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README.buildsystem.md

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SONiC Buildimage Guide

Overview

SONiC buildimage is a GNU make based environment for build process automation. It consists of two main parts:

  • Backend - collection of makefiles and other helpers that define generic target groups, used by recipes
  • Frontend - collection of recipes, that define metadata for each build target

Structure

File structure of SONiC Buildimage is as follows:

sonic-buildimage/  
  Makefile  
  slave.mk  
  sonic-slave/  
    Dockerfile  
  rules/  
    config  
    functions
    recipe1.mk
    ..
  dockers/  
    docker1/  
      Dockerfile.template    
    ..  
  src/  
    submodule1/    
    ..  
    package1/  
      Makefile  
    ..  
  platform/  
    vendor1/  
    ..  
  target/  
    debs/  
    python-wheels/  

Backend

Makefile, slave.mk and sonic-slave/Dockerfile are the backend of buildimage.
slave.mk is the actual makefile. It defines a set of rules for target groups (more on that later). You can find a make rule for every target that is defined in recipe there.
Makefile is a wrapper over sonic-slave docker image.

Every part of build is executed in a docker container called sonic-slave, specifically crafted for this environment. If build is started for the first time on a particular host, a new sonic-slave image will be built form sonic-slave/Dockerfile on the machine. It might take some time, so be patient. After that all subsequent make commands will be executed inside this container. Makefile takes every target that is passed to make command and delegates it as an entry point to a container, making process of running container transparent.

Frontend

rules/ has a collection of recipes for platform independent targets. Every recipe is a file that describes a metadata of a specific target, that is needed for its build.
You might find rules/config very useful, as it is a configuration file for a build system, which enables/disables some tweaks.
dockers/ directory is a place where you can find Dockerfiles for generic docker images.
src/ is a place where a source code for generic packages goes. It has both submodules (simple case, just run dpkg-buildpackage to build), and directories with more complcated components, that provide their own Makefiles.
platform/ contains all vendor-specific recipes, submodules etc.
Every platform/[VENDOR]/ directory is a derived part of buildimage frontend, that defines rules and targets for a concrete vendor.

Build output

target/ is basically a build output. You can find all build artifacts there.

Recipes and target groups

Now let's go over a definition of recipes and target groups.
Recipe is a small makefile that defines a target and set of variables for building it. If you want to add a new target to buildimage (.deb package or docker image), you have to create a recipe for this target.
Target group is a set of targets that are built according to the same rules. Every recipe sets a target group to which this target belongs.

Recipe example

Lets take a recipe for swsscommon as an example:

# libswsscommon package

LIBSWSSCOMMON = libswsscommon_1.0.0_amd64.deb
$(LIBSWSSCOMMON)_SRC_PATH = $(SRC_PATH)/sonic-swss-common
$(LIBSWSSCOMMON)_DEPENDS += $(LIBHIREDIS_DEV) $(LIBNL3_DEV) $(LIBNL_GENL3_DEV) \
                            $(LIBNL_ROUTE3_DEV) $(LIBNL_NF3_DEV) \
			    $(LIBNL_CLI_DEV)
$(LIBSWSSCOMMON)_RDEPENDS += $(LIBHIREDIS) $(LIBNL3) $(LIBNL_GENL3) \
                             $(LIBNL_ROUTE3) $(LIBNL_NF3) $(LIBNL_CLI)
SONIC_DPKG_DEBS += $(LIBSWSSCOMMON)

LIBSWSSCOMMON_DEV = libswsscommon-dev_1.0.0_amd64.deb
$(eval $(call add_derived_package,$(LIBSWSSCOMMON),$(LIBSWSSCOMMON_DEV)))

First we define our package swsscommon.
Then we secify SRC_PATH (path to sources), DEPENDS (build dependencies), and RDEPENDS (runtime dependencies for docker installation).
Then we add our target to SONIC_DPKG_DEBS target group.
At the end we define a dev package for swsscommon and make it derived from main one. Using add_derived_package just makes a deep copy of package's metadata, so that we don't have to repeat ourselves.

Target groups

SONIC_DPKG_DEBS
Main target group for building .deb packages. Define:

SOME_NEW_DEB = some_new_deb.deb # name of your package
$(SOME_NEW_DEB)_SRC_PATH = $(SRC_PATH)/project_name # path to directory with sources
$(SOME_NEW_DEB)_DEPENDS = $(SOME_OTHER_DEB1) $(SOME_OTHER_DEB2) ... # build dependencies
$(SOME_NEW_DEB)_RDEPENDS = $(SOME_OTHER_DEB1) $(SOME_OTHER_DEB2) ... # runtime dependencies
SONIC_DPKG_DEBS += $(SOME_NEW_DEB) # add package to this target group

SONIC_PYTHON_STDEB_DEBS
Same as above, but instead of building package using dpkg-buildpackage it executes python setup.py --command-packages=stdeb.command bdist_deb. Define:

SOME_NEW_DEB = some_new_deb.deb # name of your package
$(SOME_NEW_DEB)_SRC_PATH = $(SRC_PATH)/project_name # path to directory with sources
$(SOME_NEW_DEB)_DEPENDS = $(SOME_OTHER_DEB1) $(SOME_OTHER_DEB2) ... # build dependencies
$(SOME_NEW_DEB)_RDEPENDS = $(SOME_OTHER_DEB1) $(SOME_OTHER_DEB2) ... # runtime dependencies
SONIC_PYTHON_STDEB_DEBS += $(SOME_NEW_DEB) # add package to this target group

SONIC_MAKE_DEBS
This is a bit more flexible case. If you have to do some specific type of build or apply pathes prior to build, just define your own Makefile and add it to buildimage. Define:

SOME_NEW_DEB = some_new_deb.deb # name of your package
$(SOME_NEW_DEB)_SRC_PATH = $(SRC_PATH)/project_name # path to directory with sources
$(SOME_NEW_DEB)_DEPENDS = $(SOME_OTHER_DEB1) $(SOME_OTHER_DEB2) ... # build dependencies
$(SOME_NEW_DEB)_RDEPENDS = $(SOME_OTHER_DEB1) $(SOME_OTHER_DEB2) ... # runtime dependencies
SONIC_MAKE_DEBS += $(SOME_NEW_DEB) # add package to this target group

If some packages have to be built locally due to some legal issues or they are already prebuilt and available online, you might find next four target groups useful.

SONIC_COPY_DEBS
Those packages will be just copied from specified location on your machine. Define:

SOME_NEW_DEB = some_new_deb.deb # name of your package
$(SOME_NEW_DEB)_PATH = path/to/some_new_deb.deb # path to file
SONIC_COPY_DEBS += $(SOME_NEW_DEB) # add package to this target group

SONIC_COPY_FILES
Same as above, but applicable for regular files. Use when you need some regular files for installation in docker container. Define:

SOME_NEW_FILE = some_new_file # name of your file
$(SOME_NEW_FILE)_PATH = path/to/some_new_file # path to file
SONIC_COPY_FILES += $(SOME_NEW_FILE) # add file to this target group

SONIC_ONLINE_DEBS
Target group for debian packages that should be fetched from an online source. Define:

SOME_NEW_DEB = some_new_deb.deb # name of your package
$(SOME_NEW_DEB)_URL = https://url/to/this/deb.deb # path to file # URL for downloading
SONIC_ONLINE_DEBS += $(SOME_NEW_DEB) # add file to this target group

SONIC_ONLINE_FILES
Target group for regular files that should be fetched from an online source. Define:

SOME_NEW_FILE = some_new_file # name of your file
$(SOME_NEW_FILE)_URL = https://url/to/this/file # URL for downloading
SONIC_ONLINE_FILES += $(SOME_NEW_FILE) # add file to this target group

Docker images also have their target groups.
SONIC_SIMPLE_DOCKER_IMAGES
As you see from a name of the group, it is intended to build a docker image from a regular Dockerfile. Define:

SOME_DOCKER = some_docker.gz # name of your docker
$(SOME_DOCKER)_PATH = path/to/your/docker # path to your Dockerfile
SONIC_SIMPLE_DOCKER_IMAGES += $(SOME_DOCKER) # add docker to this group

SONIC_DOCKER_IMAGES
This one is a bit more sophisticated. You can define debian packages from buildimage that will be installed to it, and corresponding Dockerfile will be dinamically generated from a template. Define:

SOME_DOCKER = some_docker.gz # name of your docker
$(SOME_DOCKER)_PATH = path/to/your/docker # path to your Dockerfile
$(SOME_DOCKER)_DEPENDS += $(SOME_DEB1) $(SOME_DEB2) # .deb packages to install into image
$(SOME_DOCKER)_PYTHON_WHEELS += $(SOME_WHL1) $(SOME_WHL2) # python wheels to install into image
$(SOME_DOCKER)_LOAD_DOCKERS += $(SOME_OTHER_DOCkER) # docker image from which this one is built
SONIC_DOCKER_IMAGES += $(SOME_DOCKER) # add docker to this group

Tips & Tricks

Although every target is built inside a sonic-slave container, which exits at the end of build, you can enter bash of sonic-slave using this command:

$ make sonic-slave-bash

It is very useful for debugging when you add a new target and facing some troubles.

sonic-slave environment is built only once, but if sonic-slave/Dockerfile was updated, you can rebuild it with this command:

$ make sonic-slave-build

One can print out all available targets by executing the following command:

$ make list

All target groups are used by one or another recipe, so use those recipes as a reference when adding new ones.