Notes on building Xenocara for OpenBSD X hackers This document presents some techniques that can be useful for people wanting to hack the xenocara tree. It assumes some basic knowledge of the OpenBSD build system, as described in the release(8) manual page. o About Xenocara -------------- Xenocara is the name chosen for OpenBSD's version of X. It's currently based on X.Org 7.2 and its dependencies. The goal of Xenocara is to provide a framework to host local modifications and to automate the build of the modular X.Org components, including 3rd party packages and some software maintained by OpenBSD developers. o Source tree ----------- The organisation of the xenocara directory follows the general organisation used in X.Org: - app: X applications and utilities - data: various data files (keyboard mappings and bitmaps) - doc: documentation - driver: input and video drivers - font: fonts - lib: libraries - proto: X protocol headers - util: utilities that don't fit anywhere else - xserver: the source for the X servers In addition Xenocara uses the following directories: - dist: contains the Mesa sources, shared by lib and xserver above - distrib: all binary distribution related tools and data - etc: mtree(8) data files - share: make(1) configuration for Xenocara At the top-level directory two files describe the individual components of Xenocara: - MODULES lists all X.Org components (imported from the X.Org distribution at http://xorg.freedesktop.org/archive/) - 3RDPARTY lists all 3rd party software components provided in Xenocara, either as dependencies of the X.Org software, or as complements to it to provide a more useable default environment. o Compiling and installing ------------------------ Xenocara is made up of more than three hundred different independent packages that need to be build and installed in the right order, especially while bootstrapping (while /usr/X11R6 is still empty). The Xenocara Makefiles take care of that using the 'build' target. Quick startup guide The following steps will build and install everything for the first time. cd xenocara make bootstrap make obj make build If you want to use another obj directory see below. Requirements A freshly checked out xenocara tree is buildable without any external tool. However if you start modifying things in the automake build system used by many packages, you will need to have the following GNU autotools packages installed: - automake 1.9 (devel/automake/1.9) - autoconf 2.59 (devel/autoconf/2.59) - metaauto 0.6 (or later) (devel/metaauto) - libtool 1.5.22 (or later) (devel/libtool) If you have your source tree on an NFS partition, make sure the clock of your server and client are properly synchronised. A test run by configure will fail if the drift is more than one second. And larger drifts will cause other problems during builds anyways. Path To build Xenocara, you need to have /usr/X11R6/bin in your PATH. Sudo If the SUDO variable points to your sudo(8) binary in /etc/mk.conf, 'make build' can be run as a normal user. It will raise its privileges whenever needed with sudo. Otherwise, you need to run make build as root. If you have installed the full Xenocara X sets on your system, you don't need to build all of Xenocara to patch one element. You can go to any module sub-directory and run 'make build' from there. Source directory The variable XSRCDIR can be set either in the environment or in /etc/mk.conf to point to the xenocara source tree, in case you keep it in a non-standard directory (the default is /usr/src/xenocara). Objdirs Xenocara supports objdirs (and it's even the recommended way to build things). Just run 'make obj' at any level before 'make build' to make sure that the object directories are created. XOBJDIR defines the obj directory that is used (defaults to /usr/xobj). It should be created before running 'make obj'. Shadow trees Alternatively, the old 'lndir(1)' method can still be used to build Xenocara outside of its source tree. Just don't use 'make obj' in this case. o Regenerating configure scripts ------------------------------ Whenever you touched an import file for GNU autotools (Makefile.am, configure.ac mostly), you need to rebuild the configure script and makefiles skeletons. For that use the following command in the directory where you edited the autotools source files: env XENOCARA_RERUN_AUTOCONF=Yes make -f Makefile.bsd-wrapper build You can also set XENOCARA_RERUN_AUTOCONF in /etc/mk.conf or in the environment to force the regeneration of configure scripts in every component during a make build. o Cleaning in packages managed by autotools ----------------------------------------- One common problem when building xenocara is the case where the obj directory didn't exist (or the symbolic link pointed to a non-existent directory) when the source was first built. After fixing this problem, 'configure' will refuse to work in the obj dir, because the source is already configured. To recover from this in one package: rm -f obj make -f Makefile.bsd-wrapper cleandir mkdir XOBJDIR make -f Makefile.bsd-wrapper obj make -f Makefile.bsd-wrapper build or from the root of the xenocara tree: find . -type l -name obj | xargs rm -f make cleandir mkdir XOBJDIR make obj make build for more desperate cases, remove all files from XSRCDIR not in CVS: cd XSRCDIR cvs -q update -PAd -I - | awk '$1=="?" {print $2}' | xargs rm -f -- $OpenBSD: README,v 1.18 2007/04/23 08:52:58 ajacoutot Exp $