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There are many architecture-specific linux files in the config directory, all of which simply redirect to linux-gnulibc1. This change renames linux-gnulibc1 to linux-gnu and deletes the more specific files.
87 lines
4.5 KiB
Markdown
87 lines
4.5 KiB
Markdown
# The `config` directory
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## Intro
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HDF5 can be configured using both the GNU Autotools and CMake. We try to keep
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them in sync, but you can expect minor differences to crop up. Please create
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a GitHub issue for any differences noted. Note that with the Autotools, we
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do NOT check generated files into GitHub until release time, so you will
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need to generate `configure`, `Makefile.in`(s), etc. via `autogen.sh` in the
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project root if you want to build with that system.
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Configuration information for the HDF5 library and tools is (unfortunately)
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spread across the repository. Basic library configuration will generally
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be found in `configure.ac` (Autotools) and the root's `CMakeLists.txt` (CMake).
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Each subdirectory of the project also has its own `Makefile.am` or CMake build
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and test files.
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This directory contains a few important things:
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* Autotools OS- and compiler-specific configuration
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* CMake support files (in `cmake`)
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* Warning files shared between the two systems (in `*-warnings` directories)
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* CMake toolchain files (in `toolchain`)
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* CMake sanitizer files (in `sanitizer`)
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CMake will be documented elsewhere. This document focuses on the Autotools files
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and the shared warning files.
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## Autotools
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An Autotools build will first use `$host_cpu`, `$host_os`, etc. to try to find a
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suitable platform file in `config` to source and start checking compilers. The
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code that does this is in `configure.ac` (search for `host_os`). For example,
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MacOS will source the `apple` file and FreeBSD will source the `freebsd` file.
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If you dig into one of these files, the way that they check for compilers is
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rather crude. Each OS script will simply source the various C, C++, and
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Fortran compiler files that are listed inside. Each compiler file checks
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the designated compiler's version output to see if there's a match, and if so,
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the flag processing proceeds, and a variable like `cc_flags_set` will be set
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at the end.
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In case it's not obvious, the C files end in `-flags`, C++ in `-cxxflags`, and
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Fortran in `-fflags`.
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When a compiler matches, the script will attempt to set the `CFLAGS`, etc.
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variables based on the platform and compiler's properties. There are typically
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a large number of flag categories (e.g., `DEBUG_OPT_CFLAGS`) that are
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conditionally appended to the canonical variables, like `AM_FLAGS`, by the
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remainder of the `configure` script.
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For the major compilers, like Clang and gcc, there will be a section at the
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end where we append version-specific flags, mainly for warnings. These are
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imported via a function in the script (`load_gnu_arguments()` for gcc). See
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below for more detail.
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## Warnings files
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Keeping the Autotools and CMake build files in sync has always been a bit of a
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struggle. One way that we help to ensure that the same flags are used in each
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build system is to import the warnings settings from text files that are
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maintained separately from the Autotools and CMake build files. We like to
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configure the compiler to be as crabby as possible so as to catch subtle bugs,
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so there are a LOT of warning flags for popular compilers like Clang and gcc.
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We've located these files in `config/*-warnings` directories. Each file
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represents a compiler version and contains the warning flags we set, one to a
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line. Lines that start with `#` are considered comment lines. You'll also see
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`developer` and `no-developer` flavors of compiler version files. The former
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corresponds to "developer flags" that are usually either only semi-useful and/or
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generate a lot of (usually unfixable) noise. The latter corresponds to things
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that we want to ensure do NOT appear in non-developer builds of the library.
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These might involve a different level setting (`-Wfoo=x`) or something that
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gets incorporated in a "conglomerate" flag like `-Wextra` so we need to set
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`-Wno-foo` in non-developer builds. Developer warnings can be turned on
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via a configure option. You will also sometimes see `error` files. Those are
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files that include warnings that will be considered errors if you have enabled
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the "warnings as errors" configure option set. Now that the library is largely
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warning-free, these are less useful than in the past as you can now just set
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-Werror directly in many cases (our configure script is smart about not running
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configure checks with -Werror).
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For anyone interested, we are always interested in improving both the OS and
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compiler files, so pull requests for those are always welcome, especially for
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platforms we don't have routine access to. If you are a compiler or platform
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expert/aficionado, please help us out!
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