From 50b37d4a27d3295a29afca2286f1a5a086142cec Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Sun, 28 Apr 2024 11:49:46 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 3.2.1+dfsg. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- doc/developer/autotools.md | 179 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 179 insertions(+) create mode 100644 doc/developer/autotools.md (limited to 'doc/developer/autotools.md') diff --git a/doc/developer/autotools.md b/doc/developer/autotools.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a7ad6a8 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/developer/autotools.md @@ -0,0 +1,179 @@ +FreeRADIUS use of GNU autotools +=============================== + +The full autotools suite includes many utilities, which we do not +need or want to use. Especially libtool, for which we use the +faster replacement, jlibtool. + +In a normal autotools setup, one would run "autoreconf" to rebuild +all of the configure scripts, which will perform at least the +following tasks: + + - aclocal + - autoconf + - autoheader + - automake + - libtoolize + +Specifically, all we really want to run is `autoconf`, to rebuild +the configure scripts. + +We have a more complicated setup than most. There is normally just +one `configure` script, in the top-level directory. In FreeRADIUS +there are also configure scripts in most RLM module directories as +well. Autotools is not really set up to handle this well, +preferring to treat every sub-directory as a separate project. + +This means that e.g. cache files are not shared, and include files +(for configure macros) are not found as they are expected to be in +the current directory. + +What's more, autoconf macros can be found in multiple places - the +automake install directory, the system aclocal directory, and in +multiple places in the FreeRADIUS source (mainly `m4/`, but also +`acinclude.m4`, both potentially in multiple places). + +In our setup we want to run the following only: + + - autoconf, to generate configure files and `all.mk` make files. + - autoheader, to generate header files. + + +autoconf +-------- + +`autoconf` expands a `configure.ac` file to create a `configure` +script, with optionally also a Makefile. We generate a makefile +called `all.mk` to work with the boilermake system. + +Being based on m4, autoconf needs to find macro definitions from +somewhere, which will be expanded as needed upon invocation. +autoconf has several search paths for macros, including some +system paths for its own internal macros. + +Notably within the project, autoconf looks in `aclocal.m4` to find +"local" macros to add. These days, `aclocal.m4` is supposed to be +written by the `aclocal` script, so autotools added the concept of +`acinclude.m4` to put local macros. `aclocal` will add an include +directive at the bottom of `aclocal.m4` to include the +`acinclude.m4` file, if it is found in the current directory. + +When `aclocal` is run it will scan `configure.ac` for anything +that looks like a macro to expand. It will then search project +directories, the automake system directory and the aclocal system +directory, to find any macros that match. These are copied into +the `aclocal.m4` file. `autoconf` will then pick up these macro +definitions and use them when expanding `configure.ac`. Notably, +macros can be in `*.m4` files in given search directories and +`aclocal` will extract the macros and copy them over. + +`autoconf` itself will not look in `*.m4` files, only in +`aclocal.m4` and, if that is not found, `acinclude.m4`. + +We therefore have, _within one level directory_: + + - `acinclude.m4`, local macro definitions; + - `aclocal.m4`, macros collated by `aclocal`; + - `m4/` or other directories, macro files searched by `aclocal`; + - `configure.ac` the input configure script; + - `all.mk`, `configure`, etc as outputs from `autoconf`. + +The GNU Autotools manual these days recommends splitting macros +up, one file per macro, and putting them in the `m4/` directory +rather than in the `acinclude.m4` file. This makes them much +easier to maintain. + + +FreeRADIUS sub-directories +-------------------------- + +All the above is not too much of an issue for the top-level +configure script. We can have an automatically generated +`aclocal.m4` file, macros in `m4/` and extra components in +`acinclude.m4` if needed. However, the sub-directory configure +scripts really want to be kept as small as possible. There is no +real need for a separate `aclocal.m4` file if all of the configure +scripts could be scanned together. The top-level `m4/` directory and +`acinclude.m4` file can be used. + +Unfortunately, autotools doesn't like to work like this. It wants +all files to be in one directory, and `aclocal` won't scan more +than one `configure.ac` file. + +The two compromise solutions seem to be: + + - Don't use `aclocal`. + + - Nearly all local macros are put in the top-level + `acinclude.m4` file. + - A few local macros can go in `m4/`, but they have to + explicitly included in configure.ac scripts with + `m4_include()`. + - `autoconf` has to be run with multiple `-I` include args to + capture all the places where macros could be. + - Any missing macros won't get pulled in from system + locations, because `aclocal` noramally does that. + - Sub-directories are relatively clean, e.g. no `aclocal.m4` + or `acinclude.m4` files all over the place. + + - Use `aclocal`. + + - The `-I` arg can be passed to `aclocal` which makes it + search multiple project directories for local macros to copy + to `aclocal.m4`. + - All directories with a `configure` script must have an + `aclocal.m4` file to collate macros from the top-level `m4/` + directory. + - The top-level `acinclude.m4` file is ignored except in the + top-level configure script, meaning it needs to be symlinked + or copied everywhere else. + - If `autoconf` finds an `aclocal.m4` file it no longer seems + to look for macros elsewhere. + - Sub-directories get messy with `aclocal.m4` and + `acinclude.m4` files, though these don't need to be checked + into the repository. + - The top-level `m4/` directory can contain all macros as + separate files, which is much cleaner than `acinclude.m4`. + - System macros will be found and used. + +We pretty much need to use `aclocal` - it removes the need for an +`acinclude.m4` file (tidier), picks up macros from `m4/` +automatically (tidier), removes the need for `m4_include()` macros +(tidier), and means that macros will be found that might not be +shipped in the FreeRADIUS distribution (easier). + +That comes with some downsides as above - we will end up with +`aclocal.m4` files all over the place, and have to handle the case +where things were originally in `acinclude.m4` and are not macros. + +Fixing `aclocal.m4` files can be done by either including them in +git (unnecessary) or hiding them with `.gitignore` (best). + +Picking up non-macro definitions from `acinclude.m4` can be done +by adding a new macro, `FR_INIT()`, which defines anything needed. +In fact, as long as that macro is included, the _entire_ +`m4/fr_init.m4` file will be included by `aclocal`. This means the +extra definition doesn't even need to be inside the macro. + + +Rebuilding the configure scripts +================================ + +The normal way to rebuild all of the autotools outputs is to run +`autoreconf`. This must not be run with FreeRADIUS as it will +initialise and use libtool and other things we do not want. + +Instead, we have a make target to rebuild everything needed. + + make reconfig + +This will rebuild any configure files that are out of date. +However, sometimes everything needs to be forced, e.g. due to some +macros changing that are missed by the Make dependencies (maybe +from the system directories). In this case a forced rebuild can be +undertaken with: + + find . -name configure.ac | xargs touch + make reconfig + +This will ensure that _all_ configure scripts are rebuilt. -- cgit v1.2.3