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1 =pod
2
3 =head1 NAME
4
5 build.info - Building information files
6
7 =head1 SYNOPSIS
8
9 B<IF[>0|1B<]>
10
11 B<ELSIF[>0|1B<]>
12
13 B<ELSE>
14
15 B<ENDIF>
16
17 B<SUBDIRS=> I<dir> ...
18
19 B<PROGRAMS=> I<name> ...
20
21 B<LIBS=> I<name> ...
22
23 B<MODULES=> I<name> ...
24
25 B<SCRIPTS=> I<name> ...
26
27 B<DEPEND[>I<items>B<]=> I<otheritem> ...
28
29 B<GENERATE[>I<item>B<]=> I<generator> I<generator-args> ...
30
31 B<SOURCE[>I<item>B<]=> I<file> ...
32
33 B<SHARED_SOURCE[>I<item>B<]=> I<file> ...
34
35 B<DEFINE[>I<items>B<]=> I<name>[B<=>I<value>] ...
36
37 B<INCLUDE[>I<items>B<]=> I<dir> ...
38
39 B<$>I<VARIABLE>B<=>I<value>
40
41 =head1 DESCRIPTION
42
43 OpenSSL's build system revolves around three questions:
44
45 =over 4
46
47 =item What to build for?
48
49 This is about choice of platform (combination of hardware, operating
50 system, and toolchain).
51
52 =item What to build?
53
54 This is about having all the information on what needs to be built and
55 from what.
56
57 =item How to build it?
58
59 This is about build file generation.
60
61 =back
62
63 This document is all about the second item, "What to build?", and most
64 of all, how to specify that information.
65
66 For some terms used in this document, please see the L</GLOSSARY> at
67 the end.
68
69 =head2 F<build.info> files
70
71 F<build.info> files are meta data files for OpenSSL's built file
72 generators, and are used to specify exactly what end product files
73 (programs, libraries, modules or scripts) are to be produced, and from
74 what sources.
75
76 Intermediate files, such as object files, are seldom referred to at
77 all. They sometimes can be, if there's a need, but this should happen
78 very rarely, and support for that sort of thing is added on as-needed
79 basis.
80
81 Any time a directory or file is expected in a statement value, Unix
82 syntax must be used, which means that the slash C</> must be used as
83 the directory separator.
84
85 =head2 General syntax
86
87 =head3 Comments
88
89 Comments are any line that start with a hash sign (C<#>). The hash
90 sign may be preceded by any number of horizontal spaces.
91
92 =head3 Filenames
93
94 F<build.info> files are platform agnostic. This means that there is
95 some information in them that is representative rather than specific.
96
97 This is particularly visible with end product names, they work more
98 like a tag than as the actual filename that's going to be produced.
99 This is because different platforms have different decorations on
100 different types of files.
101
102 For example, if we say that we want to produce a program C<foo>, it
103 would look like this:
104
105 PROGRAM=foo
106
107 However, the program filename may end up being just C<foo> (typical
108 for Unix), or C<foo.exe> (typical for Windows), or even C<BLAH$FOO.EXE>
109 (possible on VMS, depending on policy).
110
111 These platform specific decorations are not the concern of
112 F<build.info> files. The build file generators are responsible for
113 transforming these platform agnostic names to their platform specific
114 counterparts.
115
116 =head3 Statements
117
118 With the exception of variables and conditions, the general statement
119 syntax is one of:
120
121 =over 4
122
123 =item B<I<KEYWORD>> B<=> I<value> ...
124
125 =item B<I<KEYWORD>[>I<items>B<]> B<=> I<value> ...
126
127 =back
128
129 Every B<I<KEYWORD>> represents some particular type of information.
130
131 The first form (sometimes called "plain statement") is used to specify
132 information on what end products need to be built, for example:
133
134 PROGRAMS=foo bar
135 LIBS=libpoly libcookie
136 MODULES=awesome-plugin
137 SCRIPTS=tool1 tool2
138 SUBDIRS=dir1 dir2
139
140 This says that we want to build programs C<foo> and C<bar>, the
141 libraries C<libpoly> and C<libcookie>, an awesome plugin module
142 C<awesome-plugin>, a couple of scripts C<tool1> and C<tool2>, and
143 finally that there are more F<build.info> files in subdirectories
144 C<dir1> and C<dir2>.
145
146 The second form (sometimes called "indexed statement") is used to
147 specify further details for existing items, for example:
148
149 SOURCE[foo]=foo.c details.c
150 DEPEND[foo]=libcookie
151
152 This says that the program C<foo> is built from the source files
153 F<foo.c> and F<details.c>, and that it depends on the library
154 C<libcookie> (in other words, the library will be included when
155 linking that program together).
156
157 Multiple space separated items are allowed too:
158
159 SOURCE[foo]=foo.c
160 SOURCE[details]=details.c
161 DEPEND[foo details]=libcookie
162
163 For any indexed statement for which the items haven't been specified
164 through any plain statement, or where the items exists but the indexed
165 statement does not apply, the value is simply ignored by the build
166 file generators.
167
168 =head3 Statement attributes
169
170 Some statements can have attributes added to them, to allow for
171 variations on how they are treated.
172
173 =over 4
174
175 =item B<I<KEYWORD>{> I<attrib> | I<attrib>B<=>I<attrib-value> [,...]B<}>
176 B<=> I<value> ...
177
178 =item B<I<KEYWORD>[>I<items>B<]{> I<attrib> | I<attrib>B<=>I<attrib-value>
179 [,...]B<}> B<=> I<value> ...
180
181 =back
182
183 Attributes are passed as they are to the build file generators, and
184 the exact interpretation of those attributes is entirely up to them
185 (see L</Known attributes> below for details).
186
187 A current example:
188
189 LIBS{noinst,has_main}=libtestutil.a
190
191 This says that the static library C<libtestutil.a> should not be
192 installed (C<noinst>), and that it includes an object file that has
193 the C<main> symbol (C<has_main>). Most platforms don't need to know
194 the latter, but there are some where the program linker will not look
195 for C<main> in libraries unless it's explicitly told so, so this is
196 way to tell the build file generator to emit the necessary command
197 options to make that happen.
198
199 Attributes are accumulated globally. This means that a library could
200 be given like this in different places:
201
202 # Location 1
203 LIBS=libwhatever
204
205 # Location 2
206 LIBS{noinst}=libwhatever
207
208 # Location 3
209 LIBS{has_main}=libwhatever
210
211 The end result is that the library C<libwhatever> will have the
212 attributes C<noinst> and C<has_main> attached to it.
213
214 =head3 Quoting and tokens
215
216 Statement values are normally split into a list of tokens, separated
217 by spaces.
218
219 To avoid having a value split up into several tokens, they may be
220 quoted with double (C<">) or single (C<'>) quotes.
221
222 For example:
223
224 PROGRAMS=foo "space cadet" bar
225
226 This says that we sant to build three programs, C<foo>, C<space cadet>
227 and C<bar>.
228
229 =head3 Conditionals
230
231 F<build.info> files include a very simple condition system, involving
232 the following keywords:
233
234 =over 4
235
236 =item B<IF[>0|1B<]>
237
238 =item B<ELSIF[>0|1B<]>
239
240 =item B<ELSE>
241
242 =item B<ENDIF>
243
244 =back
245
246 This works like any condition system with similar syntax, and the
247 condition value in B<IF> and B<ELSIF> can really be any literal value
248 that perl can interpret as true or false.
249
250 Conditional statements are nesting.
251
252 In itself, this is not very powerful, but together with L</Perl nuggets>,
253 it can be.
254
255 =head3 Variables
256
257 F<build.info> handles simple variables. They are defined by
258 assignment:
259
260 =over 4
261
262 =item B<$>I<NAME> B<=> I<value>
263
264 =back
265
266 These variables can then be used as part of any statement value or
267 indexed statement item. This should be used with some care, as
268 I<variables are expanded into their values before the value they are
269 part of is tokenized>.
270
271 I<Variable assignment values are not tokenized.>
272
273 Variable references can be one of:
274
275 =over 4
276
277 =item B<$>I<NAME> or B<${>I<NAME>B<}>
278
279 Simple reference; the variable reference is replaced with its value,
280 verbatim.
281
282 =item B<${>I<NAME>B</>I<str>B</>I<subst>B<}>
283
284 Substitution reference; the variable reference is replaced with its
285 value, modified by replacing all occurrences of I<str> with I<subst>.
286
287 =back
288
289 =head2 Scope
290
291 Most of the statement values are accumulated globally from all the
292 F<build.info> files that are digested. There are two exceptions,
293 F<build.info> variables and B<SUBDIRS> statement, for which the scope
294 is the F<build.info> file they are in.
295
296 =head2 Perl nuggets
297
298 Whenever a F<build.info> file is read, it is passed through the Perl
299 template processor L<OpenSSL::Template>, which is a small extension of
300 L<Text::Template>.
301
302 Perl nuggets are anything between C<{-> and C<-}>, and whatever the
303 result from such a nugget is, that value will replace the nugget in
304 text form. This is useful to get dynamically generated F<build.info>
305 statements, and is most often seen used together with the B<IF> and
306 B<ELSIF> conditional statements.
307
308 For example:
309
310 IF[{- $disabled{something} -}]
311 # do whatever's needed when "something" is disabled
312 ELSIF[{- $somethingelse eq 'blah' -}]
313 # do whatever's needed to satisfy this condition
314 ELSE
315 # fallback
316 ENDIF
317
318 Normal Perl scope applies, so it's possible to have an initial perl
319 nugget that sets diverse global variables that are used in later
320 nuggets. Each nugget is a Perl block of its own, so B<my> definitions
321 are only in scope within the same nugget, while B<our> definitions are
322 in scope within the whole F<build.info> file.
323
324 =head1 REFERENCE
325
326 =head2 Conditionals
327
328 =over 4
329
330 =item B<IF[>0|1B<]>
331
332 If the condition is true (represented as C<1> here), everything
333 between this B<IF> and the next corresponding B<ELSIF> or B<ELSE>
334 applies, and the rest until the corresponding B<ENDIF> is skipped
335 over.
336
337 If the condition is false (represented as C<0> here), everything
338 from this B<IF> is skipped over until the next corresponding B<ELSIF>
339 or B<ELSE>, at which point processing continues.
340
341 =item B<ELSE>
342
343 If F<build.info> statements have been skipped over to this point since
344 the corresponding B<IF> or B<ELSIF>, F<build.info> processing starts
345 again following this line.
346
347 =item B<ELSIF[>0|1B<]>
348
349 This is B<ELSE> and B<IF> combined.
350
351 =item B<ENDIF>
352
353 Marks the end of a conditional.
354
355 =back
356
357 =head2 Plain statements
358
359 =over 4
360
361 =item B<SUBDIRS=> I<dir> ...
362
363 This instructs the F<build.info> reader to also read the F<build.info>
364 file in every specified directory. All directories should be given
365 relative to the location of the current F<build.info> file.
366
367 =item B<PROGRAMS=> I<name> ...
368
369 Collects names of programs that should be built.
370
371 B<PROGRAMS> statements may have attributes, which apply to all the
372 programs given in such a statement. For example:
373
374 PROGRAMS=foo
375 PROGRAMS{noinst}=bar
376
377 With those two lines, the program C<foo> will not have the attribute
378 C<noinst>, while the program C<bar> will.
379
380 =item B<LIBS=> I<name> ...
381
382 Collects names of libraries that should be built.
383
384 The normal case is that libraries are built in both static and shared
385 form. However, if a name ends with C<.a>, only the static form will
386 be produced.
387
388 Similarly, libraries may be referred in indexed statements as just the
389 plain name, or the name including the ending C<.a>. If given without
390 the ending C<.a>, any form available will be used, but if given with
391 the ending C<.a>, the static library form is used unconditionally.
392
393 B<LIBS> statements may have attributes, which apply to all the
394 libraries given in such a statement. For example:
395
396 LIBS=libfoo
397 LIBS{noinst}=libbar
398
399 With those two lines, the library C<libfoo> will not have the
400 attribute C<noinst>, while the library C<libbar> will.
401
402 =item B<MODULES=> I<name>
403
404 Collects names of dynamically loadable modules that should be built.
405
406 B<MODULES> statements may have attributes, which apply to all the
407 modules given in such a statement. For example:
408
409 MODULES=foo
410 MODULES{noinst}=bar
411
412 With those two lines, the module C<foo> will not have the attribute
413 C<noinst>, while the module C<bar> will.
414
415 =item B<SCRIPTS=> I<name>
416
417 Collects names of scripts that should be built, or that just exist.
418 That is how they differ from programs, as programs are always expected
419 to be compiled from multiple sources.
420
421 B<SCRIPTS> statements may have attributes, which apply to all the
422 scripts given in such a statement. For example:
423
424 SCRIPTS=foo
425 SCRIPTS{noinst}=bar
426
427 With those two lines, the script C<foo> will not have the attribute
428 C<noinst>, while the script C<bar> will.
429
430 =back
431
432 =head2 Indexed statements
433
434 =over 4
435
436 =item B<DEPEND[>I<items>B<]> B<=> I<file> ...
437
438 Collects dependencies, where I<items> depend on the given I<file>s.
439
440 As a special case, the I<items> may be empty, for which the build file
441 generators should make the whole build depend on the given I<file>s,
442 rather than the specific I<items>.
443
444 The I<items> may be any program, library, module, script, or any
445 filename used as a value anywhere.
446
447 The I<items> may also be literal build file targets. Those are
448 recognised by being surrounded be vertical bars (also known as the
449 "pipe" character), C<|>. For example:
450
451 DEPEND[|tests|]=fipsmodule.cnf
452
453 B<DEPEND> statements may have attributes, which apply to each
454 individual dependency in such a statement. For example:
455
456 DEPEND[libfoo.a]=libmandatory.a
457 DEPEND[libfoo.a]{weak}=libbar.a libcookie.a
458
459 With those statements, the dependency between C<libfoo.a> and
460 C<libmandatory.a> is strong, while the dependency between C<libfoo.a>
461 and C<libbar.a> and C<libcookie.a> is weak. See the description of
462 B<weak> in L</Known attributes> for more information.
463
464 =item B<GENERATE[>I<item>B<]> B<=> I<generator> I<generator-arg> ...
465
466 This specifies that the I<item> is generated using the I<generator>
467 with the I<generator-arg>s as arguments, plus the name of the output
468 file as last argument.
469
470 For I<generator>s where this is applicable, any B<INCLUDE> statement
471 for the same I<item> will be given to the I<generator> as its
472 inclusion directories. Likewise, any B<DEPEND> statement for the same
473 I<item> will be given to the I<generator> as an extra file or module
474 to load, where this is applicable.
475
476 The build file generators must be able to recognise the I<generator>.
477 Currently, they at least recognise files ending in C<.pl>, and will
478 execute them to generate the I<item>, and files ending in C<.in>,
479 which will be used as input for L<OpenSSL::Template> to generate
480 I<item> (in other words, we use the exact same style of
481 L</Perl nuggets> mechanism that is used to read F<build.info> files).
482
483 =item B<SOURCE[>I<item>B<]> B<=> I<file> ...
484
485 Collects filenames that will be used as source files for I<item>.
486
487 The I<item> must be a singular item, and may be any program, library,
488 module or script given with B<PROGRAMS>, B<LIBS>, B<MODULES> and
489 B<SCRIPTS>.
490
491 Static libraries may be sources. In that case, its object files are
492 used directly when building I<item> instead of relying on library
493 dependency and symbol resolution (through B<DEPEND> statements).
494
495 B<SOURCE> statements may have attributes, which apply to each
496 individual dependency in such a statement. For example:
497
498 SOURCE[prog]=prog_a.c
499 SOURCE[prog]{check}=prog_b.c prog_c.c
500
501 With those statements, the association between C<prog> and C<prog_a.c>
502 comes with no extra attributes, while the association between C<prog>
503 and C<prog_b.c> as well as C<prog_c.c> comes with the extra attribute
504 C<check>.
505
506 =item B<SHARED_SOURCE[>I<item>B<]> B<=> I<file> ...
507
508 Collects filenames that will be used as source files for I<item>.
509
510 The I<item> must be a singular item, and may be any library or module
511 given with B<LIBS> or B<MODULES>. For libraries, the given filenames
512 are only used for their shared form, so if the item is a library name
513 ending with C<.a>, the filenames will be ignored.
514
515 B<SHARED_SOURCE> statements may have attributes, just as B<SOURCE>
516 statements.
517
518 =item B<DEFINE[>I<items>B<]> B<=> I<name>[B<=>I<value>] ...
519
520 Collects I<name> / I<value> pairs (or just I<name> with no defined
521 value if no I<value> is given) associated with I<items>.
522
523 The build file generators will decide what to do with them. For
524 example, these pairs should become C macro definitions whenever a
525 C<.c> file is built into an object file.
526
527 =item B<INCLUDE[>I<items>B<]> B<=> I<dir> ...
528
529 Collects inclusion directories that will be used when building the
530 I<items> components (object files and whatever else). This is used at
531 the discretion of the build file generators.
532
533 =back
534
535 =head2 Known attributes
536
537 Note: this will never be a complete list of attributes.
538
539 =over 4
540
541 =item B<noinst>
542
543 This is used to specify that the end products this is set for should
544 not be installed, that they are only internal. This is applicable on
545 internal static libraries, or on test programs.
546
547 =item B<misc>
548
549 This is used with B<SCRIPTS>, to specify that some scripts should be
550 installed in the "misc" directory rather than the normal program
551 directory.
552
553 =item B<engine>
554
555 This is used with B<MODULES>, to specify what modules are engines and
556 should be installed in the engines directory instead of the modules
557 directory.
558
559 =item B<weak>
560
561 This is used with B<DEPEND> where libraries are involved, to specify
562 that the dependency between two libraries is weak and is only there to
563 infer order.
564
565 Without this attribute, a dependency between two libraries, expressed
566 like this, means that if C<libfoo.a> appears in a linking command
567 line, so will C<libmandatory.a>:
568
569 DEPEND[libfoo.a]=libmandatory.a
570
571 With this attribute, a dependency between two libraries, expressed
572 like this, means that if I<both> C<libfoo.a> and C<libmandatory.a>
573 appear in a linking command line (because of recursive dependencies
574 through other libraries), they will be ordered in such a way that this
575 dependency is maintained:
576
577 DEPEND[libfoo.a]{weak}=libfoo.a libcookie.a
578
579 This is useful in complex dependency trees where two libraries can be
580 used as alternatives for each other. In this example, C<lib1.a> and
581 C<lib2.a> have alternative implementations of the same thing, and
582 C<libmandatory.a> has unresolved references to that same thing, and is
583 therefore depending on either of them, but not both at the same time:
584
585 DEPEND[program1]=libmandatory.a lib1.a
586 DEPEND[program2]=libmandatory.a lib2.a
587 DEPEND[libmandatory]{weak}=lib1.a lib2.a
588
589 =back
590
591 =head1 GLOSSARY
592
593 =over 4
594
595 =item "build file"
596
597 This is any platform specific file that describes the complete build,
598 with platform specific commands. On Unix, this is typically
599 F<Makefile>; on VMS, this is typically F<descrip.mms>.
600
601 =item "build file generator"
602
603 Perl code that generates build files, given configuration data and
604 data collected from F<build.info> files.
605
606 =item "plain statement"
607
608 Any F<build.info> statement of the form B<I<KEYWORD>>=I<values>, with
609 the exception of conditional statements and variable assignments.
610
611 =item "indexed statement"
612
613 Any F<build.info> statement of the form B<I<KEYWORD>[>I<items>B<]=>I<values>,
614 with the exception of conditional statements.
615
616 =item "intermediate file"
617
618 Any file that's an intermediate between a source file and an end
619 product.
620
621 =item "end product"
622
623 Any file that is mentioned in the B<PROGRAMS>, B<LIBS>, B<MODULES> or
624 B<SCRIPTS>.
625
626 =back
627
628 =head1 SEE ALSO
629
630 For OpenSSL::Template documentation,
631 C<perldoc -o man util/perl/OpenSSL/Template.pm>
632
633 L<Text::Template|https://metacpan.org/pod/Text::Template>
634
635 =head1 COPYRIGHT
636
637 Copyright 2019-2021 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
638
639 Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use this
640 file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy in the file
641 LICENSE in the source distribution or at
642 L<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.
643
644 =cut