1.\" 2.\" Copyright (c) 1994 University of Maryland 3.\" All Rights Reserved. 4.\" 5.\" Permission to use, copy, modify, distribute, and sell this software and its 6.\" documentation for any purpose is hereby granted without fee, provided that 7.\" the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that both that 8.\" copyright notice and this permission notice appear in supporting 9.\" documentation, and that the name of U.M. not be used in advertising or 10.\" publicity pertaining to distribution of the software without specific, 11.\" written prior permission. U.M. makes no representations about the 12.\" suitability of this software for any purpose. It is provided "as is" 13.\" without express or implied warranty. 14.\" 15.\" U.M. DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE, INCLUDING ALL 16.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS, IN NO EVENT SHALL U.M. 17.\" BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES 18.\" WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN 19.\" ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR 20.\" IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. 21.\" 22.\" Author: James da Silva, Systems Design and Analysis Group 23.\" Computer Science Department 24.\" University of Maryland at College Park 25.\" $FreeBSD$ 26.\" 27.Dd November 16, 2000 28.Dt CRUNCHGEN 1 29.Os 30.Sh NAME 31.Nm crunchgen 32.Nd generates build environment for a crunched binary 33.Sh SYNOPSIS 34.Bk -words 35.Nm 36.Op Fl foql 37.Op Fl h Ar makefile-header-name 38.Op Fl m Ar makefile-name 39.Op Fl p Ar obj-prefix 40.Op Fl c Ar c-file-name 41.Op Fl e Ar exec-file-name 42.Op Ar conf-file 43.Ek 44.Sh DESCRIPTION 45A crunched binary is a program made up of many other programs linked 46together into a single executable. 47The crunched binary 48.Fn main 49function determines which component program to run by the contents of 50.Va argv[0] . 51The main reason to crunch programs together is for fitting 52as many programs as possible onto an installation or system recovery 53floppy. 54.Pp 55The 56.Nm 57utility reads in the specifications in 58.Ar conf-file 59for a crunched binary, and generates a 60.Pa Makefile 61and accompanying 62top-level C source file that when built creates the crunched executable 63file from the component programs. 64For each component program, 65.Nm 66can optionally attempt to determine the object (.o) files that make up 67the program from its source directory 68.Pa Makefile . 69This information is cached between runs. 70The 71.Nm 72utility uses the companion program 73.Xr crunchide 1 74to eliminate link-time conflicts between the component programs by 75hiding all unnecessary symbols. 76.Pp 77The 78.Nm 79utility places specific requirements on package 80.Pa Makefile Ns s 81which make it unsuitable for use with 82.No non- Ns Bx 83sources. 84In particular, the 85.Pa Makefile 86must contain the target 87.Ic depend , 88and it must define all object files in the variable 89.Va OBJS . 90In some cases, you can use a fake 91.Pa Makefile : 92before looking for 93.Pa Makefile 94in the source directory 95.Pa foo , 96.Nm 97looks for the file 98.Pa Makefile.foo 99in the current directory. 100.Pp 101After 102.Nm 103is run, the crunched binary can be built by running 104.Dq Li make -f <conf-name>.mk . 105The component programs' object files must already be built. 106An 107.Ic objs 108target, included in the output makefile, will 109run 110.Xr make 1 111in each component program's source dir to build the object 112files for the user. 113This is not done automatically since in release 114engineering circumstances it is generally not desirable to be 115modifying objects in other directories. 116.Pp 117The options are as follows: 118.Bl -tag -width indent 119.It Fl c Ar c-file-name 120Set output C file name to 121.Ar c-file-name . 122The default name is 123.Pa <conf-name>.c . 124.It Fl e Ar exec-file-name 125Set crunched binary executable file name to 126.Ar exec-file-name . 127The default name is 128.Pa <conf-name> . 129.It Fl f 130Flush cache. 131Forces the recalculation of cached parameters. 132.It Fl l 133List names. 134Lists the names this binary will respond to. 135.It Fl h Ar makefile-header-name 136Set the name of a file to be included at the beginning of the 137.Pa Makefile Ns s 138generated by 139.Nm . 140This is useful to define some make variables such as 141.Va RELEASE_CRUNCH 142or similar, which might affect the behaviour of 143.Xr make 1 144and are annoying to pass through environment variables. 145.It Fl m Ar makefile-name 146Set output 147.Pa Makefile 148name to 149.Ar makefile-name . 150The default name is 151.Pa <conf-name>.mk . 152.It Fl o 153Add 154.Dq Li make obj 155rules to each program make target. 156.It Fl p Ar obj-prefix 157Set the pathname to be prepended to the 158.Ic srcdir 159when computing the 160.Ic objdir . 161If this option is not present, then the prefix used 162is the content of the 163.Ev MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX 164environment variable, or 165.Pa /usr/obj . 166.It Fl q 167Quiet operation. 168Status messages are suppressed. 169.El 170.Sh CRUNCHGEN CONFIGURATION FILE COMMANDS 171The 172.Nm 173utility reads specifications from the 174.Ar conf-file 175that describe the components of the crunched binary. 176In its simplest 177use, the component program names are merely listed along with the 178top-level source directories in which their sources can be found. 179The 180.Nm 181utility then calculates (via the source makefiles) and caches the 182list of object files and their locations. 183For more specialized 184situations, the user can specify by hand all the parameters that 185.Nm 186needs. 187.Pp 188The 189.Ar conf-file 190commands are as follows: 191.Bl -tag -width indent 192.It Ic srcdirs Ar dirname ... 193A list of source trees in which the source directories of the 194component programs can be found. 195These dirs are searched using the 196.Bx 197.Dq Pa <source-dir>/<progname>/ 198convention. 199Multiple 200.Ic srcdirs 201lines can be specified. 202The directories are searched in the order they are given. 203.It Ic progs Ar progname ... 204A list of programs that make up the crunched binary. 205Multiple 206.Ic progs 207lines can be specified. 208.It Ic libs Ar libspec ... 209A list of library specifications to be included in the crunched binary link. 210Multiple 211.Ic libs 212lines can be specified. 213.It Ic buildopts Ar buildopts ... 214A list of build options to be added to every make target. 215.It Ic ln Ar progname linkname 216Causes the crunched binary to invoke 217.Ar progname 218whenever 219.Ar linkname 220appears in 221.Va argv[0] . 222This allows programs that change their behavior when 223run under different names to operate correctly. 224.El 225.Pp 226To handle specialized situations, such as when the source is not 227available or not built via a conventional 228.Pa Makefile , 229the following 230.Ic special 231commands can be used to set 232.Nm 233parameters for a component program. 234.Bl -tag -width indent 235.It Ic special Ar progname Ic srcdir Ar pathname 236Set the source directory for 237.Ar progname . 238This is normally calculated by searching the specified 239.Ic srcdirs 240for a directory named 241.Ar progname . 242.It Ic special Ar progname Ic objdir Ar pathname 243Set the 244.Pa obj 245directory for 246.Ar progname . 247The 248.Pa obj 249directory is normally calculated by looking for a directory 250whose name is that of the source directory prepended by 251one of the following components, in order of priority: 252the 253.Fl p 254argument passed to the command line; or, 255the value of the 256.Ev MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX 257environment variable, or 258.Pa /usr/obj . 259If the directory is not found, the 260.Ic srcdir 261itself becomes the 262.Ic objdir . 263.It Ic special Ar progname Ic buildopts Ar buildopts 264Define a set of build options that should be added to 265.Xr make 1 266targets in addition to those specified using 267.Ic buildopts 268when processing 269.Ar progname . 270.It Ic special Ar progname Ic objs Ar object-file-name ... 271Set the list of object files for program 272.Ar progname . 273This is normally calculated by constructing a temporary makefile that includes 274.Dq Ic srcdir Ns / Ns Pa Makefile 275and outputs the value of 276.Va $(OBJS) . 277.It Ic special Ar progname Ic objpaths Ar full-pathname-to-object-file ... 278Sets the pathnames of the object files for program 279.Ar progname . 280This is normally calculated by prepending the 281.Ic objdir 282pathname to each file in the 283.Ic objs 284list. 285.It Ic special Ar progname Ic objvar Ar variable_name 286Sets the name of the 287.Xr make 1 288variable which holds the list of 289object files for program 290.Ar progname . 291This is normally 292.Va OBJS 293but some 294.Pa Makefile Ns s 295might like to use other conventions or 296prepend the program's name to the variable, e.g.\& 297.Va SSHD_OBJS . 298.It Ic special Ar progname Ic lib Ar library-name ... 299Specifies libraries to be linked with object files to produce 300.Ar progname Ns Pa .lo . 301This can be useful with libraries which redefine routines in 302the standard libraries, or poorly written libraries which 303reference symbols in the object files. 304.It Ic special Ar progname Ic keep Ar symbol-name ... 305Add specified list of symbols to the keep list for program 306.Ar progname . 307An underscore 308.Pq Ql _ 309is prepended to each symbol and it becomes the argument to a 310.Fl k 311option for the 312.Xr crunchide 1 313phase. 314This option is to be used as a last resort as its use can cause a 315symbol conflict, however in certain instances it may be the only way to 316have a symbol resolve. 317.It Ic special Ar progname Ic ident Ar identifier 318Set the 319.Pa Makefile Ns / Ns Tn C 320identifier for 321.Ar progname . 322This is normally generated from a 323.Ar progname , 324mapping 325.Ql - 326to 327.Ql _ 328and ignoring all other non-identifier characters. 329This leads to programs named 330.Qq Li foo.bar 331and 332.Qq Li foobar 333to map to the same identifier. 334.El 335.Pp 336Only the 337.Ic objpaths 338parameter is actually needed by 339.Nm , 340but it is calculated from 341.Ic objdir 342and 343.Ic objs , 344which are in turn calculated from 345.Ic srcdir , 346so is sometimes convenient to specify the earlier parameters and let 347.Nm 348calculate forward from there if it can. 349.Pp 350The makefile produced by 351.Nm 352contains an optional 353.Ic objs 354target that will build the object files for each component program by 355running 356.Xr make 1 357inside that program's source directory. 358For this to work the 359.Ic srcdir 360and 361.Ic objs 362parameters must also be valid. 363If they are not valid for a particular program, that 364program is skipped in the 365.Ic objs 366target. 367.Sh EXAMPLES 368Here is an example 369.Nm 370input conf file, named 371.Dq Pa kcopy.conf : 372.Pp 373.Bd -literal -offset indent 374srcdirs /usr/src/bin /usr/src/sbin 375 376progs test cp echo sh fsck halt init mount umount myinstall 377progs anotherprog 378ln test [ # test can be invoked via [ 379ln sh -sh # init invokes the shell with "-sh" in argv[0] 380 381special myprog objpaths /homes/leroy/src/myinstall.o # no sources 382 383special anotherprog -DNO_FOO WITHOUT_BAR=YES 384 385libs -lutil -lcrypt 386.Ed 387.Pp 388This conf file specifies a small crunched binary consisting of some 389basic system utilities plus a homegrown install program 390.Dq Pa myinstall , 391for which no source directory is specified, but its object file is 392specified directly with the 393.Ic special 394line. 395.Pp 396Additionally when 397.Dq Pa anotherprog 398is built the arguments 399.Pp 400.Dl -DNO_FOO WITHOUT_BAR=YES 401.Pp 402are added to all build targets. 403.Pp 404The crunched binary 405.Dq Pa kcopy 406can be built as follows: 407.Pp 408.Bd -literal -offset indent 409% crunchgen -m Makefile kcopy.conf # gen Makefile and kcopy.c 410% make objs # build the component programs' .o files 411% make # build the crunched binary kcopy 412% kcopy sh # test that this invokes a sh shell 413$ # it works! 414.Ed 415.Pp 416At this point the binary 417.Dq Pa kcopy 418can be copied onto an install floppy 419and hard-linked to the names of the component programs. 420.Sh SEE ALSO 421.Xr crunchide 1 , 422.Xr make 1 423.Sh CAVEATS 424While 425.Nm 426takes care to eliminate link conflicts between the component programs 427of a crunched binary, conflicts are still possible between the 428libraries that are linked in. 429Some shuffling in the order of 430libraries may be required, and in some rare cases two libraries may 431have an unresolvable conflict and thus cannot be crunched together. 432.Pp 433Some versions of the 434.Bx 435build environment do not by default build the 436intermediate object file for single-source file programs. 437The 438.Dq Li make objs 439must then be used to get those object files built, or 440some other arrangements made. 441.Sh AUTHORS 442The 443.Nm 444utility was written by 445.An James da Silva Aq jds@cs.umd.edu . 446.Pp 447Copyright (c) 1994 University of Maryland. 448All Rights Reserved. 449