cbwww/site/docs/build/index.md
Leah Rowe ee575a619b snip
Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <info@minifree.org>
2024-11-02 00:11:21 +00:00

6.9 KiB

title x-toc-enable
Build from source true

Including Canoeboot 20231026 and newer, all releases have cbwww.git (the website) and cbwww-img.git (images for the website) archived in the src tar archive for that release; Canoeboot documentation is written in Markdown (pandoc variant). You can find markdown files and images under src/www/ and src/img/, respectively.

If you're working with release documentation, you don't get the full HTML files (such as the one you're viewing now, if you're reading this page in a web browser), so either read the Markdown files directly, or compile them to HTML using the Untitled Static Site Generator (which is what the Canoeboot project uses to generate HTML from those files).

NOTE: av.canoeboot.org is hardcoded as the domain name where images are pointed to, in cbwww.git, so you will need to replace these references in your local version, unless you're happy to just continue using those.

Git

Canoeboot's build system uses Git, extensively. You should perform the steps below, even if you're using a release archive.

Before you use the build system, please know: the build system itself uses Git extensively, when downloading software like coreboot and patching it.

You should make sure to initialize your Git properly, before you begin or else the build system will not work properly. Do this:

git config --global user.name "John Doe"
git config --global user.email johndoe@example.com

Change the name and email address to whatever you want, when doing this.

You may also want to follow more of the steps here: https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Getting-Started-First-Time-Git-Setup

Python

You should ensure that the python command runs python 3, on your system. Python2 is unused by cbmk or anything that it pulls down as modules.

If building on Debian/Ubuntu based systems, you can achieve that via:

sudo apt install python-is-python3

On Fedora, you can use the following

sudo dnf install python-unversioned-command

How to compile Canoeboot

Actual development/testing is always done using cbmk directly, and this includes when building from source. Here are some instructions to get you started:

Zero..st, check time/date

Make sure date/hwclock report the correct time and date on your system, because parts of the build process download from HTTPS servers and wrong time or date can cause connections to be dropped during negotiation.

First, install build dependencies

Check config/dependencies/ for list of supported distros.

Canoeboot includes a script that automatically installs build dependencies according to the selected GNU+Linux distro.

For example:

./mk dependencies ubuntu

or

./mk dependencies debian

or

./mk dependencies fedora38

or

./mk dependencies arch

NOTE: In case of Ubuntu 20.04 LTS or derived distros for that specific release, use the dedicated configuration file (the Trisquel 11 config symlinks to this):

./mk dependencies ubuntu2004

Technically, any GNU+Linux distribution can be used to build canoeboot. However, you will have to write your own script for installing build dependencies.

Next, build ROM images

Canoeboot MaKe (cbmk) automatically runs all necessary commands; for example, ./mk -b coreboot will automatically build the required payloads if not already compiled.

As a result, you can now (after installing the correct build dependencies) run just a single command, from a fresh Git clone, to build all ROM images:

./mk -b coreboot

or even just build specific ROM images, e.g.:

./mk -b coreboot x60

or get a list of supported build targets:

./mk -b coreboot list

Or maybe just build payloads?

If you wish to build payloads, you can also do that. For example:

./mk -b grub

./mk -b seabios

./mk -b u-boot

Previous steps will be performed automatically. However, you can still run individual parts of the build system manually, if you choose. This may be beneficial when you're making changes, and you wish to test a specific part of cbmk.

Want to modify Canoeboot?

Check the cbmk maintenance manual for guidance. You may for example want to modify a config, e.g.:

./mk -m coreboot x200_8mb

Or perhaps add a new board! The maintenance manual will teach you how the Canoeboot build system (cbmk) works!

Post-compilation steps

So you compiled your Canoeboot image? Congratulations!

Before you flash, please make sure that you dumped two copies of the original firmware just in case (verifying the hashes of each dump, to ensure that they match), using the -r option in flashprog.

NOTE: Canoeboot standardises on flashprog now, as of 3 May 2024, which is a fork of flashrom.