4. Project Sets¶
The RTEMS Source Builder supports project configurations. Project configurations can be public or private and can be contained in the RTEMS Source Builder project if suitable, other projects they use the RTEMS Source Builder or privately on your local file system.
The configuration file loader searches the macro _configdir
and by default
this is set to %{_topdir}/config:%{_sbdir}/config
where _topdir
is the
your current working direct, in other words the directory you invoke the RTEMS
Source Builder command in, and _sbdir
is the directory where the RTEMS
Source Builder command resides. Therefore the config
directory under each
of these is searched so all you need to do is create a config
in your
project and add your configuration files. They do not need to be under the
RTEMS Source Builder source tree. Public projects are included in the main
RTEMS Source Builder such as RTEMS.
You can also add your own patches
directory next to your config
directory as the %patch
command searches the _patchdir
macro variable
and it is by default set to %{_topdir}/patches:%{_sbdir}/patches
.
The source-builder/config
directory provides generic scripts for building
various tools. You can specialise these in your private configurations to make
use of them. If you add new generic configurations please contribute them back
to the project
4.1. Bare Metal¶
The RSB contains a ‘bare’ configuration tree and you can use this to add
packages you use on the hosts. For example ‘qemu’ is supported on a range of
hosts. RTEMS tools live in the rtems/config
directory tree. RTEMS packages
include tools for use on your host computer as well as packages you can build
and run on RTEMS.
The bare metal support for GNU Tool chains. An example is the
lang/gcc491
build set. You need to provide a target via the command line
--target
option and this is in the standard 2 or 3 tuple form. For example
for an ARM compiler you would use arm-eabi
or ``arm-eabihf`, and for SPARC
you would use sparc-elf:
$ cd rtems-source-builder/bare
$ ../source-builder/sb-set-builder --log=log_arm_eabihf \
--prefix=$HOME/development/bare --target=arm-eabihf lang/gcc491
RTEMS Source Builder - Set Builder, v0.3.0
Build Set: lang/gcc491
config: devel/expat-2.1.0-1.cfg
package: expat-2.1.0-x86_64-apple-darwin13.2.0-1
building: expat-2.1.0-x86_64-apple-darwin13.2.0-1
config: devel/binutils-2.24-1.cfg
package: arm-eabihf-binutils-2.24-1
building: arm-eabihf-binutils-2.24-1
config: devel/gcc-4.9.1-newlib-2.1.0-1.cfg
package: arm-eabihf-gcc-4.9.1-newlib-2.1.0-1
building: arm-eabihf-gcc-4.9.1-newlib-2.1.0-1
config: devel/gdb-7.7-1.cfg
package: arm-eabihf-gdb-7.7-1
building: arm-eabihf-gdb-7.7-1
installing: expat-2.1.0-x86_64-apple-darwin13.2.0-1 -> /Users/chris/development/bare
installing: arm-eabihf-binutils-2.24-1 -> /Users/chris/development/bare
installing: arm-eabihf-gcc-4.9.1-newlib-2.1.0-1 -> /Users/chris/development/bare
installing: arm-eabihf-gdb-7.7-1 -> /Users/chris/development/bare
cleaning: expat-2.1.0-x86_64-apple-darwin13.2.0-1
cleaning: arm-eabihf-binutils-2.24-1
cleaning: arm-eabihf-gcc-4.9.1-newlib-2.1.0-1
cleaning: arm-eabihf-gdb-7.7-1
4.2. RTEMS¶
The RTEMS Configurations found in the rtems
directory. The configurations
are grouped by RTEMS version. In RTEMS the tools are specific to a specific
version because of variations between Newlib and RTEMS. Restructuring in RTEMS
and Newlib sometimes moves libc functionality between these two parts and
this makes existing tools incompatible with RTEMS.
RTEMS allows architectures to have different tool versions and patches. The large number of architectures RTEMS supports can make it difficult to get a common stable version of all the packages. An architecture may require a recent GCC because an existing bug has been fixed, however the more recent version may have a bug in other architecture. Architecture specific patches should be limited to the architecture it relates to. The patch may fix a problem on the effect architecture however it could introduce a problem in another architecture. Limit exposure limits any possible crosstalk between architectures.
If you are building a released version of RTEMS the release RTEMS tar file will be downloaded and built as part of the build process. If you are building a tool set for use with the development branch of RTEMS, the development branch will be cloned directly from the RTEMS GIT repository and built.
When building RTEMS within the RTEMS Source Builder it needs a suitable working
autoconf
and automake
. These packages need to built and installed in their
prefix in order for them to work. The RTEMS Source Builder installs all
packages only after they have been built so if you host does not have a
recent enough version of autoconf
and automake
you first need to build them
and install them then build your tool set. The commands are:
$ ../source-builder/sb-set-builder --log=l-4.11-at.txt \
--prefix=$HOME/development/rtems/4.11 4.11/rtems-autotools
$ export PATH=~/development/rtems/4.11/bin:$PATH <1>
$ ../source-builder/sb-set-builder --log=l-4.11-sparc.txt \
--prefix=$HOME/development/rtems/4.11 4.11/rtems-sparc
Items:
- Setting the path.
If this is your first time building the tools and RTEMS it pays to add the
--dry-run
option. This will run through all the configuration files and if
any checks fail you will see this quickly rather than waiting for until the
build fails a check.
To build snapshots for testing purposes you use the available macro maps
passing them on the command line using the --macros
option. For RTEMS these
are held in config/snapshots
directory. The following builds newlib from
CVS:
$ ../source-builder/sb-set-builder --log=l-4.11-sparc.txt \
--prefix=$HOME/development/rtems/4.11 \
--macros=snapshots/newlib-head.mc \
4.11/rtems-sparc
and the following uses the version control heads for binutils
, gcc
,
newlib
, gdb
and RTEMS:
$ ../source-builder/sb-set-builder --log=l-heads-sparc.txt \
--prefix=$HOME/development/rtems/4.11-head \
--macros=snapshots/binutils-gcc-newlib-gdb-head.mc \
4.11/rtems-sparc
4.3. Patches¶
Packages being built by the RSB need patches from time to time and the RSB
supports patching upstream packages. The patches are held in a seperate
directory called patches
relative to the configuration directory you are
building. For example %{_topdir}/patches:%{_sbdir}/patches
. Patches are
declared in the configuration files in a similar manner to the package’s source
so please refer to the %source
documentation. Patches, like the source, are
to be made publically available for configurations that live in the RSB package
and are downloaded on demand.
If a package has a patch management tool it is recommended you reference the package’s patch management tools directly. If the RSB does not support the specific patch manage tool please contact the mailing list to see if support can be added.
Patches for packages developed by the RTEMS project can be placed in the RTEMS
Tools Git repository. The tools
directory in the repository has various
places a patch can live. The tree is broken down in RTEMS releases and then
tools within that release. If the package is not specific to any release the
patch can be added closer to the top under the package’s name. Patches to fix
specific tool related issues for a specific architecture should be grouped
under the specific architecture and only applied when building that
architecture avoiding a patch breaking an uneffected architecture.
Patches in the RTEMS Tools repository need to be submitted to the upstream project. It should not be a clearing house for patches that will not be accepted upstream.
Patches are added to a component’s name and in the %prep:
section the
patches can be set up, meaning they are applied to source. The patches
are applied in the order they are added. If there is a dependency make
sure you order the patches correctly when you add them. You can add any
number of patches and the RSB will handle them efficently.
Patches can have options. These are added before the patch URL. If no options are provided the patch’s setup default options are used.
Patches can be declared in build set up files.
This examples shows how to declare a patch for gdb in the lm32
architecture:
%patch add <1> gdb <2> %{rtems_gdb_patches}/lm32/gdb-sim-lm32uart.diff <3>
Items:
- The patch’s
add
command. - The group of patches this patch belongs too.
- The patch’s URL. It is downloaded from here.
Patches require a checksum to avoid a warning. The %hash
directive can be
used to add a checksum for a patch that is used to verify the patch:
%hash md5 <1> gdb-sim-lm32uart.diff <2> 77d070878112783292461bd6e7db17fb <3>
Items:
- The type of checksum, in the case an MD5 hash.
- The patch file the checksum is for.
- The MD5 hash.
The patches are applied when a patch setup
command is issued in the
%prep:
section. All patches in the group are applied. To apply the GDB
patch above use:
%patch setup <1> gdb <2> -p1 <3>
Items:
- The patch’s
setup
command. - The group of patches to apply.
- The patch group’s default options. If no option is given with the patch these options are used.
Architecture specific patches live in the architecture build set file isolating
the patch to that specific architecture. If a patch is common to a tool it
resides in the RTEMS tools configuration file. Do not place patches for tools
in the source-builder/config
template configuration files.
To test a patch simply copy it to your local patches
directory. The RSB
will see the patch is present and will not attempt to download it. Once you are
happy with the patch submit it to the project and a core developer will review
it and add it to the RTEMS Tools git repository. For example, to test a local
patch for newlib, add the following two lines to the .cfg file in
rtems/config/tools/
that is included by the bset you use:
%patch add newlib file://0001-this-is-a-newlib-patch.patch <1>
%hash md5 0001-this-is-a-newlib-patch.diff 77d070878112783292461bd6e7db17fb <2>
Items:
- The diff file prepended with
file://
to tell RSB this is a local file. - The output from md5sum on the diff file.