docs/overview.txt
author "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@anciens.enib.fr>
Fri Jun 01 16:55:33 2007 +0000 (2007-06-01)
changeset 148 567f1673d59d
parent 136 22b5ef41df97
child 150 9fd545714174
permissions -rw-r--r--
Introduce the notion of tols facilities (none so far, sstrip coming right away...).
     1 File.........: overview.txt
     2 Content......: Overview of how ct-ng works.
     3 Copyrigth....: (C) 2007 Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@anciens.enib.fr>
     4 License......: see COPYING in the root of this package
     5 
     6 ________________
     7                /
     8 Introduction  /
     9 _____________/
    10 
    11 crosstool-NG aims at building toolchains. Toolchains are an essential component
    12 in a software development project. It will compile, assemble and link the code
    13 that is being developped. Some pieces of the toolchain will eventually end up
    14 in the resulting binary/ies: static libraries are but an example.
    15 
    16 So, a toolchain is a very sensitive piece of software, as any bug in one of the
    17 components, or a poorly configured component, can lead to execution problems,
    18 ranging from poor performance, to applications ending unexpectedly, to
    19 mis-behaving software (which more than often is hard to detect), to hardware
    20 damage, or even to human risks (which is more than regretable).
    21 
    22 Toolchains are made of different piece of software, each being quite complex
    23 and requiring specially crafted options to build and work seamlessly. This
    24 is usually not that easy, even in the not-so-trivial case of native toolchains.
    25 The work reaches a higher degree of complexity when it comes to cross-
    26 compilation, where it can become quite a nightmare...
    27 
    28 Some cross-toolchains exist on the internet, and can be used for general
    29 development, but they have a number of limitations:
    30   - they can be general purpose, in that they are configured for the majority:
    31     no optimisation for your specific target,
    32   - they can be prepared for a specific target and thus are not easy to use,
    33     nor optimised for, or even supporting your target,
    34   - they often are using ageing components (compiler, C library, etc...) not
    35     supporting special features of your shiny new processor;
    36 On the other side, these toolchain offer some advantages:
    37   - they are ready to use and quite easy to install and setup,
    38   - they are proven if used by a wide community.
    39 
    40 But once you want to get all the juice out of your specific hardware, you will
    41 want to build your own toolchain. This is where crosstool-ng comes into play.
    42 
    43 There are also a number of tools that builds toolchains for specific needs,
    44 which is not really scalable. Examples are:
    45   - buildroot (buildroot.uclibc.org) whose main puprpose is to build root file
    46     systems, hence the name. But once you have your toolchain with buildroot,
    47     part of it is installed in the root-to-be, so if you want to build a whole
    48     new root, you either have to save the existing one as a template and
    49     restore it later, or restart again from scratch. This is not convenient,
    50   - ptxdist (www.pengutronix.de/software/ptxdist), whose purpose is very
    51     similar to buildroot,
    52   - other projects (openembeded.org for example), which is again used to
    53     build root file systems.
    54 
    55 crosstool-NG is really targetted at building toolchains, and only toolchains.
    56 It is then up to you to use it the way you want.
    57 
    58 ___________
    59           /
    60 History  /
    61 ________/
    62 
    63 crosstool was first 'conceived' by Dan Kegel, which offered it to the community,
    64 as a set of scripts, a repository of patches, and some pre-configured, general
    65 purpose setup files to be used to configure crosstool. This is available at
    66 www.kegel.com/crosstool, and the subversion repository is hosted on google at
    67 http://code.google.com/p/crosstool/.
    68 
    69 At the time of writing, crosstool only supports building with one C library,
    70 namely glibc, and one C compiler, gcc; it is cripled with historical support
    71 for legacy components, and is some kind of a mess to upgrade. Also, submited
    72 patches take a looong time before they are integrated mainline.
    73 
    74 I once managed to add support for uClibc-based toolchains, but it did not make
    75 into mainline, mostly because I don't have time to port the patch forward to
    76 the new versions, due in part to the big effort it was taking.
    77 
    78 So I decided to clean up crosstool in the state it was, re-order the things
    79 in place, and add appropriate support for what I needed, that is uClibc
    80 support.
    81 
    82 The only option left to me was rewrite crosstool from scratch. I decided to go
    83 this way, and name the new implementation ct-ng, standing for crosstool Next
    84 Generation, as many other comunity projects do, and as a wink at the TV series
    85 "Star Trek: The Next Generation". ;-)
    86 
    87 _____________
    88             /
    89 Operation  /
    90 __________/
    91 
    92 ct-ng is configured by a configurator presenting a menu-stuctured set of
    93 options. These options let you specify the way you want your toolchain built,
    94 where you want it installed, what architecture and specific processor it
    95 will support, the version of the components you want to use, etc... The
    96 value for those options are then stored in a configuration file.
    97 
    98 To enter the menu, type:
    99   make menuconfig
   100 
   101 To build the so-configured target, simply type:
   102   make
   103 
   104 This will use the above configuration to retrieve, extract and patch the
   105 components, build, install and eventually test your newly built toolchain.
   106 
   107 You are then free to add the toolchain /bin directory in your PATH to use
   108 it at will.
   109 
   110 In any case, you can get some terse help. Just type:
   111   make help
   112 
   113 
   114 Stoping and restarting a build |
   115 -------------------------------*
   116 
   117 If you want to stop the build after a step you are debugging, you can pass the
   118 variable STOP to make:
   119   make STOP=some_step
   120 
   121 Conversely, if you want to restart a build at a specific step you are
   122 debugging, you can pass the RESTART variable to make:
   123   make RESTART=some_step
   124 
   125 The list of steps is, in order of appearence in the build process:
   126   - libc_check_config
   127   - kernel_check_config
   128   - kernel_headers
   129   - binutils
   130   - cc_core_pass_1
   131   - libc_headers
   132   - libc_start_files
   133   - cc_core_pass_2
   134   - libfloat
   135   - libc
   136   - cc
   137   - libc_finish
   138   - tools
   139   - debug
   140 
   141 Alternatively, you can call make with the name of a step to just do that step:
   142   make libc_headers
   143 is equivalent to:
   144   make RESTART=libs_headers STOP=libc_headers
   145 
   146 The shortcuts -step_name and step_name- allow to respectively stop or restart
   147 at that step. Thus:
   148   make -libc_headers        and:    make libc_headers-
   149 are equivalent to:
   150   make STOP=libc_headers    and:    make RESTART=libc_headers
   151 
   152 ____________________________
   153                            /
   154 Configuring crosstool-NG  /
   155 _________________________/
   156 
   157 crosstool-NG is configured the same way you configure your Linux kernel: by
   158 using a curses-based menu. It is assumed you now how to handle this.
   159 
   160 Almost every config item has a help entry. Read it carefully.
   161 
   162 String and number options can refer to environment variables. In such a case,
   163 you  must use the shell syntax: ${VAR}. No such option is ever needed by make.
   164 You need to neither single- nor double-quote the string options.
   165 
   166 There are three environment variablea that are computed by crosstool-NG, and
   167 that you can use:
   168 
   169 CT_TARGET:
   170   It represents the target triplet you are building for. You can use it for
   171   example in the installation/prefix directory, such as:
   172     /opt/x-tools/${CT_TARGET}
   173 
   174 CT_TOP_DIR:
   175   The top directory where crosstool-NG sits. You shouldn't need it in most
   176   cases. There is one case where you may need it: if you have local patches
   177   and you store them in your copy of crosstool-NG, you can refer to them
   178   by using CT_TOP_DIR, such as:
   179     ${CT_TOP_DIR}/patches.myproject
   180 
   181 CT_VERSION:
   182   The version of crosstool-NG you are using. Not much help for you, but it's
   183   there if you need it.
   184 
   185 
   186 Interesting config options |
   187 ---------------------------*
   188 
   189 CT_LOCAL_TARBALLS_DIR:
   190   If you already have sone tarballs in a direcotry, enter it here. That will
   191   speed up the retrieving phase, where crosstool-ng would otherwise download
   192   those tarballs.
   193 
   194 CT_PREFIX_DIR:
   195   This is where the toolchain will be installed in (and for now, where it
   196   will run from).
   197 
   198 CT_LOG_FILE:
   199   The file where *all* log messages will go. Keep the default, in goes in
   200   ${CT_PREFIX_DIR}/${CT_TARGET}.log
   201 
   202 CT_TARGET_VENDOR:
   203   An identifier for your toolchain, will take place in the vendor part of the
   204   target triplet. It shall *not* contain spaces or dashes. Usually, keep it
   205   to a one-word string, or use underscores to separate words if you need.
   206   Avoid dots, commas, and special characters.
   207 
   208 CT_TARGET_ALIAS:
   209   An alias for the toolchian. It will be used as a prefix to the toolchain
   210   tools. For example, you will have ${CT_TARGET_ALIAS}-gcc
   211 
   212 ___________________
   213                   /
   214 Toolchain types  /
   215 ________________/
   216 
   217 There are four kinds of toolchains you could encounter.
   218 
   219 First off, you must understand the following: when it comes to compilers there
   220 are up to four machines involved:
   221   1) the machine configuring the toolchain components: the config machine
   222   2) the machine building the toolchain components:    the build machine
   223   3) the machine running the toolchain:                the host machine
   224   4) the machine the toolchain is building for:        the target machine
   225 
   226 We can most of the time assume that the config machine and the build machine
   227 are the same. Most of the time, this will be true. The only time it isn't
   228 is if you're using distributed compilation (such as distcc). Let's forget
   229 this for the sake of simplicity.
   230 
   231 So we're left with three machines:
   232  - build
   233  - host
   234  - target
   235 
   236 Any toolchain will involve those three machines. You can be as pretty sure of
   237 this as "2 and 2 are 4". Here is how they come into play:
   238 
   239 1) build == host == target
   240     This is a plain native toolchain, targetting the exact same machine as the
   241     one it is built on, and running again on this exact same machine. You have
   242     to build such a toolchain when you want to use an updated component, such
   243     as a newer gcc for example.
   244     ct-ng calls it "native".
   245 
   246 2) build == host != target
   247     This is a classic cross-toolchain, which is expected to be run on the same
   248     machine it is compiled on, and generate code to run on a second machine,
   249     the target.
   250     ct-ng calls it "cross".
   251 
   252 3) build != host == target
   253     Such a toolchain is also a native toolchain, as it targets the same machine
   254     as it runs on. But it is build on another machine. You want such a
   255     toolchain when porting to a new architecture, or if the build machine is
   256     much faster than the host machine.
   257     ct-ng calls it "cross-native".
   258 
   259 4) build != host != target
   260     This one is called a canadian-toolchain (*), and is tricky. The three
   261     machines in play are different. You might want such a toolchain if you
   262     have a fast build machine, but the users will use it on another machine,
   263     and will produce code to run on a third machine.
   264     ct-ng calls it "canadian".
   265 
   266 ct-ng can build all these kinds of toolchains (or is aiming at it, anyway!)
   267 
   268 (*) The term Canadian Cross came about because at the time that these issues
   269     were all being hashed out, Canada had three national political parties.
   270     http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross_compiler
   271 
   272 _____________
   273             /
   274 Internals  /
   275 __________/
   276 
   277 Internally, crosstool-NG is script-based. To ease usage, the frontend is
   278 Makefile-based.
   279 
   280 Makefile front-end |
   281 -------------------*
   282 
   283 The Makefile defines a set of rules to call each action. You can get the
   284 list, along with some terse description, by typing "make help" in your
   285 favourite command line.
   286 
   287 The Makefile sets the version variable from the version file in ${CT_TOP_DIR}
   288 which is then available to others in the CT_VERSION environment variable.
   289 
   290 The kconfig language is a hacked version, vampirised from the toybox project
   291 by Rob LANDLEY (http://www.landley.net/code/toybox/), adapted to my needs.
   292