Sortix 1.1dev ports manual
This manual documents Sortix 1.1dev ports. You can instead view this document in the latest official manual.
DEVELOPMENT(7) | Miscellaneous Information Manual | DEVELOPMENT(7) |
NAME
development — operating system development instructionsSYNOPSIS
/srcDESCRIPTION
Releases come with the system source code in /src as a git(1) repository. It can be modified, compiled and installed on the current system. The source code is built with a make(1) build system. The source code can be located in any location, if so, simply substitute /src with the real location. These instructions only apply to building the operating system from within itself, those building it from another operating system needs to follow cross-development(7) instead. If you are building a new version of the operation system where build tools have been added or changed, you first need to install the new tools. This is not needed when building the matching release. To do so, run as root:cd /src make distclean # fully clean build directory make install-build-tools # install new tools make clean-build-tools # clean for real build below
cd /src make # build new operating system in /src/sysroot make sysmerge # upgrade current operating system with /src/sysroot
Root Makefile
The /src/Makefile handles the high level build of the operating system. The important targets are:- all
- (default) Build each component in turn and install them into the sysroot.
- build-tools
- Make all build tools.
- clean
- Clean the component directories and the port source code. (clean-core, clean-ports)
- clean-build-tools
- Clean the directories of all build tools.
- distclean
- Run every clean target such that the source code is ready for distribution. (clean-builds, clean-core, clean-ports, clean-release, clean-repository, clean-sysroot)
- install-build-tools
- Install all build tools after making them.
- iso
- Create a release iso in the /src/builds directory after making all.
- mostlyclean
- Clean everything except binary packages. (clean-builds, clean-core, clean-ports, clean-release, clean-sysroot)
- presubmit
- Verify the coding style is followed (verify-coding-style), the manual pages does not have lints (verify-manual), the build tools compile (verify-build-tools), that everything compiles without warnings on all architectures (verify-build), and the system headers works in all supported configurations (verify-headers).
- release
- Make iso and construct release directory tree in /src/release suitable for online publishing.
- sortix.iso
- Make iso and place it in the current directory as sortix.iso.
- sysmerge
- Upgrade the current operating system using the sysroot after making the all target.
- sysmerge-full
- Like sysmerge but do a full operating system upgrade that uninstalls ports not present in the sysroot using --full.
- sysmerge-full-wait
- The combination of sysmerge-full and sysmerge-full-wait.
- sysmerge-wait
- Like sysmerge but delay the upgrade until the next boot using --wait.
- sysroot-base-headers
- Create the sysroot and install only the headers of the standard library and kernel into it. This is useful when bootstrapping the runtime libraries of the compiler that need to know about libc prior to building libc.
BUILD
- The platform of the current operating system. This defaults to the current machine and operating system.
HOST
- Specifies platform on which the compiled code will run.
This defaults to the current machine and operating system. This is used
when cross-compiling the operating system. When cross-compiling the
operating system, it must be set to one of
i686-sortix and
x86_64-sortix. This must be unset when
building the build tools as they run on the current operating system. The
compiler tools are prefixed with this variable if it does not match
BUILD.
OPTLEVEL
- Specifies compiler optimization options that gets added to
CFLAGS
andCXXFLAGS
. SORTIX_INCLUDE_SOURCE
- Specifies whether the source code is included in the sysroot. This must be one of no, yes or git and defaults to git if git(1) is installed and yes otherwise.
SORTIX_ISO_COMPRESSION
- Specifies the compression algorithm used in iso files. This must be one of none, gzip or xz and defaults to xz.
Components
The operating systems components, such as libc and the kernel, each have their own directory by that name. It contains a makefile that can build and install that component. This allows building and installing only that component onto the current operating system. For instance, to build and install libc, run as root:cd /src/libc make make install
SYSROOT
set to
/src/sysroot to force the compiler to locate
files there. Likewise when installing, it sets
DESTDIR
to
/src/sysroot to make it install files there.
Directories
In addition to the directories for each operating system component, there are these special directories:- /src/ports
- If this directory exists, each subdirectory can contain the source code for a port that gets built along with the rest of the system.
- /src/release
- The release root makefile target creates this directory and populates it with a directory structure suitable for online publishing of a release.
- /src/repository
- If ports are present, this directory is made when binary packages are built and they are stored here. This works as a cache so ports don't have to be rebuilt every time the operating system is. Packages are also copied from here rather than the sysroot when making releases.
- /src/sysroot
- This directory is made when building the operating system and the freshly made files are installed here. The build system uses this as the system root which forces the compiler to look here for headers and libraries. This ensures a clean bootstrap where files from the current operating system do not leak into the new system.
- /src/sysroot-overlay
- If this directory exists, it is added to the initrd of the produced iso and can contain additional system files.
Build Tools
Some components are used to build the source code and must match the versions in the source code being built. These are currently:- carray
- kblayout-compiler
- mkinitrd
- sf
- tix
Ports
You can place the source code for ports in srctix(7) format (has a tixbuildinfo(7) file) in the /src/ports directory and they will get built automatically when and installed into the sysroot when building the whole operating system. Installable binary packages are created in the /src/repository/$HOST directory using tix-build(8) directory and can be installed with tix-install(8). If an existing binary package exists in the repository, it is used instead of the building the port again. Ports are currently made using cross-development(7) as not all ports can be built natively yet. The ports system is described in detail in porting-guide(7).Patches
The source code is managed as a git(1) repository and you can make your own changes and commit them. A good approach is to set up your own local development branch and work there:git checkout -b local git add utils/hello.c git commit -m 'Add hello(1).'
git format-patch master..local
Releases
CD-ROM release of the operating system can be built with the iso root makefile target. This will build the whole operating system, if not done already, and produce a bootable iso for the current architecture in the /src/builds directory. The sortix.iso root makefile target will do the above and place a sortix.iso file in the current directory. The release root makefile target will run the iso target and prepare a /src/release directory with a directory structure and miscellaneous files suitable for a formal online release.Following Development
The following-development(7) manual page documents what needs to be done to stay updated with the latest developments. You will need to read the new version of that document whenever you update the source code.SEE ALSO
git(1), make(1), cross-development(7), following-development(7), installation(7), porting-guide(7), serial-transfer(7), upgrade(7), sysinstall(8), sysmerge(8), update-initrd(8)December 29, 2015 | Debian |