to do any of that by hand.

                      Also by default the pfSense make.conf for ports sets PF_FILTER_RULES IPV6 CHECK_PORTINUSE for the options.

                      Thanks @jimp! I did not know about those extra make commands. Where are these commands currently documented for 'make`? This will greatly simplify my work when updating the Suricata and Snort binaries.

                      jimpJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • jimpJ
                        jimp Rebel Alliance Developer Netgate @bmeeks
                        last edited by

                        @bmeeks said in pfSense compile requirements for 3rd party software:

                        Thanks @jimp! I did not know about those extra make commands. Where are these commands currently documented for 'make`? This will greatly simplify my work when updating the Suricata and Snort binaries.

                        I forgot a step in there but I added it in. Those are documented in the FreeBSD ports handbook IIRC or you can always look in Mk/bsd.port.mk in the ports repo (or any of the files in that part of the structure) to see what other useful make targets and features there are.

                        Remember: Upvote with the ๐Ÿ‘ button for any user/post you find to be helpful, informative, or deserving of recognition!

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                        E 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • E
                          encrypt1d @jimp
                          last edited by

                          @jimp @bmeeks
                          That did the trick! I can see my new log message when the service starts now. I was able to install and back out my patch in my VM successfully using the package manager.

                          Sadly I am still seeing this in my builds:

                          ioctl(dev, DIOCGETRULES, ...): Operation not supported by device
                          

                          Note that I am unable to build against the exact same target as my firewall (12.2 stable) - they've removed that download from all of the internet as far as I can tell. I will try 12.3 Stable next, as that is the next closest.

                          E 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • E
                            encrypt1d @encrypt1d
                            last edited by

                            Thanks to you both @jimp and @bmeeks.

                            Switching to the 12.3 stable worked well, and I also I set my repo to the v2.5.2 label to be safe.

                            I can patch, compile, install and run custom code now without errors.

                            Now on to the actual work ... lol.

                            Much appreciated.

                            E 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • E
                              encrypt1d @encrypt1d
                              last edited by

                              I do have one final question - the first time I ran make, this nice little dialog box pops up in the shell:

                              Screenshot 2022-02-11 120805.png

                              If I needed to - how can I re-invoke it? It only comes up on the first make, and then never again.

                              jimpJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • jimpJ
                                jimp Rebel Alliance Developer Netgate @encrypt1d
                                last edited by

                                @encrypt1d said in pfSense compile requirements for 3rd party software:

                                If I needed to - how can I re-invoke it? It only comes up on the first make, and then never again

                                make config

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                                E 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                • E
                                  encrypt1d @jimp
                                  last edited by

                                  @jimp
                                  I like the easy answers :)

                                  E 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • E
                                    encrypt1d @encrypt1d
                                    last edited by

                                    Well it seems I spoke too soon.

                                    Any version I build still seems to have the same issue, I thought I had it fixed, but I was wrong.

                                    Even just building what is natively in the port tree (no patches) does not work for me. Still the same errors from IOCTL.

                                    No idea how to fix this, and open to ideas. its slightly inconsistent as well, some builds have far more of these errors than others, with really no changes.

                                    ioctl(dev, DIOCGETRULES, ...): Operation not supported by device
                                    ioctl(dev, DIOCCHANGERULE, ...) PF_CHANGE_GET_TICKET: Operation not supported by device
                                    

                                    Seems like @jimp worked on something like this a LONG time ago here: https://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/2527

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • jimpJ
                                      jimp Rebel Alliance Developer Netgate
                                      last edited by

                                      There are some recent changes in pf ioctls but it should be in our tree. Usually that kind of thing would happen if the pf sources in your src tree don't match the pf sources in the tree used to build pfSense.

                                      You may need to make sure you have a copy of the FreeBSD src repo from the pfSense github in /usr/src and make sure it's on the RELENG_2_6_0 branch.

                                      Remember: Upvote with the ๐Ÿ‘ button for any user/post you find to be helpful, informative, or deserving of recognition!

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                                      E 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • E
                                        encrypt1d @jimp
                                        last edited by

                                        @jimp
                                        Since I am testing on 2.5.2 on my firewall, would I not want RELENG_2_5_2?

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • jimpJ
                                          jimp Rebel Alliance Developer Netgate
                                          last edited by

                                          Then you'd want to be using the RELENG_2_5_2 branch of the src and ports trees.

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                                          • E
                                            encrypt1d @jimp
                                            last edited by

                                            @jimp

                                            I started fresh, (Build VM is FreeBSD 12.3 Stable Feb 10) and cloned the FreeBSD source as follows:

                                            git clone -b RELENG_2_5_2 --single-branch https://github.com/pfsense/FreeBSD-src
                                            

                                            I moved the contents of the ./FreeBSD-src/ that command downloaded into /usr/src, so that the FreeBSD-src folder isn't in the path anymore.

                                            I then cloned the Ports as follows in my home dir.

                                            git clone -b RELENG_2_5_2 --single-branch https://github.com/pfsense/FreeBSD-ports
                                            

                                            The target test firewall is pfSense 2.5.2 RELEASE. Build is clean.

                                            The IOCTL errors still happen, and the application is partially functional, but my game clients don't even try to talk to it. For now, I am not changing or patching anything, just building what comes right out of the port tree for this branch. Is there a checklist somewhere for setting up an environment? I must have missed something.

                                            Could it be the kernel version difference?

                                            Installing miniupnpd-2.2.1_1,1...
                                            Newer FreeBSD version for package miniupnpd:
                                            To ignore this error set IGNORE_OSVERSION=yes
                                            - package: 1203505
                                            - running kernel: 1202504
                                            Ignore the mismatch and continue? [y/N]: y
                                            

                                            P.S. I am hoping this is a consequence of the errors, but the really weird stuff is that the version of miniupnpd that shipped with 2.5.2 looks like this from Windows (It has a settings option from the general tab, which I can manually program ports if I want to).
                                            f4a4c32c-2481-45d0-b777-44ce671a5022-Native Server-1.png

                                            The version I built straight from the port tree has a different icon, and is missing the general tab, and does not have a way to add ports. Game clients also don't even try. I'll worry about this after I finally fix the IOCTL erros if it is still happening.

                                            5f22dd02-edd4-4759-a6eb-5fde3336c0ff-image.png

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