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diff --git a/poky/bitbake/doc/bitbake-user-manual/bitbake-user-manual-intro.rst b/poky/bitbake/doc/bitbake-user-manual/bitbake-user-manual-intro.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..77dc9668a --- /dev/null +++ b/poky/bitbake/doc/bitbake-user-manual/bitbake-user-manual-intro.rst @@ -0,0 +1,651 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: CC-BY-2.5 + +======== +Overview +======== + +| + +Welcome to the BitBake User Manual. This manual provides information on +the BitBake tool. The information attempts to be as independent as +possible regarding systems that use BitBake, such as OpenEmbedded and +the Yocto Project. In some cases, scenarios or examples within the +context of a build system are used in the manual to help with +understanding. For these cases, the manual clearly states the context. + +.. _intro: + +Introduction +============ + +Fundamentally, BitBake is a generic task execution engine that allows +shell and Python tasks to be run efficiently and in parallel while +working within complex inter-task dependency constraints. One of +BitBake's main users, OpenEmbedded, takes this core and builds embedded +Linux software stacks using a task-oriented approach. + +Conceptually, BitBake is similar to GNU Make in some regards but has +significant differences: + +- BitBake executes tasks according to provided metadata that builds up + the tasks. Metadata is stored in recipe (``.bb``) and related recipe + "append" (``.bbappend``) files, configuration (``.conf``) and + underlying include (``.inc``) files, and in class (``.bbclass``) + files. The metadata provides BitBake with instructions on what tasks + to run and the dependencies between those tasks. + +- BitBake includes a fetcher library for obtaining source code from + various places such as local files, source control systems, or + websites. + +- The instructions for each unit to be built (e.g. a piece of software) + are known as "recipe" files and contain all the information about the + unit (dependencies, source file locations, checksums, description and + so on). + +- BitBake includes a client/server abstraction and can be used from a + command line or used as a service over XML-RPC and has several + different user interfaces. + +History and Goals +================= + +BitBake was originally a part of the OpenEmbedded project. It was +inspired by the Portage package management system used by the Gentoo +Linux distribution. On December 7, 2004, OpenEmbedded project team +member Chris Larson split the project into two distinct pieces: + +- BitBake, a generic task executor + +- OpenEmbedded, a metadata set utilized by BitBake + +Today, BitBake is the primary basis of the +`OpenEmbedded <http://www.openembedded.org/>`__ project, which is being +used to build and maintain Linux distributions such as the `Angstrom +Distribution <http://www.angstrom-distribution.org/>`__, and which is +also being used as the build tool for Linux projects such as the `Yocto +Project <http://www.yoctoproject.org>`__. + +Prior to BitBake, no other build tool adequately met the needs of an +aspiring embedded Linux distribution. All of the build systems used by +traditional desktop Linux distributions lacked important functionality, +and none of the ad hoc Buildroot-based systems, prevalent in the +embedded space, were scalable or maintainable. + +Some important original goals for BitBake were: + +- Handle cross-compilation. + +- Handle inter-package dependencies (build time on target architecture, + build time on native architecture, and runtime). + +- Support running any number of tasks within a given package, + including, but not limited to, fetching upstream sources, unpacking + them, patching them, configuring them, and so forth. + +- Be Linux distribution agnostic for both build and target systems. + +- Be architecture agnostic. + +- Support multiple build and target operating systems (e.g. Cygwin, the + BSDs, and so forth). + +- Be self-contained, rather than tightly integrated into the build + machine's root filesystem. + +- Handle conditional metadata on the target architecture, operating + system, distribution, and machine. + +- Be easy to use the tools to supply local metadata and packages + against which to operate. + +- Be easy to use BitBake to collaborate between multiple projects for + their builds. + +- Provide an inheritance mechanism to share common metadata between + many packages. + +Over time it became apparent that some further requirements were +necessary: + +- Handle variants of a base recipe (e.g. native, sdk, and multilib). + +- Split metadata into layers and allow layers to enhance or override + other layers. + +- Allow representation of a given set of input variables to a task as a + checksum. Based on that checksum, allow acceleration of builds with + prebuilt components. + +BitBake satisfies all the original requirements and many more with +extensions being made to the basic functionality to reflect the +additional requirements. Flexibility and power have always been the +priorities. BitBake is highly extensible and supports embedded Python +code and execution of any arbitrary tasks. + +.. _Concepts: + +Concepts +======== + +BitBake is a program written in the Python language. At the highest +level, BitBake interprets metadata, decides what tasks are required to +run, and executes those tasks. Similar to GNU Make, BitBake controls how +software is built. GNU Make achieves its control through "makefiles", +while BitBake uses "recipes". + +BitBake extends the capabilities of a simple tool like GNU Make by +allowing for the definition of much more complex tasks, such as +assembling entire embedded Linux distributions. + +The remainder of this section introduces several concepts that should be +understood in order to better leverage the power of BitBake. + +Recipes +------- + +BitBake Recipes, which are denoted by the file extension ``.bb``, are +the most basic metadata files. These recipe files provide BitBake with +the following: + +- Descriptive information about the package (author, homepage, license, + and so on) + +- The version of the recipe + +- Existing dependencies (both build and runtime dependencies) + +- Where the source code resides and how to fetch it + +- Whether the source code requires any patches, where to find them, and + how to apply them + +- How to configure and compile the source code + +- How to assemble the generated artifacts into one or more installable + packages + +- Where on the target machine to install the package or packages + created + +Within the context of BitBake, or any project utilizing BitBake as its +build system, files with the ``.bb`` extension are referred to as +recipes. + +.. note:: + + The term "package" is also commonly used to describe recipes. + However, since the same word is used to describe packaged output from + a project, it is best to maintain a single descriptive term - + "recipes". Put another way, a single "recipe" file is quite capable + of generating a number of related but separately installable + "packages". In fact, that ability is fairly common. + +Configuration Files +------------------- + +Configuration files, which are denoted by the ``.conf`` extension, +define various configuration variables that govern the project's build +process. These files fall into several areas that define machine +configuration, distribution configuration, possible compiler tuning, +general common configuration, and user configuration. The main +configuration file is the sample ``bitbake.conf`` file, which is located +within the BitBake source tree ``conf`` directory. + +Classes +------- + +Class files, which are denoted by the ``.bbclass`` extension, contain +information that is useful to share between metadata files. The BitBake +source tree currently comes with one class metadata file called +``base.bbclass``. You can find this file in the ``classes`` directory. +The ``base.bbclass`` class files is special since it is always included +automatically for all recipes and classes. This class contains +definitions for standard basic tasks such as fetching, unpacking, +configuring (empty by default), compiling (runs any Makefile present), +installing (empty by default) and packaging (empty by default). These +tasks are often overridden or extended by other classes added during the +project development process. + +Layers +------ + +Layers allow you to isolate different types of customizations from each +other. While you might find it tempting to keep everything in one layer +when working on a single project, the more modular your metadata, the +easier it is to cope with future changes. + +To illustrate how you can use layers to keep things modular, consider +customizations you might make to support a specific target machine. +These types of customizations typically reside in a special layer, +rather than a general layer, called a Board Support Package (BSP) layer. +Furthermore, the machine customizations should be isolated from recipes +and metadata that support a new GUI environment, for example. This +situation gives you a couple of layers: one for the machine +configurations and one for the GUI environment. It is important to +understand, however, that the BSP layer can still make machine-specific +additions to recipes within the GUI environment layer without polluting +the GUI layer itself with those machine-specific changes. You can +accomplish this through a recipe that is a BitBake append +(``.bbappend``) file. + +.. _append-bbappend-files: + +Append Files +------------ + +Append files, which are files that have the ``.bbappend`` file +extension, extend or override information in an existing recipe file. + +BitBake expects every append file to have a corresponding recipe file. +Furthermore, the append file and corresponding recipe file must use the +same root filename. The filenames can differ only in the file type +suffix used (e.g. ``formfactor_0.0.bb`` and +``formfactor_0.0.bbappend``). + +Information in append files extends or overrides the information in the +underlying, similarly-named recipe files. + +When you name an append file, you can use the "``%``" wildcard character +to allow for matching recipe names. For example, suppose you have an +append file named as follows: :: + + busybox_1.21.%.bbappend + +That append file +would match any ``busybox_1.21.``\ x\ ``.bb`` version of the recipe. So, +the append file would match the following recipe names: :: + + busybox_1.21.1.bb + busybox_1.21.2.bb + busybox_1.21.3.bb + +.. note:: + + The use of the " % " character is limited in that it only works directly in + front of the .bbappend portion of the append file's name. You cannot use the + wildcard character in any other location of the name. + +If the ``busybox`` recipe was updated to ``busybox_1.3.0.bb``, the +append name would not match. However, if you named the append file +``busybox_1.%.bbappend``, then you would have a match. + +In the most general case, you could name the append file something as +simple as ``busybox_%.bbappend`` to be entirely version independent. + +Obtaining BitBake +================= + +You can obtain BitBake several different ways: + +- **Cloning BitBake:** Using Git to clone the BitBake source code + repository is the recommended method for obtaining BitBake. Cloning + the repository makes it easy to get bug fixes and have access to + stable branches and the master branch. Once you have cloned BitBake, + you should use the latest stable branch for development since the + master branch is for BitBake development and might contain less + stable changes. + + You usually need a version of BitBake that matches the metadata you + are using. The metadata is generally backwards compatible but not + forward compatible. + + Here is an example that clones the BitBake repository: :: + + $ git clone git://git.openembedded.org/bitbake + + This command clones the BitBake + Git repository into a directory called ``bitbake``. Alternatively, + you can designate a directory after the ``git clone`` command if you + want to call the new directory something other than ``bitbake``. Here + is an example that names the directory ``bbdev``: :: + + $ git clone git://git.openembedded.org/bitbake bbdev + +- **Installation using your Distribution Package Management System:** + This method is not recommended because the BitBake version that is + provided by your distribution, in most cases, is several releases + behind a snapshot of the BitBake repository. + +- **Taking a snapshot of BitBake:** Downloading a snapshot of BitBake + from the source code repository gives you access to a known branch or + release of BitBake. + + .. note:: + + Cloning the Git repository, as described earlier, is the preferred + method for getting BitBake. Cloning the repository makes it easier + to update as patches are added to the stable branches. + + The following example downloads a snapshot of BitBake version 1.17.0: :: + + $ wget http://git.openembedded.org/bitbake/snapshot/bitbake-1.17.0.tar.gz + $ tar zxpvf bitbake-1.17.0.tar.gz + + After extraction of the tarball using + the tar utility, you have a directory entitled ``bitbake-1.17.0``. + +- **Using the BitBake that Comes With Your Build Checkout:** A final + possibility for getting a copy of BitBake is that it already comes + with your checkout of a larger BitBake-based build system, such as + Poky. Rather than manually checking out individual layers and gluing + them together yourself, you can check out an entire build system. The + checkout will already include a version of BitBake that has been + thoroughly tested for compatibility with the other components. For + information on how to check out a particular BitBake-based build + system, consult that build system's supporting documentation. + +.. _bitbake-user-manual-command: + +The BitBake Command +=================== + +The ``bitbake`` command is the primary interface to the BitBake tool. +This section presents the BitBake command syntax and provides several +execution examples. + +Usage and syntax +---------------- + +Following is the usage and syntax for BitBake: :: + + $ bitbake -h + Usage: bitbake [options] [recipename/target recipe:do_task ...] + + Executes the specified task (default is 'build') for a given set of target recipes (.bb files). + It is assumed there is a conf/bblayers.conf available in cwd or in BBPATH which + will provide the layer, BBFILES and other configuration information. + + Options: + --version show program's version number and exit + -h, --help show this help message and exit + -b BUILDFILE, --buildfile=BUILDFILE + Execute tasks from a specific .bb recipe directly. + WARNING: Does not handle any dependencies from other + recipes. + -k, --continue Continue as much as possible after an error. While the + target that failed and anything depending on it cannot + be built, as much as possible will be built before + stopping. + -f, --force Force the specified targets/task to run (invalidating + any existing stamp file). + -c CMD, --cmd=CMD Specify the task to execute. The exact options + available depend on the metadata. Some examples might + be 'compile' or 'populate_sysroot' or 'listtasks' may + give a list of the tasks available. + -C INVALIDATE_STAMP, --clear-stamp=INVALIDATE_STAMP + Invalidate the stamp for the specified task such as + 'compile' and then run the default task for the + specified target(s). + -r PREFILE, --read=PREFILE + Read the specified file before bitbake.conf. + -R POSTFILE, --postread=POSTFILE + Read the specified file after bitbake.conf. + -v, --verbose Enable tracing of shell tasks (with 'set -x'). Also + print bb.note(...) messages to stdout (in addition to + writing them to ${T}/log.do_<task>). + -D, --debug Increase the debug level. You can specify this more + than once. -D sets the debug level to 1, where only + bb.debug(1, ...) messages are printed to stdout; -DD + sets the debug level to 2, where both bb.debug(1, ...) + and bb.debug(2, ...) messages are printed; etc. + Without -D, no debug messages are printed. Note that + -D only affects output to stdout. All debug messages + are written to ${T}/log.do_taskname, regardless of the + debug level. + -q, --quiet Output less log message data to the terminal. You can + specify this more than once. + -n, --dry-run Don't execute, just go through the motions. + -S SIGNATURE_HANDLER, --dump-signatures=SIGNATURE_HANDLER + Dump out the signature construction information, with + no task execution. The SIGNATURE_HANDLER parameter is + passed to the handler. Two common values are none and + printdiff but the handler may define more/less. none + means only dump the signature, printdiff means compare + the dumped signature with the cached one. + -p, --parse-only Quit after parsing the BB recipes. + -s, --show-versions Show current and preferred versions of all recipes. + -e, --environment Show the global or per-recipe environment complete + with information about where variables were + set/changed. + -g, --graphviz Save dependency tree information for the specified + targets in the dot syntax. + -I EXTRA_ASSUME_PROVIDED, --ignore-deps=EXTRA_ASSUME_PROVIDED + Assume these dependencies don't exist and are already + provided (equivalent to ASSUME_PROVIDED). Useful to + make dependency graphs more appealing + -l DEBUG_DOMAINS, --log-domains=DEBUG_DOMAINS + Show debug logging for the specified logging domains + -P, --profile Profile the command and save reports. + -u UI, --ui=UI The user interface to use (knotty, ncurses or taskexp + - default knotty). + --token=XMLRPCTOKEN Specify the connection token to be used when + connecting to a remote server. + --revisions-changed Set the exit code depending on whether upstream + floating revisions have changed or not. + --server-only Run bitbake without a UI, only starting a server + (cooker) process. + -B BIND, --bind=BIND The name/address for the bitbake xmlrpc server to bind + to. + -T SERVER_TIMEOUT, --idle-timeout=SERVER_TIMEOUT + Set timeout to unload bitbake server due to + inactivity, set to -1 means no unload, default: + Environment variable BB_SERVER_TIMEOUT. + --no-setscene Do not run any setscene tasks. sstate will be ignored + and everything needed, built. + --setscene-only Only run setscene tasks, don't run any real tasks. + --remote-server=REMOTE_SERVER + Connect to the specified server. + -m, --kill-server Terminate any running bitbake server. + --observe-only Connect to a server as an observing-only client. + --status-only Check the status of the remote bitbake server. + -w WRITEEVENTLOG, --write-log=WRITEEVENTLOG + Writes the event log of the build to a bitbake event + json file. Use '' (empty string) to assign the name + automatically. + --runall=RUNALL Run the specified task for any recipe in the taskgraph + of the specified target (even if it wouldn't otherwise + have run). + --runonly=RUNONLY Run only the specified task within the taskgraph of + the specified targets (and any task dependencies those + tasks may have). + +.. _bitbake-examples: + +Examples +-------- + +This section presents some examples showing how to use BitBake. + +.. _example-executing-a-task-against-a-single-recipe: + +Executing a Task Against a Single Recipe +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Executing tasks for a single recipe file is relatively simple. You +specify the file in question, and BitBake parses it and executes the +specified task. If you do not specify a task, BitBake executes the +default task, which is "build”. BitBake obeys inter-task dependencies +when doing so. + +The following command runs the build task, which is the default task, on +the ``foo_1.0.bb`` recipe file: :: + + $ bitbake -b foo_1.0.bb + +The following command runs the clean task on the ``foo.bb`` recipe file: :: + + $ bitbake -b foo.bb -c clean + +.. note:: + + The "-b" option explicitly does not handle recipe dependencies. Other + than for debugging purposes, it is instead recommended that you use + the syntax presented in the next section. + +Executing Tasks Against a Set of Recipe Files +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +There are a number of additional complexities introduced when one wants +to manage multiple ``.bb`` files. Clearly there needs to be a way to +tell BitBake what files are available and, of those, which you want to +execute. There also needs to be a way for each recipe to express its +dependencies, both for build-time and runtime. There must be a way for +you to express recipe preferences when multiple recipes provide the same +functionality, or when there are multiple versions of a recipe. + +The ``bitbake`` command, when not using "--buildfile" or "-b" only +accepts a "PROVIDES". You cannot provide anything else. By default, a +recipe file generally "PROVIDES" its "packagename" as shown in the +following example: :: + + $ bitbake foo + +This next example "PROVIDES" the +package name and also uses the "-c" option to tell BitBake to just +execute the ``do_clean`` task: :: + + $ bitbake -c clean foo + +Executing a List of Task and Recipe Combinations +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The BitBake command line supports specifying different tasks for +individual targets when you specify multiple targets. For example, +suppose you had two targets (or recipes) ``myfirstrecipe`` and +``mysecondrecipe`` and you needed BitBake to run ``taskA`` for the first +recipe and ``taskB`` for the second recipe: :: + + $ bitbake myfirstrecipe:do_taskA mysecondrecipe:do_taskB + +Generating Dependency Graphs +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +BitBake is able to generate dependency graphs using the ``dot`` syntax. +You can convert these graphs into images using the ``dot`` tool from +`Graphviz <http://www.graphviz.org>`__. + +When you generate a dependency graph, BitBake writes two files to the +current working directory: + +- ``task-depends.dot``: Shows dependencies between tasks. These + dependencies match BitBake's internal task execution list. + +- ``pn-buildlist``: Shows a simple list of targets that are to be + built. + +To stop depending on common depends, use the "-I" depend option and +BitBake omits them from the graph. Leaving this information out can +produce more readable graphs. This way, you can remove from the graph +``DEPENDS`` from inherited classes such as ``base.bbclass``. + +Here are two examples that create dependency graphs. The second example +omits depends common in OpenEmbedded from the graph: :: + + $ bitbake -g foo + + $ bitbake -g -I virtual/kernel -I eglibc foo + +Executing a Multiple Configuration Build +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +BitBake is able to build multiple images or packages using a single +command where the different targets require different configurations +(multiple configuration builds). Each target, in this scenario, is +referred to as a "multiconfig". + +To accomplish a multiple configuration build, you must define each +target's configuration separately using a parallel configuration file in +the build directory. The location for these multiconfig configuration +files is specific. They must reside in the current build directory in a +sub-directory of ``conf`` named ``multiconfig``. Following is an example +for two separate targets: + +.. image:: figures/bb_multiconfig_files.png + :align: center + +The reason for this required file hierarchy is because the ``BBPATH`` +variable is not constructed until the layers are parsed. Consequently, +using the configuration file as a pre-configuration file is not possible +unless it is located in the current working directory. + +Minimally, each configuration file must define the machine and the +temporary directory BitBake uses for the build. Suggested practice +dictates that you do not overlap the temporary directories used during +the builds. + +Aside from separate configuration files for each target, you must also +enable BitBake to perform multiple configuration builds. Enabling is +accomplished by setting the +:term:`BBMULTICONFIG` variable in the +``local.conf`` configuration file. As an example, suppose you had +configuration files for ``target1`` and ``target2`` defined in the build +directory. The following statement in the ``local.conf`` file both +enables BitBake to perform multiple configuration builds and specifies +the two extra multiconfigs: :: + + BBMULTICONFIG = "target1 target2" + +Once the target configuration files are in place and BitBake has been +enabled to perform multiple configuration builds, use the following +command form to start the builds: :: + + $ bitbake [mc:multiconfigname:]target [[[mc:multiconfigname:]target] ... ] + +Here is an example for two extra multiconfigs: ``target1`` and ``target2``: :: + + $ bitbake mc::target mc:target1:target mc:target2:target + +.. _bb-enabling-multiple-configuration-build-dependencies: + +Enabling Multiple Configuration Build Dependencies +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Sometimes dependencies can exist between targets (multiconfigs) in a +multiple configuration build. For example, suppose that in order to +build an image for a particular architecture, the root filesystem of +another build for a different architecture needs to exist. In other +words, the image for the first multiconfig depends on the root +filesystem of the second multiconfig. This dependency is essentially +that the task in the recipe that builds one multiconfig is dependent on +the completion of the task in the recipe that builds another +multiconfig. + +To enable dependencies in a multiple configuration build, you must +declare the dependencies in the recipe using the following statement +form: :: + + task_or_package[mcdepends] = "mc:from_multiconfig:to_multiconfig:recipe_name:task_on_which_to_depend" + +To better show how to use this statement, consider an example with two +multiconfigs: ``target1`` and ``target2``: :: + + image_task[mcdepends] = "mc:target1:target2:image2:rootfs_task" + +In this example, the +``from_multiconfig`` is "target1" and the ``to_multiconfig`` is "target2". The +task on which the image whose recipe contains image_task depends on the +completion of the rootfs_task used to build out image2, which is +associated with the "target2" multiconfig. + +Once you set up this dependency, you can build the "target1" multiconfig +using a BitBake command as follows: :: + + $ bitbake mc:target1:image1 + +This command executes all the tasks needed to create ``image1`` for the "target1" +multiconfig. Because of the dependency, BitBake also executes through +the ``rootfs_task`` for the "target2" multiconfig build. + +Having a recipe depend on the root filesystem of another build might not +seem that useful. Consider this change to the statement in the image1 +recipe: :: + + image_task[mcdepends] = "mc:target1:target2:image2:image_task" + +In this case, BitBake must create ``image2`` for the "target2" build since +the "target1" build depends on it. + +Because "target1" and "target2" are enabled for multiple configuration +builds and have separate configuration files, BitBake places the +artifacts for each build in the respective temporary build directories. |