Project configuration¶
The project configuration file should be named project.conf
and
be located at the project root. It holds information such as Source
aliases relevant for the sources used in the given project as well as
overrides for the configuration of element types used in the project.
Values specified in the project configuration override any of the default BuildStream project configuration, which is included here for reference.
Essentials¶
Project name¶
The project name is a unique symbol for your project and will be used to distinguish your project from others in user preferences, namspaceing of your project’s artifacts in shared artifact caches, and in any case where BuildStream needs to distinguish between multiple projects.
The first thing to setup in your project.conf
should be the name
of your project.
name: my-project-name
Note
The project name may contain alphanumeric characters, dashes and underscores, and may not start with a leading digit.
Format version¶
The BuildStream format is guaranteed to be backwards compatible
with any earlier releases. The project’s minimum required format
version of BuildStream can be specified in project.conf
with
the format-version
field, e.g.:
# The minimum base BuildStream format
format-version: 0
BuildStream will increment it’s core YAML format version at least once in any given minor point release where the format has been extended to support a new feature.
Note
External Element
and Source
plugins also implement their own YAML configuration fragments and as
such are revisioned separately from the core format. See External plugins
for details on specifying a minimum version of a specific plugin.
Core Elements
and Sources
which are maintained and distributed as a part of BuildStream are revisioned
under the same global format-version
described here.
Element path¶
To allow the user to structure their project nicely, BuildStream
allows the user to specify a project subdirectory where element
.bst
files are stored.
element-path: elements
Note that elements are referred to by their relative paths, whenever
elements are referred to in a .bst
file or on the command line.
Ref storage¶
By default, BuildStream expects to read and write source references directly in the source declaration, but this can be inconvenient and prohibitive in some workflows.
Alternatively, BuildStream allows source references to be stored centrally in a project.refs file in the toplevel project directory.
This can be controlled with the ref-storage
option, which is
allowed to be configured with the following values:
inline
Source references are stored directly in the source declaration
project.refs
Source references are stored in the
project.refs
file, and junction source references are stored in thejunction.refs
file.
To enable storing of source references in project.refs
, add the
following to your project.conf
:
ref-storage: project.refs
Note
The ref-storage
configuration is available since format version 8
Configurable Warnings¶
Warnings can be configured as fatal using the fatal-warnings
configuration item.
When a warning is configured as fatal, where a warning would usually be thrown instead an error will be thrown
causing the build to fail.
Individual warnings can be configured as fatal by setting fatal-warnings
to a list of warnings.
fatal-warnings:
- overlaps
- ref-not-in-track
- <plugin>:<warning>
BuildStream provides a collection of Core Warnings
which may be raised
by a variety of plugins. Other configurable warnings are plugin specific and should be noted within their individual documentation.
Note
The fatal-warnings
configuration is available since format version 16
Source aliases¶
In order to abstract the download location of source code and
any assets which need to be downloaded, and also as a matter of
convenience, BuildStream allows one to create named aliases for
URLs which are to be used in the individual .bst
files.
aliases:
foo: git://git.foo.org/
bar: http://bar.com/downloads/
Sandbox options¶
Sandbox options for the whole project can be supplied in
project.conf
in the same way as in an element. See element configuration
for more detail.
# Specify a user id and group id to use in the build sandbox.
sandbox:
build-uid: 1003
build-gid: 1001
Note
The sandbox
configuration is available since format version 6
Artifact server¶
If you have setup an artifact server for your
project then it is convenient to configure this in your project.conf
so that users need not have any additional configuration to communicate
with an artifact share.
artifacts:
# A url from which to download prebuilt artifacts
url: https://foo.com/artifacts
You can also specify a list of caches here; earlier entries in the list will have higher priority than later ones.
Mirrors¶
A list of mirrors can be defined that couple a location to a mapping of aliases to a list of URIs, e.g.
mirrors:
- name: middle-earth
aliases:
foo:
- http://www.middle-earth.com/foo/1
- http://www.middle-earth.com/foo/2
bar:
- http://www.middle-earth.com/bar/1
- http://www.middle-earth.com/bar/2
- name: oz
aliases:
foo:
- http://www.oz.com/foo
bar:
- http://www.oz.com/bar
The order that the mirrors (and the URIs therein) are consulted is in the order they are defined when fetching, and in reverse-order when tracking.
A default mirror to consult first can be defined via user config, or the command-line argument –default-mirror.
Note
The mirrors
field is available since format version 11
External plugins¶
If your project makes use of any custom Element
or
Source
plugins, then the project must inform BuildStream
of the plugins it means to make use of and the origin from which they can be loaded.
Note that plugins with the same name from different origins are not permitted.
Local plugins¶
Local plugins are expected to be found in a subdirectory of the actual
BuildStream project. Element
and
Source
plugins should be stored in separate
directories to avoid namespace collisions.
The versions of local plugins are largely immaterial since they are
revisioned along with the project by the user, usually in a VCS like git.
However, for the sake of consistency with other plugin loading origins
we require that you specify a version, this can always be 0
for a local
plugin.
plugins:
- origin: local
path: plugins/sources
# We want to use the `mysource` source plugin located in our
# project's `plugins/sources` subdirectory.
sources:
mysource: 0
Pip plugins¶
Plugins loaded from the pip
origin are expected to be installed
separately on the host operating system using python’s package management
system.
plugins:
- origin: pip
# Specify the name of the python package containing
# the plugins we want to load. The name one would use
# on the `pip install` command line.
#
package-name: potato
# We again must specify a minimal format version for the
# external plugin, it is allowed to be `0`.
#
elements:
potato: 0
Options¶
Options are how BuildStream projects can define parameters which can be configured by users invoking BuildStream to build your project.
Options are declared in the project.conf
in the main options
dictionary.
options:
debug:
type: bool
description: Whether to enable debugging
default: False
Users can configure those options when invoking BuildStream with the
--option
argument:
$ bst --option debug True ...
Note
The name of the option may contain alphanumeric characters underscores, and may not start with a leading digit.
Common properties¶
All option types accept the following common attributes
type
Indicates the type of option to declare
description
A description of the meaning of the option
variable
Optionally indicate a variable name to export the option to. A string form of the selected option will be used to set the exported value.
If used, this value will override any existing value for the variable declared in
project.conf
, and will be overridden in the regular composition order.Note
The name of the variable to export may contain alphanumeric characters, dashes, underscores, and may not start with a leading digit.
Boolean¶
The bool
option type allows specifying boolean values which
can be cased in conditional expressions.
Declaring
options:
debug:
type: bool
description: Whether to enable debugging
default: False
Evaluating
Boolean options can be tested in expressions with equality tests:
variables:
enable-debug: False
(?):
- debug == True:
enable-debug: True
Or simply treated as truthy values:
variables:
enable-debug: False
(?):
- debug:
enable-debug: True
Exporting
When exporting boolean options as variables, a True
option value
will be exported as 1
and a False
option as 0
Enumeration¶
The enum
option type allows specifying a string value
with a restricted set of possible values.
Declaring
options:
loglevel:
type: enum
description: The logging level
values:
- debug
- info
- warning
default: info
Evaluating
Enumeration options must be tested as strings in conditional expressions:
variables:
enable-debug: False
(?):
- loglevel == "debug":
enable-debug: True
Exporting
When exporting enumeration options as variables, the value is exported as a variable directly, as it is a simple string.
Flags¶
The flags
option type allows specifying a list of string
values with a restricted set of possible values.
In contrast with the enum
option type, the default value
need not be specified and will default to an empty set.
Declaring
options:
logmask:
type: flags
description: The logging mask
values:
- debug
- info
- warning
default:
- info
Evaluating
Options of type flags
can be tested in conditional expressions using
a pythonic in syntax to test if an element is present in a set:
variables:
enable-debug: False
(?):
- ("debug" in logmask):
enable-debug: True
Exporting
When exporting flags options as variables, the value is exported as a comma separated list of selected value strings.
Architecture¶
The arch
option type is special enumeration option which
defaults to the result of uname -m, and does not support
assigning any default in the project configuration.
options:
machine_arch:
type: arch
description: The machine architecture
values:
- arm
- aarch64
- i386
- x86_64
Architecture options can be tested with the same expressions as other Enumeration options.
Element mask¶
The element-mask
option type is a special Flags option
which automatically allows only element names as values.
options:
debug_elements:
type: element-mask
description: The elements to build in debug mode
This can be convenient for automatically declaring an option which might apply to any element, and can be tested with the same syntax as other Flag options.
variables:
enable-debug: False
(?):
- ("element.bst" in debug_elements):
enable-debug: True
Element default configuration¶
The project.conf
plays a role in defining elements by
providing default values and also by overriding values declared
by plugins on a plugin wide basis.
See the composition documentation for more detail on how elements are composed.
Variables¶
The defaults for Variables used in your project is defined here.
variables:
prefix: "/usr"
Environment¶
The defaults environment for the build sandbox is defined here.
environment:
PATH: /usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin
Additionally, the special environment-nocache
list which specifies
which environment variables do not effect build output, and are thus
not considered in the calculation of artifact keys can be defined here.
environment-nocache:
- MAXJOBS
Note that the environment-nocache
list only exists so that we can
control parameters such as make -j ${MAXJOBS}
, allowing us to control
the number of jobs for a given build without effecting the resulting
cache key.
Split rules¶
The project wide split rules defaults can be specified here.
split-rules:
devel:
- |
%{includedir}
- |
%{includedir}/**
- |
%{libdir}/lib*.a
- |
%{libdir}/lib*.la
Overriding plugin defaults¶
Base attributes declared by element and source plugins can be overridden on a project wide basis. This section explains how to make project wide statements which augment the configuration of an element or source plugin.
Element overrides¶
The elements dictionary can be used to override variables, environments or plugin specific configuration data as shown below.
elements:
# Override default values for all autotools elements
autotools:
variables:
bindir: "%{prefix}/bin"
config:
configure-commands: ...
environment:
PKG_CONFIG_PATH=%{libdir}/pkgconfig
Source overrides¶
The sources dictionary can be used to override source plugin specific configuration data as shown below.
sources:
# Override default values for all git sources
git:
config:
checkout-submodules: False
Note
The sources
override is available since format version 1
Customizing the shell¶
Since BuildStream cannot know intimate details about your host or about the nature of the runtime and software that you are building, the shell environment for debugging and testing applications may need some help.
The shell
section allows some customization of the shell environment.
Note
The shell
section is available since format version 1
Interactive shell command¶
By default, BuildStream will use sh -i
when running an interactive
shell, unless a specific command is given to the bst shell
command.
BuildStream will automatically set a convenient prompt via the PS1
environment variable for interactive shells; which might be overwritten
depending on the shell you use in your runtime.
If you are using bash
, we recommend the following configuration to
ensure that the customized prompt is not overwritten:
shell:
# Specify the command to run by default for interactive shells
command: [ 'bash', '--noprofile', '--norc', '-i' ]
Environment assignments¶
In order to cooperate with your host environment, a debugging shell sometimes needs to be configured with some extra knowledge inheriting from your host environment.
This can be achieved by setting up the shell environment
configuration,
which is expressed as a dictionary very similar to the
default environment, except that it
supports host side environment variable expansion in values.
Note
The environment
configuration is available since format version 4
For example, to share your host DISPLAY
and DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS
environments with debugging shells for your project, specify the following:
shell:
# Share some environment variables from the host environment
environment:
DISPLAY: '$DISPLAY'
DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS: '$DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS'
Or, a more complex example is how one might share the host pulseaudio
server with a bst shell
environment:
shell:
# Set some environment variables explicitly
environment:
PULSE_SERVER: 'unix:${XDG_RUNTIME_DIR}/pulse/native'
Host files¶
It can be useful to share some files on the host with a shell so that it can integrate better with the host environment.
The host-files
configuration allows one to specify files and
directories on the host to be bind mounted into the sandbox.
Note
The host-files
configuration is available since format version 4
Warning
One should never mount directories where one expects to
find data and files which belong to the user, such as /home
on POSIX platforms.
This is because the unsuspecting user may corrupt their own
files accidentally as a result. Instead users can use the
--mount
option of bst shell
to mount data into the shell.
The host-files
configuration is an ordered list of mount specifications.
Members of the list can be fully specified as a dictionary, or a simple string can be used if only the defaults are required.
The fully specified dictionary has the following members:
path
The path inside the sandbox. This is the only mandatory member of the mount specification.
host_path
The host path to mount at
path
in the sandbox. This will default topath
if left unspecified.optional
Whether the mount should be considered optional. This is
False
by default.
Here is an example of a fully specified mount specification:
shell:
# Mount an arbitrary resolv.conf from the host to
# /etc/resolv.conf in the sandbox, and avoid any
# warnings if the host resolv.conf doesnt exist.
host-files:
- host_path: '/usr/local/work/etc/resolv.conf'
path: '/etc/resolv.conf'
optional: True
Here is an example of using shorthand mount specifications:
shell:
# Specify a list of files to mount in the sandbox
# directory from the host.
#
# If these do not exist on the host, a warning will
# be issued but the shell will still be launched.
host-files:
- '/etc/passwd'
- '/etc/group'
- '/etc/resolv.conf'
Host side environment variable expansion is also supported:
shell:
# Mount a host side pulseaudio server socket into
# the shell environment at the same location.
host-files:
- '${XDG_RUNTIME_DIR}/pulse/native'
Builtin defaults¶
BuildStream defines some default values for convenience, the default
values overridden by your project’s project.conf
are presented here:
# Default BuildStream project configuration. # General configuration defaults # # Require format version 0 format-version: 0 # Elements are found at the project root element-path: . # Store source references in element files ref-storage: inline # Variable Configuration # variables: # Path configuration, to be used in build instructions. prefix: "/usr" exec_prefix: "%{prefix}" bindir: "%{exec_prefix}/bin" sbindir: "%{exec_prefix}/sbin" libexecdir: "%{exec_prefix}/libexec" datadir: "%{prefix}/share" sysconfdir: "/etc" sharedstatedir: "%{prefix}/com" localstatedir: "/var" lib: "lib" libdir: "%{prefix}/%{lib}" debugdir: "%{libdir}/debug" includedir: "%{prefix}/include" docdir: "%{datadir}/doc" infodir: "%{datadir}/info" mandir: "%{datadir}/man" # Indicates the default build directory where input is # normally staged build-root: /buildstream/%{project-name}/%{element-name} # Indicates the build installation directory in the sandbox install-root: /buildstream-install # Arguments for tooling used when stripping debug symbols objcopy-link-args: --add-gnu-debuglink objcopy-extract-args: | --only-keep-debug --compress-debug-sections strip-args: | --remove-section=.comment --remove-section=.note --strip-unneeded # Generic implementation for stripping debugging symbols strip-binaries: | cd "%{install-root}" && find -type f \ '(' -perm -111 -o -name '*.so*' \ -o -name '*.cmxs' -o -name '*.node' ')' \ -exec sh -ec \ 'read -n4 hdr <"$1" # check for elf header if [ "$hdr" != "$(printf \\x7fELF)" ]; then exit 0 fi debugfile="%{install-root}%{debugdir}/$1" mkdir -p "$(dirname "$debugfile")" objcopy %{objcopy-extract-args} "$1" "$debugfile" chmod 644 "$debugfile" strip %{strip-args} "$1" objcopy %{objcopy-link-args} "$debugfile" "$1"' - {} ';' # Generic implementation for reproducible python builds fix-pyc-timestamps: | find "%{install-root}" -name '*.pyc' -exec \ dd if=/dev/zero of={} bs=1 count=4 seek=4 conv=notrunc ';' # Base sandbox environment, can be overridden by plugins environment: PATH: /usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin SHELL: /bin/sh TERM: dumb USER: tomjon USERNAME: tomjon LOGNAME: tomjon LC_ALL: C HOME: /tmp TZ: UTC # For reproducible builds we use 2011-11-11 as a constant SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH: 1320937200 # List of environment variables which should not be taken into # account when calculating a cache key for a given element. # environment-nocache: [] # Configuration for the sandbox other than environment variables # should go in 'sandbox'. This just contains the UID and GID that # the user in the sandbox will have. Not all sandboxes will support # changing the values. sandbox: build-uid: 0 build-gid: 0 # Defaults for the 'split-rules' public data found on elements # in the 'bst' domain. # split-rules: # The runtime domain includes whatever is needed for the # built element to run, this includes stripped executables # and shared libraries by default. runtime: - | %{bindir}/* - | %{sbindir}/* - | %{libexecdir}/* - | %{libdir}/lib*.so* # The devel domain includes additional things which # you may need for development. # # By default this includes header files, static libraries # and other metadata such as pkgconfig files, m4 macros and # libtool archives. devel: - | %{includedir} - | %{includedir}/** - | %{libdir}/lib*.a - | %{libdir}/lib*.la - | %{libdir}/pkgconfig/*.pc - | %{datadir}/pkgconfig/*.pc - | %{datadir}/aclocal/*.m4 # The debug domain includes debugging information stripped # away from libraries and executables debug: - | %{debugdir} - | %{debugdir}/** # The doc domain includes documentation doc: - | %{docdir} - | %{docdir}/** - | %{infodir} - | %{infodir}/** - | %{mandir} - | %{mandir}/** # The locale domain includes translations etc locale: - | %{datadir}/locale - | %{datadir}/locale/** - | %{datadir}/i18n - | %{datadir}/i18n/** - | %{datadir}/zoneinfo - | %{datadir}/zoneinfo/** # Default behavior for `bst shell` # shell: # Command to run when `bst shell` does not provide a command # command: [ 'sh', '-i' ]