This script takes care of generating the custom target specification file for `rustc`, based on the kernel configuration. It also serves as an example of a Rust host program. A dummy architecture is kept in this patch so that a later patch adds x86 support on top with as few changes as possible. Co-developed-by: Alex Gaynor <alex.gaynor@xxxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Alex Gaynor <alex.gaynor@xxxxxxxxx> Co-developed-by: Wedson Almeida Filho <wedsonaf@xxxxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Wedson Almeida Filho <wedsonaf@xxxxxxxxxx> Co-developed-by: David Gow <davidgow@xxxxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: David Gow <davidgow@xxxxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@xxxxxxxxxx> --- scripts/.gitignore | 1 + scripts/generate_rust_target.rs | 171 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 2 files changed, 172 insertions(+) create mode 100644 scripts/generate_rust_target.rs diff --git a/scripts/.gitignore b/scripts/.gitignore index eed308bef604..b7aec8eb1bd4 100644 --- a/scripts/.gitignore +++ b/scripts/.gitignore @@ -1,6 +1,7 @@ # SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only /asn1_compiler /bin2c +/generate_rust_target /insert-sys-cert /kallsyms /module.lds diff --git a/scripts/generate_rust_target.rs b/scripts/generate_rust_target.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..7256c9606cf0 --- /dev/null +++ b/scripts/generate_rust_target.rs @@ -0,0 +1,171 @@ +// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +//! The custom target specification file generator for `rustc`. +//! +//! To configure a target from scratch, a JSON-encoded file has to be passed +//! to `rustc` (introduced in [RFC 131]). These options and the file itself are +//! unstable. Eventually, `rustc` should provide a way to do this in a stable +//! manner. For instance, via command-line arguments. Therefore, this file +//! should avoid using keys which can be set via `-C` or `-Z` options. +//! +//! [RFC 131]: https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/0131-target-specification.html + +use std::{ + collections::HashMap, + fmt::{Display, Formatter, Result}, + io::BufRead, +}; + +enum Value { + Boolean(bool), + Number(i32), + String(String), + Object(Object), +} + +type Object = Vec<(String, Value)>; + +/// Minimal "almost JSON" generator (e.g. no `null`s, no arrays, no escaping), +/// enough for this purpose. +impl Display for Value { + fn fmt(&self, formatter: &mut Formatter<'_>) -> Result { + match self { + Value::Boolean(boolean) => write!(formatter, "{}", boolean), + Value::Number(number) => write!(formatter, "{}", number), + Value::String(string) => write!(formatter, "\"{}\"", string), + Value::Object(object) => { + formatter.write_str("{")?; + if let [ref rest @ .., ref last] = object[..] { + for (key, value) in rest { + write!(formatter, "\"{}\": {},", key, value)?; + } + write!(formatter, "\"{}\": {}", last.0, last.1)?; + } + formatter.write_str("}") + } + } + } +} + +struct TargetSpec(Object); + +impl TargetSpec { + fn new() -> TargetSpec { + TargetSpec(Vec::new()) + } +} + +trait Push<T> { + fn push(&mut self, key: &str, value: T); +} + +impl Push<bool> for TargetSpec { + fn push(&mut self, key: &str, value: bool) { + self.0.push((key.to_string(), Value::Boolean(value))); + } +} + +impl Push<i32> for TargetSpec { + fn push(&mut self, key: &str, value: i32) { + self.0.push((key.to_string(), Value::Number(value))); + } +} + +impl Push<String> for TargetSpec { + fn push(&mut self, key: &str, value: String) { + self.0.push((key.to_string(), Value::String(value))); + } +} + +impl Push<&str> for TargetSpec { + fn push(&mut self, key: &str, value: &str) { + self.push(key, value.to_string()); + } +} + +impl Push<Object> for TargetSpec { + fn push(&mut self, key: &str, value: Object) { + self.0.push((key.to_string(), Value::Object(value))); + } +} + +impl Display for TargetSpec { + fn fmt(&self, formatter: &mut Formatter<'_>) -> Result { + // We add some newlines for clarity. + formatter.write_str("{\n")?; + if let [ref rest @ .., ref last] = self.0[..] { + for (key, value) in rest { + write!(formatter, " \"{}\": {},\n", key, value)?; + } + write!(formatter, " \"{}\": {}\n", last.0, last.1)?; + } + formatter.write_str("}") + } +} + +struct KernelConfig(HashMap<String, String>); + +impl KernelConfig { + /// Parses `include/config/auto.conf` from `stdin`. + fn from_stdin() -> KernelConfig { + let mut result = HashMap::new(); + + let stdin = std::io::stdin(); + let mut handle = stdin.lock(); + let mut line = String::new(); + + loop { + line.clear(); + + if handle.read_line(&mut line).unwrap() == 0 { + break; + } + + if line.starts_with('#') { + continue; + } + + let (key, value) = line.split_once('=').expect("Missing `=` in line."); + result.insert(key.to_string(), value.trim_end_matches('\n').to_string()); + } + + KernelConfig(result) + } + + /// Does the option exist in the configuration (any value)? + /// + /// The argument must be passed without the `CONFIG_` prefix. + /// This avoids repetition and it also avoids `fixdep` making us + /// depend on it. + fn has(&self, option: &str) -> bool { + let option = "CONFIG_".to_owned() + option; + self.0.contains_key(&option) + } +} + +fn main() { + let cfg = KernelConfig::from_stdin(); + let mut ts = TargetSpec::new(); + + // `llvm-target`s are taken from `scripts/Makefile.clang`. + if cfg.has("DUMMY_ARCH") { + ts.push("arch", "dummy_arch"); + } else { + panic!("Unsupported architecture"); + } + + ts.push("emit-debug-gdb-scripts", false); + ts.push("frame-pointer", "may-omit"); + ts.push( + "stack-probes", + vec![("kind".to_string(), Value::String("none".to_string()))], + ); + + // Everything else is LE, whether `CPU_LITTLE_ENDIAN` is declared or not + // (e.g. x86). It is also `rustc`'s default. + if cfg.has("CPU_BIG_ENDIAN") { + ts.push("target-endian", "big"); + } + + println!("{}", ts); +} -- 2.37.1