|
@@ -0,0 +1,138 @@
|
|
|
+// -*- mode:doc -*- ;
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+[[outside-br-custom]]
|
|
|
+Keeping customizations outside Buildroot
|
|
|
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+The Buildroot community recommends and encourages upstreaming to the
|
|
|
+official Buildroot version the packages and board support that are
|
|
|
+written by developers. However, it is sometimes not possible or
|
|
|
+desirable because some of these packages or board support are highly
|
|
|
+specific or proprietary.
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+In this case, Buildroot users are offered two choices:
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ * They can add their packages, board support and configuration files
|
|
|
+ directly within the Buildroot tree, and maintain them by using
|
|
|
+ branches in a version control system.
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ * They can use the +BR2_EXTERNAL+ mechanism, which allows to keep
|
|
|
+ package recipes, board support and configuration files outside of
|
|
|
+ the Buildroot tree, while still having them nicely integrated in
|
|
|
+ the build logic. The following paragraphs give details on how to
|
|
|
+ use +BR2_EXTERNAL+.
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
++BR2_EXTERNAL+ is an environment variable that can be used to point to
|
|
|
+a directory that contains Buildroot customizations. It can be passed
|
|
|
+to any Buildroot +make+ invocation. It is automatically saved in the
|
|
|
+hidden +.br-external+ file in the output directory. By doing this,
|
|
|
+there is no need to pass +BR2_EXTERNAL+ at every +make+ invocation. It
|
|
|
+can however be changed at any time by passing a new value, and can be
|
|
|
+removed by passing an empty value.
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+The +BR2_EXTERNAL+ path can be either an absolute or a relative path,
|
|
|
+but if it's passed as a relative path, it is important to note that it
|
|
|
+is interpreted relatively to the main Buildroot source directory, not
|
|
|
+the Buildroot output directory.
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+Some examples:
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+-----
|
|
|
+ buildroot/ $ make BR2_EXTERNAL=../foobar menuconfig
|
|
|
+-----
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+Starting from now on, external definitions from the +../foobar+
|
|
|
+directory will be used:
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+-----
|
|
|
+ buildroot/ $ make
|
|
|
+ buildroot/ $ make legal-info
|
|
|
+-----
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+We can switch to another external definitions directory at any time:
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+-----
|
|
|
+ buildroot/ $ make BR2_EXTERNAL=../barfoo xconfig
|
|
|
+-----
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+Or disable the usage of external definitions:
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+-----
|
|
|
+ buildroot/ $ make BR2_EXTERNAL= xconfig
|
|
|
+-----
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
++BR2_EXTERNAL+ then allows three different things:
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ * One can store all the board-specific configuration files there,
|
|
|
+ such as the kernel configuration, the root filesystem overlay, or
|
|
|
+ any other configuration file for which Buildroot allows to set its
|
|
|
+ location. The +BR2_EXTERNAL+ value is available within the
|
|
|
+ Buildroot configuration using +$(BR2_EXTERNAL)+. As an example, one
|
|
|
+ could set the +BR2_ROOTFS_OVERLAY+ Buildroot option to
|
|
|
+ +$(BR2_EXTERNAL)/board/<boardname>/overlay/+ (to specify a root
|
|
|
+ filesystem overlay), or the +BR2_LINUX_KERNEL_CUSTOM_CONFIG_FILE+
|
|
|
+ Buildroot option to
|
|
|
+ +$(BR2_EXTERNAL)/board/<boardname>/kernel.config+ (to specify the
|
|
|
+ location of the kernel configuration file). To achieve this, it is
|
|
|
+ recommended but not mandatory, to store those details in
|
|
|
+ directories called +board/<boardname>/+ under +BR2_EXTERNAL+. This
|
|
|
+ matches the directory structure used within Buildroot.
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ * One can store package recipes (i.e +Config.in+ and
|
|
|
+ +<packagename>.mk+), or even custom configuration options and make
|
|
|
+ logic. Buildroot automatically includes +BR2_EXTERNAL/Config.in+ to
|
|
|
+ make it appear in the top-level configuration menu, and includes
|
|
|
+ +BR2_EXTERNAL/external.mk+ with the rest of the makefile logic.
|
|
|
++
|
|
|
+The main usage of this is to store package recipes. The recommended
|
|
|
+ way to do this is to write a +BR2_EXTERNAL/Config.in+ that looks
|
|
|
+ like:
|
|
|
++
|
|
|
+------
|
|
|
+menu "<somecompany> packages"
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+source "$BR2_EXTERNAL/package/package1/Config.in"
|
|
|
+source "$BR2_EXTERNAL/package/package2/Config.in"
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+endmenu
|
|
|
+------
|
|
|
++
|
|
|
+Then, have a +BR2_EXTERNAL/external.mk+ file that looks like:
|
|
|
++
|
|
|
+------
|
|
|
+include $(sort $(wildcard $(BR2_EXTERNAL)/package/*/*.mk))
|
|
|
+------
|
|
|
++
|
|
|
+And then in +BR2_EXTERNAL/package/package1+ and
|
|
|
+ +BR2_EXTERNAL/package/package2+ create normal Buildroot package
|
|
|
+ recipes, as explained in xref:adding-packages[].
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ * One can store Buildroot defconfigs in the +configs+ subdirectory of
|
|
|
+ +BR2_EXTERNAL+. Buildroot will automatically show them in the
|
|
|
+ output of +make help+ and allow them to be loaded with the normal
|
|
|
+ +make <name>_defconfig+ command. They will be visible under the
|
|
|
+ +User-provided configs:+' label in the 'make help' output.
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+In the end, a typical +BR2_EXTERNAL+ directory organization would
|
|
|
+generally be:
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+-----
|
|
|
+$(BR2_EXTERNAL)/
|
|
|
++-- Config.in
|
|
|
++-- external.mk
|
|
|
++-- board/
|
|
|
+| +-- <boardname>/
|
|
|
+| +-- linux.config
|
|
|
+| +-- overlay/
|
|
|
+| +-- etc/
|
|
|
+| +-- <some file>
|
|
|
++-- configs/
|
|
|
+| +-- <boardname>_defconfig
|
|
|
++-- package/
|
|
|
+ +-- package1/
|
|
|
+ | +-- Config.in
|
|
|
+ | +-- package1.mk
|
|
|
+ +-- package2/
|
|
|
+ +-- Config.in
|
|
|
+ +-- package2.mk
|
|
|
+------
|