Mirror of BoringSSL (grpc依赖) https://boringssl.googlesource.com/boringssl
You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.

923 lines
32 KiB

# coding=utf8
# Copyright (c) 2015, Google Inc.
#
# Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any
# purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above
# copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies.
#
# THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES
# WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
# MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY
# SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES
# WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION
# OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN
# CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
"""Enumerates source files for consumption by various build systems."""
import optparse
import os
import subprocess
import sys
import json
# OS_ARCH_COMBOS maps from OS and platform to the OpenSSL assembly "style" for
# that platform and the extension used by asm files.
Reduce architecture detection in CMake. This follows up on https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/c/boringssl/+/55626, to make the CMake build rely on the C preprocessor, rather than CMake. While not as disasterous as pre-@platforms Bazel, CMake's build-level platform selection is not ideal: - CMAKE_SYSTEM_PROCESSOR is very inconsistent. There are multiple names for the same architecture, and sometimes, e.g., building for 32-bit Windows will still report "AMD64". - On Apple platforms, there is a separate and technically multi-valued CMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES. We map that to CMAKE_SYSTEM_PROCESSOR, but don't support the multi-value case. Instead, broadly detect whether we expect gas or nasm, and then pull in every matching file, relying on the C preprocessor to exclude files as needed. This also fixes a quirk in generate_build_files.py, where it needed to use the filename to detect the architecture of a perlasm script in CMake. This CL only applies to the standalone CMake build. The generated file lists do not change. I'm not sure yet whether this strategy will be appropriate for all those builds, so this starts with just the CMake one. This hits a pair of nuisances with the Apple linker. First, Apple has two ways to invoke the linker. The new way is libtool, the old way is ranlib. Warnings are different between the two. In both libtool and ranlib, for x86_64 but not aarch64, we get a warning about files with no symbols. This warning fires for us, but this change makes it much, much noisier. Oddly, this warning does not trigger when building for aarch64, just x86_64. I'm not sure whether this is because aarch64 hits new behavior or it happens that aarch64 object files always contain some dummy symbol. libtool has a -no_warning_for_no_symbols flag to silence this warning. Unfortunately, CMake uses ranlib and there is no way, from what I can tell, to pass this flag to ranlib. See https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/cmake/-/issues/23551#note_1306698 Since this seems to be a broader CMake limitation, and we were already living with some of these warnings, I've left this alone. But this CL does make macOS x86_64 CMake builds very noisy. I haven't used it here, but LLVM has a pile of CMake goo that switches CMake to using libtool and passes in that flag. Trialing it out reveals *different* issue, which I have worked around: When invoked as libtool, but not as ranlib, the Apple linker also warns when two object files have the same name. This appears to be a holdover from static libraries using ar, even though ld does not actually invoke ar. There appears to be no way to suppress this warning. Though we don't use libtool, we can probably assume most non-CMake builds will be using the modern spelling. So I've suffixed each perlasm file with the OS. This means, in generate_build_files.py, we no longer need a separate directory for each platform. For now, I've kept that alone, because some update scripts rely on that spelling to delete old files. Update-Note: If the CMake build fails to build somewhere for an assembly-related reasons, it's probably from this CL. Bug: 542 Change-Id: Ieb5e64997dc5a676dc30973a220d19015c8e6120 Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/c/boringssl/+/56305 Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com> Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
2 years ago
#
# TODO(https://crbug.com/boringssl/524): This probably should be a map, but some
# downstream scripts import this to find what folders to add/remove from git.
OS_ARCH_COMBOS = [
('apple', 'arm', 'ios32', [], 'S'),
('apple', 'aarch64', 'ios64', [], 'S'),
('apple', 'x86', 'macosx', ['-fPIC', '-DOPENSSL_IA32_SSE2'], 'S'),
('apple', 'x86_64', 'macosx', [], 'S'),
('linux', 'arm', 'linux32', [], 'S'),
('linux', 'aarch64', 'linux64', [], 'S'),
('linux', 'x86', 'elf', ['-fPIC', '-DOPENSSL_IA32_SSE2'], 'S'),
('linux', 'x86_64', 'elf', [], 'S'),
('win', 'x86', 'win32n', ['-DOPENSSL_IA32_SSE2'], 'asm'),
('win', 'x86_64', 'nasm', [], 'asm'),
('win', 'aarch64', 'win64', [], 'S'),
]
# NON_PERL_FILES enumerates assembly files that are not processed by the
# perlasm system.
NON_PERL_FILES = {
('apple', 'x86_64'): [
'src/crypto/curve25519/asm/fiat_curve25519_adx.S',
],
('linux', 'arm'): [
'src/crypto/curve25519/asm/x25519-asm-arm.S',
'src/crypto/poly1305/poly1305_arm_asm.S',
],
('linux', 'x86_64'): [
'src/crypto/hrss/asm/poly_rq_mul.S',
'src/crypto/curve25519/asm/fiat_curve25519_adx.S',
],
}
PREFIX = None
EMBED_TEST_DATA = True
def PathOf(x):
return x if not PREFIX else os.path.join(PREFIX, x)
LICENSE_TEMPLATE = """Copyright (c) 2015, Google Inc.
Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any
purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above
copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES
WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY
SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES
WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION
OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN
CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.""".split("\n")
def LicenseHeader(comment):
lines = []
for line in LICENSE_TEMPLATE:
if not line:
lines.append(comment)
else:
lines.append("%s %s" % (comment, line))
lines.append("")
return "\n".join(lines)
class Android(object):
def __init__(self):
self.header = LicenseHeader("#") + """
# This file is created by generate_build_files.py. Do not edit manually.
"""
def PrintVariableSection(self, out, name, files):
out.write('%s := \\\n' % name)
for f in sorted(files):
out.write(' %s\\\n' % f)
out.write('\n')
def WriteFiles(self, files, asm_outputs):
# New Android.bp format
with open('sources.bp', 'w+') as blueprint:
blueprint.write(self.header.replace('#', '//'))
# Separate out BCM files to allow different compilation rules (specific to Android FIPS)
bcm_c_files = files['bcm_crypto']
non_bcm_c_files = [file for file in files['crypto'] if file not in bcm_c_files]
non_bcm_asm = self.FilterBcmAsm(asm_outputs, False)
bcm_asm = self.FilterBcmAsm(asm_outputs, True)
self.PrintDefaults(blueprint, 'libcrypto_sources', non_bcm_c_files, non_bcm_asm)
self.PrintDefaults(blueprint, 'libcrypto_bcm_sources', bcm_c_files, bcm_asm)
self.PrintDefaults(blueprint, 'libssl_sources', files['ssl'])
self.PrintDefaults(blueprint, 'bssl_sources', files['tool'])
self.PrintDefaults(blueprint, 'boringssl_test_support_sources', files['test_support'])
self.PrintDefaults(blueprint, 'boringssl_crypto_test_sources', files['crypto_test'])
self.PrintDefaults(blueprint, 'boringssl_ssl_test_sources', files['ssl_test'])
# Legacy Android.mk format, only used by Trusty in new branches
with open('sources.mk', 'w+') as makefile:
makefile.write(self.header)
makefile.write('\n')
self.PrintVariableSection(makefile, 'crypto_sources', files['crypto'])
for ((osname, arch), asm_files) in asm_outputs:
if osname != 'linux':
continue
self.PrintVariableSection(
makefile, '%s_%s_sources' % (osname, arch), asm_files)
def PrintDefaults(self, blueprint, name, files, asm_outputs={}):
"""Print a cc_defaults section from a list of C files and optionally assembly outputs"""
blueprint.write('\n')
blueprint.write('cc_defaults {\n')
blueprint.write(' name: "%s",\n' % name)
blueprint.write(' srcs: [\n')
for f in sorted(files):
blueprint.write(' "%s",\n' % f)
blueprint.write(' ],\n')
if asm_outputs:
blueprint.write(' target: {\n')
for ((osname, arch), asm_files) in asm_outputs:
if osname != 'linux':
continue
if arch == 'aarch64':
arch = 'arm64'
blueprint.write(' linux_%s: {\n' % arch)
blueprint.write(' srcs: [\n')
for f in sorted(asm_files):
blueprint.write(' "%s",\n' % f)
blueprint.write(' ],\n')
blueprint.write(' },\n')
blueprint.write(' },\n')
blueprint.write('}\n')
def FilterBcmAsm(self, asm, want_bcm):
"""Filter a list of assembly outputs based on whether they belong in BCM
Args:
asm: Assembly file lists to filter
want_bcm: If true then include BCM files, otherwise do not
Returns:
A copy of |asm| with files filtered according to |want_bcm|
"""
Reduce architecture detection in CMake. This follows up on https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/c/boringssl/+/55626, to make the CMake build rely on the C preprocessor, rather than CMake. While not as disasterous as pre-@platforms Bazel, CMake's build-level platform selection is not ideal: - CMAKE_SYSTEM_PROCESSOR is very inconsistent. There are multiple names for the same architecture, and sometimes, e.g., building for 32-bit Windows will still report "AMD64". - On Apple platforms, there is a separate and technically multi-valued CMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES. We map that to CMAKE_SYSTEM_PROCESSOR, but don't support the multi-value case. Instead, broadly detect whether we expect gas or nasm, and then pull in every matching file, relying on the C preprocessor to exclude files as needed. This also fixes a quirk in generate_build_files.py, where it needed to use the filename to detect the architecture of a perlasm script in CMake. This CL only applies to the standalone CMake build. The generated file lists do not change. I'm not sure yet whether this strategy will be appropriate for all those builds, so this starts with just the CMake one. This hits a pair of nuisances with the Apple linker. First, Apple has two ways to invoke the linker. The new way is libtool, the old way is ranlib. Warnings are different between the two. In both libtool and ranlib, for x86_64 but not aarch64, we get a warning about files with no symbols. This warning fires for us, but this change makes it much, much noisier. Oddly, this warning does not trigger when building for aarch64, just x86_64. I'm not sure whether this is because aarch64 hits new behavior or it happens that aarch64 object files always contain some dummy symbol. libtool has a -no_warning_for_no_symbols flag to silence this warning. Unfortunately, CMake uses ranlib and there is no way, from what I can tell, to pass this flag to ranlib. See https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/cmake/-/issues/23551#note_1306698 Since this seems to be a broader CMake limitation, and we were already living with some of these warnings, I've left this alone. But this CL does make macOS x86_64 CMake builds very noisy. I haven't used it here, but LLVM has a pile of CMake goo that switches CMake to using libtool and passes in that flag. Trialing it out reveals *different* issue, which I have worked around: When invoked as libtool, but not as ranlib, the Apple linker also warns when two object files have the same name. This appears to be a holdover from static libraries using ar, even though ld does not actually invoke ar. There appears to be no way to suppress this warning. Though we don't use libtool, we can probably assume most non-CMake builds will be using the modern spelling. So I've suffixed each perlasm file with the OS. This means, in generate_build_files.py, we no longer need a separate directory for each platform. For now, I've kept that alone, because some update scripts rely on that spelling to delete old files. Update-Note: If the CMake build fails to build somewhere for an assembly-related reasons, it's probably from this CL. Bug: 542 Change-Id: Ieb5e64997dc5a676dc30973a220d19015c8e6120 Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/c/boringssl/+/56305 Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com> Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
2 years ago
# TODO(https://crbug.com/boringssl/542): Rather than filtering by filename,
# use the variable listed in the CMake perlasm line, available in
# ExtractPerlAsmFromCMakeFile.
return [(archinfo, filter(lambda p: ("/crypto/fipsmodule/" in p) == want_bcm, files))
for (archinfo, files) in asm]
class AndroidCMake(object):
def __init__(self):
self.header = LicenseHeader("#") + """
# This file is created by generate_build_files.py. Do not edit manually.
# To specify a custom path prefix, set BORINGSSL_ROOT before including this
# file, or use list(TRANSFORM ... PREPEND) from CMake 3.12.
"""
def PrintVariableSection(self, out, name, files):
out.write('set(%s\n' % name)
for f in sorted(files):
# Ideally adding the prefix would be the caller's job, but
# list(TRANSFORM ... PREPEND) is only available starting CMake 3.12. When
# sources.cmake is the source of truth, we can ask Android to either write
# a CMake function or update to 3.12.
out.write(' ${BORINGSSL_ROOT}%s\n' % f)
out.write(')\n')
def WriteFiles(self, files, asm_outputs):
# The Android emulator uses a custom CMake buildsystem.
#
# TODO(davidben): Move our various source lists into sources.cmake and have
# Android consume that directly.
with open('android-sources.cmake', 'w+') as out:
out.write(self.header)
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'crypto_sources', files['crypto'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'ssl_sources', files['ssl'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'tool_sources', files['tool'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'test_support_sources',
files['test_support'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'crypto_test_sources',
files['crypto_test'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'ssl_test_sources', files['ssl_test'])
for ((osname, arch), asm_files) in asm_outputs:
self.PrintVariableSection(
out, 'crypto_sources_%s_%s' % (osname, arch), asm_files)
class Bazel(object):
"""Bazel outputs files suitable for including in Bazel files."""
def __init__(self):
self.firstSection = True
self.header = \
"""# This file is created by generate_build_files.py. Do not edit manually.
"""
def PrintVariableSection(self, out, name, files):
if not self.firstSection:
out.write('\n')
self.firstSection = False
out.write('%s = [\n' % name)
for f in sorted(files):
out.write(' "%s",\n' % PathOf(f))
out.write(']\n')
def WriteFiles(self, files, asm_outputs):
with open('BUILD.generated.bzl', 'w+') as out:
out.write(self.header)
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'ssl_headers', files['ssl_headers'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'fips_fragments', files['fips_fragments'])
self.PrintVariableSection(
out, 'ssl_internal_headers', files['ssl_internal_headers'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'ssl_sources', files['ssl'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'crypto_headers', files['crypto_headers'])
self.PrintVariableSection(
out, 'crypto_internal_headers', files['crypto_internal_headers'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'crypto_sources', files['crypto'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'crypto_sources_asm', files['crypto_asm'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'crypto_sources_nasm', files['crypto_nasm'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'tool_sources', files['tool'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'tool_headers', files['tool_headers'])
# TODO(crbug.com/boringssl/542): Migrate everyone to the combined asm
# source lists, so we don't need to generate both sets.
for ((osname, arch), asm_files) in asm_outputs:
self.PrintVariableSection(
out, 'crypto_sources_%s_%s' % (osname, arch), asm_files)
with open('BUILD.generated_tests.bzl', 'w+') as out:
out.write(self.header)
out.write('test_support_sources = [\n')
for filename in sorted(files['test_support'] +
files['test_support_headers'] +
files['crypto_internal_headers'] +
files['ssl_internal_headers']):
if os.path.basename(filename) == 'malloc.cc':
continue
out.write(' "%s",\n' % PathOf(filename))
out.write(']\n')
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'crypto_test_sources',
files['crypto_test'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'ssl_test_sources', files['ssl_test'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'crypto_test_data',
files['crypto_test_data'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'urandom_test_sources',
files['urandom_test'])
class Eureka(object):
def __init__(self):
self.header = LicenseHeader("#") + """
# This file is created by generate_build_files.py. Do not edit manually.
"""
def PrintVariableSection(self, out, name, files):
out.write('%s := \\\n' % name)
for f in sorted(files):
out.write(' %s\\\n' % f)
out.write('\n')
def WriteFiles(self, files, asm_outputs):
# Legacy Android.mk format
with open('eureka.mk', 'w+') as makefile:
makefile.write(self.header)
self.PrintVariableSection(makefile, 'crypto_sources', files['crypto'])
self.PrintVariableSection(makefile, 'ssl_sources', files['ssl'])
self.PrintVariableSection(makefile, 'tool_sources', files['tool'])
for ((osname, arch), asm_files) in asm_outputs:
if osname != 'linux':
continue
self.PrintVariableSection(
makefile, '%s_%s_sources' % (osname, arch), asm_files)
class GN(object):
def __init__(self):
self.firstSection = True
self.header = LicenseHeader("#") + """
# This file is created by generate_build_files.py. Do not edit manually.
"""
def PrintVariableSection(self, out, name, files):
if not self.firstSection:
out.write('\n')
self.firstSection = False
out.write('%s = [\n' % name)
for f in sorted(files):
out.write(' "%s",\n' % f)
out.write(']\n')
def WriteFiles(self, files, asm_outputs):
with open('BUILD.generated.gni', 'w+') as out:
out.write(self.header)
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'crypto_sources',
files['crypto'] +
files['crypto_internal_headers'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'crypto_sources_asm', files['crypto_asm'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'crypto_sources_nasm',
files['crypto_nasm'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'crypto_headers',
files['crypto_headers'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'ssl_sources',
files['ssl'] + files['ssl_internal_headers'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'ssl_headers', files['ssl_headers'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'tool_sources',
files['tool'] + files['tool_headers'])
for ((osname, arch), asm_files) in asm_outputs:
self.PrintVariableSection(
out, 'crypto_sources_%s_%s' % (osname, arch), asm_files)
fuzzers = [os.path.splitext(os.path.basename(fuzzer))[0]
for fuzzer in files['fuzz']]
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'fuzzers', fuzzers)
with open('BUILD.generated_tests.gni', 'w+') as out:
self.firstSection = True
out.write(self.header)
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'test_support_sources',
files['test_support'] +
files['test_support_headers'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'crypto_test_sources',
files['crypto_test'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'crypto_test_data',
files['crypto_test_data'])
self.PrintVariableSection(out, 'ssl_test_sources', files['ssl_test'])
class GYP(object):
def __init__(self):
self.header = LicenseHeader("#") + """
# This file is created by generate_build_files.py. Do not edit manually.
"""
def PrintVariableSection(self, out, name, files):
out.write(' \'%s\': [\n' % name)
for f in sorted(files):
out.write(' \'%s\',\n' % f)
out.write(' ],\n')
def WriteFiles(self, files, asm_outputs):
with open('boringssl.gypi', 'w+') as gypi:
gypi.write(self.header + '{\n \'variables\': {\n')
self.PrintVariableSection(gypi, 'boringssl_ssl_sources',
files['ssl'] + files['ssl_headers'] +
files['ssl_internal_headers'])
self.PrintVariableSection(gypi, 'boringssl_crypto_sources',
files['crypto'] + files['crypto_headers'] +
files['crypto_internal_headers'])
for ((osname, arch), asm_files) in asm_outputs:
self.PrintVariableSection(gypi, 'boringssl_%s_%s_sources' %
(osname, arch), asm_files)
gypi.write(' }\n}\n')
class CMake(object):
def __init__(self):
self.header = LicenseHeader("#") + R'''
# This file is created by generate_build_files.py. Do not edit manually.
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.10)
project(BoringSSL LANGUAGES C CXX)
set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 14)
set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD_REQUIRED ON)
set(CMAKE_C_STANDARD 11)
set(CMAKE_C_STANDARD_REQUIRED ON)
if(CMAKE_COMPILER_IS_GNUCXX OR CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER_ID MATCHES "Clang")
set(CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS "${CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS} -fvisibility=hidden -fno-common -fno-exceptions -fno-rtti")
set(CMAKE_C_FLAGS "${CMAKE_C_FLAGS} -fvisibility=hidden -fno-common")
endif()
# pthread_rwlock_t requires a feature flag on glibc.
if(CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME STREQUAL "Linux")
set(CMAKE_C_FLAGS "${CMAKE_C_FLAGS} -D_XOPEN_SOURCE=700")
endif()
if(WIN32)
add_definitions(-D_HAS_EXCEPTIONS=0)
add_definitions(-DWIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN)
add_definitions(-DNOMINMAX)
# Allow use of fopen.
add_definitions(-D_CRT_SECURE_NO_WARNINGS)
endif()
add_definitions(-DBORINGSSL_IMPLEMENTATION)
if(OPENSSL_NO_ASM)
add_definitions(-DOPENSSL_NO_ASM)
else()
# On x86 and x86_64 Windows, we use the NASM output.
if(WIN32 AND CMAKE_SYSTEM_PROCESSOR MATCHES "AMD64|x86_64|amd64|x86|i[3-6]86")
enable_language(ASM_NASM)
set(OPENSSL_NASM TRUE)
set(CMAKE_ASM_NASM_FLAGS "${CMAKE_ASM_NASM_FLAGS} -gcv8")
else()
enable_language(ASM)
set(OPENSSL_ASM TRUE)
# Work around https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/cmake/-/issues/20771 in older
# CMake versions.
if(APPLE AND CMAKE_VERSION VERSION_LESS 3.19)
if(CMAKE_OSX_SYSROOT)
set(CMAKE_ASM_FLAGS "${CMAKE_ASM_FLAGS} -isysroot \"${CMAKE_OSX_SYSROOT}\"")
endif()
foreach(arch ${CMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES})
set(CMAKE_ASM_FLAGS "${CMAKE_ASM_FLAGS} -arch ${arch}")
endforeach()
endif()
if(NOT WIN32)
set(CMAKE_ASM_FLAGS "${CMAKE_ASM_FLAGS} -Wa,--noexecstack")
endif()
# Clang's integerated assembler does not support debug symbols.
if(NOT CMAKE_ASM_COMPILER_ID MATCHES "Clang")
set(CMAKE_ASM_FLAGS "${CMAKE_ASM_FLAGS} -Wa,-g")
endif()
endif()
endif()
if(BUILD_SHARED_LIBS)
add_definitions(-DBORINGSSL_SHARED_LIBRARY)
# Enable position-independent code globally. This is needed because
# some library targets are OBJECT libraries.
set(CMAKE_POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE TRUE)
endif()
'''
def PrintLibrary(self, out, name, files, libs=[]):
out.write('add_library(\n')
out.write(' %s\n\n' % name)
for f in sorted(files):
out.write(' %s\n' % PathOf(f))
out.write(')\n\n')
if libs:
out.write('target_link_libraries(%s %s)\n\n' % (name, ' '.join(libs)))
def PrintExe(self, out, name, files, libs):
out.write('add_executable(\n')
out.write(' %s\n\n' % name)
for f in sorted(files):
out.write(' %s\n' % PathOf(f))
out.write(')\n\n')
out.write('target_link_libraries(%s %s)\n\n' % (name, ' '.join(libs)))
def PrintVariable(self, out, name, files):
out.write('set(\n')
out.write(' %s\n\n' % name)
for f in sorted(files):
out.write(' %s\n' % PathOf(f))
out.write(')\n\n')
def WriteFiles(self, files, asm_outputs):
with open('CMakeLists.txt', 'w+') as cmake:
cmake.write(self.header)
self.PrintVariable(cmake, 'CRYPTO_SOURCES_ASM', files['crypto_asm'])
self.PrintVariable(cmake, 'CRYPTO_SOURCES_NASM', files['crypto_nasm'])
cmake.write(
R'''if(OPENSSL_ASM)
list(APPEND CRYPTO_SOURCES_ASM_USED ${CRYPTO_SOURCES_ASM})
endif()
if(OPENSSL_NASM)
list(APPEND CRYPTO_SOURCES_ASM_USED ${CRYPTO_SOURCES_NASM})
endif()
''')
self.PrintLibrary(cmake, 'crypto',
files['crypto'] + ['${CRYPTO_SOURCES_ASM_USED}'])
cmake.write('target_include_directories(crypto PUBLIC $<BUILD_INTERFACE:${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/src/include>)\n\n')
self.PrintLibrary(cmake, 'ssl', files['ssl'], ['crypto'])
self.PrintExe(cmake, 'bssl', files['tool'], ['ssl', 'crypto'])
cmake.write(
R'''if(NOT ANDROID)
find_package(Threads REQUIRED)
target_link_libraries(crypto Threads::Threads)
endif()
if(WIN32)
target_link_libraries(crypto ws2_32)
endif()
''')
class JSON(object):
def WriteFiles(self, files, asm_outputs):
sources = dict(files)
for ((osname, arch), asm_files) in asm_outputs:
sources['crypto_%s_%s' % (osname, arch)] = asm_files
with open('sources.json', 'w+') as f:
json.dump(sources, f, sort_keys=True, indent=2)
def FindCMakeFiles(directory):
"""Returns list of all CMakeLists.txt files recursively in directory."""
cmakefiles = []
for (path, _, filenames) in os.walk(directory):
for filename in filenames:
if filename == 'CMakeLists.txt':
cmakefiles.append(os.path.join(path, filename))
return cmakefiles
def OnlyFIPSFragments(path, dent, is_dir):
return is_dir or (path.startswith(
os.path.join('src', 'crypto', 'fipsmodule', '')) and
NoTests(path, dent, is_dir))
def NoTestsNorFIPSFragments(path, dent, is_dir):
return (NoTests(path, dent, is_dir) and
(is_dir or not OnlyFIPSFragments(path, dent, is_dir)))
def NoTests(path, dent, is_dir):
"""Filter function that can be passed to FindCFiles in order to remove test
sources."""
if is_dir:
return dent != 'test'
return 'test.' not in dent
def OnlyTests(path, dent, is_dir):
"""Filter function that can be passed to FindCFiles in order to remove
non-test sources."""
if is_dir:
return dent != 'test'
return '_test.' in dent
def AllFiles(path, dent, is_dir):
"""Filter function that can be passed to FindCFiles in order to include all
sources."""
return True
def NoTestRunnerFiles(path, dent, is_dir):
"""Filter function that can be passed to FindCFiles or FindHeaderFiles in
order to exclude test runner files."""
# NOTE(martinkr): This prevents .h/.cc files in src/ssl/test/runner, which
# are in their own subpackage, from being included in boringssl/BUILD files.
return not is_dir or dent != 'runner'
def NotGTestSupport(path, dent, is_dir):
return 'gtest' not in dent and 'abi_test' not in dent
def SSLHeaderFiles(path, dent, is_dir):
return dent in ['ssl.h', 'tls1.h', 'ssl23.h', 'ssl3.h', 'dtls1.h', 'srtp.h']
def FindCFiles(directory, filter_func):
"""Recurses through directory and returns a list of paths to all the C source
files that pass filter_func."""
cfiles = []
for (path, dirnames, filenames) in os.walk(directory):
for filename in filenames:
if not filename.endswith('.c') and not filename.endswith('.cc'):
continue
if not filter_func(path, filename, False):
continue
cfiles.append(os.path.join(path, filename))
for (i, dirname) in enumerate(dirnames):
if not filter_func(path, dirname, True):
del dirnames[i]
cfiles.sort()
return cfiles
def FindHeaderFiles(directory, filter_func):
"""Recurses through directory and returns a list of paths to all the header files that pass filter_func."""
hfiles = []
for (path, dirnames, filenames) in os.walk(directory):
for filename in filenames:
if not filename.endswith('.h'):
continue
if not filter_func(path, filename, False):
continue
hfiles.append(os.path.join(path, filename))
for (i, dirname) in enumerate(dirnames):
if not filter_func(path, dirname, True):
del dirnames[i]
hfiles.sort()
return hfiles
def ExtractPerlAsmFromCMakeFile(cmakefile):
"""Parses the contents of the CMakeLists.txt file passed as an argument and
returns a list of all the perlasm() directives found in the file."""
perlasms = []
with open(cmakefile) as f:
for line in f:
line = line.strip()
if not line.startswith('perlasm('):
continue
if not line.endswith(')'):
raise ValueError('Bad perlasm line in %s' % cmakefile)
# Remove "perlasm(" from start and ")" from end
params = line[8:-1].split()
Reduce architecture detection in CMake. This follows up on https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/c/boringssl/+/55626, to make the CMake build rely on the C preprocessor, rather than CMake. While not as disasterous as pre-@platforms Bazel, CMake's build-level platform selection is not ideal: - CMAKE_SYSTEM_PROCESSOR is very inconsistent. There are multiple names for the same architecture, and sometimes, e.g., building for 32-bit Windows will still report "AMD64". - On Apple platforms, there is a separate and technically multi-valued CMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES. We map that to CMAKE_SYSTEM_PROCESSOR, but don't support the multi-value case. Instead, broadly detect whether we expect gas or nasm, and then pull in every matching file, relying on the C preprocessor to exclude files as needed. This also fixes a quirk in generate_build_files.py, where it needed to use the filename to detect the architecture of a perlasm script in CMake. This CL only applies to the standalone CMake build. The generated file lists do not change. I'm not sure yet whether this strategy will be appropriate for all those builds, so this starts with just the CMake one. This hits a pair of nuisances with the Apple linker. First, Apple has two ways to invoke the linker. The new way is libtool, the old way is ranlib. Warnings are different between the two. In both libtool and ranlib, for x86_64 but not aarch64, we get a warning about files with no symbols. This warning fires for us, but this change makes it much, much noisier. Oddly, this warning does not trigger when building for aarch64, just x86_64. I'm not sure whether this is because aarch64 hits new behavior or it happens that aarch64 object files always contain some dummy symbol. libtool has a -no_warning_for_no_symbols flag to silence this warning. Unfortunately, CMake uses ranlib and there is no way, from what I can tell, to pass this flag to ranlib. See https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/cmake/-/issues/23551#note_1306698 Since this seems to be a broader CMake limitation, and we were already living with some of these warnings, I've left this alone. But this CL does make macOS x86_64 CMake builds very noisy. I haven't used it here, but LLVM has a pile of CMake goo that switches CMake to using libtool and passes in that flag. Trialing it out reveals *different* issue, which I have worked around: When invoked as libtool, but not as ranlib, the Apple linker also warns when two object files have the same name. This appears to be a holdover from static libraries using ar, even though ld does not actually invoke ar. There appears to be no way to suppress this warning. Though we don't use libtool, we can probably assume most non-CMake builds will be using the modern spelling. So I've suffixed each perlasm file with the OS. This means, in generate_build_files.py, we no longer need a separate directory for each platform. For now, I've kept that alone, because some update scripts rely on that spelling to delete old files. Update-Note: If the CMake build fails to build somewhere for an assembly-related reasons, it's probably from this CL. Bug: 542 Change-Id: Ieb5e64997dc5a676dc30973a220d19015c8e6120 Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/c/boringssl/+/56305 Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com> Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
2 years ago
if len(params) != 4:
raise ValueError('Bad perlasm line in %s' % cmakefile)
perlasms.append({
Reduce architecture detection in CMake. This follows up on https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/c/boringssl/+/55626, to make the CMake build rely on the C preprocessor, rather than CMake. While not as disasterous as pre-@platforms Bazel, CMake's build-level platform selection is not ideal: - CMAKE_SYSTEM_PROCESSOR is very inconsistent. There are multiple names for the same architecture, and sometimes, e.g., building for 32-bit Windows will still report "AMD64". - On Apple platforms, there is a separate and technically multi-valued CMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES. We map that to CMAKE_SYSTEM_PROCESSOR, but don't support the multi-value case. Instead, broadly detect whether we expect gas or nasm, and then pull in every matching file, relying on the C preprocessor to exclude files as needed. This also fixes a quirk in generate_build_files.py, where it needed to use the filename to detect the architecture of a perlasm script in CMake. This CL only applies to the standalone CMake build. The generated file lists do not change. I'm not sure yet whether this strategy will be appropriate for all those builds, so this starts with just the CMake one. This hits a pair of nuisances with the Apple linker. First, Apple has two ways to invoke the linker. The new way is libtool, the old way is ranlib. Warnings are different between the two. In both libtool and ranlib, for x86_64 but not aarch64, we get a warning about files with no symbols. This warning fires for us, but this change makes it much, much noisier. Oddly, this warning does not trigger when building for aarch64, just x86_64. I'm not sure whether this is because aarch64 hits new behavior or it happens that aarch64 object files always contain some dummy symbol. libtool has a -no_warning_for_no_symbols flag to silence this warning. Unfortunately, CMake uses ranlib and there is no way, from what I can tell, to pass this flag to ranlib. See https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/cmake/-/issues/23551#note_1306698 Since this seems to be a broader CMake limitation, and we were already living with some of these warnings, I've left this alone. But this CL does make macOS x86_64 CMake builds very noisy. I haven't used it here, but LLVM has a pile of CMake goo that switches CMake to using libtool and passes in that flag. Trialing it out reveals *different* issue, which I have worked around: When invoked as libtool, but not as ranlib, the Apple linker also warns when two object files have the same name. This appears to be a holdover from static libraries using ar, even though ld does not actually invoke ar. There appears to be no way to suppress this warning. Though we don't use libtool, we can probably assume most non-CMake builds will be using the modern spelling. So I've suffixed each perlasm file with the OS. This means, in generate_build_files.py, we no longer need a separate directory for each platform. For now, I've kept that alone, because some update scripts rely on that spelling to delete old files. Update-Note: If the CMake build fails to build somewhere for an assembly-related reasons, it's probably from this CL. Bug: 542 Change-Id: Ieb5e64997dc5a676dc30973a220d19015c8e6120 Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/c/boringssl/+/56305 Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com> Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
2 years ago
'arch': params[1],
'output': os.path.join(os.path.dirname(cmakefile), params[2]),
'input': os.path.join(os.path.dirname(cmakefile), params[3]),
})
return perlasms
def ReadPerlAsmOperations():
"""Returns a list of all perlasm() directives found in CMake config files in
src/."""
perlasms = []
cmakefiles = FindCMakeFiles('src')
for cmakefile in cmakefiles:
perlasms.extend(ExtractPerlAsmFromCMakeFile(cmakefile))
return perlasms
def PerlAsm(output_filename, input_filename, perlasm_style, extra_args):
"""Runs the a perlasm script and puts the output into output_filename."""
base_dir = os.path.dirname(output_filename)
if not os.path.isdir(base_dir):
os.makedirs(base_dir)
subprocess.check_call(
['perl', input_filename, perlasm_style] + extra_args + [output_filename])
def WriteAsmFiles(perlasms):
"""Generates asm files from perlasm directives for each supported OS x
platform combination."""
asmfiles = {}
Reduce architecture detection in CMake. This follows up on https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/c/boringssl/+/55626, to make the CMake build rely on the C preprocessor, rather than CMake. While not as disasterous as pre-@platforms Bazel, CMake's build-level platform selection is not ideal: - CMAKE_SYSTEM_PROCESSOR is very inconsistent. There are multiple names for the same architecture, and sometimes, e.g., building for 32-bit Windows will still report "AMD64". - On Apple platforms, there is a separate and technically multi-valued CMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES. We map that to CMAKE_SYSTEM_PROCESSOR, but don't support the multi-value case. Instead, broadly detect whether we expect gas or nasm, and then pull in every matching file, relying on the C preprocessor to exclude files as needed. This also fixes a quirk in generate_build_files.py, where it needed to use the filename to detect the architecture of a perlasm script in CMake. This CL only applies to the standalone CMake build. The generated file lists do not change. I'm not sure yet whether this strategy will be appropriate for all those builds, so this starts with just the CMake one. This hits a pair of nuisances with the Apple linker. First, Apple has two ways to invoke the linker. The new way is libtool, the old way is ranlib. Warnings are different between the two. In both libtool and ranlib, for x86_64 but not aarch64, we get a warning about files with no symbols. This warning fires for us, but this change makes it much, much noisier. Oddly, this warning does not trigger when building for aarch64, just x86_64. I'm not sure whether this is because aarch64 hits new behavior or it happens that aarch64 object files always contain some dummy symbol. libtool has a -no_warning_for_no_symbols flag to silence this warning. Unfortunately, CMake uses ranlib and there is no way, from what I can tell, to pass this flag to ranlib. See https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/cmake/-/issues/23551#note_1306698 Since this seems to be a broader CMake limitation, and we were already living with some of these warnings, I've left this alone. But this CL does make macOS x86_64 CMake builds very noisy. I haven't used it here, but LLVM has a pile of CMake goo that switches CMake to using libtool and passes in that flag. Trialing it out reveals *different* issue, which I have worked around: When invoked as libtool, but not as ranlib, the Apple linker also warns when two object files have the same name. This appears to be a holdover from static libraries using ar, even though ld does not actually invoke ar. There appears to be no way to suppress this warning. Though we don't use libtool, we can probably assume most non-CMake builds will be using the modern spelling. So I've suffixed each perlasm file with the OS. This means, in generate_build_files.py, we no longer need a separate directory for each platform. For now, I've kept that alone, because some update scripts rely on that spelling to delete old files. Update-Note: If the CMake build fails to build somewhere for an assembly-related reasons, it's probably from this CL. Bug: 542 Change-Id: Ieb5e64997dc5a676dc30973a220d19015c8e6120 Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/c/boringssl/+/56305 Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com> Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
2 years ago
for perlasm in perlasms:
for (osname, arch, perlasm_style, extra_args, asm_ext) in OS_ARCH_COMBOS:
if arch != perlasm['arch']:
continue
# TODO(https://crbug.com/boringssl/524): Now that we incorporate osname in
# the output filename, the asm files can just go in a single directory.
# For now, we keep them in target-specific directories to avoid breaking
# downstream scripts.
key = (osname, arch)
outDir = '%s-%s' % key
output = perlasm['output']
if not output.startswith('src'):
raise ValueError('output missing src: %s' % output)
output = os.path.join(outDir, output[4:])
Reduce architecture detection in CMake. This follows up on https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/c/boringssl/+/55626, to make the CMake build rely on the C preprocessor, rather than CMake. While not as disasterous as pre-@platforms Bazel, CMake's build-level platform selection is not ideal: - CMAKE_SYSTEM_PROCESSOR is very inconsistent. There are multiple names for the same architecture, and sometimes, e.g., building for 32-bit Windows will still report "AMD64". - On Apple platforms, there is a separate and technically multi-valued CMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES. We map that to CMAKE_SYSTEM_PROCESSOR, but don't support the multi-value case. Instead, broadly detect whether we expect gas or nasm, and then pull in every matching file, relying on the C preprocessor to exclude files as needed. This also fixes a quirk in generate_build_files.py, where it needed to use the filename to detect the architecture of a perlasm script in CMake. This CL only applies to the standalone CMake build. The generated file lists do not change. I'm not sure yet whether this strategy will be appropriate for all those builds, so this starts with just the CMake one. This hits a pair of nuisances with the Apple linker. First, Apple has two ways to invoke the linker. The new way is libtool, the old way is ranlib. Warnings are different between the two. In both libtool and ranlib, for x86_64 but not aarch64, we get a warning about files with no symbols. This warning fires for us, but this change makes it much, much noisier. Oddly, this warning does not trigger when building for aarch64, just x86_64. I'm not sure whether this is because aarch64 hits new behavior or it happens that aarch64 object files always contain some dummy symbol. libtool has a -no_warning_for_no_symbols flag to silence this warning. Unfortunately, CMake uses ranlib and there is no way, from what I can tell, to pass this flag to ranlib. See https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/cmake/-/issues/23551#note_1306698 Since this seems to be a broader CMake limitation, and we were already living with some of these warnings, I've left this alone. But this CL does make macOS x86_64 CMake builds very noisy. I haven't used it here, but LLVM has a pile of CMake goo that switches CMake to using libtool and passes in that flag. Trialing it out reveals *different* issue, which I have worked around: When invoked as libtool, but not as ranlib, the Apple linker also warns when two object files have the same name. This appears to be a holdover from static libraries using ar, even though ld does not actually invoke ar. There appears to be no way to suppress this warning. Though we don't use libtool, we can probably assume most non-CMake builds will be using the modern spelling. So I've suffixed each perlasm file with the OS. This means, in generate_build_files.py, we no longer need a separate directory for each platform. For now, I've kept that alone, because some update scripts rely on that spelling to delete old files. Update-Note: If the CMake build fails to build somewhere for an assembly-related reasons, it's probably from this CL. Bug: 542 Change-Id: Ieb5e64997dc5a676dc30973a220d19015c8e6120 Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/c/boringssl/+/56305 Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com> Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
2 years ago
output = '%s-%s.%s' % (output, osname, asm_ext)
PerlAsm(output, perlasm['input'], perlasm_style, extra_args)
asmfiles.setdefault(key, []).append(output)
for (key, non_perl_asm_files) in NON_PERL_FILES.items():
asmfiles.setdefault(key, []).extend(non_perl_asm_files)
for files in asmfiles.values():
files.sort()
return asmfiles
def ExtractVariablesFromCMakeFile(cmakefile):
"""Parses the contents of the CMakeLists.txt file passed as an argument and
returns a dictionary of exported source lists."""
variables = {}
in_set_command = False
set_command = []
with open(cmakefile) as f:
for line in f:
if '#' in line:
line = line[:line.index('#')]
line = line.strip()
if not in_set_command:
if line.startswith('set('):
in_set_command = True
set_command = []
elif line == ')':
in_set_command = False
if not set_command:
raise ValueError('Empty set command')
variables[set_command[0]] = set_command[1:]
else:
set_command.extend([c for c in line.split(' ') if c])
if in_set_command:
raise ValueError('Unfinished set command')
return variables
def main(platforms):
cmake = ExtractVariablesFromCMakeFile(os.path.join('src', 'sources.cmake'))
crypto_c_files = (FindCFiles(os.path.join('src', 'crypto'), NoTestsNorFIPSFragments) +
FindCFiles(os.path.join('src', 'third_party', 'fiat'), NoTestsNorFIPSFragments))
fips_fragments = FindCFiles(os.path.join('src', 'crypto', 'fipsmodule'), OnlyFIPSFragments)
ssl_source_files = FindCFiles(os.path.join('src', 'ssl'), NoTests)
tool_c_files = FindCFiles(os.path.join('src', 'tool'), NoTests)
tool_h_files = FindHeaderFiles(os.path.join('src', 'tool'), AllFiles)
# BCM shared library C files
bcm_crypto_c_files = [
os.path.join('src', 'crypto', 'fipsmodule', 'bcm.c')
]
# Generate err_data.c
with open('err_data.c', 'w+') as err_data:
subprocess.check_call(['go', 'run', 'err_data_generate.go'],
cwd=os.path.join('src', 'crypto', 'err'),
stdout=err_data)
crypto_c_files.append('err_data.c')
crypto_c_files.sort()
test_support_c_files = FindCFiles(os.path.join('src', 'crypto', 'test'),
NotGTestSupport)
test_support_h_files = (
FindHeaderFiles(os.path.join('src', 'crypto', 'test'), AllFiles) +
FindHeaderFiles(os.path.join('src', 'ssl', 'test'), NoTestRunnerFiles))
crypto_test_files = []
if EMBED_TEST_DATA:
# Generate crypto_test_data.cc
with open('crypto_test_data.cc', 'w+') as out:
subprocess.check_call(
['go', 'run', 'util/embed_test_data.go'] + cmake['CRYPTO_TEST_DATA'],
cwd='src',
stdout=out)
crypto_test_files += ['crypto_test_data.cc']
crypto_test_files += FindCFiles(os.path.join('src', 'crypto'), OnlyTests)
crypto_test_files += [
'src/crypto/test/abi_test.cc',
'src/crypto/test/file_test_gtest.cc',
'src/crypto/test/gtest_main.cc',
]
# urandom_test.cc is in a separate binary so that it can be test PRNG
# initialisation.
crypto_test_files = [
file for file in crypto_test_files
if not file.endswith('/urandom_test.cc')
]
crypto_test_files.sort()
ssl_test_files = FindCFiles(os.path.join('src', 'ssl'), OnlyTests)
ssl_test_files += [
'src/crypto/test/abi_test.cc',
'src/crypto/test/gtest_main.cc',
]
ssl_test_files.sort()
urandom_test_files = [
'src/crypto/fipsmodule/rand/urandom_test.cc',
]
fuzz_c_files = FindCFiles(os.path.join('src', 'fuzz'), NoTests)
ssl_h_files = FindHeaderFiles(os.path.join('src', 'include', 'openssl'),
SSLHeaderFiles)
def NotSSLHeaderFiles(path, filename, is_dir):
return not SSLHeaderFiles(path, filename, is_dir)
crypto_h_files = FindHeaderFiles(os.path.join('src', 'include', 'openssl'),
NotSSLHeaderFiles)
ssl_internal_h_files = FindHeaderFiles(os.path.join('src', 'ssl'), NoTests)
crypto_internal_h_files = (
FindHeaderFiles(os.path.join('src', 'crypto'), NoTests) +
FindHeaderFiles(os.path.join('src', 'third_party', 'fiat'), NoTests))
asm_outputs = sorted(WriteAsmFiles(ReadPerlAsmOperations()).items())
# Generate combined source lists for gas and nasm. Build files have a choice
# of using the per-platform ones or the combined ones. In the combined mode,
# Windows x86 and Windows x86_64 must still be special-cased, but otherwise
# all assembly files can be linked together. Some files appear in multiple
# per-platform lists, so we duplicate.
asm_sources = set()
nasm_sources = set()
for ((osname, arch), asm_files) in asm_outputs:
if (osname, arch) in (('win', 'x86'), ('win', 'x86_64')):
nasm_sources.update(asm_files)
else:
asm_sources.update(asm_files)
files = {
'bcm_crypto': bcm_crypto_c_files,
'crypto': crypto_c_files,
'crypto_asm': sorted(list(asm_sources)),
'crypto_nasm': sorted(list(nasm_sources)),
'crypto_headers': crypto_h_files,
'crypto_internal_headers': crypto_internal_h_files,
'crypto_test': crypto_test_files,
'crypto_test_data': sorted('src/' + x for x in cmake['CRYPTO_TEST_DATA']),
'fips_fragments': fips_fragments,
'fuzz': fuzz_c_files,
'ssl': ssl_source_files,
'ssl_headers': ssl_h_files,
'ssl_internal_headers': ssl_internal_h_files,
'ssl_test': ssl_test_files,
'tool': tool_c_files,
'tool_headers': tool_h_files,
'test_support': test_support_c_files,
'test_support_headers': test_support_h_files,
'urandom_test': urandom_test_files,
}
for platform in platforms:
platform.WriteFiles(files, asm_outputs)
return 0
ALL_PLATFORMS = {
'android': Android,
'android-cmake': AndroidCMake,
'bazel': Bazel,
'cmake': CMake,
'eureka': Eureka,
'gn': GN,
'gyp': GYP,
'json': JSON,
}
if __name__ == '__main__':
parser = optparse.OptionParser(
usage='Usage: %%prog [--prefix=<path>] [all|%s]' %
'|'.join(sorted(ALL_PLATFORMS.keys())))
parser.add_option('--prefix', dest='prefix',
help='For Bazel, prepend argument to all source files')
parser.add_option(
'--embed_test_data', type='choice', dest='embed_test_data',
action='store', default="true", choices=["true", "false"],
help='For Bazel or GN, don\'t embed data files in crypto_test_data.cc')
options, args = parser.parse_args(sys.argv[1:])
PREFIX = options.prefix
EMBED_TEST_DATA = (options.embed_test_data == "true")
if not args:
parser.print_help()
sys.exit(1)
if 'all' in args:
platforms = [platform() for platform in ALL_PLATFORMS.values()]
else:
platforms = []
for s in args:
platform = ALL_PLATFORMS.get(s)
if platform is None:
parser.print_help()
sys.exit(1)
platforms.append(platform())
sys.exit(main(platforms))