xref: /qemu/docs/devel/build-system.rst (revision 49b7d744)
1==================================
2The QEMU build system architecture
3==================================
4
5This document aims to help developers understand the architecture of the
6QEMU build system. As with projects using GNU autotools, the QEMU build
7system has two stages, first the developer runs the "configure" script
8to determine the local build environment characteristics, then they run
9"make" to build the project. There is about where the similarities with
10GNU autotools end, so try to forget what you know about them.
11
12
13Stage 1: configure
14==================
15
16The QEMU configure script is written directly in shell, and should be
17compatible with any POSIX shell, hence it uses #!/bin/sh. An important
18implication of this is that it is important to avoid using bash-isms on
19development platforms where bash is the primary host.
20
21In contrast to autoconf scripts, QEMU's configure is expected to be
22silent while it is checking for features. It will only display output
23when an error occurs, or to show the final feature enablement summary
24on completion.
25
26Because QEMU uses the Meson build system under the hood, only VPATH
27builds are supported.  There are two general ways to invoke configure &
28perform a build:
29
30 - VPATH, build artifacts outside of QEMU source tree entirely::
31
32     cd ../
33     mkdir build
34     cd build
35     ../qemu/configure
36     make
37
38 - VPATH, build artifacts in a subdir of QEMU source tree::
39
40     mkdir build
41     cd build
42     ../configure
43     make
44
45For now, checks on the compilation environment are found in configure
46rather than meson.build, though this is expected to change.  The command
47line is parsed in the configure script and, whenever needed, converted
48into the appropriate options to Meson.
49
50New checks should be added to Meson, which usually comprises the
51following tasks:
52
53 - Add a Meson build option to meson_options.txt.
54
55 - Add support to the command line arg parser to handle any new
56   `--enable-XXX`/`--disable-XXX` flags required by the feature.
57
58 - Add information to the help output message to report on the new
59   feature flag.
60
61 - Add code to perform the actual feature check.
62
63 - Add code to include the feature status in `config-host.h`
64
65 - Add code to print out the feature status in the configure summary
66   upon completion.
67
68
69Taking the probe for SDL2_Image as an example, we have the following pieces
70in configure::
71
72  # Initial variable state
73  sdl_image=auto
74
75  ..snip..
76
77  # Configure flag processing
78  --disable-sdl-image) sdl_image=disabled
79  ;;
80  --enable-sdl-image) sdl_image=enabled
81  ;;
82
83  ..snip..
84
85  # Help output feature message
86  sdl-image         SDL Image support for icons
87
88  ..snip..
89
90  # Meson invocation
91  -Dsdl_image=$sdl_image
92
93In meson_options.txt::
94
95  option('sdl', type : 'feature', value : 'auto',
96         description: 'SDL Image support for icons')
97
98In meson.build::
99
100  # Detect dependency
101  sdl_image = dependency('SDL2_image', required: get_option('sdl_image'),
102                         method: 'pkg-config',
103                         static: enable_static)
104
105  # Create config-host.h (if applicable)
106  config_host_data.set('CONFIG_SDL_IMAGE', sdl_image.found())
107
108  # Summary
109  summary_info += {'SDL image support': sdl_image.found()}
110
111
112
113Helper functions
114----------------
115
116The configure script provides a variety of helper functions to assist
117developers in checking for system features:
118
119`do_cc $ARGS...`
120   Attempt to run the system C compiler passing it $ARGS...
121
122`do_cxx $ARGS...`
123   Attempt to run the system C++ compiler passing it $ARGS...
124
125`compile_object $CFLAGS`
126   Attempt to compile a test program with the system C compiler using
127   $CFLAGS. The test program must have been previously written to a file
128   called $TMPC.
129
130`compile_prog $CFLAGS $LDFLAGS`
131   Attempt to compile a test program with the system C compiler using
132   $CFLAGS and link it with the system linker using $LDFLAGS. The test
133   program must have been previously written to a file called $TMPC.
134
135`has $COMMAND`
136   Determine if $COMMAND exists in the current environment, either as a
137   shell builtin, or executable binary, returning 0 on success.
138
139`path_of $COMMAND`
140   Return the fully qualified path of $COMMAND, printing it to stdout,
141   and returning 0 on success.
142
143`check_define $NAME`
144   Determine if the macro $NAME is defined by the system C compiler
145
146`check_include $NAME`
147   Determine if the include $NAME file is available to the system C
148   compiler
149
150`write_c_skeleton`
151   Write a minimal C program main() function to the temporary file
152   indicated by $TMPC
153
154`feature_not_found $NAME $REMEDY`
155   Print a message to stderr that the feature $NAME was not available
156   on the system, suggesting the user try $REMEDY to address the
157   problem.
158
159`error_exit $MESSAGE $MORE...`
160   Print $MESSAGE to stderr, followed by $MORE... and then exit from the
161   configure script with non-zero status
162
163`query_pkg_config $ARGS...`
164   Run pkg-config passing it $ARGS. If QEMU is doing a static build,
165   then --static will be automatically added to $ARGS
166
167
168Stage 2: Meson
169==============
170
171The Meson build system is currently used to describe the build
172process for:
173
1741) executables, which include:
175
176   - Tools - qemu-img, qemu-nbd, qga (guest agent), etc
177
178   - System emulators - qemu-system-$ARCH
179
180   - Userspace emulators - qemu-$ARCH
181
182   - Some (but not all) unit tests
183
1842) documentation
185
1863) ROMs, which can be either installed as binary blobs or compiled
187
1884) other data files, such as icons or desktop files
189
190The source code is highly modularized, split across many files to
191facilitate building of all of these components with as little duplicated
192compilation as possible. The Meson "sourceset" functionality is used
193to list the files and their dependency on various configuration
194symbols.
195
196Various subsystems that are common to both tools and emulators have
197their own sourceset, for example `block_ss` for the block device subsystem,
198`chardev_ss` for the character device subsystem, etc.  These sourcesets
199are then turned into static libraries as follows::
200
201    libchardev = static_library('chardev', chardev_ss.sources(),
202                                name_suffix: 'fa',
203                                build_by_default: false)
204
205    chardev = declare_dependency(link_whole: libchardev)
206
207The special `.fa` suffix is needed as long as unit tests are built with
208the older Makefile infrastructure, and will go away later.
209
210Files linked into emulator targets there can be split into two distinct groups
211of files, those which are independent of the QEMU emulation target and
212those which are dependent on the QEMU emulation target.
213
214In the target-independent set lives various general purpose helper code,
215such as error handling infrastructure, standard data structures,
216platform portability wrapper functions, etc. This code can be compiled
217once only and the .o files linked into all output binaries.
218Target-independent code lives in the `common_ss`, `softmmu_ss` and
219`user_ss` sourcesets.  `common_ss` is linked into all emulators, `softmmu_ss`
220only in system emulators, `user_ss` only in user-mode emulators.
221
222In the target-dependent set lives CPU emulation, device emulation and
223much glue code. This sometimes also has to be compiled multiple times,
224once for each target being built.
225
226All binaries link with a static library `libqemuutil.a`, which is then
227linked to all the binaries.  `libqemuutil.a` is built from several
228sourcesets; most of them however host generated code, and the only two
229of general interest are `util_ss` and `stub_ss`.
230
231The separation between these two is purely for documentation purposes.
232`util_ss` contains generic utility files.  Even though this code is only
233linked in some binaries, sometimes it requires hooks only in some of
234these and depend on other functions that are not fully implemented by
235all QEMU binaries.  `stub_ss` links dummy stubs that will only be linked
236into the binary if the real implementation is not present.  In a way,
237the stubs can be thought of as a portable implementation of the weak
238symbols concept.
239
240The following files concur in the definition of which files are linked
241into each emulator:
242
243`default-configs/*.mak`
244  The files under default-configs/ control what emulated hardware is built
245  into each QEMU system and userspace emulator targets. They merely contain
246  a list of config variable definitions like the machines that should be
247  included. For example, default-configs/aarch64-softmmu.mak has::
248
249    include arm-softmmu.mak
250    CONFIG_XLNX_ZYNQMP_ARM=y
251    CONFIG_XLNX_VERSAL=y
252
253`*/Kconfig`
254  These files are processed together with `default-configs/*.mak` and
255  describe the dependencies between various features, subsystems and
256  device models.  They are described in kconfig.rst.
257
258These files rarely need changing unless new devices / hardware need to
259be enabled for a particular system/userspace emulation target
260
261
262Support scripts
263---------------
264
265Meson has a special convention for invoking Python scripts: if their
266first line is `#! /usr/bin/env python3` and the file is *not* executable,
267find_program() arranges to invoke the script under the same Python
268interpreter that was used to invoke Meson.  This is the most common
269and preferred way to invoke support scripts from Meson build files,
270because it automatically uses the value of configure's --python= option.
271
272In case the script is not written in Python, use a `#! /usr/bin/env ...`
273line and make the script executable.
274
275Scripts written in Python, where it is desirable to make the script
276executable (for example for test scripts that developers may want to
277invoke from the command line, such as tests/qapi-schema/test-qapi.py),
278should be invoked through the `python` variable in meson.build. For
279example::
280
281  test('QAPI schema regression tests', python,
282       args: files('test-qapi.py'),
283       env: test_env, suite: ['qapi-schema', 'qapi-frontend'])
284
285This is needed to obey the --python= option passed to the configure
286script, which may point to something other than the first python3
287binary on the path.
288
289
290Stage 3: makefiles
291==================
292
293The use of GNU make is required with the QEMU build system.
294
295The output of Meson is a build.ninja file, which is used with the Ninja
296build system.  QEMU uses a different approach, where Makefile rules are
297synthesized from the build.ninja file.  The main Makefile includes these
298rules and wraps them so that e.g. submodules are built before QEMU.
299The resulting build system is largely non-recursive in nature, in
300contrast to common practices seen with automake.
301
302Tests are also ran by the Makefile with the traditional `make check`
303phony target.  Meson test suites such as `unit` can be ran with `make
304check-unit` too.  It is also possible to run tests defined in meson.build
305with `meson test`.
306
307The following text is only relevant for unit tests which still have to
308be converted to Meson.
309
310All binaries should link to `libqemuutil.a`, e.g.:
311
312   qemu-img$(EXESUF): qemu-img.o ..snip.. libqemuutil.a
313
314On Windows, all binaries have the suffix `.exe`, so all Makefile rules
315which create binaries must include the $(EXESUF) variable on the binary
316name. e.g.
317
318   qemu-img$(EXESUF): qemu-img.o ..snip..
319
320This expands to `.exe` on Windows, or an empty string on other platforms.
321
322Variable naming
323---------------
324
325The QEMU convention is to define variables to list different groups of
326object files. These are named with the convention $PREFIX-obj-y.  The
327Meson `chardev` variable in the previous example corresponds to a
328variable 'chardev-obj-y'.
329
330Likewise, tests that are executed by `make check-unit` are grouped into
331a variable check-unit-y, like this:
332
333  check-unit-y += tests/test-visitor-serialization$(EXESUF)
334  check-unit-y += tests/test-iov$(EXESUF)
335  check-unit-y += tests/test-bitmap$(EXESUF)
336
337When a test or object file which needs to be conditionally built based
338on some characteristic of the host system, the configure script will
339define a variable for the conditional. For example, on Windows it will
340define $(CONFIG_POSIX) with a value of 'n' and $(CONFIG_WIN32) with a
341value of 'y'. It is now possible to use the config variables when
342listing object files. For example,
343
344  check-unit-$(CONFIG_POSIX) += tests/test-vmstate$(EXESUF)
345
346On Windows this expands to
347
348  check-unit-n += tests/vmstate.exe
349
350Since the `check-unit` target only runs tests included in `$(check-unit-y)`,
351POSIX specific tests listed in `$(util-obj-n)` are ignored on the Windows
352platform builds.
353
354
355CFLAGS / LDFLAGS / LIBS handling
356--------------------------------
357
358There are many different binaries being built with differing purposes,
359and some of them might even be 3rd party libraries pulled in via git
360submodules. As such the use of the global CFLAGS variable is generally
361avoided in QEMU, since it would apply to too many build targets.
362
363Flags that are needed by any QEMU code (i.e. everything *except* GIT
364submodule projects) are put in $(QEMU_CFLAGS) variable. For linker
365flags the $(LIBS) variable is sometimes used, but a couple of more
366targeted variables are preferred.
367
368In addition to these variables, it is possible to provide cflags and
369libs against individual source code files, by defining variables of the
370form $FILENAME-cflags and $FILENAME-libs. For example, the test
371test-crypto-tlscredsx509 needs to link to the libtasn1 library,
372so tests/Makefile.include defines some variables:
373
374  tests/crypto-tls-x509-helpers.o-cflags := $(TASN1_CFLAGS)
375  tests/crypto-tls-x509-helpers.o-libs := $(TASN1_LIBS)
376
377The scope is a little different between the two variables. The libs get
378used when linking any target binary that includes the curl.o object
379file, while the cflags get used when compiling the curl.c file only.
380
381
382Important files for the build system
383====================================
384
385Statically defined files
386------------------------
387
388The following key files are statically defined in the source tree, with
389the rules needed to build QEMU. Their behaviour is influenced by a
390number of dynamically created files listed later.
391
392`Makefile`
393  The main entry point used when invoking make to build all the components
394  of QEMU. The default 'all' target will naturally result in the build of
395  every component. Makefile takes care of recursively building submodules
396  directly via a non-recursive set of rules.
397
398`*/meson.build`
399  The meson.build file in the root directory is the main entry point for the
400  Meson build system, and it coordinates the configuration and build of all
401  executables.  Build rules for various subdirectories are included in
402  other meson.build files spread throughout the QEMU source tree.
403
404`rules.mak`
405  This file provides the generic helper rules for invoking build tools, in
406  particular the compiler and linker.
407
408`tests/Makefile.include`
409  Rules for building the unit tests. This file is included directly by the
410  top level Makefile, so anything defined in this file will influence the
411  entire build system. Care needs to be taken when writing rules for tests
412  to ensure they only apply to the unit test execution / build.
413
414`tests/docker/Makefile.include`
415  Rules for Docker tests. Like tests/Makefile, this file is included
416  directly by the top level Makefile, anything defined in this file will
417  influence the entire build system.
418
419`tests/vm/Makefile.include`
420  Rules for VM-based tests. Like tests/Makefile, this file is included
421  directly by the top level Makefile, anything defined in this file will
422  influence the entire build system.
423
424Dynamically created files
425-------------------------
426
427The following files are generated dynamically by configure in order to
428control the behaviour of the statically defined makefiles. This avoids
429the need for QEMU makefiles to go through any pre-processing as seen
430with autotools, where Makefile.am generates Makefile.in which generates
431Makefile.
432
433Built by configure:
434
435`config-host.mak`
436  When configure has determined the characteristics of the build host it
437  will write a long list of variables to config-host.mak file. This
438  provides the various install directories, compiler / linker flags and a
439  variety of `CONFIG_*` variables related to optionally enabled features.
440  This is imported by the top level Makefile and meson.build in order to
441  tailor the build output.
442
443  config-host.mak is also used as a dependency checking mechanism. If make
444  sees that the modification timestamp on configure is newer than that on
445  config-host.mak, then configure will be re-run.
446
447  The variables defined here are those which are applicable to all QEMU
448  build outputs. Variables which are potentially different for each
449  emulator target are defined by the next file...
450
451`$TARGET-NAME/config-target.mak`
452  TARGET-NAME is the name of a system or userspace emulator, for example,
453  x86_64-softmmu denotes the system emulator for the x86_64 architecture.
454  This file contains the variables which need to vary on a per-target
455  basis. For example, it will indicate whether KVM or Xen are enabled for
456  the target and any other potential custom libraries needed for linking
457  the target.
458
459
460Built by Meson:
461
462`${TARGET-NAME}-config-devices.mak`
463  TARGET-NAME is again the name of a system or userspace emulator. The
464  config-devices.mak file is automatically generated by make using the
465  scripts/make_device_config.sh program, feeding it the
466  default-configs/$TARGET-NAME file as input.
467
468`config-host.h`, `$TARGET-NAME/config-target.h`, `$TARGET-NAME/config-devices.h`
469  These files are used by source code to determine what features
470  are enabled.  They are generated from the contents of the corresponding
471  `*.h` files using the scripts/create_config program. This extracts
472  relevant variables and formats them as C preprocessor macros.
473
474`build.ninja`
475  The build rules.
476
477
478Built by Makefile:
479
480`Makefile.ninja`
481  A Makefile conversion of the build rules in build.ninja.  The conversion
482  is straightforward and, were it necessary to debug the rules produced
483  by Meson, it should be enough to look at build.ninja.  The conversion
484  is performed by scripts/ninjatool.py.
485
486`Makefile.mtest`
487  The Makefile definitions that let "make check" run tests defined in
488  meson.build.  The rules are produced from Meson's JSON description of
489  tests (obtained with "meson introspect --tests") through the script
490  scripts/mtest2make.py.
491
492
493Useful make targets
494-------------------
495
496`help`
497  Print a help message for the most common build targets.
498
499`print-VAR`
500  Print the value of the variable VAR. Useful for debugging the build
501  system.
502