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author | Ludovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org> | 2021-04-11 15:02:23 +0200 |
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committer | Ludovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org> | 2021-04-12 18:44:09 +0200 |
commit | eb613eff58603ba5b35c93b5b34090a78559790b (patch) | |
tree | 251dc2460294d8bc860dcf098f237c7dc0e29b6e | |
parent | a514b4ab19a628cbfa8b6d7c316ed7242018fcbf (diff) | |
download | guix-eb613eff58603ba5b35c93b5b34090a78559790b.tar.gz |
doc: Move list of build phases to "Build Phases".
Before this change, the 'gnu-build-system' phases were listed in the "Build Systems" section, and then summarized in the "Build Phases" section. This moves everything to "Build Phases". * doc/guix.texi (Build Systems): Move phase table to... (Build Phases): ... here. Rearrange surrounding text.
-rw-r--r-- | doc/guix.texi | 108 |
1 files changed, 49 insertions, 59 deletions
diff --git a/doc/guix.texi b/doc/guix.texi index 0b8180e6a7..38205fe3fa 100644 --- a/doc/guix.texi +++ b/doc/guix.texi @@ -7298,55 +7298,7 @@ standards, GNU Coding Standards}). In a nutshell, packages using it are configured, built, and installed with the usual @code{./configure && make && make check && make install} command sequence. In practice, a few additional steps are often needed. -All these steps are split up in separate @dfn{phases}, -notably@footnote{Please see the @code{(guix build gnu-build-system)} -modules for more details about the build phases.}: - -@table @code -@item unpack -Unpack the source tarball, and change the current directory to the -extracted source tree. If the source is actually a directory, copy it -to the build tree, and enter that directory. - -@item patch-source-shebangs -Patch shebangs encountered in source files so they refer to the right -store file names. For instance, this changes @code{#!/bin/sh} to -@code{#!/gnu/store/@dots{}-bash-4.3/bin/sh}. - -@item configure -Run the @file{configure} script with a number of default options, such -as @option{--prefix=/gnu/store/@dots{}}, as well as the options specified -by the @code{#:configure-flags} argument. - -@item build -Run @code{make} with the list of flags specified with -@code{#:make-flags}. If the @code{#:parallel-build?} argument is true -(the default), build with @code{make -j}. - -@item check -Run @code{make check}, or some other target specified with -@code{#:test-target}, unless @code{#:tests? #f} is passed. If the -@code{#:parallel-tests?} argument is true (the default), run @code{make -check -j}. - -@item install -Run @code{make install} with the flags listed in @code{#:make-flags}. - -@item patch-shebangs -Patch shebangs on the installed executable files. - -@item strip -Strip debugging symbols from ELF files (unless @code{#:strip-binaries?} -is false), copying them to the @code{debug} output when available -(@pxref{Installing Debugging Files}). -@end table - -@vindex %standard-phases -The build-side module @code{(guix build gnu-build-system)} defines -@code{%standard-phases} as the default list of build phases. -@code{%standard-phases} is a list of symbol/procedure pairs, where the -procedure implements the actual phase. - +All these steps are split up in separate @dfn{phases}. @xref{Build Phases}, for more info on build phases and ways to customize them. @@ -8250,16 +8202,53 @@ exception is the ``bare-bones'' @code{trivial-build-system} (@pxref{Build Systems}). As discussed in the previous section, those build systems provide a -standard list of phases. For @code{gnu-build-system}, the standard -phases include an @code{unpack} phase to unpack the source code tarball, -a @command{configure} phase to run @code{./configure}, a @code{build} -phase to run @command{make}, and (among others) an @code{install} phase -to run @command{make install}; @pxref{Build Systems}, for a more -detailed view of these phases. Likewise, @code{cmake-build-system} -inherits these phases, but its @code{configure} phase runs -@command{cmake} instead of @command{./configure}. Other build systems, -such as @code{python-build-system}, have a wholly different list of -standard phases. All this code runs on the @dfn{build side}: it is +standard list of phases. For @code{gnu-build-system}, the main build +phases are the following: + +@table @code +@item unpack +Unpack the source tarball, and change the current directory to the +extracted source tree. If the source is actually a directory, copy it +to the build tree, and enter that directory. + +@item patch-source-shebangs +Patch shebangs encountered in source files so they refer to the right +store file names. For instance, this changes @code{#!/bin/sh} to +@code{#!/gnu/store/@dots{}-bash-4.3/bin/sh}. + +@item configure +Run the @file{configure} script with a number of default options, such +as @option{--prefix=/gnu/store/@dots{}}, as well as the options specified +by the @code{#:configure-flags} argument. + +@item build +Run @code{make} with the list of flags specified with +@code{#:make-flags}. If the @code{#:parallel-build?} argument is true +(the default), build with @code{make -j}. + +@item check +Run @code{make check}, or some other target specified with +@code{#:test-target}, unless @code{#:tests? #f} is passed. If the +@code{#:parallel-tests?} argument is true (the default), run @code{make +check -j}. + +@item install +Run @code{make install} with the flags listed in @code{#:make-flags}. + +@item patch-shebangs +Patch shebangs on the installed executable files. + +@item strip +Strip debugging symbols from ELF files (unless @code{#:strip-binaries?} +is false), copying them to the @code{debug} output when available +(@pxref{Installing Debugging Files}). +@end table + +Other build systems have similar phases, with some variations. For +example, @code{cmake-build-system} has same-named phases but its +@code{configure} phases runs @code{cmake} instead of @code{./configure}. +Others, such as @code{python-build-system}, have a wholly different list +of standard phases. All this code runs on the @dfn{build side}: it is evaluated when you actually build the package, in a dedicated build process spawned by the build daemon (@pxref{Invoking guix-daemon}). @@ -8270,6 +8259,7 @@ is a procedure that accepts an arbitrary number of arguments. By convention, those procedures receive information about the build in the form of @dfn{keyword parameters}, which they can use or ignore. +@vindex %standard-phases For example, here is how @code{(guix build gnu-build-system)} defines @code{%standard-phases}, the variable holding its alist of build phases@footnote{We present a simplified view of those build phases, but |