mirror of
https://github.com/crosstool-ng/crosstool-ng.git
synced 2024-12-29 17:18:53 +00:00
c009897aee
Reported-by: "Antony N. Pavlov" <antony@niisi.msk.ru> Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@anciens.enib.fr>
295 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
295 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
File.........: 8 - Internals.txt
|
|
Copyright....: (C) 2010 Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@anciens.enib.fr>
|
|
License......: Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike (CC-by-sa), v2.5
|
|
|
|
|
|
Internals /
|
|
__________/
|
|
|
|
|
|
Internally, crosstool-NG is script-based. To ease usage, the frontend is
|
|
Makefile-based.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Makefile front-end |
|
|
-------------------+
|
|
|
|
The entry point to crosstool-NG is the Makefile script "ct-ng". Calling this
|
|
script with an action will act exactly as if the Makefile was in the current
|
|
working directory and make was called with the action as rule. Thus:
|
|
ct-ng menuconfig
|
|
|
|
is equivalent to having the Makefile in CWD, and calling:
|
|
make menuconfig
|
|
|
|
Having ct-ng as it is avoids copying the Makefile everywhere, and acts as a
|
|
traditional command.
|
|
|
|
ct-ng loads sub- Makefiles from the library directory $(CT_LIB_DIR), as set up
|
|
at configuration time with ./configure.
|
|
|
|
ct-ng also searches for config files, sub-tools, samples, scripts and patches in
|
|
that library directory.
|
|
|
|
Because of a stupid make behavior/bug I was unable to track down, implicit make
|
|
rules are disabled: installing with --local would trigger those rules, and mconf
|
|
was unbuildable.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kconfig parser |
|
|
---------------+
|
|
|
|
The kconfig language is a hacked version, vampirised from the Linux kernel
|
|
(http://www.kernel.org/), and (heavily) adapted to my needs.
|
|
|
|
The list of the most notable changes (at least the ones I remember) follows:
|
|
- the CONFIG_ prefix has been replaced with CT_
|
|
- a leading | in prompts is skipped, and subsequent leading spaces are not
|
|
trimmed; otherwise leading spaces are silently trimmed
|
|
- removed the warning about undefined environment variable
|
|
|
|
The kconfig parsers (conf and mconf) are not installed pre-built, but as
|
|
source files. Thus you can have the directory where crosstool-NG is installed,
|
|
exported (via NFS or whatever) and have clients with different architectures
|
|
use the same crosstool-NG installation, and most notably, the same set of
|
|
patches.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Architecture-specific |
|
|
----------------------+
|
|
|
|
Note: this chapter is not really well written, and might thus be a little bit
|
|
complex to understand. To get a better grasp of what an architecture is, the
|
|
reader is kindly encouraged to look at the "arch/" sub-directory, and to the
|
|
existing architectures to see how things are laid out.
|
|
|
|
An architecture is defined by:
|
|
|
|
- a human-readable name, in lower case letters, with numbers as appropriate.
|
|
The underscore is allowed; space and special characters are not.
|
|
Eg.: arm, x86_64
|
|
- a file in "config/arch/", named after the architecture's name, and suffixed
|
|
with ".in".
|
|
Eg.: config/arch/arm.in
|
|
- a file in "scripts/build/arch/", named after the architecture's name, and
|
|
suffixed with ".sh".
|
|
Eg.: scripts/build/arch/arm.sh
|
|
|
|
The architecture's ".in" file API:
|
|
> the config option "ARCH_%arch%" (where %arch% is to be replaced with the
|
|
actual architecture name).
|
|
That config option must have *neither* a type, *nor* a prompt! Also, it can
|
|
*not* depend on any other config option (EXPERIMENTAL is managed as above).
|
|
Eg.:
|
|
config ARCH_arm
|
|
+ mandatory:
|
|
defines a (terse) help entry for this architecture:
|
|
Eg.:
|
|
config ARCH_arm
|
|
help
|
|
The ARM architecture.
|
|
+ optional:
|
|
selects adequate associated config options.
|
|
Note: 64-bit architectures *shall* select ARCH_64
|
|
Eg.:
|
|
config ARCH_arm
|
|
select ARCH_SUPPORTS_BOTH_ENDIAN
|
|
select ARCH_DEFAULT_LE
|
|
help
|
|
The ARM architecture.
|
|
Eg.:
|
|
config ARCH_x86_64
|
|
select ARCH_64
|
|
help
|
|
The x86_64 architecture.
|
|
|
|
> other target-specific options, at your discretion. Note however that to
|
|
avoid name-clashing, such options shall be prefixed with "ARCH_%arch%",
|
|
where %arch% is again replaced by the actual architecture name.
|
|
(Note: due to historical reasons, and lack of time to clean up the code,
|
|
I may have left some config options that do not completely conform to
|
|
this, as the architecture name was written all upper case. However, the
|
|
prefix is unique among architectures, and does not cause harm).
|
|
|
|
The architecture's ".sh" file API:
|
|
> the function "CT_DoArchTupleValues"
|
|
+ parameters: none
|
|
+ environment:
|
|
- all variables from the ".config" file,
|
|
- the two variables "target_endian_eb" and "target_endian_el" which are
|
|
the endianness suffixes
|
|
+ return value: 0 upon success, !0 upon failure
|
|
+ provides:
|
|
- mandatory
|
|
- the environment variable CT_TARGET_ARCH
|
|
- contains:
|
|
the architecture part of the target tuple.
|
|
Eg.: "armeb" for big endian ARM
|
|
"i386" for an i386
|
|
+ provides:
|
|
- optional
|
|
- the environment variable CT_TARGET_SYS
|
|
- contains:
|
|
the system part of the target tuple.
|
|
Eg.: "gnu" for glibc on most architectures
|
|
"gnueabi" for glibc on an ARM EABI
|
|
- defaults to:
|
|
- for glibc-based toolchain: "gnu"
|
|
- for uClibc-based toolchain: "uclibc"
|
|
+ provides:
|
|
- optional
|
|
- the environment variables to configure the cross-gcc (defaults)
|
|
- CT_ARCH_WITH_ARCH : the gcc ./configure switch to select architecture level ( "--with-arch=${CT_ARCH_ARCH}" )
|
|
- CT_ARCH_WITH_ABI : the gcc ./configure switch to select ABI level ( "--with-abi=${CT_ARCH_ABI}" )
|
|
- CT_ARCH_WITH_CPU : the gcc ./configure switch to select CPU instruction set ( "--with-cpu=${CT_ARCH_CPU}" )
|
|
- CT_ARCH_WITH_TUNE : the gcc ./configure switch to select scheduling ( "--with-tune=${CT_ARCH_TUNE}" )
|
|
- CT_ARCH_WITH_FPU : the gcc ./configure switch to select FPU type ( "--with-fpu=${CT_ARCH_FPU}" )
|
|
- CT_ARCH_WITH_FLOAT : the gcc ./configure switch to select floating point arithmetics ( "--with-float=soft" or /empty/ )
|
|
+ provides:
|
|
- optional
|
|
- the environment variables to pass to the cross-gcc to build target binaries (defaults)
|
|
- CT_ARCH_ARCH_CFLAG : the gcc switch to select architecture level ( "-march=${CT_ARCH_ARCH}" )
|
|
- CT_ARCH_ABI_CFLAG : the gcc switch to select ABI level ( "-mabi=${CT_ARCH_ABI}" )
|
|
- CT_ARCH_CPU_CFLAG : the gcc switch to select CPU instruction set ( "-mcpu=${CT_ARCH_CPU}" )
|
|
- CT_ARCH_TUNE_CFLAG : the gcc switch to select scheduling ( "-mtune=${CT_ARCH_TUNE}" )
|
|
- CT_ARCH_FPU_CFLAG : the gcc switch to select FPU type ( "-mfpu=${CT_ARCH_FPU}" )
|
|
- CT_ARCH_FLOAT_CFLAG : the gcc switch to choose floating point arithmetics ( "-msoft-float" or /empty/ )
|
|
- CT_ARCH_ENDIAN_CFLAG : the gcc switch to choose big or little endian ( "-mbig-endian" or "-mlittle-endian" )
|
|
- default to:
|
|
see above.
|
|
+ provides:
|
|
- optional
|
|
- the environment variables to configure the core and final compiler, specific to this architecture:
|
|
- CT_ARCH_CC_CORE_EXTRA_CONFIG : additional, architecture specific core gcc ./configure flags
|
|
- CT_ARCH_CC_EXTRA_CONFIG : additional, architecture specific final gcc ./configure flags
|
|
- default to:
|
|
- all empty
|
|
+ provides:
|
|
- optional
|
|
- the architecture-specific CFLAGS and LDFLAGS:
|
|
- CT_ARCH_TARGET_CLFAGS
|
|
- CT_ARCH_TARGET_LDFLAGS
|
|
- default to:
|
|
- all empty
|
|
|
|
You can have a look at "config/arch/arm.in" and "scripts/build/arch/arm.sh" for
|
|
a quite complete example of what an actual architecture description looks like.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kernel specific |
|
|
----------------+
|
|
|
|
A kernel is defined by:
|
|
|
|
- a human-readable name, in lower case letters, with numbers as appropriate.
|
|
The underscore is allowed; space and special characters are not (although
|
|
they are internally replaced with underscores.
|
|
Eg.: linux, bare-metal
|
|
- a file in "config/kernel/", named after the kernel name, and suffixed with
|
|
".in".
|
|
Eg.: config/kernel/linux.in, config/kernel/bare-metal.in
|
|
- a file in "scripts/build/kernel/", named after the kernel name, and suffixed
|
|
with ".sh".
|
|
Eg.: scripts/build/kernel/linux.sh, scripts/build/kernel/bare-metal.sh
|
|
|
|
The kernel's ".in" file must contain:
|
|
> an optional lines containing exactly "# EXPERIMENTAL", starting on the
|
|
first column, and without any following space or other character.
|
|
If this line is present, then this kernel is considered EXPERIMENTAL,
|
|
and correct dependency on EXPERIMENTAL will be set.
|
|
|
|
> the config option "KERNEL_%kernel_name%" (where %kernel_name% is to be
|
|
replaced with the actual kernel name, with all special characters and
|
|
spaces replaced by underscores).
|
|
That config option must have *neither* a type, *nor* a prompt! Also, it can
|
|
*not* depends on EXPERIMENTAL.
|
|
Eg.: KERNEL_linux, KERNEL_bare_metal
|
|
+ mandatory:
|
|
defines a (terse) help entry for this kernel.
|
|
Eg.:
|
|
config KERNEL_bare_metal
|
|
help
|
|
Build a compiler for use without any kernel.
|
|
+ optional:
|
|
selects adequate associated config options.
|
|
Eg.:
|
|
config KERNEL_bare_metal
|
|
select BARE_METAL
|
|
help
|
|
Build a compiler for use without any kernel.
|
|
|
|
> other kernel specific options, at your discretion. Note however that, to
|
|
avoid name-clashing, such options should be prefixed with
|
|
"KERNEL_%kernel_name%", where %kernel_name% is again tp be replaced with
|
|
the actual kernel name.
|
|
(Note: due to historical reasons, and lack of time to clean up the code,
|
|
I may have left some config options that do not completely conform to
|
|
this, as the kernel name was written all upper case. However, the prefix
|
|
is unique among kernels, and does not cause harm).
|
|
|
|
The kernel's ".sh" file API:
|
|
> is a bash script fragment
|
|
|
|
> defines the function CT_DoKernelTupleValues
|
|
+ see the architecture's CT_DoArchTupleValues, except for:
|
|
+ set the environment variable CT_TARGET_KERNEL, the kernel part of the
|
|
target tuple
|
|
+ return value: ignored
|
|
|
|
> defines the function "do_kernel_get":
|
|
+ parameters: none
|
|
+ environment:
|
|
- all variables from the ".config" file.
|
|
+ return value: 0 for success, !0 for failure.
|
|
+ behavior: download the kernel's sources, and store the tarball into
|
|
"${CT_TARBALLS_DIR}". To this end, a functions is available, that
|
|
abstracts downloading tarballs:
|
|
- CT_DoGet <tarball_base_name> <URL1 [URL...]>
|
|
Eg.: CT_DoGet linux-2.6.26.5 ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.6
|
|
Note: retrieving sources from svn, cvs, git and the likes is not supported
|
|
by CT_DoGet. You'll have to do this by hand, as it is done for eglibc in
|
|
"scripts/build/libc/eglibc.sh"
|
|
|
|
> defines the function "do_kernel_extract":
|
|
+ parameters: none
|
|
+ environment:
|
|
- all variables from the ".config" file,
|
|
+ return value: 0 for success, !0 for failure.
|
|
+ behavior: extract the kernel's tarball into "${CT_SRC_DIR}", and apply
|
|
required patches. To this end, a function is available, that abstracts
|
|
extracting tarballs:
|
|
- CT_ExtractAndPatch <tarball_base_name>
|
|
Eg.: CT_ExtractAndPatch linux-2.6.26.5
|
|
|
|
> defines the function "do_kernel_headers":
|
|
+ parameters: none
|
|
+ environment:
|
|
- all variables from the ".config" file,
|
|
+ return value: 0 for success, !0 for failure.
|
|
+ behavior: install the kernel headers (if any) in "${CT_SYSROOT_DIR}/usr/include"
|
|
|
|
> defines any kernel-specific helper functions
|
|
These functions, if any, must be prefixed with "do_kernel_%CT_KERNEL%_",
|
|
where '%CT_KERNEL%' is to be replaced with the actual kernel name, to avoid
|
|
any name-clashing.
|
|
|
|
You can have a look at "config/kernel/linux.in" and "scripts/build/kernel/linux.sh"
|
|
as an example of what a complex kernel description looks like.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adding a new version of a component |
|
|
------------------------------------+
|
|
|
|
When a new component, such as the Linux kernel, gcc or any other is released,
|
|
adding the new version to crosstool-NG is quite easy. There is a script that
|
|
will do all that for you:
|
|
scripts/addToolVersion.sh
|
|
|
|
Run it with no option to get some help.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Build scripts |
|
|
--------------+
|
|
|
|
To Be Written later...
|