c0af695426
Copyright headers shouldn't contain the filename (and especially shouldn't contain a different file's filename). Change-Id: I82690a3bf371265402bc16f5d2fbb9299c3a1926
179 lines
6.3 KiB
Text
179 lines
6.3 KiB
Text
Bionic comes with a set of 'clean' Linux kernel headers that can safely be
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included by userland applications and libraries without fear of hideous
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conflicts. for more information why this is needed, see the "RATIONALE"
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section at the end of this document.
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these clean headers are automatically generated by several scripts located
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in the 'bionic/kernel/tools' directory, which process a set of original
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and unmodified kernel headers in order to get rid of many annoying
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declarations and constructs that usually result in compilation failure.
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the 'clean headers' only contain type and macro definitions, with the
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exception of a couple static inline functions used for performance
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reason (e.g. optimized CPU-specific byte-swapping routines)
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they can be included from C++, or when compiling code in strict ANSI mode.
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they can be also included before or after any Bionic C library header.
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the generation process works as follows:
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* 'external/kernel-headers/original/'
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contains a set of kernel headers as normally found in the 'include'
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directory of a normal Linux kernel source tree. note that this should
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only contain the files that are really needed by Android (use
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'find_headers.py' to find these automatically).
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* 'bionic/libc/kernel/common'
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contains the non-arch-specific clean headers and directories
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(e.g. linux, asm-generic and mtd)
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* 'bionic/libc/kernel/arch-arm/'
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contains the ARM-specific directory tree of clean headers.
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* 'bionic/libc/kernel/arch-arm/asm'
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contains the real ARM-specific headers
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* 'bionic/libc/kernel/arch-x86'
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'bionic/libc/kernel/arch-x86/asm'
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similarly contains all headers and symlinks to be used on x86
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* 'bionic/libc/kernel/tools' contains various Python and shell scripts used
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to manage and re-generate the headers
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the tools you can use are:
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* tools/find_users.py
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scans a list of source files or directories and prints which ones do
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include Linux headers.
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* tools/find_headers.py
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scans a list of source files or directories and recursively finds all
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the original kernel headers they need.
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* tools/clean_header.py
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prints the clean version of a given kernel header. with the -u option,
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this will also update the corresponding clean header file if its
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content has changed. you can also process more than one file with -u
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* tools/update_all.py
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automatically update all clean headers from the content of
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'external/kernel-headers/original'. this is the script you're likely going to
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run whenever you update the original headers.
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HOW TO BUILD BIONIC AND OTHER PROGRAMS WITH THE CLEAN HEADERS:
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==============================================================
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add bionic/kernel/common and bionic/kernel/arch-<yourarch> to your C
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include path. that should be enough. Note that Bionic will not compile properly
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if you don't.
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HOW TO SUPPORT ANOTHER ARCHITECTURE:
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====================================
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see the content of tools/defaults.py, you will need to make a few updates
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here:
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- add a new item to the 'kernel_archs' list of supported architectures
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- add a proper definition for 'kernel_known_<arch>_statics' with
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relevant definitions.
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- update 'kernel_known_statics' to map "<arch>" to
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'kernel_known_<arch>_statics'
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then, add the new architecture-specific headers to original/asm-<arch>.
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(please ensure that these are really needed, e.g. with tools/find_headers.py)
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finally, run tools/update_all.py
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HOW TO UPDATE THE HEADERS WHEN NEEDED:
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======================================
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IMPORTANT IMPORTANT:
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WHEN UPDATING THE HEADERS, ALWAYS CHECK THAT THE NEW CLEAN HEADERS DO
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NOT BREAK THE KERNEL <-> USER ABI, FOR EXAMPLE BY CHANGING THE SIZE
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OF A GIVEN TYPE. THIS TASK CANNOT BE EASILY AUTOMATED AT THE MOMENT
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copy any updated kernel header into the corresponding location under
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'bionic/kernel/original'.
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for any new kernel header you want to add, first run tools/find_headers.py to be
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sure that it is really needed by the Android sources. then add it to
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'bionic/kernel/original'
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then, run tools/update_all.py to re-run the auto-cleaning
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HOW THE CLEANUP PROCESS WORKS:
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==============================
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this section describes the action performed by the cleanup program(s) when they
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process the original kernel headers into clean ones:
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1. Optimize well-known macros (e.g. __KERNEL__, __KERNEL_STRICT_NAMES)
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this pass gets rid of everything that is guarded by a well-known macro
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definition. this means that a block like
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#ifdef __KERNEL__
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....
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#endif
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will be totally omitted from the output. the optimizer is smart enough to
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handle all complex C-preprocessor conditional expression appropriately.
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this means that, for example:
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#if defined(__KERNEL__) || defined(FOO)
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...
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#endif
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will be transformed into:
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#ifdef FOO
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...
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#endif
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see tools/defaults.py for the list of well-known macros used in this pass,
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in case you need to update it in the future.
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note that this also remove any reference to a kernel-specific configuration
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macro like CONFIG_FOO from the clean headers.
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2. remove variable and function declarations:
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this pass scans non-directive text and only keeps things that look like a
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typedef/struct/union/enum declaration. this allows to get rid of any variable
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or function declaration that should only be used within the kernel anyway
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(and which normally *should* be guarded in a #ifdef __KERNEL__ ... #endif
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block, if the kernel writers were not so messy)
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there are however a few exceptions: it is seldom useful to keep the definition
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of some static inline functions performing very simple operations. a good
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example is the optimized 32-bit byte-swap function found in
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arch-arm/asm/byteorder.h
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the list of exceptions is in tools/defaults.py in case you need to update it
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in the future.
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note that we do *not* remove macro definitions, including these macro that
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perform a call to one of these kernel-header functions, or even define other
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functions. we consider it safe since userland applications have no business
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using them anyway.
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3. whitespace cleanup:
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the final pass remove any comments and empty lines from the final headers.
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4. add a standard disclaimer:
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prepended to each generated header, contains a message like
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"do not edit directly - file was auto-generated by ...."
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