kumquat-buildroot/docs/manual/adding-packages-cmaketargets.txt
Thomas Petazzoni e174184807 doc: update GENTARGETS/AUTOTARGETS/CMAKETARGETS on the number of arguments
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2011-11-13 21:30:33 +01:00

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Infrastructure for CMake-based packages
---------------------------------------
[[cmaketargets-tutorial]]
+CMAKETARGETS+ tutorial
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
First, let's see how to write a +.mk+ file for a CMake-based package,
with an example :
------------------------
01: #############################################################
02: #
03: # libfoo
04: #
05: #############################################################
06: LIBFOO_VERSION = 1.0
07: LIBFOO_SOURCE = libfoo-$(LIBFOO_VERSION).tar.gz
08: LIBFOO_SITE = http://www.foosoftware.org/download
09: LIBFOO_INSTALL_STAGING = YES
10: LIBFOO_INSTALL_TARGET = YES
11: LIBFOO_CONF_OPT = -DBUILD_DEMOS=ON
12: LIBFOO_DEPENDENCIES = libglib2 host-pkg-config
13:
14: $(eval $(call CMAKETARGETS))
------------------------
On line 6, we declare the version of the package.
On line 7 and 8, we declare the name of the tarball and the location
of the tarball on the Web. Buildroot will automatically download the
tarball from this location.
On line 9, we tell Buildroot to install the package to the staging
directory. The staging directory, located in +output/staging/+
is the directory where all the packages are installed, including their
development files, etc. By default, packages are not installed to the
staging directory, since usually, only libraries need to be installed in
the staging directory: their development files are needed to compile
other libraries or applications depending on them. Also by default, when
staging installation is enabled, packages are installed in this location
using the +make install+ command.
On line 10, we tell Buildroot to also install the package to the
target directory. This directory contains what will become the root
filesystem running on the target. Usually, we try not to install header
files and to install stripped versions of the binary. By default, target
installation is enabled, so in fact, this line is not strictly
necessary. Also by default, packages are installed in this location
using the +make install+ command.
On line 11, we tell Buildroot to pass custom options to CMake when it is
configuring the package.
On line 12, we declare our dependencies, so that they are built
before the build process of our package starts.
Finally, on line line 14, we invoke the +CMAKETARGETS+
macro that generates all the Makefile rules that actually allows the
package to be built.
[[cmaketargets-reference]]
+CMAKETARGETS+ reference
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The main macro of the CMake package infrastructure is
+CMAKETARGETS+. It has the same number of arguments and the same
semantic as the +GENTARGETS+ macro, which is the main macro of the
generic package infrastructure. For CMake packages, the ability to
have target and host packages is also available.
Just like the generic infrastructure, the CMake infrastructure works
by defining a number of variables before calling the +CMAKETARGETS+
macro.
First, all the package metadata information variables that exist in
the generic infrastructure also exist in the CMake infrastructure:
+LIBFOO_VERSION+, +LIBFOO_SOURCE+, +LIBFOO_PATCH+, +LIBFOO_SITE+,
+LIBFOO_SUBDIR+, +LIBFOO_DEPENDENCIES+, +LIBFOO_INSTALL_STAGING+,
+LIBFOO_INSTALL_TARGET+.
A few additional variables, specific to the CMake infrastructure, can
also be defined. Many of them are only useful in very specific cases,
typical packages will therefore only use a few of them.
* +LIBFOO_SUBDIR+ may contain the name of a subdirectory inside the
package that contains the main CMakeLists.txt file. This is useful,
if for example, the main CMakeLists.txt file is not at the root of
the tree extracted by the tarball. If +HOST_LIBFOO_SUBDIR+ is not
specified, it defaults to +LIBFOO_SUBDIR+.
* +LIBFOO_CONF_ENV+, to specify additional environment variables to
pass to CMake. By default, empty.
* +LIBFOO_CONF_OPT+, to specify additional configure options to pass
to CMake. By default, empty.
* +LIBFOO_MAKE+, to specify an alternate +make+ command. This is
typically useful when parallel make is enabled in the configuration
(using +BR2_JLEVEL+) but that this feature should be disabled for
the given package, for one reason or another. By default, set to
+$(MAKE)+. If parallel building is not supported by the package,
then it should be set to +LIBFOO_MAKE=$(MAKE1)+.
* +LIBFOO_MAKE_ENV+, to specify additional environment variables to
pass to make in the build step. These are passed before the +make+
command. By default, empty.
* +LIBFOO_MAKE_OPT+, to specify additional variables to pass to make
in the build step. These are passed after the +make+ command. By
default, empty.
* +LIBFOO_INSTALL_STAGING_OPT+ contains the make options used to
install the package to the staging directory. By default, the value
is +DESTDIR=$$(STAGING_DIR) install+, which is correct for most
CMake packages. It is still possible to override it.
* +LIBFOO_INSTALL_TARGET_OPT+ contains the make options used to
install the package to the target directory. By default, the value
is +DESTDIR=$$(TARGET_DIR) install+. The default value is correct
for most CMake packages, but it is still possible to override it if
needed.
* +LIBFOO_CLEAN_OPT+ contains the make options used to clean the
package. By default, the value is +clean+.
With the CMake infrastructure, all the steps required to build and
install the packages are already defined, and they generally work well
for most CMake-based packages. However, when required, it is still
possible to customize what is done in any particular step:
* By adding a post-operation hook (after extract, patch, configure,
build or install). See the reference documentation of the generic
infrastructure for details.
* By overriding one of the steps. For example, even if the CMake
infrastructure is used, if the package +.mk+ file defines its own
+LIBFOO_CONFIGURE_CMDS+ variable, it will be used instead of the
default CMake one. However, using this method should be restricted
to very specific cases. Do not use it in the general case.