Building Guide (liblfds)
Introducton
The liblfds library uses a porting abstraction layer to mask platform differences. Building liblfds requires build files (makefile, etc) for your toolchain (GCC, gnumake, etc) and a port of the abstraction layer to your platform.
A small number of popular toolchains are supported out-of-the-box, and all supported toolchains have a porting abtraction layer provided.
Supported Toolchains
The supported toolchains are;
- GCC and gnumake
- GCC, kbuild and gnumake (Linux kernel toolchain)
- MSVC and gnumake (Windows user-mode toolchain - and, yup, gnumake, not nmake)
- WDK 7.1 (Windows XP/Vista/7 kernel toolchain)
Note that in 7.1.0, Visual Studio solution files are not provided. This is because there are over liblfds and the benchmark and benchmark libraries and programmes (seven projects in all) in the end due to the multple build variants (debug, release, library, DLL, kernel library, kernel DLL, and repeated twice, once for VS2012 and once for VS2013) what comes to something like ten thousand settings, all of which have to be set using a mouse and a GUI, which is not only extraordinarily time-consuming and error-prone, but emotionally agonizing.
Mac support is not available due to lack of access to a Mac.
Directory Structure
└───liblfds710 : liblfds library ├───bin : output directory - the library file ends up here ├───build : build configuration directory - contains one directory per platform │ ├───gcc_gnumake : GCC and gnumake │ ├───gcc_gnumake_kbuild : GCC, gnumake, and kbuild │ ├───msvc_gnumake : Microsoft Visual C (command line compiler) and gnumake │ └───wdk_7.1 : WDK 7.1 ├───inc : the public header files │ └───liblfds710 ├───obj : temporary directory for object files └───src : the data structures ├───lfds710_btree_addonly_unbalanced : btree (add-only, unbalanced) ├───lfds710_freelist : freelist ├───lfds710_hash_addonly : hash (add-only) ├───lfds710_list_addonly_singlylinked_ordered : singly-linked list (add-only, singly-linked, ordered) ├───lfds710_list_addonly_singlylinked_unordered : singly-linked list (add-only, singly-linked, unordered) ├───lfds710_misc : misc library functions ├───lfds710_prng : PRNG library functions ├───lfds710_queue_bounded_singleproducer_singleconsumer : queue (bounded, single-producer, single-consumer) ├───lfds710_queue_bounded_manyproducer_manyconsumer : queue (bounded, many-producer, many-consumer) ├───lfds710_unqueue_bounded_manyproducer_manyconsumer : queue (unbounded, many-producer, many-consumer) ├───lfds710_ringbuffer : ringbuffer └───lfds710_stack : stack
Building
The library directory tree contains at its top level directory called build.
This directory contains one directory per supported toolchain, where each such directory contains the files necessary to build for that toolchain. Detailed descriptions of how to build for each toolchain are given below, with one heading per toolchain.
The resultant library file will be placed in the top level directory liblfds710/bin/, with the root filename liblfds710.*, where the suffix varies by build type (static or dynamic) and by operating system (.a, .lib, etc).
The header files are in the top level directory inc. They are arranged a single master header file, liblfds710/inc/liblfds710.h together with a subdirectory, liblfds710/inc/liblfds710/, which contains a set of header files, one per data structure, where these per-data structure header files are included by the master file.
To use the header files, include and only include the master header file, liblfds710/inc/liblfds710.h.
On all platforms, you need to clean between changing build types (debug, release, static, dynamic, profiled, etc), as there is only one directory used to hold object files.
Per-Toolchain Build Instructions
GCC and gnumake
└───liblfds710 └───build └───gcc_gnumake Makefile
To build, install GCC and gnumake, enter the build directory and type;
make
The following targets are available;
ar_cov : archive (.a), coverage ar_dbg : archive (.a), debug ar_prof : archive (.a), profiling ar_rel : archive (.a), release ar_tsan : archive (.a), thread sanitizer ar_vanilla : archive (.a), no specific-build arguments ar_install : install to /usr/local/include/ and /usr/local/lib/ ar_uninstall : uninstall so_cov : shared (.so), coverage so_dbg : shared (.so), debug so_prof : shared (.so), profiling so_rel : shared (.so), release so_tsan : shared (.so), thread sanitizer so_vanilla : shared (.so), no specific-build arguments so_install : install to /usr/local/include/ and /usr/local/lib/ (creates the necessary soft links for .so versioning) so_uninstall : uninstall clean : what you'd expect
When switching from one target to another, clean must be made.
If building *_ar_tsan, libtsan must be installed. This is not necessary if building *_so_tsan.
GCC, gnumake and kbuild
└───liblfds710 └───build └───gcc_gnumake_kbuild Kbuild Makefile
To build, install GCC, gnumake, kbuild (and the Linux kernel headers), enter the build directory and type;
make
The makefile is complimentory (mint-flavoured :-) and simply issues the necessary kbuild command.
There are three targets;
clean help modules
Note that modules is the default build (i.e. with no arguments).
I do not properly understand kbuild. I've read the documentation; I find for example examples which have switches in which are simply not present in the documentation, and in general I don't see how libraries are built to fit in with larger projects. The most I can say about this build is that it compiles without warnings or errors. I am pretty sure it's not something which can be used as it is in a kernel build or driver, but anyone who knows enough to be developing such a thing should be able to take what is here (since it compiles against the kernel) and easily fit it into their work.
Any feedback on making this build proper is greatly appreciated.
MSVC and gnumake
└───liblfds710 └───build └───msvc_and_gnumake liblfds710.def makefile
To build, install an MSVC command line compiler, enter the build directory and type;
make
The following targets are available;
libdbg : archive (.lib), debug librel : archive (.lib), release dlldbg : shared (.dll), debug dllrel : shared (.dll), release clean : what you'd expect
When switching from one target to another, clean must be made.
WDK 7.1
└───liblfds710 └───build └───wdk_7.1 dirs driver_entry_renamed_to_avoid_compiler_warning.c liblfds710.def readme_before_win_kernel_build.txt runme_before_win_kernel_dynamic_lib_build.bat runme_before_win_kernel_static_lib_build.bat sources.dynamic sources.static
All processor types are supported (x86, IA64, x64).
The WDK 7.1 kernel build environment is primitive and has a number of severe limitations; in particular, all source files must be in one directory and it is not possible to choose the output binary type (static or dynamic library) from the build command line; rather, a string has to be modified in a text file used by the build (!)
To deal with these limitations, it is necessary for a Windows kernel build to run a batch file prior to building. There are two batch files, one for static library builds and the other for dynamic library builds. They are idempotent; you can run them as often as you like and switch between them as often as you want. It's all fine.
Both batch files copy all the sources file into a single directory, liblfds710/build/wdk7.1/single_dir_for_windows_kernel/.
The static library batch file will then copy liblfds710/sources.static into liblfds710/build/wdk7.1/single_dir_for_windows_kernel/, which will cause a static library to be built.
The dynamic library batch file will then copy liblfds710/sources.dynamic into liblfds710/build/wdk7.1/single_dir_for_windows_kernel/, which will cause a dynamic library to be built. It will also copy driver_entry_renamed_to_avoid_compiler_warning.c to liblfds710/build/wdk7.1/single_dir_for_windows_kernel/driver_entry.c (note the renaming), since the linker requires the DriverEntry function to exist, even though it's not used.
To build, start a build command line as usual, indicating through the command line you select whether you are making a debug or release build. Then run the appropriate liblfds batch file to select a static or dynamic library. Then, finally, run build.exe in the liblfds710/build/wdk_7.1/ directory, with whatever arguments you prefer.
Note that due to limitations in the build environment, object files appear in a subdirectory in liblfds710/build/wdk7.1/single_dir_for_windows_kernel/, rather than in the usual liblfds710/obj/. The final binary output however still appears almost as usual, in liblfds710/bin/[processor]/, where processor might be i386. (The usual is just liblfds710/bin/, with no subdirectories).
Note that the sources file used to compile the library asserts the define KERNEL_MODE. This appears to be necessary, due to the lack of a compiler-provided macro to differentiate in the code between a user-mode or kernel-mode build.