User Guide ========== Dependencies & installation --------------------------- This project depends on - Python 3 - distro Python 3 package - jsonschema Python 3 package - PyYAML Python 3 package (optional, for yaml file support) To install kas into your python site-package repository, run:: $ sudo pip3 install . Usage ----- There are (at least) four options for using kas: - Install it locally via pip to get the ``kas`` command. - Use the container image locally. In this case, download the ``kas-container`` script from the kas repository and use it in place of the ``kas`` command. The script version corresponds to the kas tool and the kas image version. - Use the container image in CI. Specify ``ghcr.io/siemens/kas/kas[-isar][:]`` in your CI script that requests a container image as runtime environment. See https://github.com/orgs/siemens/packages/container/kas%2Fkas/31765 and https://github.com/orgs/siemens/packages/container/kas%2Fkas-isar/31794 for all available images. - Use the **run-kas** wrapper from this directory. In this case, replace ``kas`` in the examples below with ``path/to/run-kas``. Start build:: $ kas build /path/to/kas-project.yml Alternatively, experienced bitbake users can invoke usual **bitbake** steps manually, e.g.:: $ kas shell /path/to/kas-project.yml -c 'bitbake dosfsutils-native' kas will place downloads and build artifacts under the current directory when being invoked. You can specify a different location via the environment variable `KAS_WORK_DIR`. Use Cases --------- 1. Initial build/setup:: $ mkdir $PROJECT_DIR $ cd $PROJECT_DIR $ git clone $PROJECT_URL meta-project $ kas build meta-project/kas-project.yml 2. Update/rebuild:: $ cd $PROJECT_DIR/meta-project $ git pull $ kas build kas-project.yml Plugins ------- kas sub-commands are implemented by a series of plugins. Each plugin typically provides a single command. ``build`` plugin ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. automodule:: kas.plugins.build ``checkout`` plugin ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. automodule:: kas.plugins.checkout ``for-all-repos`` plugin ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. automodule:: kas.plugins.for_all_repos ``shell`` plugin ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. automodule:: kas.plugins.shell Project Configuration --------------------- Currently, JSON and YAML are supported as the base file formats. Since YAML is arguably easier to read, this documentation focuses on the YAML format. .. code-block:: yaml # Every file needs to contain a header, that provides kas with information # about the context of this file. header: # The `version` entry in the header describes for which configuration # format version this file was created for. It is used by kas to figure # out if it is compatible with this file. The version is an integer that # is increased on every format change. version: x # The machine as it is written into the `local.conf` of bitbake. machine: qemux86-64 # The distro name as it is written into the `local.conf` of bitbake. distro: poky repos: # This entry includes the repository where the config file is located # to the bblayers.conf: meta-custom: # Here we include a list of layers from the poky repository to the # bblayers.conf: poky: url: "https://git.yoctoproject.org/git/poky" refspec: 89e6c98d92887913cadf06b2adb97f26cde4849b layers: meta: meta-poky: meta-yocto-bsp: A minimal input file consists out of the ``header``, ``machine``, ``distro``, and ``repos``. Additionally, you can add ``bblayers_conf_header`` and ``local_conf_header`` which are strings that are added to the head of the respective files (``bblayers.conf`` or ``local.conf``): .. code-block:: yaml bblayers_conf_header: meta-custom: | POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION = "2" BBPATH = "${TOPDIR}" BBFILES ?= "" local_conf_header: meta-custom: | PATCHRESOLVE = "noop" CONF_VERSION = "1" IMAGE_FSTYPES = "tar" ``meta-custom`` in these examples should be a unique name (in project scope) for this configuration entries. We assume that your configuration file is part of a ``meta-custom`` repository/layer. This way its possible to overwrite or append entries in files that include this configuration by naming an entry the same (overwriting) or using an unused name (appending). Including in-tree configuration files ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ It's currently possible to include kas configuration files from the same repository/layer like this: .. code-block:: yaml header: version: x includes: - base.yml - bsp.yml - product.yml The specified files are addressed relative to your current configuration file. Including configuration files from other repos ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ It's also possible to include configuration files from other repos like this: .. code-block:: yaml header: version: x includes: - repo: poky file: kas-poky.yml - repo: meta-bsp-collection file: hw1/kas-hw-bsp1.yml - repo: meta-custom file: products/product.yml repos: meta-custom: meta-bsp-collection: url: "https://www.example.com/git/meta-bsp-collection" refspec: 3f786850e387550fdab836ed7e6dc881de23001b layers: # Additional to the layers that are added from this repository # in the hw1/kas-hw-bsp1.yml, we add here an additional bsp # meta layer: meta-custom-bsp: poky: url: "https://git.yoctoproject.org/git/poky" refspec: 89e6c98d92887913cadf06b2adb97f26cde4849b layers: # If `kas-poky.yml` adds the `meta-yocto-bsp` layer and we # do not want it in our bblayers for this project, we can # overwrite it by setting: meta-yocto-bsp: exclude The files are addressed relative to the git repository path. The include mechanism collects and merges the content from top to buttom and depth first. That means that settings in one include file are overwritten by settings in a latter include file and entries from the last include file can be overwritten by the current file. While merging all the dictionaries are merged recursively while preserving the order in which the entries are added to the dictionary. This means that ``local_conf_header`` entries are added to the ``local.conf`` file in the same order in which they are defined in the different include files. Note that the order of the configuration file entries is not preserved within one include file, because the parser creates normal unordered dictionaries. Including configuration files via the command line ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ When specifying the kas configuration file on the command line, additional configurations can be included ad-hoc: $ kas build kas-base.yml:debug-image.yml:board.yml This is equivalent to static inclusion from some kas-combined.yml like this: .. code-block:: yaml header: version: x includes: - kas-base.yml - debug.image.yml - board.yml Command line inclusion allows to create configurations on-demand, without the need to write a kas configuration file for each possible combination. Note that all configuration files combined via the command line either have to come from the same repository or have to live outside of any versioning control. kas will refuse any other combination in order to avoid complications and configuration flaws that can easily emerge from them. Configuration reference ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * ``header``: dict [required] The header of every kas configuration file. It contains information about the context of the file. * ``version``: integer [required] Lets kas check if it is compatible with this file. See the :doc:`configuration format changelog ` for the format history and the latest available version. * ``includes``: list [optional] A list of configuration files this current file is based on. They are merged in order they are stated. So a latter one could overwrite settings from previous files. The current file can overwrite settings from every included file. An item in this list can have one of two types: * item: string The path to a kas configuration file, relative to the current file. * item: dict If files from other repositories should be included, choose this representation. * ``repo``: string [required] The id of the repository where the file is located. The repo needs to be defined in the ``repos`` dictionary as ````. * ``file``: string [required] The path to the file relative to the root of the repository. * ``build_system``: string [optional] Defines the bitbake-based build system. Known build systems are ``openembedded`` (or ``oe``) and ``isar``. If set, this restricts the search of kas for the init script in the configured repositories to ``oe-init-build-env`` or ``isar-init-build-env``, respectively. If ``kas-container`` finds this property in the top-level kas configuration file (includes are not evaluated), it will automatically select the required container image and invocation mode. * ``defaults``: dict [optional] This key can be used to set default values for various properties. This may help you to avoid repeating the same property assignment in multiple places if, for example, you wish to use the same refspec for all repositories. * ``repos``: dict [optional] This key can contain default values for some repository properties. If a default value is set for a repository property it may still be overridden by setting the same property to a different value in a given repository. * ``refspec``: string [optional] Sets the default ``refspec`` property applied to all repositories that do not override this. * ``patches``: dict [optional] This key can contain default values for some repository patch properties. If a default value is set for a patch property it may still be overridden by setting the same property to a different value in a given patch. * ``repo``: string [optional] Sets the default ``repo`` property applied to all repository patches that do not override this. * ``machine``: string [optional] Contains the value of the ``MACHINE`` variable that is written into the ``local.conf``. Can be overwritten by the ``KAS_MACHINE`` environment variable and defaults to ``qemux86-64``. * ``distro``: string [optional] Contains the value of the ``DISTRO`` variable that is written into the ``local.conf``. Can be overwritten by the ``KAS_DISTRO`` environment variable and defaults to ``poky``. * ``target``: string [optional] or list [optional] Contains the target or a list of targets to build by bitbake. Can be overwritten by the ``KAS_TARGET`` environment variable and defaults to ``core-image-minimal``. Space is used as a delimiter if multiple targets should be specified via the environment variable. * ``env``: dict [optional] Contains environment variable names with the default values. These variables are made available to bitbake via ``BB_ENV_EXTRAWHITE`` and can be overwritten by the variables of the environment in which kas is started. * ``task``: string [optional] Contains the task to build by bitbake. Can be overwritten by the ``KAS_TASK`` environment variable and defaults to ``build``. * ``repos``: dict [optional] Contains the definitions of all available repos and layers. * ````: dict [optional] Contains the definition of a repository and the layers, that should be part of the build. If the value is ``None``, the repository, where the current configuration file is located is defined as ```` and added as a layer to the build. * ``name``: string [optional] Defines under which name the repository is stored. If its missing the ```` will be used. * ``url``: string [optional] The url of the repository. If this is missing, no version control operations are performed. * ``type``: string [optional] The type of version control repository. The default value is ``git`` and ``hg`` is also supported. * ``refspec``: string [optional] The refspec that should be used. If ``url`` was specified but no ``refspec`` the revision you get depends on the defaults of the version control system used. * ``path``: string [optional] The path where the repository is stored. If the ``url`` and ``path`` is missing, the repository where the current configuration file is located is defined. If the ``url`` is missing and the path defined, this entry references the directory the path points to. If the ``url`` as well as the ``path`` is defined, the path is used to overwrite the checkout directory, that defaults to ``kas_work_dir`` + ``repo.name``. In case of a relative path name ``kas_work_dir`` is prepended. * ``layers``: dict [optional] Contains the layers from this repository that should be added to the ``bblayers.conf``. If this is missing or ``None`` or and empty dictionary, the path to the repo itself is added as a layer. * ````: enum [optional] Adds the layer with ```` that is relative to the repository root directory, to the ``bblayers.conf`` if the value of this entry is not in this list: ``['disabled', 'excluded', 'n', 'no', '0', 'false']``. This way it is possible to overwrite the inclusion of a layer in latter loaded configuration files. * ``patches``: dict [optional] Contains the patches that should be applied to this repo before it is used. * ````: dict [optional] One entry in patches with its specific and unique id. All available patch entries are applied in the order of their sorted ````. * ``repo``: string [required] The identifier of the repo where the path of this entry is relative to. * ``path``: string [required] The path to one patch file or a quilt formatted patchset directory. * ``bblayers_conf_header``: dict [optional] This contains strings that should be added to the ``bblayers.conf`` before any layers are included. * ````: string [optional] A string that is added to the ``bblayers.conf``. The entry id (````) should be unique if lines should be added and can be the same from another included file, if this entry should be overwritten. The lines are added to ``bblayers.conf`` in the same order as they are included from the different configuration files. * ``local_conf_header``: dict [optional] This contains strings that should be added to the ``local.conf``. * ````: string [optional] A string that is added to the ``local.conf``. It operates in the same way as the ``bblayers_conf_header`` entry. * ``proxy_config``: dict [optional] Defines the proxy configuration bitbake should use. Every entry can be overwritten by the respective environment variables. * ``http_proxy``: string [optional] * ``https_proxy``: string [optional] * ``no_proxy``: string [optional]