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And add two references to it: in "Submitting patches" and in "Adding new packages to Buildroot" sections. Signed-off-by: Ricardo Martincoski <ricardo.martincoski@gmail.com> Cc: Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com> Cc: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
207 lines
7.3 KiB
Plaintext
207 lines
7.3 KiB
Plaintext
// -*- mode:doc; -*-
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// vim: set syntax=asciidoc:
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=== Tips and tricks
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[[package-name-variable-relation]]
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==== Package name, config entry name and makefile variable relationship
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In Buildroot, there is some relationship between:
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* the _package name_, which is the package directory name (and the
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name of the +*.mk+ file);
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* the config entry name that is declared in the +Config.in+ file;
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* the makefile variable prefix.
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It is mandatory to maintain consistency between these elements,
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using the following rules:
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* the package directory and the +*.mk+ name are the _package name_
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itself (e.g.: +package/foo-bar_boo/foo-bar_boo.mk+);
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* the _make_ target name is the _package name_ itself (e.g.:
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+foo-bar_boo+);
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* the config entry is the upper case _package name_ with `.` and `-`
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characters substituted with `_`, prefixed with +BR2_PACKAGE_+ (e.g.:
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+BR2_PACKAGE_FOO_BAR_BOO+);
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* the +*.mk+ file variable prefix is the upper case _package name_
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with `.` and `-` characters substituted with `_` (e.g.:
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+FOO_BAR_BOO_VERSION+).
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[[check-package]]
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==== How to check the coding style
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Buildroot provides a script in +utils/check-package+ that checks new or
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changed files for coding style. It is not a complete language validator,
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but it catches many common mistakes. It is meant to run in the actual
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files you created or modified, before creating the patch for submission.
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This script can be used for packages, filesystem makefiles, Config.in
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files, etc. It does not check the files defining the package
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infrastructures and some other files containing similar common code.
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To use it, run the +check-package+ script, by telling which files you
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created or changed:
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----
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$ ./utils/check-package package/new-package/*
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----
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If you have the +utils+ directory in your path you can also run:
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----
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$ cd package/new-package/
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$ check-package *
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----
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The tool can also be used for packages in a br2-external:
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----
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$ check-package -b /path/to/br2-ext-tree/package/my-package/*
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----
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[[testing-package]]
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==== How to test your package
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Once you have added your new package, it is important that you test it
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under various conditions: does it build for all architectures? Does it
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build with the different C libraries? Does it need threads, NPTL? And
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so on...
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Buildroot runs http://autobuild.buildroot.org/[autobuilders] which
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continuously test random configurations. However, these only build the
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`master` branch of the git tree, and your new fancy package is not yet
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there.
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Buildroot provides a script in +utils/test-pkg+ that uses the same base
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configurations as used by the autobuilders so you can test your package
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in the same conditions.
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First, create a config snippet that contains all the necessary options
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needed to enable your package, but without any architecture or toolchain
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option. For example, let's create a config snippet that just enables
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+libcurl+, without any TLS backend:
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----
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$ cat libcurl.config
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BR2_PACKAGE_LIBCURL=y
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----
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If your package needs more configuration options, you can add them to the
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config snippet. For example, here's how you would test +libcurl+ with
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+openssl+ as a TLS backend and the +curl+ program:
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----
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$ cat libcurl.config
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BR2_PACKAGE_LIBCURL=y
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BR2_PACKAGE_CURL=y
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BR2_PACKAGE_OPENSSL=y
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----
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Then run the +test-pkg+ script, by telling it what config snippet to use
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and what package to test:
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----
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$ ./utils/test-pkg -c libcurl.config -p libcurl
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----
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By default, +test-pkg+ will build your package against a subset of the
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toolchains used by the autobuilders, which has been selected by the
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Buildroot developers as being the most useful and representative
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subset. If you want to test all toolchains, pass the +-a+ option. Note
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that in any case, internal toolchains are excluded as they take too
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long to build.
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The output lists all toolchains that are tested and the corresponding
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result (excerpt, results are fake):
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----
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$ ./utils/test-pkg -c libcurl.config -p libcurl
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armv5-ctng-linux-gnueabi [ 1/11]: OK
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armv7-ctng-linux-gnueabihf [ 2/11]: OK
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br-aarch64-glibc [ 3/11]: SKIPPED
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br-arcle-hs38 [ 4/11]: SKIPPED
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br-arm-basic [ 5/11]: FAILED
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br-arm-cortex-a9-glibc [ 6/11]: OK
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br-arm-cortex-a9-musl [ 7/11]: FAILED
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br-arm-cortex-m4-full [ 8/11]: OK
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br-arm-full [ 9/11]: OK
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br-arm-full-nothread [10/11]: FAILED
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br-arm-full-static [11/11]: OK
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11 builds, 2 skipped, 2 build failed, 1 legal-info failed
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----
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The results mean:
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* `OK`: the build was successful.
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* `SKIPPED`: one or more configuration options listed in the config
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snippet were not present in the final configuration. This is due to
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options having dependencies not satisfied by the toolchain, such as
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for example a package that +depends on BR2_USE_MMU+ with a noMMU
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toolchain. The missing options are reported in +missing.config+ in
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the output build directory (+~/br-test-pkg/TOOLCHAIN_NAME/+ by
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default).
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* `FAILED`: the build failed. Inspect the +logfile+ file in the output
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build directory to see what went wrong:
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** the actual build failed,
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** the legal-info failed,
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** one of the preliminary steps (downloading the config file, applying
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the configuration, running `dirclean` for the package) failed.
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When there are failures, you can just re-run the script with the same
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options (after you fixed your package); the script will attempt to
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re-build the package specified with +-p+ for all toolchains, without
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the need to re-build all the dependencies of that package.
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The +test-pkg+ script accepts a few options, for which you can get some
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help by running:
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----
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$ ./utils/test-pkg -h
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----
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[[github-download-url]]
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==== How to add a package from GitHub
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Packages on GitHub often don't have a download area with release tarballs.
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However, it is possible to download tarballs directly from the repository
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on GitHub. As GitHub is known to have changed download mechanisms in the
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past, the 'github' helper function should be used as shown below.
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------------------------
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# Use a tag or a full commit ID
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FOO_VERSION = v1.0
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FOO_SITE = $(call github,<user>,<package>,$(FOO_VERSION))
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------------------------
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.Notes
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- The FOO_VERSION can either be a tag or a commit ID.
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- The tarball name generated by github matches the default one from
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Buildroot (e.g.: +foo-f6fb6654af62045239caed5950bc6c7971965e60.tar.gz+),
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so it is not necessary to specify it in the +.mk+ file.
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- When using a commit ID as version, you should use the full 40 hex characters.
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If the package you wish to add does have a release section on GitHub, the
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maintainer may have uploaded a release tarball, or the release may just point
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to the automatically generated tarball from the git tag. If there is a
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release tarball uploaded by the maintainer, we prefer to use that since it
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may be slightly different (e.g. it contains a configure script so we don't
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need to do AUTORECONF).
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You can see on the release page if it's an uploaded tarball or a git tag:
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image::github_hash_mongrel2.png[]
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- If it looks like the image above then it was uploaded by the
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maintainer and you should use that link (in that example:
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'mongrel2-v1.9.2.tar.bz2') to specify +FOO_SITE+, and not use the
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'github' helper.
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- On the other hand, if there's is *only* the "Source code" link, then
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it's an automatically generated tarball and you should use the
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'github' helper function.
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