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README.TXT31-Oct-201310.4 KiB

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README.TXT

1Bionic comes with a set of 'clean' Linux kernel headers that can safely be
2included by userland applications and libraries without fear of hideous
3conflicts. for more information why this is needed, see the "RATIONALE"
4section at the end of this document.
5
6these clean headers are automatically generated by several scripts located
7in the 'bionic/kernel/tools' directory, which process a set of original
8and unmodified kernel headers in order to get rid of many annoying
9declarations and constructs that usually result in compilation failure.
10
11the 'clean headers' only contain type and macro definitions, with the
12exception of a couple static inline functions used for performance
13reason (e.g. optimized CPU-specific byte-swapping routines)
14
15they can be included from C++, or when compiling code in strict ANSI mode.
16they can be also included before or after any Bionic C library header.
17
18the generation process works as follows:
19
20  * 'bionic/kernel/original/'
21    contains a set of kernel headers as normally found in the 'include'
22    directory of a normal Linux kernel source tree. note that this should
23    only contain the files that are really needed by Android (use
24    'find_headers.py' to find these automatically).
25
26  * 'bionic/kernel/common'
27    contains the non-arch-specific clean headers and directories
28    (e.g. linux, asm-generic and mtd)
29
30  *'bionic/kernel/arch-arm/'
31    contains the ARM-specific directory tree of clean headers.
32
33  * 'bionic/kernel/arch-arm/asm'
34    contains the real ARM-specific headers
35
36  * 'bionic/kernel/arch-x86'
37    similarly contains all headers and symlinks to be used on x86
38
39  * 'bionic/kernel/tools' contains various Python and shell scripts used
40    to manage and re-generate the headers
41
42the tools you can use are:
43
44  * tools/find_users.py
45    scans a list of source files or directories and prints which ones do
46    include Linux headers.
47
48  * tools/find_headers.py
49    scans a list of source files or directories and recursively finds all
50    the original kernel headers they need.
51
52  * tools/clean_header.py
53    prints the clean version of a given kernel header. with the -u option,
54    this will also update the corresponding clean header file if its
55    content has changed. you can also process more than one file with -u
56
57  * tools/update_all.py
58    automatically update all clean headers from the content of 
59    'bionic/kernel/original'. this is the script you're likely going to 
60    run whenever you update the original headers.
61
62NOTE:
63  if ANDROID_PRODUCT_OUT is defined in your environment, both 'clean_header.py'
64  and 'update_all.py' will automatically issue "p4 add/edit/delete" commands
65  appropriately to reflect the changes being made.
66
67  you will need to "p4 submit" manually though...
68
69
70HOW TO BUILD BIONIC AND OTHER PROGRAMS WITH THE CLEAN HEADERS:
71==============================================================
72
73add bionic/kernel/common and bionic/kernel/arch-<yourarch> to your C
74include path. that should be enough. Note that Bionic will not compile properly 
75if you don't.
76
77
78HOW TO SUPPORT ANOTHER ARCHITECTURE:
79====================================
80
81see the content of tools/defaults.py, you will need to make a few updates
82here:
83
84  - add a new item to the 'kernel_archs' list of supported architectures
85
86  - add a proper definition for 'kernel_known_<arch>_statics' with
87    relevant definitions.
88
89  - update 'kernel_known_statics' to map "<arch>" to
90    'kernel_known_<arch>_statics'
91
92then, add the new architecture-specific headers to original/asm-<arch>.
93(please ensure that these are really needed, e.g. with tools/find_headers.py)
94
95finally, run tools/update_all.py
96
97
98
99HOW TO UPDATE THE HEADERS WHEN NEEDED:
100======================================
101
102IMPORTANT IMPORTANT:
103
104  WHEN UPDATING THE HEADERS, ALWAYS CHECK THAT THE NEW CLEAN HEADERS DO
105  NOT BREAK THE KERNEL <-> USER ABI, FOR EXAMPLE BY CHANGING THE SIZE
106  OF A GIVEN TYPE. THIS TASK CANNOT BE EASILY AUTOMATED AT THE MOMENT
107
108copy any updated kernel header into the corresponding location under
109'bionic/kernel/original'.
110
111for any new kernel header you want to add, first run tools/find_headers.py to be
112sure that it is really needed by the Android sources. then add it to
113'bionic/kernel/original'
114
115then, run tools/update_all.py to re-run the auto-cleaning
116
117
118
119HOW THE CLEANUP PROCESS WORKS:
120==============================
121
122this section describes the action performed by the cleanup program(s) when they
123process the original kernel headers into clean ones:
124
1251. Optimize well-known macros (e.g. __KERNEL__, __KERNEL_STRICT_NAMES)
126
127    this pass gets rid of everything that is guarded by a well-known macro
128    definition. this means that a block like
129
130       #ifdef __KERNEL__
131       ....
132       #endif
133
134    will be totally omitted from the output. the optimizer is smart enough to
135    handle all complex C-preprocessor conditional expression appropriately.
136    this means that, for example:
137
138       #if defined(__KERNEL__) || defined(FOO)
139       ...
140       #endif
141
142    will be transformed into:
143
144       #ifdef FOO
145       ...
146       #endif
147
148    see tools/defaults.py for the list of well-known macros used in this pass,
149    in case you need to update it in the future.
150
151    note that this also remove any reference to a kernel-specific configuration
152    macro like CONFIG_FOO from the clean headers.
153
154
1552. remove variable and function declarations:
156
157  this pass scans non-directive text and only keeps things that look like a
158  typedef/struct/union/enum declaration. this allows to get rid of any variable
159  or function declaration that should only be used within the kernel anyway
160  (and which normally *should* be guarded in a #ifdef __KERNEL__ ... #endif
161  block, if the kernel writers were not so messy)
162
163  there are however a few exceptions: it is seldom useful to keep the definition
164  of some static inline functions performing very simple operations. a good
165  example is the optimized 32-bit byte-swap function found in
166  arch-arm/asm/byteorder.h
167
168  the list of exceptions is in tools/defaults.py in case you need to update it
169  in the future.
170
171  note that we do *not* remove macro definitions, including these macro that
172  perform a call to one of these kernel-header functions, or even define other
173  functions. we consider it safe since userland applications have no business
174  using them anyway.
175
176
1773. whitespace cleanup:
178
179  the final pass remove any comments and empty lines from the final headers.
180
181
1824. add a standard disclaimer:
183
184  prepended to each generated header, contains a message like
185  "do not edit directly - file was auto-generated by ...."
186
187
188RATIONALE:
189==========
190
191OVERVIEW OF THE CURRENT KERNEL HEADER MESS:
192-------------------------------------------
193
194The original kernel headers are not easily usable from userland applications.
195they contain many declarations and construct that will result in a compilation
196failure or even worse, incorrect behaviour. for example:
197
198- some headers try to define Posix types (e.g. size_t, ssize_t) that can
199  conflict with the corresponding definitions provided by your C library.
200
201- some headers use constructs that cannot be compiled in ANSI C mode.
202
203- some headers use constructs do not compile with C++ at all.
204
205- some headers contain invalid "legacy" definitions for the benefit of old
206  C libraries (e.g. glibc5) but result in incorrect behaviour if used
207  directly.
208
209  e.g. gid_t being defined in <linux/types.h> as a 16-bit type while the
210  kernel uses 32-bit ids. this results in problems when getgroups() or
211  setgroups() are called, since they operate on gid_t arrays.
212
213unfortunately, these headers are also the only source of some really extensive
214constant and type definitions that are required by userland applications.
215think any library/program that need to access ALSA, or Video4Linux, or
216anything related to a specific device or Linux-specific system interface
217(e.g. IOCTLS, etc...)
218
219As a consequence, every Linux distribution provides a set of patched kernel
220headers to be used by userland applications (which installs in
221/usr/include/linux/, /usr/include/asm/, etc...). these are manually maintained
222by distribution packagers, and generated either manually or with various
223scripts. these headers are also tailored to GNU LibC and cannot be reused
224easily by Bionic.
225
226for a really long period, the kernel authors have stated that they don't want
227to fix the problem, even when someone proposed a patch to start cleaning the
228official headers. from their point of view this is purely a library author
229problem.
230
231fortunately, enlightnment happened, and the kernel now provides a way to
232install a set of "user-friendly" headers that are generated from the official
233ones by stripping the __KERNEL__ protected declarations.
234
235unfortunately, this is not enough for Bionic because the result still contains
236a few broken declarations that are difficult to route around. (see below for
237a little bit of details).
238
239we plan to be able to support these kernel-generated user-land headers in the
240future, but the priority on this issue is very low.
241
242
243WHAT WE DO:
244-----------
245
246so we're doomed to repeat the same effort than anyone else. the big difference
247here is that we want to automate as much as possible the generation of the
248clean headers to easily support additional architectures in the future,
249and keep current with upstream changes in the header definitions with the
250least possible hassle.
251
252of course, this is only a race to the bottom. the kernel maintainers still
253feel free to randomly break the structure of their headers (e.g. moving the
254location of some files) occasionally, so we'll need to keep up with that by
255updating our build script/original headers as these cases happen.
256
257what we do is keep a set of "original" kernel headers, and process them
258automatically to generate a set of "clean" headers that can be used from
259userland and the C library.
260
261note that the "original" headers can be tweaked a little to avoid some subtle
262issues. for example:
263
264- when the location of various USB-related headers changes in the kernel
265  source tree, we want to keep them at the same location in our generated
266  headers (there is no reason to break the userland API for something
267  like that).
268
269- sometimes, we prefer to take certain things out of blocks guarded by a
270  #ifdef __KERNEL__ .. #endif. for example, on recent kernels <linux/wireless.h>
271  only includes <linux/if.h> when in kernel mode. we make it available to
272  userland as well since some code out there assumes that this is the case.
273
274- sometimes, the header is simply incorrect (e.g. it uses a type without
275  including the header that defines it before-hand)
276
277