adding-packages-generic.txt 20 KB

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  1. // -*- mode:doc; -*-
  2. // vim: set syntax=asciidoc:
  3. Infrastructure for packages with specific build systems
  4. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  5. By 'packages with specific build systems' we mean all the packages
  6. whose build system is not one of the standard ones, such as
  7. 'autotools' or 'CMake'. This typically includes packages whose build
  8. system is based on hand-written Makefiles or shell scripts.
  9. [[generic-package-tutorial]]
  10. +generic-package+ Tutorial
  11. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
  12. ------------------------------
  13. 01: #############################################################
  14. 02: #
  15. 03: # libfoo
  16. 04: #
  17. 05: #############################################################
  18. 06:
  19. 07: LIBFOO_VERSION = 1.0
  20. 08: LIBFOO_SOURCE = libfoo-$(LIBFOO_VERSION).tar.gz
  21. 09: LIBFOO_SITE = http://www.foosoftware.org/download
  22. 10: LIBFOO_LICENSE = GPLv3+
  23. 11: LIBFOO_LICENSE_FILES = COPYING
  24. 12: LIBFOO_INSTALL_STAGING = YES
  25. 13: LIBFOO_CONFIG_SCRIPTS = libfoo-config
  26. 14: LIBFOO_DEPENDENCIES = host-libaaa libbbb
  27. 15:
  28. 16: define LIBFOO_BUILD_CMDS
  29. 17: $(MAKE) CC="$(TARGET_CC)" LD="$(TARGET_LD)" -C $(@D) all
  30. 18: endef
  31. 19:
  32. 20: define LIBFOO_INSTALL_STAGING_CMDS
  33. 21: $(INSTALL) -D -m 0755 $(@D)/libfoo.a $(STAGING_DIR)/usr/lib/libfoo.a
  34. 22: $(INSTALL) -D -m 0644 $(@D)/foo.h $(STAGING_DIR)/usr/include/foo.h
  35. 23: $(INSTALL) -D -m 0755 $(@D)/libfoo.so* $(STAGING_DIR)/usr/lib
  36. 24: endef
  37. 25:
  38. 26: define LIBFOO_INSTALL_TARGET_CMDS
  39. 27: $(INSTALL) -D -m 0755 $(@D)/libfoo.so* $(TARGET_DIR)/usr/lib
  40. 28: $(INSTALL) -d -m 0755 $(TARGET_DIR)/etc/foo.d
  41. 29: endef
  42. 30:
  43. 31: define LIBFOO_DEVICES
  44. 32: /dev/foo c 666 0 0 42 0 - - -
  45. 33: endef
  46. 34:
  47. 35: define LIBFOO_PERMISSIONS
  48. 36: /bin/foo f 4755 0 0 - - - - -
  49. 37: endef
  50. 38:
  51. 39: define LIBFOO_USERS
  52. 40: foo -1 libfoo -1 * - - - LibFoo daemon
  53. 41: endef
  54. 42:
  55. 43: $(eval $(generic-package))
  56. --------------------------------
  57. The Makefile begins on line 7 to 11 with metadata information: the
  58. version of the package (+LIBFOO_VERSION+), the name of the
  59. tarball containing the package (+LIBFOO_SOURCE+) the
  60. Internet location at which the tarball can be downloaded from
  61. (+LIBFOO_SITE+), the license (+LIBFOO_LICENSE+) and file with the
  62. license text (+LIBFOO_LICENSE_FILES+). All variables must start with
  63. the same prefix, +LIBFOO_+ in this case. This prefix is always the
  64. uppercased version of the package name (see below to understand where
  65. the package name is defined).
  66. On line 12, we specify that this package wants to install something to
  67. the staging space. This is often needed for libraries, since they must
  68. install header files and other development files in the staging space.
  69. This will ensure that the commands listed in the
  70. +LIBFOO_INSTALL_STAGING_CMDS+ variable will be executed.
  71. On line 13, we specify that there is some fixing to be done to some
  72. of the 'libfoo-config' files that were installed during
  73. +LIBFOO_INSTALL_STAGING_CMDS+ phase.
  74. These *-config files are executable shell script files that are
  75. located in '$(STAGING_DIR)/usr/bin' directory and are executed
  76. by other 3rd party packages to find out the location and the linking
  77. flags of this particular package.
  78. The problem is that all these *-config files by default give wrong,
  79. host system linking flags that are unsuitable for cross-compiling.
  80. For example: '-I/usr/include' instead of '-I$(STAGING_DIR)/usr/include'
  81. or: '-L/usr/lib' instead of '-L$(STAGING_DIR)/usr/lib'
  82. So some sed magic is done to these scripts to make them give correct
  83. flags.
  84. The argument to be given to +LIBFOO_CONFIG_SCRIPTS+ is the file name(s)
  85. of the shell script(s) needing fixing. All these names are relative to
  86. '$(STAGING_DIR)/usr/bin' and if needed multiple names can be given.
  87. In addition, the scripts listed in +LIBFOO_CONFIG_SCRIPTS+ are removed
  88. from +$(TARGET_DIR)/usr/bin+, since they are not needed on the target.
  89. Example 1:
  90. Package divine installs shell script '$(STAGING_DIR)/usr/bin/divine-config'.
  91. So it's fixup would be:
  92. DIVINE_CONFIG_SCRIPTS = divine-config
  93. Example 2:
  94. Package imagemagick installs the following scripts:
  95. '$(STAGING_DIR)/usr/bin/{Magick,Magick++,MagickCore,MagickWand,Wand}-config'
  96. So it's fixup would be:
  97. IMAGEMAGICK_CONFIG_SCRIPTS = \
  98. Magick-config Magick++-config \
  99. MagickCore-config MagickWand-config Wand-config
  100. On line 14, we specify the list of dependencies this package relies
  101. on. These dependencies are listed in terms of lower-case package names,
  102. which can be packages for the target (without the +host-+
  103. prefix) or packages for the host (with the +host-+) prefix).
  104. Buildroot will ensure that all these packages are built and installed
  105. 'before' the current package starts its configuration.
  106. The rest of the Makefile, lines 16..29, defines what should be done
  107. at the different steps of the package configuration, compilation and
  108. installation.
  109. +LIBFOO_BUILD_CMDS+ tells what steps should be performed to
  110. build the package. +LIBFOO_INSTALL_STAGING_CMDS+ tells what
  111. steps should be performed to install the package in the staging space.
  112. +LIBFOO_INSTALL_TARGET_CMDS+ tells what steps should be
  113. performed to install the package in the target space.
  114. All these steps rely on the +$(@D)+ variable, which
  115. contains the directory where the source code of the package has been
  116. extracted.
  117. On line 31..33, we define a device-node file used by this package
  118. (+LIBFOO_DEVICES+).
  119. On line 35..37, we define the permissions to set to specific files
  120. installed by this package (+LIBFOO_PERMISSIONS+).
  121. On lines 39..41, we define a user that is used by this package (eg.
  122. to run a daemon as non-root) (+LIBFOO_USERS+).
  123. Finally, on line 43, we call the +generic-package+ function, which
  124. generates, according to the variables defined previously, all the
  125. Makefile code necessary to make your package working.
  126. [[generic-package-reference]]
  127. +generic-package+ Reference
  128. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
  129. There are two variants of the generic target. The +generic-package+ macro is
  130. used for packages to be cross-compiled for the target. The
  131. +host-generic-package+ macro is used for host packages, natively compiled
  132. for the host. It is possible to call both of them in a single +.mk+
  133. file: once to create the rules to generate a target
  134. package and once to create the rules to generate a host package:
  135. ----------------------
  136. $(eval $(generic-package))
  137. $(eval $(host-generic-package))
  138. ----------------------
  139. This might be useful if the compilation of the target package requires
  140. some tools to be installed on the host. If the package name is
  141. +libfoo+, then the name of the package for the target is also
  142. +libfoo+, while the name of the package for the host is
  143. +host-libfoo+. These names should be used in the DEPENDENCIES
  144. variables of other packages, if they depend on +libfoo+ or
  145. +host-libfoo+.
  146. The call to the +generic-package+ and/or +host-generic-package+ macro *must* be
  147. at the end of the +.mk+ file, after all variable definitions.
  148. For the target package, the +generic-package+ uses the variables defined by
  149. the .mk file and prefixed by the uppercased package name:
  150. +LIBFOO_*+. +host-generic-package+ uses the +HOST_LIBFOO_*+ variables. For
  151. 'some' variables, if the +HOST_LIBFOO_+ prefixed variable doesn't
  152. exist, the package infrastructure uses the corresponding variable
  153. prefixed by +LIBFOO_+. This is done for variables that are likely to
  154. have the same value for both the target and host packages. See below
  155. for details.
  156. The list of variables that can be set in a +.mk+ file to give metadata
  157. information is (assuming the package name is +libfoo+) :
  158. * +LIBFOO_VERSION+, mandatory, must contain the version of the
  159. package. Note that if +HOST_LIBFOO_VERSION+ doesn't exist, it is
  160. assumed to be the same as +LIBFOO_VERSION+. It can also be a
  161. revision number, branch or tag for packages that are fetched
  162. directly from their revision control system. +
  163. Examples: +
  164. +LIBFOO_VERSION = 0.1.2+ +
  165. +LIBFOO_VERSION = cb9d6aa9429e838f0e54faa3d455bcbab5eef057+ +
  166. +LIBFOO_VERSION = stable+
  167. * +LIBFOO_SOURCE+ may contain the name of the tarball of
  168. the package. If +HOST_LIBFOO_SOURCE+ is not specified, it
  169. defaults to +LIBFOO_SOURCE+. If none are specified, then
  170. the value is assumed to be
  171. +packagename-$(LIBFOO_VERSION).tar.gz+. +
  172. Example: +LIBFOO_SOURCE = foobar-$(LIBFOO_VERSION).tar.bz2+
  173. * +LIBFOO_PATCH+ may contain a space-separated list of patch file
  174. names, that will be downloaded from the same location as the tarball
  175. indicated in +LIBFOO_SOURCE+, and then applied to the package source
  176. code. If +HOST_LIBFOO_PATCH+ is not specified, it defaults to
  177. +LIBFOO_PATCH+. Note that patches that are included in Buildroot
  178. itself use a different mechanism: all files of the form
  179. +<packagename>-*.patch+ present in the package directory inside
  180. Buildroot will be applied to the package after extraction (see
  181. xref:patch-policy[patching a package]). Finally, patches listed in
  182. the +LIBFOO_PATCH+ variable are applied _before_ the patches stored
  183. in the Buildroot package directory.
  184. * +LIBFOO_SITE+ provides the location of the package, which can be a
  185. URL or a local filesystem path. HTTP, FTP and SCP are supported URL
  186. types for retrieving package tarballs. Git, Subversion, Mercurial,
  187. and Bazaar are supported URL types for retrieving packages directly
  188. from source code management systems. A filesystem path may be used
  189. to specify either a tarball or a directory containing the package
  190. source code. See +LIBFOO_SITE_METHOD+ below for more details on how
  191. retrieval works. +
  192. Note that SCP URLs should be of the form
  193. +scp://[user@]host:filepath+, and that filepath is relative to the
  194. user's home directory, so you may want to prepend the path with a
  195. slash for absolute paths:
  196. +scp://[user@]host:/absolutepath+. +
  197. If +HOST_LIBFOO_SITE+ is not specified, it defaults to
  198. +LIBFOO_SITE+.
  199. Examples: +
  200. +LIBFOO_SITE=http://www.libfoosoftware.org/libfoo+ +
  201. +LIBFOO_SITE=http://svn.xiph.org/trunk/Tremor/+ +
  202. +LIBFOO_SITE=git://github.com/kergoth/tslib.git+ +
  203. +LIBFOO_SITE=/opt/software/libfoo.tar.gz+ +
  204. +LIBFOO_SITE=$(TOPDIR)/../src/libfoo/+
  205. * +LIBFOO_SITE_METHOD+ determines the method used to fetch or copy the
  206. package source code. In many cases, Buildroot guesses the method
  207. from the contents of +LIBFOO_SITE+ and setting +LIBFOO_SITE_METHOD+
  208. is unnecessary. When +HOST_LIBFOO_SITE_METHOD+ is not specified, it
  209. defaults to the value of +LIBFOO_SITE_METHOD+. +
  210. The possible values of +LIBFOO_SITE_METHOD+ are:
  211. ** +wget+ for normal FTP/HTTP downloads of tarballs. Used by
  212. default when +LIBFOO_SITE+ begins with +http://+, +https://+ or
  213. +ftp://+.
  214. ** +scp+ for downloads of tarballs over SSH with scp. Used by
  215. default when +LIBFOO_SITE+ begins with +scp://+.
  216. ** +svn+ for retrieving source code from a Subversion repository.
  217. Used by default when +LIBFOO_SITE+ begins with +svn://+. When a
  218. +http://+ Subversion repository URL is specified in
  219. +LIBFOO_SITE+, one 'must' specify +LIBFOO_SITE_METHOD=svn+.
  220. Buildroot performs a checkout which is preserved as a tarball in
  221. the download cache; subsequent builds use the tarball instead of
  222. performing another checkout.
  223. ** +git+ for retrieving source code from a Git repository. Used by
  224. default when +LIBFOO_SITE+ begins with +git://+. The downloaded
  225. source code is cached as with the +svn+
  226. method.
  227. ** +hg+ for retrieving source code from a Mercurial repository. One
  228. 'must' specify +LIBFOO_SITE_METHOD=hg+ when +LIBFOO_SITE+
  229. contains a Mercurial repository URL. The downloaded source code
  230. is cached as with the +svn+ method.
  231. ** +bzr+ for retrieving source code from a Bazaar repository. Used
  232. by default when +LIBFOO_SITE+ begins with +bzr://+. The
  233. downloaded source code is cached as with the +svn+ method.
  234. ** +file+ for a local tarball. One should use this when
  235. +LIBFOO_SITE+ specifies a package tarball as a local filename.
  236. Useful for software that isn't available publicly or in version
  237. control.
  238. ** +local+ for a local source code directory. One should use this
  239. when +LIBFOO_SITE+ specifies a local directory path containing
  240. the package source code. Buildroot copies the contents of the
  241. source directory into the package's build directory.
  242. * +LIBFOO_DEPENDENCIES+ lists the dependencies (in terms of package
  243. name) that are required for the current target package to
  244. compile. These dependencies are guaranteed to be compiled and
  245. installed before the configuration of the current package starts. In
  246. a similar way, +HOST_LIBFOO_DEPENDENCIES+ lists the dependencies for
  247. the current host package.
  248. * +LIBFOO_INSTALL_STAGING+ can be set to +YES+ or +NO+ (default). If
  249. set to +YES+, then the commands in the +LIBFOO_INSTALL_STAGING_CMDS+
  250. variables are executed to install the package into the staging
  251. directory.
  252. * +LIBFOO_INSTALL_TARGET+ can be set to +YES+ (default) or +NO+. If
  253. set to +YES+, then the commands in the +LIBFOO_INSTALL_TARGET_CMDS+
  254. variables are executed to install the package into the target
  255. directory.
  256. * +LIBFOO_CONFIG_SCRIPTS+ lists the names of the files in
  257. '$(STAGING_DIR)/usr/bin' that need some special fixing to make them
  258. cross-compiling friendly. Multiple file names separated by space can
  259. be given and all are relative to '$(STAGING_DIR)/usr/bin'. The files
  260. listed in +LIBFOO_CONFIG_SCRIPTS+ are also removed from
  261. +$(TARGET_DIR)/usr/bin+ since they are not needed on the target.
  262. * +LIBFOO_DEVICES+ lists the device files to be created by Buildroot
  263. when using the static device table. The syntax to use is the
  264. makedevs one. You can find some documentation for this syntax in the
  265. xref:makedev-syntax[]. This variable is optional.
  266. * +LIBFOO_PERMISSIONS+ lists the changes of permissions to be done at
  267. the end of the build process. The syntax is once again the makedevs one.
  268. You can find some documentation for this syntax in the xref:makedev-syntax[].
  269. This variable is optional.
  270. * +LIBFOO_USERS+ lists the users to create for this package, if it installs
  271. a program you want to run as a specific user (eg. as a daemon, or as a
  272. cron-job). The syntax is similar in spirit to the makedevs one, and is
  273. described in the xref:makeuser-syntax[]. This variable is optional.
  274. * +LIBFOO_LICENSE+ defines the license (or licenses) under which the package
  275. is released.
  276. This name will appear in the manifest file produced by +make legal-info+.
  277. If the license appears in xref:legal-info-list-licenses[the following list],
  278. use the same string to make the manifest file uniform.
  279. Otherwise, describe the license in a precise and concise way, avoiding
  280. ambiguous names such as +BSD+ which actually name a family of licenses.
  281. This variable is optional. If it is not defined, +unknown+ will appear in
  282. the +license+ field of the manifest file for this package.
  283. * +LIBFOO_LICENSE_FILES+ is a space-separated list of files in the package
  284. tarball that contain the license(s) under which the package is released.
  285. +make legal-info+ copies all of these files in the +legal-info+ directory.
  286. See xref:legal-info[] for more information.
  287. This variable is optional. If it is not defined, a warning will be produced
  288. to let you know, and +not saved+ will appear in the +license files+ field
  289. of the manifest file for this package.
  290. * +LIBFOO_REDISTRIBUTE+ can be set to +YES+ (default) or +NO+ to indicate if
  291. the package source code is allowed to be redistributed. Set it to +NO+ for
  292. non-opensource packages: Buildroot will not save the source code for this
  293. package when collecting the +legal-info+.
  294. The recommended way to define these variables is to use the following
  295. syntax:
  296. ----------------------
  297. LIBFOO_VERSION = 2.32
  298. ----------------------
  299. Now, the variables that define what should be performed at the
  300. different steps of the build process.
  301. * +LIBFOO_CONFIGURE_CMDS+ lists the actions to be performed to
  302. configure the package before its compilation.
  303. * +LIBFOO_BUILD_CMDS+ lists the actions to be performed to
  304. compile the package.
  305. * +HOST_LIBFOO_INSTALL_CMDS+ lists the actions to be performed
  306. to install the package, when the package is a host package. The
  307. package must install its files to the directory given by
  308. +$(HOST_DIR)+. All files, including development files such as
  309. headers should be installed, since other packages might be compiled
  310. on top of this package.
  311. * +LIBFOO_INSTALL_TARGET_CMDS+ lists the actions to be
  312. performed to install the package to the target directory, when the
  313. package is a target package. The package must install its files to
  314. the directory given by +$(TARGET_DIR)+. Only the files required for
  315. 'execution' of the package have to be
  316. installed. Header files, static libraries and documentation will be
  317. removed again when the target filesystem is finalized.
  318. * +LIBFOO_INSTALL_STAGING_CMDS+ lists the actions to be
  319. performed to install the package to the staging directory, when the
  320. package is a target package. The package must install its files to
  321. the directory given by +$(STAGING_DIR)+. All development files
  322. should be installed, since they might be needed to compile other
  323. packages.
  324. * +LIBFOO_CLEAN_CMDS+, lists the actions to perform to clean up
  325. the build directory of the package.
  326. * +LIBFOO_UNINSTALL_TARGET_CMDS+ lists the actions to
  327. uninstall the package from the target directory +$(TARGET_DIR)+
  328. * +LIBFOO_UNINSTALL_STAGING_CMDS+ lists the actions to
  329. uninstall the package from the staging directory +$(STAGING_DIR)+.
  330. * +LIBFOO_INSTALL_INIT_SYSV+ and +LIBFOO_INSTALL_INIT_SYSTEMD+ list the
  331. actions to install init scripts either for the systemV-like init systems
  332. (busybox, sysvinit, etc.) or for the systemd units. These commands
  333. will be run only when the relevant init system is installed (i.e. if
  334. systemd is selected as the init system in the configuration, only
  335. +LIBFOO_INSTALL_INIT_SYSTEMD+ will be run).
  336. The preferred way to define these variables is:
  337. ----------------------
  338. define LIBFOO_CONFIGURE_CMDS
  339. action 1
  340. action 2
  341. action 3
  342. endef
  343. ----------------------
  344. In the action definitions, you can use the following variables:
  345. * +$(@D)+, which contains the directory in which the package source
  346. code has been uncompressed.
  347. * +$(TARGET_CC)+, +$(TARGET_LD)+, etc. to get the target
  348. cross-compilation utilities
  349. * +$(TARGET_CROSS)+ to get the cross-compilation toolchain prefix
  350. * Of course the +$(HOST_DIR)+, +$(STAGING_DIR)+ and +$(TARGET_DIR)+
  351. variables to install the packages properly.
  352. The last feature of the generic infrastructure is the ability to add
  353. hooks. These define further actions to perform after existing steps.
  354. Most hooks aren't really useful for generic packages, since the +.mk+
  355. file already has full control over the actions performed in each step
  356. of the package construction. The hooks are more useful for packages
  357. using the autotools infrastructure described below. However, since
  358. they are provided by the generic infrastructure, they are documented
  359. here. The exception is +LIBFOO_POST_PATCH_HOOKS+. Patching the
  360. package and producing legal info are not user definable, so
  361. +LIBFOO_POST_PATCH_HOOKS+ and +LIBFOO_POST_LEGAL_INFO_HOOKS+ are
  362. useful for generic packages.
  363. The following hook points are available:
  364. * +LIBFOO_POST_DOWNLOAD_HOOKS+
  365. * +LIBFOO_POST_EXTRACT_HOOKS+
  366. * +LIBFOO_PRE_PATCH_HOOKS+
  367. * +LIBFOO_POST_PATCH_HOOKS+
  368. * +LIBFOO_PRE_CONFIGURE_HOOKS+
  369. * +LIBFOO_POST_CONFIGURE_HOOKS+
  370. * +LIBFOO_POST_BUILD_HOOKS+
  371. * +LIBFOO_POST_INSTALL_HOOKS+ (for host packages only)
  372. * +LIBFOO_POST_INSTALL_STAGING_HOOKS+ (for target packages only)
  373. * +LIBFOO_POST_INSTALL_TARGET_HOOKS+ (for target packages only)
  374. * +LIBFOO_POST_LEGAL_INFO_HOOKS+
  375. These variables are 'lists' of variable names containing actions to be
  376. performed at this hook point. This allows several hooks to be
  377. registered at a given hook point. Here is an example:
  378. ----------------------
  379. define LIBFOO_POST_PATCH_FIXUP
  380. action1
  381. action2
  382. endef
  383. LIBFOO_POST_PATCH_HOOKS += LIBFOO_POST_PATCH_FIXUP
  384. ----------------------