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config_system.md

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Bob Configuration System

Bob's "features" allow module definitions to be changed depending on configuration options, e.g.:

bob_binary {
    ...
    warnings_as_errors: {
        cflags: ["-Werror"],
    },
}

However, this is limited to one level deep, so isn't much use on its own. Bob therefore uses a separate configuration system ("Mconfig") to allow more complicated options and dependencies, which are translated into a set of boolean options at build time. The language is based on the Linux kernel's configuration mechanism, Kconfig, and is partially compatible with it.

Configuring a build using Mconfig

After bootstrapping a build, there should be two scripts in the build directory: config and menuconfig. Generally, at least one of these needs to be run before starting a build for the first time.

$BUILDDIR/config

This is a command-line tool to enable and disable options. It will attempt to satisfy all the options passed to it within a single invocation, and all other options will be reset to their default values:

$BUILDDIR/config ANDROID=y TARGET_TOOLCHAIN_CLANG=y ALLOW_HOST_EXPLORE=n

If incompatible options are requested, an error will be printed and the config file will not be written:

$BUILDDIR/config TARGET_TOOLCHAIN_CLANG=y TARGET_TOOLCHAIN_GNU=y
ERROR: TARGET_TOOLCHAIN_CLANG=y was ignored or overridden. Value is n

User-set options are not preserved between invocations - i.e. specifying e.g. ENABLE_FOO=y, where ENABLE_FOO is disabled by default, will not be preserved if $BUILDDIR/config is run a subsequent time without specifying ENABLE_FOO=y.

$BUILDDIR/menuconfig

This is an ncurses-based graphical tool to enable and disable options, and is invoked by simply running $BUILDDIR/menuconfig.

Unlike config, menuconfig will remember previously user-set options, so can be used to incrementally change the build configuration.

Note that running config after menuconfig will clear any any previously set options.

Configuring the config system

The Mconfig file

Configuration options live in a file called Mconfig at the root of a project directory.

Furthermore, Mconfig files can include other ones using the source or source_local statements. For compatibility with kernel Kconfig files, the argument to source is a directory relative to the project root, not relative to the Mconfig file containing the source statement. source_local takes a path relative to the current file. E.g., for the following layout:

project
|-- subcomponent
|   |-- subsubcomponent
|   |   `-- Mconfig
|   `-- Mconfig
`-- Mconfig

project/Mconfig would contain:

config WARNINGS_AS_ERRORS
	bool "Fail the build if the compiler issues a warning"
	default y

# ...More config options...

source "subcomponent/Mconfig"

And subcomponent/Mconfig would contain:

# ...
source "subcomponent/subsubcomponent/Mconfig"
# OR: source_local "subsubcomponent/Mconfig"
# NOT: source "subsubcomponent/Mconfig"

Configuration options

The fundamental unit of Mconfig is the config option. Each one is mapped to a value which can be used inside build.bp files during the build. They are defined as follows:

config OPTION_NAME
	bool|int|string "User-visible option name"
	depends on (A && B) || C
	default n|y|"hello"|1234 if D || E
	default n
	bob_ignore n|y
	select ANOTHER_OPTION
	warning "warning text when option enabled"
	help
		This is a longer, possibly multiline help text
		describing OPTION_NAME.

Types

Booleans

In Mconfig, these have values y and n, which are translated into 1 and 0 when used in a build.bp.

Strings

String processing is limited, but options can contain constant string values chosen using defaults, or be overridden by the user if user-visible:

config INSTALL_PATH
	string "Location to install the binary"
	default "/usr/local/bin" if LINUX
	default "$(TARGET_OUT)/bin" if ANDROID

String values can also be compared in expressions (default if and depends on) using the = and != operators.

Integers

Like strings, int options can contain constant values chosen using defaults, or be overridden by the user if user-visible. They can also be compared in expressions using the =, !=, <, >, <= and >= operators.

Hidden options

The "user visible option name" in the example above is optional:

config HIDDEN_DERIVED_VALUE
	bool
	default y if OPT_A && !OPT_B
	default n

Options like the above will not be visible in menuconfig, or settable on the command-line using config. Instead, they are always given their default value based on their default if conditions.

Dependencies

Options can have dependencies using the depends on construct. If the expression is not true, it will not be possible to enable the option, and the option will not be visible in menuconfig:

config BUILD_UNIT_TESTS
	bool "Build the unit tests"
	depends on DEBUG_SYMBOLS && UNIT_TEST_FRAMEWORK_FOUND
	default y
	help
		Build the unit tests. Disable if you are not a developer.

Default values

If no default value is specified, options will be n, 0, or "" by default (for bools, ints, and strings, respectively). However, options can specify a default value, which can change depending on other options using default if:

config OS_NAME
	string "Operating system name"
	default "Android" if ANDROID
	default "Linux" if LINUX
	default "Unknown"

Ignore configuration options by bob

There is a possibility to mark a config option as bob_ignore y to point Bob that it should ignore such option while gathering parameters for templates and features. This will prevent from accidentally exposing options by cflags.

config PLATFORM_VERBOSE_MODE
	bool "Enable verbose mode"
	default y
	bob_ignore y

config PLATFORM_VERBOSE_TYPE
	string "verbose mode type"
	default "all"
	bob_ignore y

Options are stored in .bob.config.json as:

{
	"platform_verbose_mode" : {
		"ignore" : true,
		"value" : true
	},
	"platform_verbose_type" : {
		"ignore" : true,
		"value" : "all"
	}
}

This way Bob will not be able to recognize at all of those options:

bob_defaults {
	...
	platform_verbose_mode: {
        cflags: [
			"-DVERBOSE_MODE=1",
			"-DVERBOSE_TYPE={{.platform_verbose_type}}",
		],
	},
}

Negated values

Mconfig can be used to negate config options:

config ASSERTIONS
	bool "Enable assertions"
	default n

config NO_ASSERTIONS
	bool
	default y if !ASSERTIONS

bob_defaults {
    ...
    no_assertions: {
        cflags: ["-DNDEBUG"],
    },
}

The canonical way for a negative option is default y if !POSITIVE_OPTION, as shown above. It could also be done using depends, but this is not recommended, because to be technically correct the dependency should be circular:

config ASSERTIONS
	bool "Enable assertions"
	depends on !NO_ASSERTIONS     # Don't do this
	default y

config NO_ASSERTIONS:
	bool
	depends on !ASSERTIONS
	default n

Mutually-exclusive options (choice groups)

Choice groups are used to indicate mutually exclusive config options:

choice
	prompt "Build type"
	default DEBUG_BUILD # If this is missing, the first option whose
	                    # dependencies are satisfied will be the default.
	help
		Choose either an optimized build, for distribution, or an
		unoptimized build with debug symbols, for debugging and
		development.

config FAST_BUILD
	bool "Optimized build"
	depends on HAS_OPTIMIZING_COMPILER

config DEBUG_BUILD
	bool "Debug build"

endchoice

Only one of FAST_BUILD and DEBUG_BUILD can be enabled, and an attempt to enable them both using config will result in an error.

The default value is chosen by adding a default clause to the top-level choice section, instead of by putting one on a single config option.

Selecting other options

The select keyword means that, when a given option is enabled, it will also enable other option(s). Adding if and a condition will make this conditional.

If those options cannot be enabled, for example if their dependencies are not satisfied, an error will be raised.

For example, the DEBUG_BUILD option above could be modified as follows:

# ...inside "Build type" choice group

config DEBUG_BUILD
	bool "Debug build"
	select ASSERTIONS
	select BUILD_UNIT_TESTS if UNIT_TEST_FRAMEWORK_FOUND

Menus

Putting options between menu and endmenu keywords will make them appear in a separate menu within menuconfig. Menus also support visible if and depends on:

  • visible if: If the associated condition is not satisfied, the menu will not appear in menuconfig. However, options within the menu may still become enabled.

  • depends on: If the associated condition is not satisfied, none of the options within the menu will be able to be enabled.

menuconfig

Using menuconfig (instead of just menu) creates a config option with an associated sub-menu, which contains the options which depend on it:

menuconfig ENABLE_NEW_FEATURE
	bool "Enable a new feature"
	depends on A_PREREQUISITE
	default y

config NEW_FEATURE_DOES_FOO
	bool "Enable the foo functionality of the new feature"
	default y
	depends on ENABLE_NEW_FEATURE

config NEW_FEATURE_NAME
	string "The unnecessarily-configurable name of the new feature"
	default "bar"
	depends on ENABLE_NEW_FEATURE

In the above case, NEW_FEATURE_DOES_FOO and NEW_FEATURE_NAME will not be visible in the ncurses GUI menu unless ENABLE_NEW_FEATURE is enabled.

Setting the menu title

The mainmenu construct sets the title of the menuconfig window:

mainmenu "Configuration for MyProgram"

config ...

Dynamic configuration using Python

Not all options can be determined statically, or from user settings. The configuration system allows Python plugins to inspect and change options.

A configuration plugin is a Python script containing the following:

import config_system

def plugin_exec():
    # Read options using get_config
    if config_system.get_config("TARGET_TOOLCHAIN_CLANG")["value"] == "y":
        ...
    # Write them using set_config
    if find_unit_test_framework():
        config_system.set_config("UNIT_TEST_FRAMEWORK_FOUND", "y")

Config plugins are included in the build system by adding them to the BOB_CONFIG_PLUGINS variable during bootstrap:

export BOB_CONFIG_PLUGINS="path/to/config_plugin:path/to/other_config_plugin" # No .py extension
... # Other exports for Bob bootstrap
bob/bootstrap_linux.bash # or bootstrap_androidbp.bash