| # Building `sys/unix` |
| |
| The sys/unix package provides access to the raw system call interface of the |
| underlying operating system. See: https://godoc.org/golang.org/x/sys/unix |
| |
| Porting Go to a new architecture/OS combination or adding syscalls, types, or |
| constants to an existing architecture/OS pair requires some manual effort; |
| however, there are tools that automate much of the process. |
| |
| ## Build Systems |
| |
| There are currently two ways we generate the necessary files. We are currently |
| migrating the build system to use containers so the builds are reproducible. |
| This is being done on an OS-by-OS basis. Please update this documentation as |
| components of the build system change. |
| |
| ### Old Build System (currently for `GOOS != "Linux" || GOARCH == "sparc64"`) |
| |
| The old build system generates the Go files based on the C header files |
| present on your system. This means that files |
| for a given GOOS/GOARCH pair must be generated on a system with that OS and |
| architecture. This also means that the generated code can differ from system |
| to system, based on differences in the header files. |
| |
| To avoid this, if you are using the old build system, only generate the Go |
| files on an installation with unmodified header files. It is also important to |
| keep track of which version of the OS the files were generated from (ex. |
| Darwin 14 vs Darwin 15). This makes it easier to track the progress of changes |
| and have each OS upgrade correspond to a single change. |
| |
| To build the files for your current OS and architecture, make sure GOOS and |
| GOARCH are set correctly and run `mkall.sh`. This will generate the files for |
| your specific system. Running `mkall.sh -n` shows the commands that will be run. |
| |
| Requirements: bash, perl, go |
| |
| ### New Build System (currently for `GOOS == "Linux" && GOARCH != "sparc64"`) |
| |
| The new build system uses a Docker container to generate the go files directly |
| from source checkouts of the kernel and various system libraries. This means |
| that on any platform that supports Docker, all the files using the new build |
| system can be generated at once, and generated files will not change based on |
| what the person running the scripts has installed on their computer. |
| |
| The OS specific files for the new build system are located in the `${GOOS}` |
| directory, and the build is coordinated by the `${GOOS}/mkall.go` program. When |
| the kernel or system library updates, modify the Dockerfile at |
| `${GOOS}/Dockerfile` to checkout the new release of the source. |
| |
| To build all the files under the new build system, you must be on an amd64/Linux |
| system and have your GOOS and GOARCH set accordingly. Running `mkall.sh` will |
| then generate all of the files for all of the GOOS/GOARCH pairs in the new build |
| system. Running `mkall.sh -n` shows the commands that will be run. |
| |
| Requirements: bash, perl, go, docker |
| |
| ## Component files |
| |
| This section describes the various files used in the code generation process. |
| It also contains instructions on how to modify these files to add a new |
| architecture/OS or to add additional syscalls, types, or constants. Note that |
| if you are using the new build system, the scripts cannot be called normally. |
| They must be called from within the docker container. |
| |
| ### asm files |
| |
| The hand-written assembly file at `asm_${GOOS}_${GOARCH}.s` implements system |
| call dispatch. There are three entry points: |
| ``` |
| func Syscall(trap, a1, a2, a3 uintptr) (r1, r2, err uintptr) |
| func Syscall6(trap, a1, a2, a3, a4, a5, a6 uintptr) (r1, r2, err uintptr) |
| func RawSyscall(trap, a1, a2, a3 uintptr) (r1, r2, err uintptr) |
| ``` |
| The first and second are the standard ones; they differ only in how many |
| arguments can be passed to the kernel. The third is for low-level use by the |
| ForkExec wrapper. Unlike the first two, it does not call into the scheduler to |
| let it know that a system call is running. |
| |
| When porting Go to an new architecture/OS, this file must be implemented for |
| each GOOS/GOARCH pair. |
| |
| ### mksysnum |
| |
| Mksysnum is a script located at `${GOOS}/mksysnum.pl` (or `mksysnum_${GOOS}.pl` |
| for the old system). This script takes in a list of header files containing the |
| syscall number declarations and parses them to produce the corresponding list of |
| Go numeric constants. See `zsysnum_${GOOS}_${GOARCH}.go` for the generated |
| constants. |
| |
| Adding new syscall numbers is mostly done by running the build on a sufficiently |
| new installation of the target OS (or updating the source checkouts for the |
| new build system). However, depending on the OS, you make need to update the |
| parsing in mksysnum. |
| |
| ### mksyscall.pl |
| |
| The `syscall.go`, `syscall_${GOOS}.go`, `syscall_${GOOS}_${GOARCH}.go` are |
| hand-written Go files which implement system calls (for unix, the specific OS, |
| or the specific OS/Architecture pair respectively) that need special handling |
| and list `//sys` comments giving prototypes for ones that can be generated. |
| |
| The mksyscall.pl script takes the `//sys` and `//sysnb` comments and converts |
| them into syscalls. This requires the name of the prototype in the comment to |
| match a syscall number in the `zsysnum_${GOOS}_${GOARCH}.go` file. The function |
| prototype can be exported (capitalized) or not. |
| |
| Adding a new syscall often just requires adding a new `//sys` function prototype |
| with the desired arguments and a capitalized name so it is exported. However, if |
| you want the interface to the syscall to be different, often one will make an |
| unexported `//sys` prototype, an then write a custom wrapper in |
| `syscall_${GOOS}.go`. |
| |
| ### types files |
| |
| For each OS, there is a hand-written Go file at `${GOOS}/types.go` (or |
| `types_${GOOS}.go` on the old system). This file includes standard C headers and |
| creates Go type aliases to the corresponding C types. The file is then fed |
| through godef to get the Go compatible definitions. Finally, the generated code |
| is fed though mkpost.go to format the code correctly and remove any hidden or |
| private identifiers. This cleaned-up code is written to |
| `ztypes_${GOOS}_${GOARCH}.go`. |
| |
| The hardest part about preparing this file is figuring out which headers to |
| include and which symbols need to be `#define`d to get the actual data |
| structures that pass through to the kernel system calls. Some C libraries |
| preset alternate versions for binary compatibility and translate them on the |
| way in and out of system calls, but there is almost always a `#define` that can |
| get the real ones. |
| See `types_darwin.go` and `linux/types.go` for examples. |
| |
| To add a new type, add in the necessary include statement at the top of the |
| file (if it is not already there) and add in a type alias line. Note that if |
| your type is significantly different on different architectures, you may need |
| some `#if/#elif` macros in your include statements. |
| |
| ### mkerrors.sh |
| |
| This script is used to generate the system's various constants. This doesn't |
| just include the error numbers and error strings, but also the signal numbers |
| an a wide variety of miscellaneous constants. The constants come from the list |
| of include files in the `includes_${uname}` variable. A regex then picks out |
| the desired `#define` statements, and generates the corresponding Go constants. |
| The error numbers and strings are generated from `#include <errno.h>`, and the |
| signal numbers and strings are generated from `#include <signal.h>`. All of |
| these constants are written to `zerrors_${GOOS}_${GOARCH}.go` via a C program, |
| `_errors.c`, which prints out all the constants. |
| |
| To add a constant, add the header that includes it to the appropriate variable. |
| Then, edit the regex (if necessary) to match the desired constant. Avoid making |
| the regex too broad to avoid matching unintended constants. |
| |
| |
| ## Generated files |
| |
| ### `zerror_${GOOS}_${GOARCH}.go` |
| |
| A file containing all of the system's generated error numbers, error strings, |
| signal numbers, and constants. Generated by `mkerrors.sh` (see above). |
| |
| ### `zsyscall_${GOOS}_${GOARCH}.go` |
| |
| A file containing all the generated syscalls for a specific GOOS and GOARCH. |
| Generated by `mksyscall.pl` (see above). |
| |
| ### `zsysnum_${GOOS}_${GOARCH}.go` |
| |
| A list of numeric constants for all the syscall number of the specific GOOS |
| and GOARCH. Generated by mksysnum (see above). |
| |
| ### `ztypes_${GOOS}_${GOARCH}.go` |
| |
| A file containing Go types for passing into (or returning from) syscalls. |
| Generated by godefs and the types file (see above). |