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- Building Dinit
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-
- Building Dinit should be a straight-forward process. It requires GNU make and a C++11 compiler
- (GCC version 4.9 and later, or Clang ~5.0 and later, should be fine)
- On the directly supported operating systems - Linux, OpenBSD, FreeBSD and Darwin (macOS) - a
- suitable build configuration is provided and will be used automatically if no manual configuration
- is supplied - skip directly to running "make" (more details below) if you are on one of these
- systems and are happy to use the default configuration.
- For other systems, or to fine tune or correct the configuration, create and edit the
- "mconfig" file (start by copying one for a particular OS from the "configs" directory) to choose
- appropriate values for the configuration variables defined within. In particular:
- CXX : should be set to the name of the C++ compiler (and link driver)
- CXXOPTS : are options passed to the compiler during compilation (see note for GCC below)
- LDFLAGS : are any extra flags required for linking; should not normally be needed
- (FreeBSD requires -lrt).
- Note that the "eg++" or "clang++" package must be installed on OpenBSD as the default "g++"
- compiler is too old. Clang is part of the base system in recent releases.
- Then, from the top-level directory, run "make" (or "gmake" if the system make is not GNU make,
- such as on most BSD systems):
- make
- If everything goes smoothly this will build dinit, dinitctl, and optionally the shutdown
- utility. Use "make install" to install; you can specify an alternate installation by
- setting the "DESTDIR" variable, eg "make DESTDIR=/tmp/temporary-install-path install".
- Recommended Compiler options
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
- Dinit should generally build fine with no additional options, other than:
- -std=c++11 : may be required to select correct C++ standard.
- -D_GLIBCXX_USE_CXX11_ABI=1 : see "Special note for GCC/Libstdc++", below. Not needed for
- most modern systems.
- Recommended options, supported by at least GCC and Clang, are:
- -Os : optimise for size
- -fno-rtti : disable RTTI (run-time type information), it is not required by Dinit.
- However, on some platforms such as Mac OS (and historically FreeBSD, IIRC), this
- prevents exceptions working correctly.
- -fno-plt : enables better code generation for non-static builds, but may cause unit test
- failures on some older versions of FreeBSD (11.2-RELEASE-p4 with clang++ 6.0.0).
- -flto : perform link-time optimisation (option required at compile and link).
- Consult compiler documentation for further information on the above options.
- Other configuration variables
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
- There are a number of other variables you can set in the mconfig file which affect the build:
- SBINDIR=...
- Where the "/sbin" directory is. Executables will be installed here.
- MANDIR=...
- Where the "man" directory is. Man pages will be installed here.
- SYSCONTROLSOCKET=...
- Default full path to the control socket, for when Dinit runs as system service manager.
- BUILD_SHUTDOWN=yes|no
- Whether to build the "shutdown" (and "halt" etc) utilities. These are only useful
- if dinit is the system init (i.e. the PID 1 process). You probably don't want this
- unless building for Linux.
- SHUTDOWN_PREFIX=...
- Name prefix for "shutdown", "halt" and "reboot" commands (if they are built). This affects
- both the output, and what command dinit will execute as part of system shutdown.
- If you want to install Dinit alongside another init system with its own shutdown/halt/reboot
- commands, set this (for eg. to "dinit-").
- USE_UTMPX=1|0
- Whether to build support for manipulating the utmp/utmpx database via the related POSIX
- functions. This may be required (along with appropriate service configuration) for utilities
- like "who" to work correctly (the service configuration items "inittab-id" and "inittab-line"
- have no effect if this is disabled). If not set to any value, support is enabled for certain
- systems automatically and disabled for all others.
- SANITIZE_OPTS=...
- Any options to enable run-time sanitizers or additional safety checks. This will be used
- only when building tests. It can safely be left blank.
- Running test suite
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
- Build the "check" target in order to run the test suite:
- make check
- The standard mconfig options enable various sanitizers during build of the tests. On Linux you may
- see an error such as the following:
- make[3]: Leaving directory '/home/davmac/workspace/dinit/src/tests/cptests'
- ./tests
- ==25332==ERROR: AddressSanitizer failed to allocate 0xdfff0001000 (15392894357504) bytes at
- address 2008fff7000 (errno: 12)
- ==25332==ReserveShadowMemoryRange failed while trying to map 0xdfff0001000 bytes. Perhaps
- you're using ulimit -v
- make[2]: *** [Makefile:12: run-tests] Aborted
- If you get this, either disable the address sanitizer or make sure you have overcommit enabled:
- echo 1 > /proc/sys/vm/overcommit_memory
- Any test failures will abort the test suite run immediately.
- To run the integration tests:
- make check-igr
-
- (The integration tests are more fragile than the unit tests, but give a better indication that
- Dinit will actually work correctly on your system).
- In addition to the standard test suite, there is experimental support for fuzzing the control
- protocol handling using LLVM/clang's fuzzer (libFuzzer). Change to the `src/tests/cptests`
- directory and build the "fuzz" target:
- make fuzz
- Then create a "corpus" directory and run the fuzzer:
- mkdir corpus
- ./fuzz corpus
- This will auto-generate test data as it finds input which triggers new execution paths. Check
- libFuzzer documentation for further details.
- Installation
- =-=-=-=-=-=-
- You can install using the "install" target:
- make install
- If you want to install to an alternate root (eg for packaging purposes), specify that root via
- DESTDIR:
- make DESTDIR=/some/path install
- The dinit executable will be put in /sbin (or rather, in $DESTDIR/sbin), which may not be on the
- path for normal users. Consider making a symbolic link to /usr/sbin/dinit.
- Special note for GCC/Libstdc++
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
- (Note: the issue discussed here has apparently been resolved in recent GCC versions).
- GCC 5.x onwards includes a "dual ABI" in its standard library implementation, aka Libstdc++.
- Compiling against the newer (C++11 and later) ABI can be achieved by adding
- -D_GLIBCXX_USE_CXX11_ABI=1 to the compiler command line; this uses a non-standard language
- extension to differently mangle symbol names in order to link against the new ABI versions.
- (Some systems may be configured to build with the new ABI by default, and in that case you
- build against the old ABI using -D_GLIBCXX_USE_CXX11_ABI=0).
- This is problematic for several reasons. First, it prevents linking against the new ABI with
- other compilers that do not understand the language extension (LLVM i.e. clang++ does so
- in recent versions, so this is perhaps no longer much of a problem in practice). Secondly,
- some aspects of library behaviour are ABI-dependent but cannot be changed using the ABI
- macro; in particular, exceptions thrown as a result of failed I/O operations are, in GCC
- versions 5.x and 6.x, always "old ABI" exceptions which cannot be caught by code compiled
- against the new ABI, and in GCC version 7.x they are always "new ABI" exceptions which cannot
- be caught by code compiled against the old ABI. Since the one library object now supposedly
- houses both ABIs, this means that at least one of the two ABIs is always broken.
- A blog post describing the dual ABI mechanism can be found here:
- https://developers.redhat.com/blog/2015/02/05/gcc5-and-the-c11-abi/
- The bug regarding the issue with catching other-ABI exceptions is here:
- https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=66145
- Since Dinit is affected by this bug, the unfortunate possibility exists to break Dinit by
- upgrading GCC. If you have libstdc++ corresponding to GCC 5.x or 6.x, you *must* build with
- the old ABI, but Dinit will be broken if you upgrade to GCC 7. If you have libstdc++ from
- GCC 7, you *must* build with the new ABI. If the wrong ABI is used, Dinit may still run
- successfully but any attempt to load a non-existing service, for example, will cause Dinit
- to crash.
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