[TOC]
This page describes some build systems tricks that can help developers but are not part of the standard workflow.
They are low level commands that should not be taken as part of a stable API but better have a documentation than only having a description in the build system code.
RIOT_MAKEFILES_GLOBAL_PRE
: files parsed before the body of$RIOTBASE/Makefile.include
RIOT_MAKEFILES_GLOBAL_POST
: files parsed after the body of$RIOTBASE/Makefile.include
The variables are a list of files that will be included by
$RIOTBASE/Makefile.include
.
They will be handled as relative to the application directory if the path is
relative.
You can configure your own files that will be parsed by the build system main
Makefile.include
file before or after its main body, examples usages can be:
- Globally overwrite a variable, like
TERMPROG
- Specify a hard written
PORT
/DEBUG_ADAPTER_ID
for some BOARD values - Define your custom targets
- Override default targets
ccache
is a compiler cache. It speeds up recompilation by caching previous compilations and detecting when the same compilation is being done again.
Usually, the initial build takes a little (5% - 20%) longer, but repeated builds are up to ten times faster.
Using ccache
is safe, as ccache
tries very hard to not mess up things and falls back to a normal compile if it cannot ensure correct output.
There's one drawback: without further tweaking, gcc
stops emitting colored output.
- Install using the package manager of your distribution, e.g., on Ubuntu or Debian:
# sudo apt-get install ccache
- Set
CCACHE
variable toccache
:
# export CCACHE=ccache
- (Optionally) add the above export line to your
~/.profile
Build without ccache
:
[kaspar@booze default (master)]$ time BOARD=samr21-xpro make clean all
Building application "default" for "samr21-xpro" with MCU "samd21".
[...]
text data bss dec hex filename
37016 180 6008 43204 a8c4 /home/kaspar/src/riot/examples/default/bin/samr21-xpro/default.elf
real 0m12.321s
user 0m10.317s
sys 0m1.170s
[kaspar@booze default (master)]$
First build with ccache
enabled:
[kaspar@booze default (master)]$ time BOARD=samr21-xpro make clean all
Building application "default" for "samr21-xpro" with MCU "samd21".
[...]
text data bss dec hex filename
37016 180 6008 43204 a8c4 /home/kaspar/src/riot/examples/default/bin/samr21-xpro/default.elf
real 0m15.462s
user 0m12.410s
sys 0m1.597s
[kaspar@booze default (master)]$
Subsequent build with ccache
enabled:
[kaspar@booze default (master)]$ time BOARD=samr21-xpro make clean all
Building application "default" for "samr21-xpro" with MCU "samd21".
[...]
text data bss dec hex filename
37016 180 6008 43204 a8c4 /home/kaspar/src/riot/examples/default/bin/samr21-xpro/default.elf
real 0m2.157s
user 0m1.213s
sys 0m0.327s
[kaspar@booze default (master)]$
When refactoring dependency handling or modifying variables used for dependency resolution, one may want to evaluate the impact on the existing applications. This describe some debug targets to dump variables used during dependency resolution.
To analyze one board and application run the following commands in an application directory.
Generate the variables dump with the normal dependency resolution to a
dependencies_info_board_name
file:
BOARD=board_name make dependency-debug
Or with the "quick" version used by murdock to know supported boards
(this is an incomplete resolution, details in makefiles/dependencies_debug.inc.mk
)
to a dependencies_info-boards-supported_board_name
file:
BOARDS=board_name DEPENDENCY_DEBUG=1 make info-boards-supported
For more configuration and usage details, see in the file defining the targets
makefiles/dependencies_debug.inc.mk
To do a repository wide analysis, you can use the script
dist/tools/buildsystem_sanity_check/save_all_dependencies_resolution_variables.sh
that will generate the output for all boards and applications.
It currently take around 2 hours on an 8 cores machine with ssd.
Most applications and tests include a Makefile.ci
to indicate which boards can
not compile the application or test. The content for these files can be
generated via the script in
make -C $APPLICATION_DIRECTORY generate-Makefile.ci
This will compile and link the application for every board available and record
the result in the Makefile.ci. This requires the toolchain for every target to
be available. The target supports using docker via the BUILD_IN_DOCKER=1
variable.
By exporting the BUILD_DIR
environment variable, a custom build / clone cache
directory can be created. This can be particularly useful when working with
multiple git work trees or clones of the RIOT repository.
There is a make target for build size comparison. You can use it like that:
$ cd RIOT/test/test_something
$ git checkout master
$ BINDIRBASE=master-bin make buildtest
$ git checkout my-branch
$ BINDIRBASE=my-branch-bin make buildtest
$ OLDBIN=master-bin NEWBIN=my-branch-bin make info-buildsizes-diff
text data bss dec BOARD/BINDIRBASE
0 0 0 0 avsextrem **← this line contains the diff**
57356 1532 96769 155657 master-bin
57356 1532 96769 155657 my-branch-bin
...
Check it out, the output contains colors. ;)
For zsh users a RIOT-aware completion is provided in
dist/tools/zsh-completion
. Refer to the README.md
in there for more details
and installation instructions.