Recipe & Patch Style Guide: Difference between revisions

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= Motivation =
'''Please see the [http://openembedded.org/wiki/Styleguide OpenEmbedded style guidelines]'''.
 
As with most style guides, the idea here is to have a consistent format and look
so that when someone new comes to the scene they can learn quickly and get involved.
This will also help the reviewers and maintainers understand what changes are being
made by contributors.
 
= Recipes file format and style =
 
As a brief summary:
 
* Consistent whitespace throughout the file
* File follows a roughly standard variable order
* Patches are all documented
* No legacy staging
* Use BBCLASSEXTEND where possible instead of -native versions
* No -sdk or -nativesdk packages, use BBCLASSEXTEND
* pkgconfig .pc files are correct and don't need manual mangling
* No custom do_configure for autotooled projects
* Uses "make install" where at all possible
** if recipe installs can we patch make install and push upstream
 
==== Additional MetaData ====
 
All recipes should aim to specify the following fields where possible:
 
* DESCRIPTION
* SUMMARY
* HOMEPAGE
* BUGTRACKER
* LICENSE
* LIC_FILES_CHKSUM
* DISTRO_PN_ALIAS
The DESCRIPTION should give an extended (possibly multi-line) description of what
recipe provides.
 
SUMMARY should give an 80 character/one line maximum short summary of the description.
Note that by default, DESCRIPTION is set to the value of SUMMARY, so if you only have
a short description to use, just set SUMMARY.
 
== White Space Management ==
 
* The correct spacing for a variable is FOO = "BAR".
* Use quotes on the right hand side of assignments: FOO = "BAR"
* Indentation of multiline variables such as SRC_URI is desirable.
* Most variables such as SRC_URI should use spaces.
* For multiple-line continuations, use spaces for indenting as developers tend to use different amount of spaces per tab.
* Shell functions should use tabs
* Python functions must use spaces (4 spaces per indent).
* No spaces are allowed after the line continuation symbol
* Comments inside bb files are allowed using the '#' character at the beginning of a line, but you cannot use a comment within a continuation.
 
 
== File Naming Convention ==
 
[[Versioning Policy|Use $packagename_$version.bb]]
 
 
== Guidelines for task functions ==
 
* Put the ''inherit'' declaration after the initial variables are set up and before any custom ''do_'' routines. This is flexible as ordering is often important.
* If you define custom ''do_'' routines, keep them in the order of the tasks being executed, that is:
** do_fetch
** do_unpack
** do_patch
** do_configure
** do_compile
** do_install
** do_populate_sysroot
** do_package
 
* Don't use ''cp'' to put files into staging or destination directories, use ''install'' instead.
* Don't use ''mkdir'' to create destination directories, use ''install -d'' instead.
 
== Preferred variable ordering ==
 
* There is a standard set of variables often found in a .bb file and the preferred order to make the file easily readable to seasoned developers is
** DESCRIPTION
** AUTHOR
** HOMEPAGE
** SECTION
** PRIORITY
** LICENSE
** DEPENDS
** SRCDATE
** SRCREV
** PV
** PR
** SRC_URI
** S
** inherit ...
** build class specific variables, i.e. EXTRA_QMAKEVARS_POST
** task overrides, i.e. do_configure
** PACKAGE_ARCH
** PACKAGES
** FILES
** RDEPENDS
** RRECOMMENDS
** RSUGGESTS
** PROVIDES
** RPROVIDES
** RCONFLICTS
 
* Variables related to the same package (*_{PN} and similar) should be kept together and after any PACKAGES definition
* Variables operating on packages (R* ones so RDEPENDS, RRECOMMENDS, RPROVIDES and so on as well as variables like ALLOW_EMPTY) should always specify the package they apply to, e.g. RDEPENDS_${PN} = "x", not RDEPENDS = "x"
* Recipes are sensitive to variable order so the above is a guideline, not an absolute rule.
 
== Example Recipe ==
 
<pre>
SUMMARY = "X11 Code Viewer"
DESCRIPTION = "Allow viewing of X11 code in a fancy way which allows easier \
              and more productive X11 programming"
AUTHOR = "John Bazz <john.bazz@example.org>"
HOMEPAGE = "http://www.example.org/xcv/"
SECTION = "x11/applications"
PRIORITY = "optional"
LICENSE = "GPLv2"
DEPENDS = "libsm libx11 libxext libxaw"
SRCDATE = "20600815"
PV = "0.0+cvs${SRCDATE}"
PR = "r5"
 
# upstream does not yet publish any release so we have to fetch last working version from CVS
SRC_URI = "cvs://anonymous@xcv.example.org/cvsroot/xcv;module=xcv \
          file://toolbar-resize-fix.patch;patch=1"
 
S = "${WORKDIR}/xcv/"
 
inherit autotools
 
do_configure_prepend() {
    rm ${S}/aclocal.m4
}
 
do_install() {
    install -d ${D}${bindir}
    install -d ${D}${mandir}/man1
 
    install -m 0755 xcv ${D}${bindir}/ 
    install -m 0644 xcv.1.gz ${D}${mandir}/man1/
}
 
RDEPENDS_${PN} = "shared-mime-info"
RRECOMMENDS_${PN} = "ctags"
RCONFLICTS_${PN} = "xcv2"
 
</pre>
 
= Patches =
 
Patches (i.e. patch files within the metadata, which are referred to in SRC_URI) should contain information about where they came from and why they are required, as the project moves forward, we want to increase the quality of the data that is made available to the community. This can be done in the recipes and also in the patch files in order to understand why the patch exists and to help future maintainer to understand why it is required. The following information covers how to incorporate and manage patches within the meta-data.
 
For details on how to format newly created patches or properly submit existing patches for incorporation, please refer to the '''[[Contribution_Guidelines]]'''.
 
== New style patch application ==
 
The patch and pnum parameters have been renamed to the more logical apply and striplevel. The apply parameter takes either "yes" or "no" and the striplevel parameter takes an integer (0, 1, etc).
 
Both parameters are now optional with "sane" defaults.
 
The apply parameter is optional for SRC_URI lines with patch or diff extensions, which will default to being applied.
 
The striplevel parameter is also optional with a default striplevel of 1.
 
Old style parameters (patch and pnum) will continue to work for some time but it would be useful to move to the new style syntax as people are updating other parts of their recipes.
 
Therefore a patch line would be changed from:
 
file://some.patch;patch=1;pnum=2
 
to:
 
file://some.patch;striplevel=2
 
and a patch line:
 
file://another.diff;patch=1;pnum=1
 
could be changed to:
 
file://another.diff
 
= License Fields =
 
== LICENSE Metadata ==
 
* The LICENSE information in the .bb file needs to be practical.
* if there's "or any later version" in GPL related copyright, append "+" then which effectively means below:
GPLv2, GPLv2+, GPLv3, GPLv3+, LGPLv2, LGPLv2+, LGPLv2.1, LGPLv2.1+, LGPLv3, LGPLv3+
* Scripts generated by autotools are not counted for licensing (they are always under GPL)
* Dual license: GPLv2 | BSD
* Multiple licenses: GPLv3+ & LGPLv2.1+
* GPLv3 (correction may be required!)
anti-tivoization in GPLv3 only applies to User Products, which per definition is “either
(1) a “consumer product”, which means any tangible personal property which is normally
used for personal, family, or household purposes, or (2) anything designed or sold for
incorporation into a dwelling."
* For package changing its license, better to keep new license in .inc file with old license in corresponding .bb file. Take readline for example:
readline.inc: LICENSE = "GPLv3+"
readline_5.2.bb: LICENSE = "GPLv2"
* we can treat MIT-style license as "MIT", meaning that any lawyer can tell it derivatives from standard form, such as below one:
 
Permission to use, copy, modify, distribute, and sell this software and its
documentation for any purpose is hereby granted without fee, provided that
the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that both that copyright
notice and this permission notice appear in supporting documentation, and
that the name of the copyright holders not be used in advertising or
publicity pertaining to distribution of the software without specific,
written prior permission.  The copyright holders make no representations
about the suitability of this software for any purpose.  It is provided "as
is" without express or implied warranty.
* some package may have complex license, such as wireless-tool:
most of files are GPLv2;
one part in file is GPLv2+;
some of them are dual licensed, such as sample_enc.c under LGPL | MPL | BSD.
In such case, first ignore the GPLv2+ bit since there is no way you could ever ship the package under say GPLv3 due to many headers being v2 only.
Since there are files that are GPLv2 only, the answer is no. The LICENSE field is therefore primarily GPLv2 and we can ignore the 2+ bits.
If they're a key part, the recipe becomes "GPLv2 & (LGPL | MPL | BSD)"
* automake may generate COPYING automatically if there's no such one existing (e.g. Xsettings-client-0.10). A short answer is to add a MIT-style COPYING in poky and then install it before autotools work. See last section for detail description
* all .bb files require LICENSE fields, even for those Poky specific (which are MIT).
* ask on the ML for license information for those local files we don't know their origins
* Name Sub-Packages with different Licenses
** LICENSE = "LGPLv2.1 & GPLv3+"
** LICENSE_libidn = "LGPLv2.1"
** LICENSE_libidn-tests = "GPLv3+"
* when listing sub-package license, remember to use names included in PACKAGES instead of source directories, e.g:
LICENSE = "GPLv2 & LGPLv2 & BSD & MIT"
LICENSE_lib/ext2fs = "LGPLv2"
Better to use:
LICENSE_e2fsprogs-mke2fs = "LGPLv2"
because mke2fs is a package name
----
* Two variants of the license, the New BSD License/Modified BSD License, and the Simplified BSD License/FreeBSD License have been verified as GPL-compatible free software licenses by the Free Software Foundation, while the original has not been accepted as an open source license(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Original_BSD_license#4-clause)
* The original BSD license also includes a clause requiring all advertising of the software to display a notice crediting its authors. This "advertising clause" (since disavowed by UC Berkeley) is present in the modified MIT License used by XFree86 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIT_License)
* http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_free_software_licenses
* http://www.opensource.org/licenses/alphabetical
* http://www.gnu.org/licenses/license-list.html
 
=== Autotools adds wrong COPYING ===
 
Autotools add the wrong COPYING license to source code with out COPYING, to ensure that we have the correct and consistent license, add the correct license file to the SRC_URI List and a do_config_prepend().
 
SRC_URI = "... \
        ...
        file://XXX-license"
do_configure_prepend() {
        # This package doesn't ship with its own COPYING file and
        # autotools will install a GPLv2 one instead of MIT. Add the
        # correct license here to avoid confusion.
        cp ${WORKDIR}/MIT-style-license ${S}/COPYING
}
 
 
== License Updates ==
 
There are 2 parts to the licensing update that needs to happen in the recipe files, first is the LICENSE metadata, and the second is the License Verification with LIC_FILE_CHKSUM
 
=== LICENSE ===
 
* GPLv2, GPLv2+, GPLv3, GPLv3+, LGPLv2,
* LGPLv2+, LGPLv2.1, LGPLv2.1+, LGPLv3, LGPLv3+
* Dual license: GPLv2 | BSD
* Multiple licenses: GPLv3+ & LGPLv2.1+
* Name Sub-Packages with different Licenses
** LICENSE = "LGPLv2.1 & GPLv3+"
** LICENSE_libidn = "LGPLv2.1"
** LICENSE_libidn-tests = "GPLv3+"
 
=== LIC_FILES_CHKSUM ===
If a LICENSE or COPYING file exists, use it along with the license text from one source (header file preferred), if there is inconsistencies (multi versions, different licenses) report this information and then we can determine what the next steps should be to reconcile. Next steps include internal review and working with upstream community to reconcile licenses.
 
* How to specify the LIC_FILES_CHKSUM variable:
LIC_FILES_CHKSUM = “file://COPYING;md5=xxxx \
                    file://licfile1.txt;beginline=5;endline=29;md5=yyyy \
                    file://licfile2.txt;endline=50;md5=zzzz \
                    ...“
 
* Explanation:
This file lists all the files with the text of licenses for the source code. It is also possible to specify on which line the license text starts and on which line it ends within that file using the “beginline” & “endline” parameters. If the “beginline” parameter is not specified then license text begins from the 1st line is assumed. Similarly if “endline” parameter is not specified then the license text ends at the last line in the file is assumed. So if a file contains only licensing information, then there is no need to specify “beginline” & “endline” parameters.
 
The “md5” parameter stores the md5 checksum of the license text. So if the license text changes in any way, it’s md5 sum will differ and will not match with the previously stored md5 checksum. This mismatch will trigger build failure, notifying developer about the license text md5 mismatch, and allowing the developer to review the license text changes. Also note that if md5 checksum is not matched while building, the correct md5 checksum is printed in the build log.
 
There is no limit on how many files can be specified. But generally every project would need specifying of just one or two files for license tracking. Many projects would have a “COPYING” file which will store all the license information for all the source code files. If the “COPYING” file is valid then tracking only that file would be enough.
 
* Tips on using the LIC_FILE_CHKSUM variable:
1. if you specify empty or invalid “md5” parameter;  then while building the package, bitbake will give md5 not matched error, and also show the correct “md5” parameter value in the build log
 
2. If the whole file contains only license text, then there is no need to specify “beginline” and “endline” parameters.

Latest revision as of 11:02, 5 June 2014