Validation and Error Messages¶
With multiple packages defining and overriding system configuration
settings, it is easy to introduce conflicts and violations that are
difficult to find. The newt build <target-name> command validates
the setting definitions and value overrides for all the packages in
the target to ensure a valid and consistent build. It aborts the build
when it detects violations or ambiguities between packages.
The following sections describe the error conditions that newt detects
and the error messages that it outputs. For most errors, newt also
outputs the Setting history with the order of package overrides to
help you resolve the errors.
Note: The newt target config <target-name> command also detects
errors and outputs error messages at the top of the command output. The
command outputs the package setting definitions and values after it
outputs the error messages. It is easy to miss the error messages at the
top.
Value Override Violations¶
The newt tool uses package priorities to resolve override conflicts. It uses the value override from the highest priority package when multiple packages override the same setting. Newt checks for the following override violations:
Ambiguity Violation - Two packages of the same priority override a setting with different values. And no higher priority package overrides the setting.
Priority Violation - A package overrides a setting defined by a package with higher or equal priority.
Note: A package may override the default value for a setting that it defines. For example, a package defines a setting with a default value but needs to conditionally override the value based on another setting value.
Example: Ambiguity Violation Error Message¶
The following example shows the error message that newt outputs for an ambiguity violation:
Error: Syscfg ambiguities detected:
Setting: LOG_NEWTMGR, Packages: [apps/slinky, apps/splitty]
Setting history (newest -> oldest):
LOG_NEWTMGR: [apps/splitty:0, apps/slinky:1, sys/log/full:0]
The above error occurs because the apps/slinky and apps/splitty
packages in the split image target both override the same setting with
different values. The apps/slinky package sets the sys/log/full
package LOG_NEWTMGR setting to 1, and the apps/splitty package
sets the setting to 0. The overrides are ambiguous because both are
app packages and have the same priority. The following are excerpts
of the defintion and the two overrides from the syscfg.yml files
that cause the error:
#Package: sys/log/full
syscfg.defs:
LOG_NEWTMGR:
description: 'Enables or disables newtmgr command tool logging'
value: 0
#Package: apps/slinky
syscfg.vals:
LOG_NEWTMGR: 1
#Package: apps/splitty
syscfg.vals:
LOG_NEWTMGR: 0
Example: Priority Violation Error Message¶
The following example shows the error message that newt outputs for a priority violation where a package tries to change the setting that was defined by another package at the same priority level:
Error: Priority violations detected (Packages can only override settings defined by packages of lower priority):
Package: mgmt/newtmgr overriding setting: LOG_NEWTMGR defined by sys/log/full
Setting history (newest -> oldest):
LOG_NEWTMGR: [sys/log/full:0]
The above error occurs because the mgmt/newtmgr lib package
overrides the LOG_NEWTMGR setting that the sys/log/full lib
package defines. The following are excerpts of the definition and the
override from the syscfg.yml files that cause this error:
#Package: sys/log/full
syscfg.defs:
LOG_NEWTMGR:
description: 'Enables or disables newtmgr command tool logging'
value: 0
#Package: mgmt/newtmgr
syscfg.vals:
LOG_NEWTMGR: 1
Flash Area Violations¶
For flash_owner type setting definitions, newt checks for the
following violations:
An undefined flash area is assigned to a setting.
A flash area is assigned to multiple settings.
Example: Undefined Flash Area Error Message¶
The following example shows the error message that newt outputs for an undefined flash area.
Building target targets/sim_slinky
Error: Flash errors detected:
Setting REBOOT_LOG_FLASH_AREA specifies unknown flash area: FLASH_AREA_NOEXIST
Setting history (newest -> oldest):
REBOOT_LOG_FLASH_AREA: [hw/bsp/native:FLASH_AREA_NOEXIST, sys/reboot:]
The above error occurs because the hw/bsp/native package assigns the
undefined FLASH_AREA_NOEXIST flash area to the sys/reboot
package REBOOT_LOG_FLASH_AREA setting. The following are excerpts of
the definition and the override from the syscfg.yml files that cause
the error:
#Package: sys/reboot
syscfg.defs:
REBOOT_LOG_FLASH_AREA:
description: 'Flash Area to use for reboot log.'
type: flash_owner
value:
#Package: hw/bsp/native
syscfg.vals:
REBOOT_LOG_FLASH_AREA: FLASH_AREA_NOEXIST
Example: Multiple Flash Area Assignment Error Message¶
The following example shows the error message that newt outputs when multiple settings are assigned the same flash area:
Error: Flash errors detected:
Multiple flash_owner settings specify the same flash area
settings: REBOOT_LOG_FLASH_AREA, CONFIG_FCB_FLASH_AREA
flash area: FLASH_AREA_NFFS
Setting history (newest -> oldest):
CONFIG_FCB_FLASH_AREA: [hw/bsp/native:FLASH_AREA_NFFS, sys/config:]
REBOOT_LOG_FLASH_AREA: [apps/slinky:FLASH_AREA_NFFS, sys/reboot:]
The above error occurs because the hw/bsp/native package assigns the
FLASH_AREA_NFFS flash area to the sys/config/ package
CONFIG_FCB_FLASH_AREA setting, and the apps/slinky package also
assigns FLASH_AREA_NFFS to the sys/reboot package
REBOOT_LOG_FLASH_AREA setting. The following are excerpts of the two
definitions and the two overrides from the syscfg.yml files that
cause the error:
# Package: sys/config
syscfg.defs.CONFIG_FCB:
CONFIG_FCB_FLASH_AREA:
description: 'The flash area for the Config Flash Circular Buffer'
type: 'flash_owner'
value:
# Package: sys/reboot
syscfg.defs:
REBOOT_LOG_FLASH_AREA:
description: 'The flash area for the reboot log'
type: 'flash_owner'
value:
#Package: hw/bsp/native
syscfg.vals:
CONFIG_FCB_FLASH_AREA: FLASH_AREA_NFFS
#Package: apps/slinky
syscfg.vals:
REBOOT_LOG_FLASH_AREA: FLASH_AREA_NFFS
Restriction Violations¶
For setting definitions with restrictions specified, newt checks for the following violations:
A setting with a
$notnullrestriction does not have a value.For a setting with expression restrictions, some required setting values in the expressions evaluate to false.
Example: $notnull Restriction Violation Error Message¶
The following example shows the error message that newt outputs when a
setting with $notnull restriction does not have a value:
Error: Syscfg restriction violations detected:
NFFS_FLASH_AREA must not be null
Setting history (newest -> oldest):
NFFS_FLASH_AREA: [fs/nffs:]
The above error occurs because the fs/nffs package defines the
NFFS_FLASH_AREA setting with a $notnull restriction and no
packages override the setting. The following is an excerpt of the
definition in the syscfg.yml file that causes the error:
#Package: fs/nffs
syscfg.defs:
NFFS_FLASH_AREA:
description: 'The flash area to use for the Newtron Flash File System'
type: flash_owner
value:
restrictions:
- $notnull
Example: Expression Restriction Violation Error Message¶
The following example shows the error message that newt outputs for an expression restriction violation:
Error: Syscfg restriction violations detected:
CONFIG_FCB=1 requires CONFIG_FCB_FLASH_AREA be set, but CONFIG_FCB_FLASH_AREA=
Setting history (newest -> oldest):
CONFIG_FCB: [targets/sim_slinky:1, sys/config:0]
CONFIG_FCB_FLASH_AREA: [sys/config:]
The above error occurs because the sys/config package defines the
CONFIG_FCB setting with a restriction that when set, requires that
the CONFIG_FCB_FLASH_AREA setting must also be set. The following
are excerpts of the definition and the override from the syscfg.yml
files that cause the error:
# Package: sys/config
syscfg.defs:
CONFIG_FCB:
description: 'Uses Config Flash Circular Buffer'
value: 0
restrictions:
- '!CONFIG_NFFS'
- 'CONFIG_FCB_FLASH_AREA'
# Package: targets/sim_slinky
syscfg.vals:
CONFIG_FCB: 1
Task Priority Violations¶
For task_priority type setting definitions, newt checks for the
following violations:
A task priority number is assigned to multiple settings.
The task priority number is greater than 239.
Example: Duplicate Task Priority Assignment Error Message¶
The following example shows the error message that newt outputs when a task priority number is assigned to multiple settings.
Note: The settings used in this example are not actual
apps/slinky and sys/shell settings. These settings are created
for this example because currently only one Mynewt package defines a
task_priority type setting.
Error: duplicate priority value: setting1=SHELL_TASK_PRIORITY setting2=SLINKY_TASK_PRIORITY pkg1=apps/slinky pkg2=sys/shell value=1
The above error occurs because the apps/slinky package defines a
SLINKY_TASK_PRIORITY setting with a default task priority of 1 and
the sys/shell package also defines a SHELL_TASK_PRIORITY setting
with a default task priority of 1.
Example: Invalid Task Priority Error Message¶
The following example shows the error message that newt outputs when a setting is assigned an invalid task priority value:
Error: invalid priority value: value too great (> 239); setting=SLINKY_TASK_PRIORITY value=240 pkg=apps/slinky
The above error occurs because the apps/slinky package defines the
SLINKY_TASK_PRIORITY setting with 240 for the default task priority
value.
Note: Newt does not output the Setting history with task
priority violation error messages.
Duplicate System Configuration Setting Definition¶
A setting definition must be unique. Newt checks that only one package
in the target defines a setting. The following example shows the error
message that newt outputs when multiple packages define the
LOG_NEWTMGR setting:
Error: setting LOG_NEWTMGR redefined
Note: Newt does not output the Setting history with duplicate
setting error messages.
Override of Undefined System Configuration Setting¶
The newt build command ignores overrides of undefined system
configuration settings. The command does not print a warning when you
run it with the default log level. If you override a setting and the
value is not assigned to the setting, you may have misspelled the
setting name or a package no longer defines the setting. You have two
options to troubleshoot this problem:
Run the
newt target config showcommand to see the configuration setting definitions and overrides.Run the
newt build -ldebugcommand to build your target with DEBUG log level.
Note: The newt build -ldebug command generates lots of output and we
recommend that you use the newt target config show command option.
Example: Ignoring Override of Undefined Setting Message¶
The following example shows that the apps/slinky application
overrides the LOG_NEWTMGR setting but omits the T as an example
of an error and overrides the misspelled LOG_NEWMGR setting. Here
is an excerpt from its syscfg.yml file:
#package: apps/slinky
syscfg.vals:
# Enable the shell task.
SHELL_TASK: 1
...
# Enable newtmgr commands.
STATS_NEWTMGR: 1
LOG_NEWMGR: 1
The newt target config show slinky_sim command outputs the
following WARNING message:
2017/02/18 17:19:12.119 [WARNING] Ignoring override of undefined settings:
2017/02/18 17:19:12.119 [WARNING] LOG_NEWMGR
2017/02/18 17:19:12.119 [WARNING] NFFS_FLASH_AREA
2017/02/18 17:19:12.119 [WARNING] Setting history (newest -> oldest):
2017/02/18 17:19:12.119 [WARNING] LOG_NEWMGR: [apps/slinky:1]
2017/02/18 17:19:12.119 [WARNING] NFFS_FLASH_AREA: [hw/bsp/native:FLASH_AREA_NFFS]
The newt build -ldebug slinky_sim command outputs the following
DEBUG message:
2017/02/18 17:06:21.451 [DEBUG] Ignoring override of undefined settings:
2017/02/18 17:06:21.451 [DEBUG] LOG_NEWMGR
2017/02/18 17:06:21.451 [DEBUG] NFFS_FLASH_AREA
2017/02/18 17:06:21.451 [DEBUG] Setting history (newest -> oldest):
2017/02/18 17:06:21.451 [DEBUG] LOG_NEWMGR: [apps/slinky:1]
2017/02/18 17:06:21.451 [DEBUG] NFFS_FLASH_AREA: [hw/bsp/native:FLASH_AREA_NFFS]
BSP Package Overrides Undefined Configuration Settings¶
You might see a warning that indicates your application’s BSP package is
overriding some undefined settings. As you can see from the previous
example, the WARNING message shows that the hw/bsp/native package is
overriding the undefined NFFS_FLASH_AREA setting. This is not an
error because of the way a BSP package defines and assigns its flash
areas to packages that use flash memory.
A BSP package defines, in its bsp.yml file, a flash area map of the
flash areas on the board. A package that uses flash memory must define a
flash area configuration setting name. The BSP package overrides the
package’s flash area setting with one of the flash areas from its flash
area map. A BSP package overrides the flash area settings for all
packages that use flash memory because it does not know the packages
that an application uses. When an application does not include one of
these packages, the flash area setting for the package is undefined. You
will see a message that indicates the BSP package overrides this
undefined setting.
Here are excerpts from the hw/bsp/native package’s bsp.yml and
syscfg.yml files for the slinky_sim target. The BSP package
defines the flash area map in its bsp.yml file and overrides the
flash area settings for all packages in its syscfg.yml file. The
slinky_sim target does not use the fs/nffs package which defines
the NFFS_FLASH_AREA setting. Newt warns that the hw/bsp/native
packages overrides the undefined NFFS_FLASH_AREA setting.
# hw/bsp/native bsp.yml
bsp.flash_map:
areas:
# System areas.
FLASH_AREA_BOOTLOADER:
device: 0
offset: 0x00000000
size: 16kB
...
FLASH_AREA_IMAGE_SCRATCH:
device: 0
offset: 0x000e0000
size: 128kB
# User areas.
FLASH_AREA_REBOOT_LOG:
user_id: 0
device: 0
offset: 0x00004000
size: 16kB
FLASH_AREA_NFFS:
user_id: 1
device: 0
offset: 0x00008000
# hw/bsp/native syscfg.yml
syscfg.vals:
NFFS_FLASH_AREA: FLASH_AREA_NFFS
CONFIG_FCB_FLASH_AREA: FLASH_AREA_NFFS
REBOOT_LOG_FLASH_AREA: FLASH_AREA_REBOOT_LOG