Binaries built using the Make build system now no longer appear in the
working directory of the build, but rather in the build directory. Thus
some paths had to be adjusted.
This adds new compile-time infrastructure to parse source code files for
`MP_REGISTER_ROOT_POINTER()` and generates a new `root_pointers.h` header
file containing the collected declarations. This works the same as the
existing `MP_REGISTER_MODULE()` feature.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
This cleans up the parsing of MP_REGISTER_MODULE() and generation of
genhdr/moduledefs.h so that it uses the same process as compressed error
string messages, using the output of qstr extraction.
This makes sure all MP_REGISTER_MODULE()'s that are part of the build are
correctly picked up. Previously the extraction would miss some (eg if you
had a mod.c file in the board directory for an stm32 board).
Build speed is more or less unchanged.
Thanks to @stinos for the ports/windows/msvc/genhdr.targets changes.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This ensures MICROPY_QSTR_EXTRA_POOL and MICROPY_MODULE_FROZEN_MPY are set
if necessary before the CFLAGS are extracted for QSTR generation.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Commit 4173950658 removed automatic building
of mpy-cross, which rebuilt it whenever any of its dependent source files
changed.
But needing to build mpy-cross, and not knowing how, is a frequent issue.
This commit aims to help by automatically building mpy-cross only if it
doesn't exist. For Makefiles it uses an order-only prerequisite, while
for CMake it uses a custom command.
If MICROPY_MPYCROSS (which is what makemanifest.py uses to locate the
mpy-cross executable) is defined in the environment then automatic build
will not be attempted, allowing a way to prevent this auto-build if needed.
Thanks to Trammell Hudson aka @osresearch for the original idea; see #5760.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
The parts that are generic are added to py/ so they can be used by other
ports that use CMake.
py/usermod.cmake:
* Creates a usermod target to hang user C/CXX modules from.
* Gathers sources from user C/CXX modules and libs for QSTR scan.
ports/rp2/CMakeLists.txt:
* Includes py/usermod.cmake.
* Links the resulting usermod library to the MicroPython target.
py/mkrules.cmake:
Add cxxflags to qstr.i.last custom command for CXX modules:
* MICROPY_CPP_FLAGS so CXX modules will find includes.
* -DNO_QSTR to fix fatal error missing "genhdr/qstrdefs.generated.h".
Usage:
The rp2 port can be linked against user C modules by running:
make USER_C_MODULES=/path/to/module/micropython.cmake
CMake will print a list of included modules.
Co-authored-by: Graham Sanderson <graham.sanderson@raspberrypi.org>
Co-authored-by: Michael O'Cleirigh <michael.ocleirigh@rivulet.ca>
Signed-off-by: Phil Howard <phil@pimoroni.com>
This allows a port to specify a custom qstrdefsport.h file, the same as the
QSTR_DEFS variable in a Makefile.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
The core cmake rules use custom commands to invoke qstr processing
scripts. For the zephyr port, it's possible that list arguments to these
commands may contain generator expressions, therefore we need to expand
them properly.
Signed-off-by: Maureen Helm <maureen.helm@nxp.com>