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1 Intro
2 =====
3
4 This directory contains a few sets of files that are used for
5 configuration in diverse ways:
6
7 *.conf Target platform configurations, please read
8 'Configurations of OpenSSL target platforms' for more
9 information.
10 *.tmpl Build file templates, please read 'Build-file
11 programming with the "unified" build system' as well
12 as 'Build info files' for more information.
13 *.pm Helper scripts / modules for the main `Configure`
14 script. See 'Configure helper scripts for more
15 information.
16
17
18 Configurations of OpenSSL target platforms
19 ==========================================
20
21 Configuration targets are a collection of facts that we know about
22 different platforms and their capabilities. We organise them in a
23 hash table, where each entry represent a specific target.
24
25 Note that configuration target names must be unique across all config
26 files. The Configure script does check that a config file doesn't
27 have config targets that shadow config targets from other files.
28
29 In each table entry, the following keys are significant:
30
31 inherit_from => Other targets to inherit values from.
32 Explained further below. [1]
33 template => Set to 1 if this isn't really a platform
34 target. Instead, this target is a template
35 upon which other targets can be built.
36 Explained further below. [1]
37
38 sys_id => System identity for systems where that
39 is difficult to determine automatically.
40
41 enable => Enable specific configuration features.
42 This MUST be an array of words.
43 disable => Disable specific configuration features.
44 This MUST be an array of words.
45 Note: if the same feature is both enabled
46 and disabled, disable wins.
47
48 as => The assembler command. This is not always
49 used (for example on Unix, where the C
50 compiler is used instead).
51 asflags => Default assembler command flags [4].
52 cpp => The C preprocessor command, normally not
53 given, as the build file defaults are
54 usually good enough.
55 cppflags => Default C preprocessor flags [4].
56 defines => As an alternative, macro definitions may be
57 given here instead of in `cppflags' [4].
58 If given here, they MUST be as an array of
59 the string such as "MACRO=value", or just
60 "MACRO" for definitions without value.
61 includes => As an alternative, inclusion directories
62 may be given here instead of in `cppflags'
63 [4]. If given here, the MUST be an array
64 of strings, one directory specification
65 each.
66 cc => The C compiler command, usually one of "cc",
67 "gcc" or "clang". This command is normally
68 also used to link object files and
69 libraries into the final program.
70 cxx => The C++ compiler command, usually one of
71 "c++", "g++" or "clang++". This command is
72 also used when linking a program where at
73 least one of the object file is made from
74 C++ source.
75 cflags => Defaults C compiler flags [4].
76 cxxflags => Default C++ compiler flags [4]. If unset,
77 it gets the same value as cflags.
78
79 (linking is a complex thing, see [3] below)
80 ld => Linker command, usually not defined
81 (meaning the compiler command is used
82 instead).
83 (NOTE: this is here for future use, it's
84 not implemented yet)
85 lflags => Default flags used when linking apps,
86 shared libraries or DSOs [4].
87 ex_libs => Extra libraries that are needed when
88 linking shared libraries, DSOs or programs.
89 The value is also assigned to Libs.private
90 in $(libdir)/pkgconfig/libcrypto.pc.
91
92 shared_cppflags => Extra C preprocessor flags used when
93 processing C files for shared libraries.
94 shared_cflag => Extra C compiler flags used when compiling
95 for shared libraries, typically something
96 like "-fPIC".
97 shared_ldflag => Extra linking flags used when linking
98 shared libraries.
99 module_cppflags
100 module_cflags
101 module_ldflags => Has the same function as the corresponding
102 `shared_' attributes, but for building DSOs.
103 When unset, they get the same values as the
104 corresponding `shared_' attributes.
105
106 ar => The library archive command, the default is
107 "ar".
108 (NOTE: this is here for future use, it's
109 not implemented yet)
110 arflags => Flags to be used with the library archive
111 command. On Unix, this includes the
112 command letter, 'r' by default.
113
114 ranlib => The library archive indexing command, the
115 default is 'ranlib' it it exists.
116
117 unistd => An alternative header to the typical
118 '<unistd.h>'. This is very rarely needed.
119
120 shared_extension => File name extension used for shared
121 libraries.
122 obj_extension => File name extension used for object files.
123 On unix, this defaults to ".o" (NOTE: this
124 is here for future use, it's not
125 implemented yet)
126 exe_extension => File name extension used for executable
127 files. On unix, this defaults to "" (NOTE:
128 this is here for future use, it's not
129 implemented yet)
130 shlib_variant => A "variant" identifier inserted between the base
131 shared library name and the extension. On "unixy"
132 platforms (BSD, Linux, Solaris, MacOS/X, ...) this
133 supports installation of custom OpenSSL libraries
134 that don't conflict with other builds of OpenSSL
135 installed on the system. The variant identifier
136 becomes part of the SONAME of the library and also
137 any symbol versions (symbol versions are not used or
138 needed with MacOS/X). For example, on a system
139 where a default build would normally create the SSL
140 shared library as 'libssl.so -> libssl.so.1.1' with
141 the value of the symlink as the SONAME, a target
142 definition that sets 'shlib_variant => "-abc"' will
143 create 'libssl.so -> libssl-abc.so.1.1', again with
144 an SONAME equal to the value of the symlink. The
145 symbol versions associated with the variant library
146 would then be 'OPENSSL_ABC_<version>' rather than
147 the default 'OPENSSL_<version>'. The string inserted
148 into symbol versions is obtained by mapping all
149 letters in the "variant" identifier to upper case
150 and all non-alphanumeric characters to '_'.
151
152 thread_scheme => The type of threads is used on the
153 configured platform. Currently known
154 values are "(unknown)", "pthreads",
155 "uithreads" (a.k.a solaris threads) and
156 "winthreads". Except for "(unknown)", the
157 actual value is currently ignored but may
158 be used in the future. See further notes
159 below [2].
160 dso_scheme => The type of dynamic shared objects to build
161 for. This mostly comes into play with
162 modules, but can be used for other purposes
163 as well. Valid values are "DLFCN"
164 (dlopen() et al), "DLFCN_NO_H" (for systems
165 that use dlopen() et al but do not have
166 fcntl.h), "DL" (shl_load() et al), "WIN32"
167 and "VMS".
168 asm_arch => The architecture to be used for compiling assembly
169 source. This acts as a selector in build.info files.
170 uplink_arch => The architecture to be used for compiling uplink
171 source. This acts as a selector in build.info files.
172 This is separate from asm_arch because it's compiled
173 even when 'no-asm' is given, even though it contains
174 assembler source.
175 perlasm_scheme => The perlasm method used to create the
176 assembler files used when compiling with
177 assembler implementations.
178 shared_target => The shared library building method used.
179 This serves multiple purposes:
180 - as index for targets found in shared_info.pl.
181 - as linker script generation selector.
182 To serve both purposes, the index for shared_info.pl
183 should end with '-shared', and this suffix will be
184 removed for use as a linker script generation
185 selector. Note that the latter is only used if
186 'shared_defflag' is defined.
187 build_scheme => The scheme used to build up a Makefile.
188 In its simplest form, the value is a string
189 with the name of the build scheme.
190 The value may also take the form of a list
191 of strings, if the build_scheme is to have
192 some options. In this case, the first
193 string in the list is the name of the build
194 scheme.
195 Currently recognised build scheme is "unified".
196 For the "unified" build scheme, this item
197 *must* be an array with the first being the
198 word "unified" and the second being a word
199 to identify the platform family.
200
201 multilib => On systems that support having multiple
202 implementations of a library (typically a
203 32-bit and a 64-bit variant), this is used
204 to have the different variants in different
205 directories.
206
207 bn_ops => Building options (was just bignum options in
208 the earlier history of this option, hence the
209 name). This is a string of words that describe
210 algorithms' implementation parameters that
211 are optimal for the designated target platform,
212 such as the type of integers used to build up
213 the bignum, different ways to implement certain
214 ciphers and so on. To fully comprehend the
215 meaning, the best is to read the affected
216 source.
217 The valid words are:
218
219 THIRTY_TWO_BIT bignum limbs are 32 bits,
220 this is default if no
221 option is specified, it
222 works on any supported
223 system [unless "wider"
224 limb size is implied in
225 assembly code];
226 BN_LLONG bignum limbs are 32 bits,
227 but 64-bit 'unsigned long
228 long' is used internally
229 in calculations;
230 SIXTY_FOUR_BIT_LONG bignum limbs are 64 bits
231 and sizeof(long) is 8;
232 SIXTY_FOUR_BIT bignums limbs are 64 bits,
233 but execution environment
234 is ILP32;
235 RC4_CHAR RC4 key schedule is made
236 up of 'unsigned char's;
237 RC4_INT RC4 key schedule is made
238 up of 'unsigned int's;
239
240
241 [1] as part of the target configuration, one can have a key called
242 'inherit_from' that indicate what other configurations to inherit
243 data from. These are resolved recursively.
244
245 Inheritance works as a set of default values that can be overridden
246 by corresponding key values in the inheriting configuration.
247
248 Note 1: any configuration table can be used as a template.
249 Note 2: pure templates have the attribute 'template => 1' and
250 cannot be used as build targets.
251
252 If several configurations are given in the 'inherit_from' array,
253 the values of same attribute are concatenated with space
254 separation. With this, it's possible to have several smaller
255 templates for different configuration aspects that can be combined
256 into a complete configuration.
257
258 instead of a scalar value or an array, a value can be a code block
259 of the form 'sub { /* your code here */ }'. This code block will
260 be called with the list of inherited values for that key as
261 arguments. In fact, the concatenation of strings is really done
262 by using 'sub { join(" ",@_) }' on the list of inherited values.
263
264 An example:
265
266 "foo" => {
267 template => 1,
268 haha => "ha ha",
269 hoho => "ho",
270 ignored => "This should not appear in the end result",
271 },
272 "bar" => {
273 template => 1,
274 haha => "ah",
275 hoho => "haho",
276 hehe => "hehe"
277 },
278 "laughter" => {
279 inherit_from => [ "foo", "bar" ],
280 hehe => sub { join(" ",(@_,"!!!")) },
281 ignored => "",
282 }
283
284 The entry for "laughter" will become as follows after processing:
285
286 "laughter" => {
287 haha => "ha ha ah",
288 hoho => "ho haho",
289 hehe => "hehe !!!",
290 ignored => ""
291 }
292
293 [2] OpenSSL is built with threading capabilities unless the user
294 specifies 'no-threads'. The value of the key 'thread_scheme' may
295 be "(unknown)", in which case the user MUST give some compilation
296 flags to Configure.
297
298 [3] OpenSSL has three types of things to link from object files or
299 static libraries:
300
301 - shared libraries; that would be libcrypto and libssl.
302 - shared objects (sometimes called dynamic libraries); that would
303 be the modules.
304 - applications; those are apps/openssl and all the test apps.
305
306 Very roughly speaking, linking is done like this (words in braces
307 represent the configuration settings documented at the beginning
308 of this file):
309
310 shared libraries:
311 {ld} $(CFLAGS) {lflags} {shared_ldflag} -o libfoo.so \
312 foo/something.o foo/somethingelse.o {ex_libs}
313
314 shared objects:
315 {ld} $(CFLAGS) {lflags} {module_ldflags} -o libeng.so \
316 blah1.o blah2.o -lcrypto {ex_libs}
317
318 applications:
319 {ld} $(CFLAGS) {lflags} -o app \
320 app1.o utils.o -lssl -lcrypto {ex_libs}
321
322 [4] There are variants of these attribute, prefixed with `lib_',
323 `dso_' or `bin_'. Those variants replace the unprefixed attribute
324 when building library, DSO or program modules specifically.
325
326 Historically, the target configurations came in form of a string with
327 values separated by colons. This use is deprecated. The string form
328 looked like this:
329
330 "target" => "{cc}:{cflags}:{unistd}:{thread_cflag}:{sys_id}:{lflags}:{bn_ops}:{cpuid_obj}:{bn_obj}:{ec_obj}:{des_obj}:{aes_obj}:{bf_obj}:{md5_obj}:{sha1_obj}:{cast_obj}:{rc4_obj}:{rmd160_obj}:{rc5_obj}:{wp_obj}:{cmll_obj}:{modes_obj}:{padlock_obj}:{perlasm_scheme}:{dso_scheme}:{shared_target}:{shared_cflag}:{shared_ldflag}:{shared_extension}:{ranlib}:{arflags}:{multilib}"
331
332
333 Build info files
334 ================
335
336 The build.info files that are spread over the source tree contain the
337 minimum information needed to build and distribute OpenSSL. It uses a
338 simple and yet fairly powerful language to determine what needs to be
339 built, from what sources, and other relationships between files.
340
341 For every build.info file, all file references are relative to the
342 directory of the build.info file for source files, and the
343 corresponding build directory for built files if the build tree
344 differs from the source tree.
345
346 When processed, every line is processed with the perl module
347 Text::Template, using the delimiters "{-" and "-}". The hashes
348 %config and %target are passed to the perl fragments, along with
349 $sourcedir and $builddir, which are the locations of the source
350 directory for the current build.info file and the corresponding build
351 directory, all relative to the top of the build tree.
352
353 'Configure' only knows inherently about the top build.info file. For
354 any other directory that has one, further directories to look into
355 must be indicated like this:
356
357 SUBDIRS=something someelse
358
359 On to things to be built; they are declared by setting specific
360 variables:
361
362 PROGRAMS=foo bar
363 LIBS=libsomething
364 MODULES=libeng
365 SCRIPTS=myhack
366
367 Note that the files mentioned for PROGRAMS, LIBS and MODULES *must* be
368 without extensions. The build file templates will figure them out.
369
370 For each thing to be built, it is then possible to say what sources
371 they are built from:
372
373 PROGRAMS=foo bar
374 SOURCE[foo]=foo.c common.c
375 SOURCE[bar]=bar.c extra.c common.c
376
377 It's also possible to tell some other dependencies:
378
379 DEPEND[foo]=libsomething
380 DEPEND[libbar]=libsomethingelse
381
382 (it could be argued that 'libsomething' and 'libsomethingelse' are
383 source as well. However, the files given through SOURCE are expected
384 to be located in the source tree while files given through DEPEND are
385 expected to be located in the build tree)
386
387 It's also possible to depend on static libraries explicitly:
388
389 DEPEND[foo]=libsomething.a
390 DEPEND[libbar]=libsomethingelse.a
391
392 This should be rarely used, and care should be taken to make sure it's
393 only used when supported. For example, native Windows build doesn't
394 support building static libraries and DLLs at the same time, so using
395 static libraries on Windows can only be done when configured
396 'no-shared'.
397
398 In some cases, it's desirable to include some source files in the
399 shared form of a library only:
400
401 SHARED_SOURCE[libfoo]=dllmain.c
402
403 For any file to be built, it's also possible to tell what extra
404 include paths the build of their source files should use:
405
406 INCLUDE[foo]=include
407
408 It's also possible to specify C macros that should be defined:
409
410 DEFINE[foo]=FOO BAR=1
411
412 In some cases, one might want to generate some source files from
413 others, that's done as follows:
414
415 GENERATE[foo.s]=asm/something.pl $(CFLAGS)
416 GENERATE[bar.s]=asm/bar.S
417
418 The value of each GENERATE line is a command line or part of it.
419 Configure places no rules on the command line, except that the first
420 item must be the generator file. It is, however, entirely up to the
421 build file template to define exactly how those command lines should
422 be handled, how the output is captured and so on.
423
424 Sometimes, the generator file itself depends on other files, for
425 example if it is a perl script that depends on other perl modules.
426 This can be expressed using DEPEND like this:
427
428 DEPEND[asm/something.pl]=../perlasm/Foo.pm
429
430 There may also be cases where the exact file isn't easily specified,
431 but an inclusion directory still needs to be specified. INCLUDE can
432 be used in that case:
433
434 INCLUDE[asm/something.pl]=../perlasm
435
436 NOTE: GENERATE lines are limited to one command only per GENERATE.
437
438 Finally, you can have some simple conditional use of the build.info
439 information, looking like this:
440
441 IF[1]
442 something
443 ELSIF[2]
444 something other
445 ELSE
446 something else
447 ENDIF
448
449 The expression in square brackets is interpreted as a string in perl,
450 and will be seen as true if perl thinks it is, otherwise false. For
451 example, the above would have "something" used, since 1 is true.
452
453 Together with the use of Text::Template, this can be used as
454 conditions based on something in the passed variables, for example:
455
456 IF[{- $disabled{shared} -}]
457 LIBS=libcrypto
458 SOURCE[libcrypto]=...
459 ELSE
460 LIBS=libfoo
461 SOURCE[libfoo]=...
462 ENDIF
463
464
465 Build-file programming with the "unified" build system
466 ======================================================
467
468 "Build files" are called "Makefile" on Unix-like operating systems,
469 "descrip.mms" for MMS on VMS, "makefile" for nmake on Windows, etc.
470
471 To use the "unified" build system, the target configuration needs to
472 set the three items 'build_scheme', 'build_file' and 'build_command'.
473 In the rest of this section, we will assume that 'build_scheme' is set
474 to "unified" (see the configurations documentation above for the
475 details).
476
477 For any name given by 'build_file', the "unified" system expects a
478 template file in Configurations/ named like the build file, with
479 ".tmpl" appended, or in case of possible ambiguity, a combination of
480 the second 'build_scheme' list item and the 'build_file' name. For
481 example, if 'build_file' is set to "Makefile", the template could be
482 Configurations/Makefile.tmpl or Configurations/unix-Makefile.tmpl.
483 In case both Configurations/unix-Makefile.tmpl and
484 Configurations/Makefile.tmpl are present, the former takes
485 precedence.
486
487 The build-file template is processed with the perl module
488 Text::Template, using "{-" and "-}" as delimiters that enclose the
489 perl code fragments that generate configuration-dependent content.
490 Those perl fragments have access to all the hash variables from
491 configdata.pem.
492
493 The build-file template is expected to define at least the following
494 perl functions in a perl code fragment enclosed with "{-" and "-}".
495 They are all expected to return a string with the lines they produce.
496
497 generatesrc - function that produces build file lines to generate
498 a source file from some input.
499
500 It's called like this:
501
502 generatesrc(src => "PATH/TO/tobegenerated",
503 generator => [ "generatingfile", ... ]
504 generator_incs => [ "INCL/PATH", ... ]
505 generator_deps => [ "dep1", ... ]
506 generator => [ "generatingfile", ... ]
507 incs => [ "INCL/PATH", ... ],
508 deps => [ "dep1", ... ],
509 intent => one of "libs", "dso", "bin" );
510
511 'src' has the name of the file to be generated.
512 'generator' is the command or part of command to
513 generate the file, of which the first item is
514 expected to be the file to generate from.
515 generatesrc() is expected to analyse and figure out
516 exactly how to apply that file and how to capture
517 the result. 'generator_incs' and 'generator_deps'
518 are include directories and files that the generator
519 file itself depends on. 'incs' and 'deps' are
520 include directories and files that are used if $(CC)
521 is used as an intermediary step when generating the
522 end product (the file indicated by 'src'). 'intent'
523 indicates what the generated file is going to be
524 used for.
525
526 src2obj - function that produces build file lines to build an
527 object file from source files and associated data.
528
529 It's called like this:
530
531 src2obj(obj => "PATH/TO/objectfile",
532 srcs => [ "PATH/TO/sourcefile", ... ],
533 deps => [ "dep1", ... ],
534 incs => [ "INCL/PATH", ... ]
535 intent => one of "lib", "dso", "bin" );
536
537 'obj' has the intended object file with '.o'
538 extension, src2obj() is expected to change it to
539 something more suitable for the platform.
540 'srcs' has the list of source files to build the
541 object file, with the first item being the source
542 file that directly corresponds to the object file.
543 'deps' is a list of explicit dependencies. 'incs'
544 is a list of include file directories. Finally,
545 'intent' indicates what this object file is going
546 to be used for.
547
548 obj2lib - function that produces build file lines to build a
549 static library file ("libfoo.a" in Unix terms) from
550 object files.
551
552 called like this:
553
554 obj2lib(lib => "PATH/TO/libfile",
555 objs => [ "PATH/TO/objectfile", ... ]);
556
557 'lib' has the intended library file name *without*
558 extension, obj2lib is expected to add that. 'objs'
559 has the list of object files to build this library.
560
561 libobj2shlib - backward compatibility function that's used the
562 same way as obj2shlib (described next), and was
563 expected to build the shared library from the
564 corresponding static library when that was suitable.
565 NOTE: building a shared library from a static
566 library is now DEPRECATED, as they no longer share
567 object files. Attempting to do this will fail.
568
569 obj2shlib - function that produces build file lines to build a
570 shareable object library file ("libfoo.so" in Unix
571 terms) from the corresponding object files.
572
573 called like this:
574
575 obj2shlib(shlib => "PATH/TO/shlibfile",
576 lib => "PATH/TO/libfile",
577 objs => [ "PATH/TO/objectfile", ... ],
578 deps => [ "PATH/TO/otherlibfile", ... ]);
579
580 'lib' has the base (static) library ffile name
581 *without* extension. This is useful in case
582 supporting files are needed (such as import
583 libraries on Windows).
584 'shlib' has the corresponding shared library name
585 *without* extension. 'deps' has the list of other
586 libraries (also *without* extension) this library
587 needs to be linked with. 'objs' has the list of
588 object files to build this library.
589
590 obj2dso - function that produces build file lines to build a
591 dynamic shared object file from object files.
592
593 called like this:
594
595 obj2dso(lib => "PATH/TO/libfile",
596 objs => [ "PATH/TO/objectfile", ... ],
597 deps => [ "PATH/TO/otherlibfile",
598 ... ]);
599
600 This is almost the same as obj2shlib, but the
601 intent is to build a shareable library that can be
602 loaded in runtime (a "plugin"...).
603
604 obj2bin - function that produces build file lines to build an
605 executable file from object files.
606
607 called like this:
608
609 obj2bin(bin => "PATH/TO/binfile",
610 objs => [ "PATH/TO/objectfile", ... ],
611 deps => [ "PATH/TO/libfile", ... ]);
612
613 'bin' has the intended executable file name
614 *without* extension, obj2bin is expected to add
615 that. 'objs' has the list of object files to build
616 this library. 'deps' has the list of library files
617 (also *without* extension) that the programs needs
618 to be linked with.
619
620 in2script - function that produces build file lines to build a
621 script file from some input.
622
623 called like this:
624
625 in2script(script => "PATH/TO/scriptfile",
626 sources => [ "PATH/TO/infile", ... ]);
627
628 'script' has the intended script file name.
629 'sources' has the list of source files to build the
630 resulting script from.
631
632 In all cases, file file paths are relative to the build tree top, and
633 the build file actions run with the build tree top as current working
634 directory.
635
636 Make sure to end the section with these functions with a string that
637 you thing is appropriate for the resulting build file. If nothing
638 else, end it like this:
639
640 ""; # Make sure no lingering values end up in the Makefile
641 -}
642
643
644 Configure helper scripts
645 ========================
646
647 Configure uses helper scripts in this directory:
648
649 Checker scripts
650 ---------------
651
652 These scripts are per platform family, to check the integrity of the
653 tools used for configuration and building. The checker script used is
654 either {build_platform}-{build_file}-checker.pm or
655 {build_platform}-checker.pm, where {build_platform} is the second
656 'build_scheme' list element from the configuration target data, and
657 {build_file} is 'build_file' from the same target data.
658
659 If the check succeeds, the script is expected to end with a non-zero
660 expression. If the check fails, the script can end with a zero, or
661 with a `die`.