Annotation of xenocara/README, Revision 1.26
1.1 matthieu 1:
2: Notes on building Xenocara for OpenBSD X hackers
3:
4: This document presents some techniques that can be useful for people
5: wanting to hack the xenocara tree. It assumes some basic knowledge of
6: the OpenBSD build system, as described in the release(8) manual page.
7:
8: o About Xenocara
9: --------------
1.11 david 10: Xenocara is the name chosen for OpenBSD's version of X. It's
1.22 matthieu 11: currently based on X.Org 7.3 and its dependencies. The goal of
1.1 matthieu 12: Xenocara is to provide a framework to host local modifications and to
13: automate the build of the modular X.Org components, including 3rd
1.11 david 14: party packages and some software maintained by OpenBSD developers.
1.1 matthieu 15:
16: o Source tree
17: -----------
18:
19: The organisation of the xenocara directory follows the general
20: organisation used in X.Org:
21:
22: - app: X applications and utilities
23: - data: various data files (keyboard mappings and bitmaps)
24: - doc: documentation
25: - driver: input and video drivers
26: - font: fonts
27: - lib: libraries
28: - proto: X protocol headers
29: - util: utilities that don't fit anywhere else
1.24 matthieu 30: - xserver: the source for the X servers
1.1 matthieu 31:
32: In addition Xenocara uses the following directories:
33:
34: - dist: contains the Mesa sources, shared by lib and xserver above
35: - distrib: all binary distribution related tools and data
36: - etc: mtree(8) data files
1.3 matthieu 37: - share: make(1) configuration for Xenocara
1.1 matthieu 38:
1.2 matthieu 39: At the top-level directory two files describe the individual
1.3 matthieu 40: components of Xenocara:
1.1 matthieu 41:
1.2 matthieu 42: - MODULES lists all X.Org components (imported from the X.Org
43: distribution at http://xorg.freedesktop.org/archive/)
1.3 matthieu 44: - 3RDPARTY lists all 3rd party software components provided in Xenocara,
1.2 matthieu 45: either as dependencies of the X.Org software, or as
46: complements to it to provide a more useable default
47: environment.
48:
49: o Compiling and installing
50: ------------------------
51:
1.25 matthieu 52: Xenocara is made up of almost three hundred different independent
53: packages that need to be built and installed in the right order,
54: especially while bootstrapping (while /usr/X11R6 is still empty). The
55: Xenocara Makefiles take care of that using the 'build' target.
1.2 matthieu 56:
1.5 matthieu 57: Quick startup guide
58:
59: The following steps will build and install everything for the first time.
60:
1.7 matthieu 61: cd xenocara
1.5 matthieu 62: make bootstrap
63: make obj
64: make build
65:
66: If you want to use another obj directory see below.
67:
1.2 matthieu 68: Requirements
69:
70: A freshly checked out xenocara tree is buildable without any external
1.23 matthieu 71: tool. Only the xenocara and the src (currently only the
1.24 matthieu 72: src/sys/dev/pci/pcidevs file) trees are needed.
1.23 matthieu 73:
74: However if you start modifying things in the automake build
1.2 matthieu 75: system used by many packages, you will need to have the following
1.3 matthieu 76: GNU autotools packages installed:
1.2 matthieu 77:
78: - automake 1.9 (devel/automake/1.9)
1.26 ! matthieu 79: - autoconf 2.62 (devel/autoconf/2.62)
1.6 matthieu 80: - metaauto 0.6 (or later) (devel/metaauto)
1.2 matthieu 81: - libtool 1.5.22 (or later) (devel/libtool)
82:
1.17 matthieu 83: If you have your source tree on an NFS partition, make sure the clock
1.23 matthieu 84: of your server and client are properly synchronised. Any significant
85: drift will cause various problems during builds.
1.17 matthieu 86:
1.8 matthieu 87: Path
88:
1.24 matthieu 89: To build Xenocara, you need to have /usr/X11R6/bin in your PATH.
1.8 matthieu 90:
1.2 matthieu 91: Sudo
92:
93: If the SUDO variable points to your sudo(8) binary in /etc/mk.conf,
94: 'make build' can be run as a normal user. It will raise its privileges
95: whenever needed with sudo. Otherwise, you need to run make build as
96: root.
97:
1.3 matthieu 98: If you have installed the full Xenocara X sets on your system, you
99: don't need to build all of Xenocara to patch one element. You can go
1.24 matthieu 100: to any module sub-directory and run 'make build' from there.
1.2 matthieu 101:
1.8 matthieu 102: Source directory
103:
104: The variable XSRCDIR can be set either in the environment or in
1.9 matthieu 105: /etc/mk.conf to point to the xenocara source tree, in case you keep it
1.21 matthieu 106: in a non-standard directory (the default is /usr/xenocara).
1.8 matthieu 107:
1.2 matthieu 108: Objdirs
109:
110: Xenocara supports objdirs (and it's even the recommended way to build
111: things). Just run 'make obj' at any level before 'make build' to make
1.24 matthieu 112: sure that the object directories are created.
113: XOBJDIR defines the obj directory that is used (defaults to /usr/xobj).
1.13 matthieu 114: It should be created before running 'make obj'.
1.2 matthieu 115:
1.24 matthieu 116: Shadow trees
1.2 matthieu 117:
118: Alternatively, the old 'lndir(1)' method can still be used to build
1.3 matthieu 119: Xenocara outside of its source tree. Just don't use 'make obj' in this
1.24 matthieu 120: case.
1.2 matthieu 121:
122: o Regenerating configure scripts
123: ------------------------------
124:
125: Whenever you touched an import file for GNU autotools (Makefile.am,
126: configure.ac mostly), you need to rebuild the configure script and
1.24 matthieu 127: makefiles skeletons. For that use the following command in the
1.14 matthieu 128: directory where you edited the autotools source files:
1.2 matthieu 129:
130: env XENOCARA_RERUN_AUTOCONF=Yes make -f Makefile.bsd-wrapper build
131:
1.24 matthieu 132: You can also set XENOCARA_RERUN_AUTOCONF in /etc/mk.conf or in the
133: environment to force the regeneration of configure scripts
1.14 matthieu 134: in every component during a make build.
1.2 matthieu 135:
1.15 matthieu 136: o Cleaning in packages managed by autotools
137: -----------------------------------------
138:
139: One common problem when building xenocara is the case where the obj
140: directory didn't exist (or the symbolic link pointed to a non-existent
1.24 matthieu 141: directory) when the source was first built. After fixing this problem,
142: 'configure' will refuse to work in the obj dir, because the source
143: is already configured.
1.15 matthieu 144:
145: To recover from this in one package:
146:
147: rm -f obj
148: make -f Makefile.bsd-wrapper cleandir
149: mkdir XOBJDIR
150: make -f Makefile.bsd-wrapper obj
151: make -f Makefile.bsd-wrapper build
152:
153: or from the root of the xenocara tree:
154:
1.24 matthieu 155: find . -type l -name obj | xargs rm -f
1.15 matthieu 156: make cleandir
157: mkdir XOBJDIR
158: make obj
159: make build
160:
1.16 matthieu 161: for more desperate cases, remove all files from XSRCDIR not in CVS:
1.15 matthieu 162:
163: cd XSRCDIR
164: cvs -q update -PAd -I - | awk '$1=="?" {print $2}' | xargs rm -f
165:
1.19 matthieu 166: o How to build something with debug information?
167: ----------------------------------------------
168:
169: You can use "env CFLAGS=-g make -f Makefile.bsd-wrapper build" to
170: build any module with debugging information, but you'll need to remove
171: XOBJDIR/xorg-config.cache.${MACHINE} before doing that because
172: autoconf caches the value of CFLAGS in its cache.
173:
174: o How to get a core file out of the X server?
175: -------------------------------------------
176:
177: Several things are needed:
178:
179: 1) set kern.nosuidcoredump=2 in /etc/sysctl.conf
1.24 matthieu 180: 2) put
1.19 matthieu 181:
182: Option "NoTrapSignals" "true"
183:
1.24 matthieu 184: in the "ServerFlags" section of /etc/X11/xorg.conf. If such a section
1.19 matthieu 185: doesn't exist, it can be added as follow:
186:
187: Section "ServerFlags"
188: Option "NoTrapSignals" "true"
189: EndSection
190:
1.24 matthieu 191: anywhere in the configuration file.
1.19 matthieu 192:
193: 3) start the X server as root, with the -keepPriv option. A regular
194: user is not allowed to use this option. If you use xdm, you can add
195: the option in /etc/X11/xdm/Xservers. If you want to use startx, you
196: need to run it as root, like this:
197:
198: startx -- /usr/X11R6/bin/X -keepPriv
199:
200: Now the X server will dump core when catching a fatal signal. But it
201: will also not be able to restore the text mode on exit. So be prepared
202: to log in remotely (serial terminal or ssh) to reboot your machine or
203: to restart X.
204:
205: The core dump will be in /var/crash.
206:
207: See also <http://xorg.freedesktop.org/wiki/Development/Documentation/ServerDebugging>
208:
1.15 matthieu 209: --
1.26 ! matthieu 210: $OpenBSD: README,v 1.25 2008/10/10 05:32:58 matthieu Exp $