abuild ====== This utility is a great tool to check whether your coreboot tree compiles for one or all targets. It compiles the 'default' build for a mainboard. This is roughly equivalent to removing the .config file, running `make menuconfig`, selecting the manufacturer and mainboard, then saving the config without making any other changes. It is run on all patches submitted via gerrit as part of the process. Before submitting a patch, it is a very good idea to run abuild first to make sure your patch compiles cleanly for all. Note that abuild is a tool to do a simple build test, and binaries it produces may well not boot if flashed to a system. ## Basic usage abuild needs to be run from the coreboot directory. If you cd into the coreboot/util/abuild directory and try to run it from there, it will not run correctly. If you invoke abuild with no parameters, it will build all boards automatically. You can also specify a single board to build with the -t option. For example, to build the Lenovo X230 target, run: ```bash $ util/abuild/abuild -t lenovo/x230 ``` ## Where builds and logs are stored The resulting images and logs are stored in directory coreboot-builds/ under your current directory. This can be overridden with --outdir: ```bash $ util/abuild/abuild --outdir /mnt/portable/coreboot-builds ``` This is useful if you want to divert the build to an external hard drive, e.g. to keep the solid-state drive holding the coreboot tree young. (We will still refer to this directory as "coreboot-builds" below.) After running the X230 build above, the build log will be in coreboot-builds/LENOVO_X230/make.log. For an overview of what passed and what failed, look at coreboot-builds/passing_boards and coreboot-builds/failing_boards. **These logs are overwritten with each abuild run.** Save them elsewhere if you feel a need to reference the results later. ## Payloads You can also specify a payload directory with -p: ```bash mkdir payloads cp /somewhere/filo.elf payloads ``` Then add a file payloads/payload.sh which prints the name of the payload to use (and takes the mainboard as a parameter) such as: ```bash echo "`dirname $0`/build/filo.elf" ``` Then you can build an image with payload by specifying: ```bash util/abuild/abuild -t lenovo/x230 -p ./payloads ``` You can also tell abuild not to use a payload: ```bash util/abuild/abuild -t lenovo/x230 -p none ``` ## Build non-default configurations Sometimes you do need to build test a custom, non-default configuration. This can be accomplished by placing a config file in configs/. First, clean your slate with `make distclean` or `rm .config`. Then run `make menuconfig`, select the manufacturer and mainboard, and configure the options you need to test building for. Then save a minimal config file omitting options that did not change from default: ```bash make savedefconfig ``` This file is saved as `defconfig` and can be edited further. Now this file can be saved in configs/ which will form the basis of a custom configuration included in an abuild. However, it needs to be named in a specific way for abuild to pick it up: ``` config._ ``` is effectively the BOARD\_xxx Kconfig option without "BOARD\_". is a free form description of the configuration being built. For example, a config for ASUS P8Z77-M PRO that tests building with MRC raminit code (as opposed to the default native raminit) would be named `config.asus_p8z77_m_pro_mrc_bin` and contains: ``` CONFIG_VENDOR_ASUS=y CONFIG_BOARD_ASUS_P8Z77_M_PRO=y # CONFIG_USE_NATIVE_RAMINIT is not set CONFIG_CPU_MICROCODE_CBFS_NONE=y # CONFIG_BOOTBLOCK_CONSOLE is not set # CONFIG_POSTCAR_CONSOLE is not set ``` For what we are trying to do, not setting USE_NATIVE_RAMINIT is the important part. The other three optional changes are meant to speed things up. All these options can be selected during `make menuconfig`. Path to MRC binary blob remains default and thus not included here. Custom configurations can also be put in a file and applied to an entire abuild run using -K. Assume for example you are not interested in the postcar stage at all and just want it to shut up, you can create a file named `myconfig` with this line: ``` # CONFIG_POSTCAR_CONSOLE is not set ``` and run `abuild -K myconfig` to build everything with a silent postcar stage. ## Selectively build certain targets only (also config file naming caveats) The P8Z77-M PRO example above would fail for P8Z77-M, because the config file name is ambiguous. `abuild` would pick up this config when building for P8Z77-M, but fails when it sees that this config isn't meant for P8Z77-M (but for P8Z77-M PRO). To avoid this error, you have to skip this config using --skip_set: ```bash util/abuild/abuild --skip_set BOARD_ASUS_P8Z77_M_PRO ``` To complete the test, run abuild again specifically for this board variant (see next section). You can skip building other targets based on other Kconfigs. To skip building targets without a Kconfig set, use --skip_unset: ```bash util/abuild/abuild --skip_unset USE_NATIVE_RAMINIT ``` This example skips building configs not using (Sandy/Ivy Bridge) native RAM init. ## Additional Examples Many boards have multiple variants. You can build for a specific variant of a board: ```bash util/abuild/abuild -t asus/p8x7x-series -b p8z77-m_pro -p none ``` Many of the boards need files from the 'blobs' repository, which will be initialized by the -B option. If the blobs repo has already been initialized in your local tree, it won't hurt to add the -B. ```bash util/abuild/abuild -B -t lenovo/x230 -p none ``` Adding ccache to your system and telling abuild to use it with the -y option will speed things up a bit: ```bash util/abuild/abuild -B -y -t lenovo/x230 -p none ``` Telling abuild to use multiple cores with the -c option helps speed things up as well: ```bash util/abuild/abuild -B -y -c 8 -t lenovo/x230 -p none ``` Of course, the real power of abuild is in testing multiple boards. ```bash util/abuild/abuild -B -y -c 8 -p none ``` ## Full options list ```text coreboot autobuild v0.11.01 (Feb 3, 2023) [...] Usage: util/abuild/abuild [options] util/abuild/abuild [-V|--version] util/abuild/abuild [-h|--help] Options: [-a|--all] Build previously succeeded ports as well [-A|--any-toolchain] Use any toolchain [-b|--board-variant ] Build specific board variant under the given target. [-B|--blobs] Allow using binary files [--checksum ] Store checksums at path/basefile [-c|--cpus ] Build on at the same time [-C|--config] Configure-only mode [-d|--dir ] Directory containing config files [-e|--exitcode] Exit with a non-zero errorlevel on failure [-J|--junit] Write JUnit formatted xml log file [-K|--kconfig ] Prepend file to generated Kconfig [-l|--loglevel ] Set loglevel [-L|--clang] Use clang on supported arch [-n|--name] Set build name - also sets xmlfile if not already set [-o|--outdir ] Store build results in path (defaults to coreboot-builds) [-p|--payloads ] Use payloads in to build images [-P|--prefix ] File name prefix in CBFS [-q|--quiet] Print fewer messages [-r|--remove] Remove output dir after build [-R|--root ] Absolute path to coreboot sources (defaults to /usr/src/coreboot) [--scan-build] Use clang's static analyzer [--skip_set ] Skip building boards with this Kconfig set [--skip_unset ] Skip building boards with this Kconfig not set [--timeless] Generate timeless builds [-t|--target ] Attempt to build target vendor/board only [-T|--test] Submit image(s) to automated test system [-u|--update] Update existing image [-v|--verbose] Print more messages [-x|--chromeos] Build with CHROMEOS enabled Skip boards without ChromeOS support [-X|--xmlfile ] Set JUnit XML log file filename (defaults to /usr/src/coreboot/abuild.xml) [-y|--ccache] Use ccache [-z|--clean] Remove build results when finished [-Z|--clean-somewhat] Remove build but keep coreboot.rom + config [-V|--version] Print version number and exit [-h|--help] Print this help and exit [-s|--silent] obsolete ```