Fuchsia builds use Generate Ninja (GN), a meta-build system that generates build files consumed by Ninja{:.external}, which executes the actual build. The build system provides the tools to configure the build for a specific product and templates to build code for Fuchsia targets.
You define individual build targets for GN using BUILD.gn
files located with your project source code. The Fuchsia build system provides templates as GN imports (.gni
) for you to declare Fuchsia artifacts, such as:
fuchsia_component()
: Defines an executable component, containing the manifest, program binary, and resources.fuchsia_package()
: Defines a package containing one or more components for distribution in a package repository.fuchsia_test_package()
: Defines a package containing test components.Note: You can see all the Fuchsia build templates in //build/components.gni
.
Below is an example of a BUILD.gn
file for a simple component package with tests:
import("//build/components.gni") executable("bin") { sources = [ "main.cc" ] } fuchsia_component("hello-world-component") { deps = [ ":bin" ] manifest = "meta/hello-world.cml" } fuchsia_package("hello-world") { deps = [ ":hello-world-component", ] } fuchsia_component("hello-world-test-component") { testonly = true deps = [ ":bin_test" ] manifest = "meta/hello-world-bin-test.cml" } fuchsia_test_package("hello-world-tests") { test_components = [ ":hello-world-test-component" ] }
A unique label composed of the target's name and the path to its BUILD.gn
file identifies everything that can participate in the build. In the above example, the hello-world
target might have a label that looks like this: //src/examples/basic:hello-world
.
Note: For more details on the mechanics of building with GN, see Introduction to GN.
The GN front-end configures the build according to the chosen Fuchsia product configuration, collecting all the necessary packages and components required by the build. These targets are defined in various BUILD.gn
files throughout the source tree. The output of the GN step is an optimized set of instructions for Ninja in the build directory.
The build system invokes GN when you run the fx set
command to configure the build.
fx set workstation_eng.qemu-x64
You should run the GN configuration step anytime you want to adjust the product configuration or the packages available to the build. GN is also invoked automatically during a build anytime one of the BUILD.gn
files in the current configuration is changed.
The Fuchsia build system defines the baseline configuration for a Fuchsia build as a combination of a product and board. Together, these elements form the build configuration you provide to fx set
.
{: width=“570”}
Boards define the architecture that the build targets, which may affect what drivers are included and influence device specific kernel parameters.
This codelab targets the qemu-x64
board, which supports the Fuchsia emulator (FEMU) running on x64 architecture.
A product defines the software configuration that a build produces. This configuration may include what services are available and the user-facing experience.
This codelab targets the workstation_eng
product, which provides a general purpose computing distribution of Fuchsia with a graphical interface and some built-in user apps like a terminal and browser.
Once the GN build configuration is complete, Ninja consumes the generated build files and runs the appropriate compile, link, and packaging commands to generate the Fuchsia image.
The build system invokes Ninja when you run the fx build
command to execute the current build configuration.
fx build
In this exercise, you'll build the workstation_eng
product configuration from source to run on the qemu-x64
emulator board.
Set up the build environment for the workstation_eng
product and qemu-x64
board:
fx set workstation_eng.qemu-x64
This command runs GN on the set of targets defined in the product's build configuration to produce the build instructions. It does not actually perform the build, but instead defines the parameters of what is considered buildable.
Once the build is configured, use fx list-packages
to print the set of packages the build is aware of:
fx list-packages
This is a useful tool to determine if a package you need was properly included in the build configuration.
Build the Workstation target with fx build
:
fx build
<<../_common/_restart_femu.md>>
Open another terminal window and run the following command to print the details of your device target:
ffx target show
Look for the build configuration of the target output:
{{ '<strong>' }}Version: "2000-01-01T12:00:00+00:00"{{ '</strong>' }} Product: "workstation_eng" Board: "qemu-x64" {{ '<strong>' }}Commit: "2000-01-01T12:00:00+00:00"{{ '</strong>' }}
Notice that the configuration points to the build you just completed on your machine.
You are now running your own build of Fuchsia!