README revision 1.5 1 1.5 rillig $NetBSD: README,v 1.5 2022/02/03 20:32:38 rillig Exp $
2 1.1 apb
3 1.1 apb Notes for NetBSD src/tools
4 1.1 apb
5 1.1 apb
6 1.1 apb Background
7 1.1 apb ==========
8 1.1 apb
9 1.1 apb Several programs that are part of NetBSD are also built as tools. Such
10 1.3 apb programs are typically built twice: once as a tool and once as part of
11 1.3 apb the release build. Tools are relevant only when the make(1) variable
12 1.3 apb USETOOLS=yes, which is the default for most NetBSD builds.
13 1.1 apb
14 1.1 apb Tools are built on the host platform, using the host compiler,
15 1.1 apb and will run on the host platform during the cross-build of the
16 1.1 apb remainder of NetBSD. They are built near the beginning of a NetBSD
17 1.1 apb build (e.g. "build.sh tools" or "make tools" from the top level src
18 1.1 apb directory), and installed in ${TOOLDIR}.
19 1.1 apb
20 1.1 apb Tools are executed during the main part of the build, when several
21 1.1 apb TOOL_* variables defined in src/share/mk/bsd.*.mk will refer to the
22 1.1 apb tools installed in ${TOOLDIR}.
23 1.1 apb
24 1.1 apb
25 1.1 apb Portability
26 1.1 apb ===========
27 1.1 apb
28 1.1 apb Programs that are built as tools need to be more portable than other
29 1.1 apb parts of NetBSD, because they will need to run on the host platform.
30 1.3 apb
31 1.4 apb Most tools should restrict themselves to C language features that are
32 1.5 rillig defined in C99 (ISO/IEC 9899-1999); they should avoid using C11 language
33 1.5 rillig features, such as <threads.h>, _Alignof, <uchar.h>, _Generic,
34 1.5 rillig static_assert, anonymous structures and unions.
35 1.5 rillig
36 1.5 rillig Tools may use library features such as functions, macros, and types,
37 1.5 rillig that are defined in C99 and in POSIX (IEEE Std 1003.1) (XXX year?), and
38 1.5 rillig features that are provided by the compatibility framework
39 1.5 rillig (src/tools/compat) described in a separate section below.
40 1.3 apb
41 1.3 apb If a tool attempts to use a feature that is not available on the host
42 1.3 apb platform, then the tools build will fail. This can be addressed by
43 1.3 apb changing the tool to avoid that feature, or by adding the feature to the
44 1.3 apb src/tools/compat framework. It is usually easy to add new macros or
45 1.3 apb functions to src/tools/compat, and that is usually better than adding
46 1.3 apb compatibility definitions to individual tools.
47 1.2 apb
48 1.1 apb
49 1.1 apb Compatibility framework
50 1.1 apb =======================
51 1.1 apb
52 1.1 apb src/tools/compat provides a compatibility framework for use by tools.
53 1.1 apb It installs the following components, and more:
54 1.1 apb
55 1.1 apb ${TOOLDIR}/lib/libnbcompat.a
56 1.1 apb
57 1.1 apb A library containing functions that are needed by some tools.
58 1.1 apb
59 1.1 apb ${TOOLDIR}/include/nbtool_compat.h
60 1.1 apb
61 1.1 apb A header file defining macros that are needed by some tools.
62 1.1 apb
63 1.1 apb ${TOOLDIR}/share/compat/defs.mk
64 1.1 apb
65 1.1 apb A makefile fragment, to be included by other makefiles,
66 1.1 apb to define make variables appropriate for building tools.
67 1.1 apb
68 1.1 apb Among other things, this makefile fragment automatically adds
69 1.1 apb the libnbcompat.a library to the LDADD and DPADD variables,
70 1.1 apb so that tools will be linked with that library, and adds
71 1.1 apb -I${NETBSDSRCDIR}/tools/compat and -DHAVE_NBTOOL_CONFIG_H=1 to the
72 1.1 apb HOST_CPPFLAGS variable, so that compiled programs can detect when
73 1.1 apb they are being built as tools.
74 1.1 apb
75 1.1 apb
76 1.1 apb Adapting Makefiles for use with tools
77 1.1 apb =====================================
78 1.1 apb
79 1.3 apb Makefiles under src/tools/*/Makefile should define the HOSTPROG
80 1.3 apb variable. This is typically done by tools/Makefile.hostprog,
81 1.1 apb which is directly or indirectly included by all Makefiles in
82 1.1 apb src/tools/*/Makefile.
83 1.1 apb
84 1.3 apb Makefiles in the non-tools part of the src tree can test whether or not
85 1.3 apb the HOSTPROG variable is defined, in order tell the difference between
86 1.3 apb building a tool and building part of a NetBSD release, and they may
87 1.3 apb alter their behavior accordingly.
88 1.3 apb
89 1.1 apb For example, the Makefile may conditionally refrain from compiling and
90 1.1 apb linking certain files, and the Makefile may conditionally pass macros to
91 1.1 apb the compiler via constructs like this:
92 1.1 apb
93 1.1 apb .if defined(HOSTPROG)
94 1.3 apb CPPFLAGS+= -DWITH_FEATURE_X=0 # exclude feature X from tools build
95 1.1 apb .else
96 1.3 apb CPPFLAGS+= -DWITH_FEATURE_X=1 # include feature X in release build
97 1.1 apb .endif
98 1.1 apb
99 1.1 apb Adapting Programs for use with tools
100 1.1 apb ====================================
101 1.1 apb
102 1.3 apb When a tool is being built, the C compiler should automatically be
103 1.3 apb invoked with -DHAVE_NBTOOL_CONFIG_H=1. This is done as a result of
104 1.3 apb settings in ${TOOLDIR}/share/compat/defs.mk, which should be included
105 1.3 apb from src/tools/Makefile.host, which should be included directly or
106 1.3 apb indirectly from src/tools/*/Makefile.
107 1.3 apb
108 1.3 apb A C source file can test whether the HAVE_NBTOOL_CONFIG_H macro is
109 1.3 apb defined, in order to tell whether or not it is being compiled as part of
110 1.3 apb a tool.
111 1.3 apb
112 1.3 apb In order to obtain the definitions provided by the tools compatibility
113 1.3 apb framework, almost every C source file that is built as part of a tool
114 1.3 apb should have lines like these as the first non-comment lines:
115 1.1 apb
116 1.1 apb #if HAVE_NBTOOL_CONFIG_H
117 1.1 apb #include "nbtool_config.h"
118 1.3 apb #endif
119 1.1 apb
120 1.3 apb To omit features from the tools version of a program, the program
121 1.3 apb may test the HAVE_NBTOOL_CONFIG_H macro, like this:
122 1.3 apb
123 1.3 apb #if HAVE_NBTOOL_CONFIG_H
124 1.3 apb ... code to be used when built as a tool
125 1.3 apb #else
126 1.3 apb ... code to be used when built as part of a release
127 1.3 apb #endif
128 1.3 apb
129 1.3 apb It is often preferable to use macros whose names refer to the features
130 1.3 apb that should be included or omitted. See the section on "Adapting
131 1.3 apb Makefiles for use with tools" for an example in which the Makefile
132 1.3 apb passes -DWITH_FEATURE_X=0 or -DWITH_FEATURE_X=1 to the compiler
133 1.3 apb according to whether or not the program is being built as a tool. Then
134 1.3 apb the program can use code like this:
135 1.1 apb
136 1.1 apb #if WITH_FEATURE_X
137 1.3 apb ... code to be used when FEATURE X is desired,
138 1.3 apb ... e.g. when being built as part of a release.
139 1.3 apb #else
140 1.3 apb ... code to be used when FEATURE X is not desired,
141 1.3 apb ... e.g. when being built as a tool.
142 1.3 apb #endif
143