README.md (8685B)
1 # Building `sys/unix` 2 3 The sys/unix package provides access to the raw system call interface of the 4 underlying operating system. See: https://godoc.org/golang.org/x/sys/unix 5 6 Porting Go to a new architecture/OS combination or adding syscalls, types, or 7 constants to an existing architecture/OS pair requires some manual effort; 8 however, there are tools that automate much of the process. 9 10 ## Build Systems 11 12 There are currently two ways we generate the necessary files. We are currently 13 migrating the build system to use containers so the builds are reproducible. 14 This is being done on an OS-by-OS basis. Please update this documentation as 15 components of the build system change. 16 17 ### Old Build System (currently for `GOOS != "linux"`) 18 19 The old build system generates the Go files based on the C header files 20 present on your system. This means that files 21 for a given GOOS/GOARCH pair must be generated on a system with that OS and 22 architecture. This also means that the generated code can differ from system 23 to system, based on differences in the header files. 24 25 To avoid this, if you are using the old build system, only generate the Go 26 files on an installation with unmodified header files. It is also important to 27 keep track of which version of the OS the files were generated from (ex. 28 Darwin 14 vs Darwin 15). This makes it easier to track the progress of changes 29 and have each OS upgrade correspond to a single change. 30 31 To build the files for your current OS and architecture, make sure GOOS and 32 GOARCH are set correctly and run `mkall.sh`. This will generate the files for 33 your specific system. Running `mkall.sh -n` shows the commands that will be run. 34 35 Requirements: bash, go 36 37 ### New Build System (currently for `GOOS == "linux"`) 38 39 The new build system uses a Docker container to generate the go files directly 40 from source checkouts of the kernel and various system libraries. This means 41 that on any platform that supports Docker, all the files using the new build 42 system can be generated at once, and generated files will not change based on 43 what the person running the scripts has installed on their computer. 44 45 The OS specific files for the new build system are located in the `${GOOS}` 46 directory, and the build is coordinated by the `${GOOS}/mkall.go` program. When 47 the kernel or system library updates, modify the Dockerfile at 48 `${GOOS}/Dockerfile` to checkout the new release of the source. 49 50 To build all the files under the new build system, you must be on an amd64/Linux 51 system and have your GOOS and GOARCH set accordingly. Running `mkall.sh` will 52 then generate all of the files for all of the GOOS/GOARCH pairs in the new build 53 system. Running `mkall.sh -n` shows the commands that will be run. 54 55 Requirements: bash, go, docker 56 57 ## Component files 58 59 This section describes the various files used in the code generation process. 60 It also contains instructions on how to modify these files to add a new 61 architecture/OS or to add additional syscalls, types, or constants. Note that 62 if you are using the new build system, the scripts/programs cannot be called normally. 63 They must be called from within the docker container. 64 65 ### asm files 66 67 The hand-written assembly file at `asm_${GOOS}_${GOARCH}.s` implements system 68 call dispatch. There are three entry points: 69 ``` 70 func Syscall(trap, a1, a2, a3 uintptr) (r1, r2, err uintptr) 71 func Syscall6(trap, a1, a2, a3, a4, a5, a6 uintptr) (r1, r2, err uintptr) 72 func RawSyscall(trap, a1, a2, a3 uintptr) (r1, r2, err uintptr) 73 ``` 74 The first and second are the standard ones; they differ only in how many 75 arguments can be passed to the kernel. The third is for low-level use by the 76 ForkExec wrapper. Unlike the first two, it does not call into the scheduler to 77 let it know that a system call is running. 78 79 When porting Go to a new architecture/OS, this file must be implemented for 80 each GOOS/GOARCH pair. 81 82 ### mksysnum 83 84 Mksysnum is a Go program located at `${GOOS}/mksysnum.go` (or `mksysnum_${GOOS}.go` 85 for the old system). This program takes in a list of header files containing the 86 syscall number declarations and parses them to produce the corresponding list of 87 Go numeric constants. See `zsysnum_${GOOS}_${GOARCH}.go` for the generated 88 constants. 89 90 Adding new syscall numbers is mostly done by running the build on a sufficiently 91 new installation of the target OS (or updating the source checkouts for the 92 new build system). However, depending on the OS, you may need to update the 93 parsing in mksysnum. 94 95 ### mksyscall.go 96 97 The `syscall.go`, `syscall_${GOOS}.go`, `syscall_${GOOS}_${GOARCH}.go` are 98 hand-written Go files which implement system calls (for unix, the specific OS, 99 or the specific OS/Architecture pair respectively) that need special handling 100 and list `//sys` comments giving prototypes for ones that can be generated. 101 102 The mksyscall.go program takes the `//sys` and `//sysnb` comments and converts 103 them into syscalls. This requires the name of the prototype in the comment to 104 match a syscall number in the `zsysnum_${GOOS}_${GOARCH}.go` file. The function 105 prototype can be exported (capitalized) or not. 106 107 Adding a new syscall often just requires adding a new `//sys` function prototype 108 with the desired arguments and a capitalized name so it is exported. However, if 109 you want the interface to the syscall to be different, often one will make an 110 unexported `//sys` prototype, and then write a custom wrapper in 111 `syscall_${GOOS}.go`. 112 113 ### types files 114 115 For each OS, there is a hand-written Go file at `${GOOS}/types.go` (or 116 `types_${GOOS}.go` on the old system). This file includes standard C headers and 117 creates Go type aliases to the corresponding C types. The file is then fed 118 through godef to get the Go compatible definitions. Finally, the generated code 119 is fed though mkpost.go to format the code correctly and remove any hidden or 120 private identifiers. This cleaned-up code is written to 121 `ztypes_${GOOS}_${GOARCH}.go`. 122 123 The hardest part about preparing this file is figuring out which headers to 124 include and which symbols need to be `#define`d to get the actual data 125 structures that pass through to the kernel system calls. Some C libraries 126 preset alternate versions for binary compatibility and translate them on the 127 way in and out of system calls, but there is almost always a `#define` that can 128 get the real ones. 129 See `types_darwin.go` and `linux/types.go` for examples. 130 131 To add a new type, add in the necessary include statement at the top of the 132 file (if it is not already there) and add in a type alias line. Note that if 133 your type is significantly different on different architectures, you may need 134 some `#if/#elif` macros in your include statements. 135 136 ### mkerrors.sh 137 138 This script is used to generate the system's various constants. This doesn't 139 just include the error numbers and error strings, but also the signal numbers 140 and a wide variety of miscellaneous constants. The constants come from the list 141 of include files in the `includes_${uname}` variable. A regex then picks out 142 the desired `#define` statements, and generates the corresponding Go constants. 143 The error numbers and strings are generated from `#include <errno.h>`, and the 144 signal numbers and strings are generated from `#include <signal.h>`. All of 145 these constants are written to `zerrors_${GOOS}_${GOARCH}.go` via a C program, 146 `_errors.c`, which prints out all the constants. 147 148 To add a constant, add the header that includes it to the appropriate variable. 149 Then, edit the regex (if necessary) to match the desired constant. Avoid making 150 the regex too broad to avoid matching unintended constants. 151 152 ### internal/mkmerge 153 154 This program is used to extract duplicate const, func, and type declarations 155 from the generated architecture-specific files listed below, and merge these 156 into a common file for each OS. 157 158 The merge is performed in the following steps: 159 1. Construct the set of common code that is idential in all architecture-specific files. 160 2. Write this common code to the merged file. 161 3. Remove the common code from all architecture-specific files. 162 163 164 ## Generated files 165 166 ### `zerrors_${GOOS}_${GOARCH}.go` 167 168 A file containing all of the system's generated error numbers, error strings, 169 signal numbers, and constants. Generated by `mkerrors.sh` (see above). 170 171 ### `zsyscall_${GOOS}_${GOARCH}.go` 172 173 A file containing all the generated syscalls for a specific GOOS and GOARCH. 174 Generated by `mksyscall.go` (see above). 175 176 ### `zsysnum_${GOOS}_${GOARCH}.go` 177 178 A list of numeric constants for all the syscall number of the specific GOOS 179 and GOARCH. Generated by mksysnum (see above). 180 181 ### `ztypes_${GOOS}_${GOARCH}.go` 182 183 A file containing Go types for passing into (or returning from) syscalls. 184 Generated by godefs and the types file (see above).