| .. _modules: |
| |
| Modules (External projects) |
| ############################ |
| |
| Zephyr relies on the source code of several externally maintained projects in |
| order to avoid reinventing the wheel and to reuse as much well-established, |
| mature code as possible when it makes sense. In the context of Zephyr's build |
| system those are called *modules*. These modules must be integrated with the |
| Zephyr build system, as described in more detail in other sections on |
| this page. |
| |
| To be classified as a candidate for being included in the default list of |
| modules, an external project is required to have its own life-cycle outside |
| the Zephyr Project, that is, reside in its own repository, and have its own |
| contribution and maintenance workflow and release process. Zephyr modules |
| should not contain code that is written exclusively for Zephyr. Instead, |
| such code should be contributed to the main zephyr tree. |
| |
| Modules to be included in the default manifest of the Zephyr project need to |
| provide functionality or features endorsed and approved by the project Technical |
| Steering Committee and should comply with the |
| :ref:`module licensing requirements<modules_licensing>` and |
| :ref:`contribution guidelines<modules_contributing>`. They should also have a |
| Zephyr developer that is committed to maintain the module codebase. |
| |
| Zephyr depends on several categories of modules, including but not limited to: |
| |
| - Debugger integration |
| - Silicon vendor Hardware Abstraction Layers (HALs) |
| - Cryptography libraries |
| - File Systems |
| - Inter-Process Communication (IPC) libraries |
| |
| This page summarizes a list of policies and best practices which aim at |
| better organizing the workflow in Zephyr modules. |
| |
| Module Repositories |
| ******************* |
| |
| * All modules included in the default manifest shall be hosted in repositories |
| under the zephyrproject-rtos GitHub organization. |
| |
| * The module repository codebase shall include a *module.yml* file in a |
| :file:`zephyr/` folder at the root of the repository. |
| |
| * Module repository names should follow the convention of using lowercase |
| letters and dashes instead of underscores. This rule will apply to all |
| new module repositories, except for repositories that are directly |
| tracking external projects (hosted in Git repositories); such modules |
| may be named as their external project counterparts. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| Existing module repositories that do not conform to the above convention |
| do not need to be renamed to comply with the above convention. |
| |
| * Modules should use "zephyr" as the default name for the repository main |
| branch. Branches for specific purposes, for example, a module branch for |
| an LTS Zephyr version, shall have names starting with the 'zephyr\_' prefix. |
| |
| * If the module has an external (upstream) project repository, the module |
| repository should preserve the upstream repository folder structure. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| It is not required in module repositories to maintain a 'master' |
| branch mirroring the master branch of the external repository. It |
| is not recommended as this may generate confusion around the module's |
| main branch, which should be 'zephyr'. |
| |
| .. _modules_synchronization: |
| |
| Synchronizing with upstream |
| =========================== |
| |
| It is preferred to synchronize a module repository with the latest stable |
| release of the corresponding external project. It is permitted, however, to |
| update a Zephyr module repository with the latest development branch tip, |
| if this is required to get important updates in the module codebase. When |
| synchronizing a module with upstream it is mandatory to document the |
| rationale for performing the particular update. |
| |
| Requirements for allowed practices |
| ---------------------------------- |
| |
| Changes to the main branch of a module repository, including synchronization |
| with upstream code base, may only be applied via pull requests. These pull |
| requests shall be *verifiable* by Zephyr CI and *mergeable* (e.g. with the |
| *Rebase and merge*, or *Create a merge commit* option using Github UI). This |
| ensures that the incoming changes are always **reviewable**, and the |
| *downstream* module repository history is incremental (that is, existing |
| commits, tags, etc. are always preserved). This policy also allows to run |
| Zephyr CI, git lint, identity, and license checks directly on the set of |
| changes that are to be brought into the module repository. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| Force-pushing to a module's main branch is not allowed. |
| |
| Allowed practices |
| --------------------- |
| |
| The following practices conform to the above requirements and should be |
| followed in all modules repositories. It is up to the module code owner |
| to select the preferred synchronization practice, however, it is required |
| that the selected practice is consistently followed in the respective |
| module repository. |
| |
| **Updating modules with a diff from upstream:** |
| Upstream changes brought as a single *snapshot* commit (manual diff) in a |
| pull request against the module's main branch, which may be merged using |
| the *Rebase & merge* operation. This approach is simple and |
| should be applicable to all modules with the downside of suppressing the |
| upstream history in the module repository. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| The above practice is the only allowed practice in modules where |
| the external project is not hosted in an upstream Git repository. |
| |
| The commit message is expected to identify the upstream project URL, the |
| version to which the module is updated (upstream version, tag, commit SHA, |
| if applicable, etc.), and the reason for the doing the update. |
| |
| **Updating modules by merging the upstream branch:** |
| Upstream changes brought in by performing a Git merge of the intended upstream |
| branch (e.g. main branch, latest release branch, etc.) submitting the result in |
| pull request against the module main branch, and merging the pull request using |
| the *Create a merge commit* operation. |
| This approach is applicable to modules with an upstream project Git repository. |
| The main advantages of this approach is that the upstream repository history |
| (that is, the original commit SHAs) is preserved in the module repository. The |
| downside of this approach is that two additional merge commits are generated in |
| the downstream main branch. |
| |
| |
| Contributing to Zephyr modules |
| ****************************** |
| |
| .. _modules_contributing: |
| |
| |
| Individual Roles & Responsibilities |
| =================================== |
| |
| To facilitate management of Zephyr module repositories, the following |
| individual roles are defined. |
| |
| **Administrator:** Each Zephyr module shall have an administrator |
| who is responsible for managing access to the module repository, |
| for example, for adding individuals as Collaborators in the repository |
| at the request of the module owner. Module administrators are |
| members of the Administrators team, that is a group of project |
| members with admin rights to module GitHub repositories. |
| |
| **Module owner:** Each module shall have a module code owner. Module |
| owners will have the overall responsibility of the contents of a |
| Zephyr module repository. In particular, a module owner will: |
| |
| * coordinate code reviewing in the module repository |
| * be the default assignee in pull-requests against the repository's |
| main branch |
| * request additional collaborators to be added to the repository, as |
| they see fit |
| * regularly synchronize the module repository with its upstream |
| counterpart following the policies described in |
| :ref:`modules_synchronization` |
| * be aware of security vulnerability issues in the external project |
| and update the module repository to include security fixes, as |
| soon as the fixes are available in the upstream code base |
| * list any known security vulnerability issues, present in the |
| module codebase, in Zephyr release notes. |
| |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| Module owners are not required to be Zephyr |
| :ref:`Maintainers <project_roles>`. |
| |
| **Merger:** The Zephyr Release Engineering team has the right and the |
| responsibility to merge approved pull requests in the main branch of a |
| module repository. |
| |
| |
| Maintaining the module codebase |
| =============================== |
| |
| Updates in the zephyr main tree, for example, in public Zephyr APIs, |
| may require patching a module's codebase. The responsibility for keeping |
| the module codebase up to date is shared between the **contributor** of |
| such updates in Zephyr and the module **owner**. In particular: |
| |
| * the contributor of the original changes in Zephyr is required to submit |
| the corresponding changes that are required in module repositories, to |
| ensure that Zephyr CI on the pull request with the original changes, as |
| well as the module integration testing are successful. |
| |
| * the module owner has the overall responsibility for synchronizing |
| and testing the module codebase with the zephyr main tree. |
| This includes occasional advanced testing of the module's codebase |
| in addition to the testing performed by Zephyr's CI. |
| The module owner is required to fix issues in the module's codebase that |
| have not been caught by Zephyr pull request CI runs. |
| |
| |
| |
| Contributing changes to modules |
| =============================== |
| |
| Submitting and merging changes directly to a module's codebase, that is, |
| before they have been merged in the corresponding external project |
| repository, should be limited to: |
| |
| * changes required due to updates in the zephyr main tree |
| * urgent changes that should not wait to be merged in the external project |
| first, such as fixes to security vulnerabilities. |
| |
| Non-trivial changes to a module's codebase, including changes in the module |
| design or functionality should be discouraged, if the module has an upstream |
| project repository. In that case, such changes shall be submitted to the |
| upstream project, directly. |
| |
| :ref:`Submitting changes to modules <submitting_new_modules>` describes in |
| detail the process of contributing changes to module repositories. |
| |
| Contribution guidelines |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| Contributing to Zephyr modules shall follow the generic project |
| :ref:`Contribution guidelines <contribute_guidelines>`. |
| |
| **Pull Requests:** may be merged with minimum of 2 approvals, including |
| an approval by the PR assignee. In addition to this, pull requests in module |
| repositories may only be merged if the introduced changes are verified |
| with Zephyr CI tools, as described in more detail in other sections on |
| this page. |
| |
| The merging of pull requests in the main branch of a module |
| repository must be coupled with the corresponding manifest |
| file update in the zephyr main tree. |
| |
| **Issue Reporting:** GitHub issues are intentionally disabled in module |
| repositories, in |
| favor of a centralized policy for issue reporting. Tickets concerning, for |
| example, bugs or enhancements in modules shall be opened in the main |
| zephyr repository. Issues should be appropriately labeled using GitHub |
| labels corresponding to each module, where applicable. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| It is allowed to file bug reports for zephyr modules to track |
| the corresponding upstream project bugs in Zephyr. These bug reports |
| shall not affect the |
| :ref:`Release Quality Criteria<release_quality_criteria>`. |
| |
| |
| .. _modules_licensing: |
| |
| Licensing requirements and policies |
| *********************************** |
| |
| All source files in a module's codebase shall include a license header, |
| unless the module repository has **main license file** that covers source |
| files that do not include license headers. |
| |
| Main license files shall be added in the module's codebase by Zephyr |
| developers, only if they exist as part of the external project, |
| and they contain a permissive OSI-compliant license. Main license files |
| should preferably contain the full license text instead of including an |
| SPDX license identifier. If multiple main license files are present it |
| shall be made clear which license applies to each source file in a module's |
| codebase. |
| |
| Individual license headers in module source files supersede the main license. |
| |
| Any new content to be added in a module repository will require to have |
| license coverage. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| Zephyr recommends conveying module licensing via individual license |
| headers and main license files. This not a hard requirement; should |
| an external project have its own practice of conveying how licensing |
| applies in the module's codebase (for example, by having a single or |
| multiple main license files), this practice may be accepted by and |
| be referred to in the Zephyr module, as long as licensing requirements, |
| for example OSI compliance, are satisfied. |
| |
| License policies |
| ================ |
| |
| When creating a module repository a developer shall: |
| |
| * import the main license files, if they exist in the external project, and |
| * document (for example in the module README or .yml file) the default license |
| that covers the module's codebase. |
| |
| License checks |
| -------------- |
| |
| License checks (via CI tools) shall be enabled on every pull request that |
| adds new content in module repositories. |
| |
| |
| Documentation requirements |
| ************************** |
| |
| All Zephyr module repositories shall include an .rst file documenting: |
| |
| * the scope and the purpose of the module |
| * how the module integrates with Zephyr |
| * the owner of the module repository |
| * synchronization information with the external project (commit, SHA, version etc.) |
| * licensing information as described in :ref:`modules_licensing`. |
| |
| The file shall be required for the inclusion of the module and the contained |
| information should be kept up to date. |
| |
| |
| Testing requirements |
| ******************** |
| |
| All Zephyr modules should provide some level of **integration** testing, |
| ensuring that the integration with Zephyr works correctly. |
| Integration tests: |
| |
| * may be in the form of a minimal set of samples and tests that reside |
| in the zephyr main tree |
| * should verify basic usage of the module (configuration, |
| functional APIs, etc.) that is integrated with Zephyr. |
| * shall be built and executed (for example in QEMU) as part of |
| twister runs in pull requests that introduce changes in module |
| repositories. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| New modules, that are candidates for being included in the Zephyr |
| default manifest, shall provide some level of integration testing. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| Vendor HALs are implicitly tested via Zephyr tests built or executed |
| on target platforms, so they do not need to provide integration tests. |
| |
| The purpose of integration testing is not to provide functional verification |
| of the module; this should be part of the testing framework of the external |
| project. |
| |
| Certain external projects provide test suites that reside in the upstream |
| testing infrastructure but are written explicitly for Zephyr. These tests |
| may (but are not required to) be part of the Zephyr test framework. |
| |
| Deprecating and removing modules |
| ********************************* |
| |
| Modules may be deprecated for reasons including, but not limited to: |
| |
| * Lack of maintainership in the module |
| * Licensing changes in the external project |
| * Codebase becoming obsolete |
| |
| The module information shall indicate whether a module is |
| deprecated and the build system shall issue a warning |
| when trying to build Zephyr using a deprecated module. |
| |
| Deprecated modules may be removed from the Zephyr default manifest |
| after 2 Zephyr releases. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| Repositories of removed modules shall remain accessible via their |
| original URL, as they are required by older Zephyr versions. |
| |
| |
| Integrate modules in Zephyr build system |
| **************************************** |
| |
| The build system variable :makevar:`ZEPHYR_MODULES` is a `CMake list`_ of |
| absolute paths to the directories containing Zephyr modules. These modules |
| contain :file:`CMakeLists.txt` and :file:`Kconfig` files describing how to |
| build and configure them, respectively. Module :file:`CMakeLists.txt` files are |
| added to the build using CMake's `add_subdirectory()`_ command, and the |
| :file:`Kconfig` files are included in the build's Kconfig menu tree. |
| |
| If you have :ref:`west <west>` installed, you don't need to worry about how |
| this variable is defined unless you are adding a new module. The build system |
| knows how to use west to set :makevar:`ZEPHYR_MODULES`. You can add additional |
| modules to this list by setting the :makevar:`ZEPHYR_EXTRA_MODULES` CMake |
| variable or by adding a :makevar:`ZEPHYR_EXTRA_MODULES` line to ``.zephyrrc`` |
| (See the section on :ref:`env_vars` for more details). This can be |
| useful if you want to keep the list of modules found with west and also add |
| your own. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| If the module ``FOO`` is provided by :ref:`west <west>` but also given with |
| ``-DZEPHYR_EXTRA_MODULES=/<path>/foo`` then the module given by the command |
| line variable :makevar:`ZEPHYR_EXTRA_MODULES` will take precedence. |
| This allows you to use a custom version of ``FOO`` when building and still |
| use other Zephyr modules provided by :ref:`west <west>`. |
| This can for example be useful for special test purposes. |
| |
| If you want to permanently add modules to the zephyr workspace and you are |
| using zephyr as your manifest repository, you can also add a west manifest file |
| into the :zephyr_file:`submanifests` directory. See |
| :zephyr_file:`submanifests/README.txt` for more details. |
| |
| See :ref:`west-basics` for more on west workspaces. |
| |
| Finally, you can also specify the list of modules yourself in various ways, or |
| not use modules at all if your application doesn't need them. |
| |
| |
| Module yaml file description |
| **************************** |
| |
| A module can be described using a file named :file:`zephyr/module.yml`. |
| The format of :file:`zephyr/module.yml` is described in the following: |
| |
| Module name |
| =========== |
| |
| Each Zephyr module is given a name by which it can be referred to in the build |
| system. |
| |
| The name may be specified in the :file:`zephyr/module.yml` file: |
| |
| .. code-block:: yaml |
| |
| name: <name> |
| |
| In CMake the location of the Zephyr module can then be referred to using the |
| CMake variable ``ZEPHYR_<MODULE_NAME>_MODULE_DIR`` and the variable |
| ``ZEPHYR_<MODULE_NAME>_CMAKE_DIR`` holds the location of the directory |
| containing the module's :file:`CMakeLists.txt` file. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| When used for CMake and Kconfig variables, all letters in module names are |
| converted to uppercase and all non-alphanumeric characters are converted |
| to underscores (_). |
| As example, the module ``foo-bar`` must be referred to as |
| ``ZEPHYR_FOO_BAR_MODULE_DIR`` in CMake and Kconfig. |
| |
| Here is an example for the Zephyr module ``foo``: |
| |
| .. code-block:: yaml |
| |
| name: foo |
| |
| .. note:: |
| If the ``name`` field is not specified then the Zephyr module name will be |
| set to the name of the module folder. |
| As example, the Zephyr module located in :file:`<workspace>/modules/bar` will |
| use ``bar`` as its module name if nothing is specified in |
| :file:`zephyr/module.yml`. |
| |
| Module integration files (in-module) |
| ==================================== |
| |
| Inclusion of build files, :file:`CMakeLists.txt` and :file:`Kconfig`, can be |
| described as: |
| |
| .. code-block:: yaml |
| |
| build: |
| cmake: <cmake-directory> |
| kconfig: <directory>/Kconfig |
| |
| The ``cmake: <cmake-directory>`` part specifies that |
| :file:`<cmake-directory>` contains the :file:`CMakeLists.txt` to use. The |
| ``kconfig: <directory>/Kconfig`` part specifies the Kconfig file to use. |
| Neither is required: ``cmake`` defaults to ``zephyr``, and ``kconfig`` |
| defaults to ``zephyr/Kconfig``. |
| |
| Here is an example :file:`module.yml` file referring to |
| :file:`CMakeLists.txt` and :file:`Kconfig` files in the root directory of the |
| module: |
| |
| .. code-block:: yaml |
| |
| build: |
| cmake: . |
| kconfig: Kconfig |
| |
| Build system integration |
| ======================== |
| |
| When a module has a :file:`module.yml` file, it will automatically be included into |
| the Zephyr build system. The path to the module is then accessible through Kconfig |
| and CMake variables. |
| |
| In both Kconfig and CMake, the variable ``ZEPHYR_<MODULE_NAME>_MODULE_DIR`` |
| contains the absolute path to the module. |
| |
| In CMake, ``ZEPHYR_<MODULE_NAME>_CMAKE_DIR`` contains the |
| absolute path to the directory containing the :file:`CMakeLists.txt` file that |
| is included into CMake build system. This variable's value is empty if the |
| module.yml file does not specify a CMakeLists.txt. |
| |
| To read these variables for a Zephyr module named ``foo``: |
| |
| - In CMake: use ``${ZEPHYR_FOO_MODULE_DIR}`` for the module's top level directory, and ``${ZEPHYR_FOO_CMAKE_DIR}`` for the directory containing its :file:`CMakeLists.txt` |
| - In Kconfig: use ``$(ZEPHYR_FOO_MODULE_DIR)`` for the module's top level directory |
| |
| Notice how a lowercase module name ``foo`` is capitalized to ``FOO`` |
| in both CMake and Kconfig. |
| |
| These variables can also be used to test whether a given module exists. |
| For example, to verify that ``foo`` is the name of a Zephyr module: |
| |
| .. code-block:: cmake |
| |
| if(ZEPHYR_FOO_MODULE_DIR) |
| # Do something if FOO exists. |
| endif() |
| |
| In Kconfig, the variable may be used to find additional files to include. |
| For example, to include the file :file:`some/Kconfig` in module ``foo``: |
| |
| .. code-block:: kconfig |
| |
| source "$(ZEPHYR_FOO_MODULE_DIR)/some/Kconfig" |
| |
| During CMake processing of each Zephyr module, the following two variables are |
| also available: |
| |
| - the current module's top level directory: ``${ZEPHYR_CURRENT_MODULE_DIR}`` |
| - the current module's :file:`CMakeLists.txt` directory: ``${ZEPHYR_CURRENT_CMAKE_DIR}`` |
| |
| This removes the need for a Zephyr module to know its own name during CMake |
| processing. The module can source additional CMake files using these ``CURRENT`` |
| variables. For example: |
| |
| .. code-block:: cmake |
| |
| include(${ZEPHYR_CURRENT_MODULE_DIR}/cmake/code.cmake) |
| |
| It is possible to append values to a Zephyr CMake list variable from the module's first |
| CMakeLists.txt file. |
| To do so, append the value to the list and then set the list in the PARENT_SCOPE |
| of the CMakeLists.txt file. For example, to append ``bar`` to the ``FOO_LIST`` variable in the |
| Zephyr CMakeLists.txt scope: |
| |
| .. code-block:: cmake |
| |
| list(APPEND FOO_LIST bar) |
| set(FOO_LIST ${FOO_LIST} PARENT_SCOPE) |
| |
| An example of a Zephyr list where this is useful is when adding additional |
| directories to the ``SYSCALL_INCLUDE_DIRS`` list. |
| |
| Zephyr module dependencies |
| ========================== |
| |
| A Zephyr module may be dependent on other Zephyr modules to be present in order |
| to function correctly. Or it might be that a given Zephyr module must be |
| processed after another Zephyr module, due to dependencies of certain CMake |
| targets. |
| |
| Such a dependency can be described using the ``depends`` field. |
| |
| .. code-block:: yaml |
| |
| build: |
| depends: |
| - <module> |
| |
| Here is an example for the Zephyr module ``foo`` that is dependent on the Zephyr |
| module ``bar`` to be present in the build system: |
| |
| .. code-block:: yaml |
| |
| name: foo |
| build: |
| depends: |
| - bar |
| |
| This example will ensure that ``bar`` is present when ``foo`` is included into |
| the build system, and it will also ensure that ``bar`` is processed before |
| ``foo``. |
| |
| .. _modules_module_ext_root: |
| |
| Module integration files (external) |
| =================================== |
| |
| Module integration files can be located externally to the Zephyr module itself. |
| The ``MODULE_EXT_ROOT`` variable holds a list of roots containing integration |
| files located externally to Zephyr modules. |
| |
| Module integration files in Zephyr |
| ---------------------------------- |
| |
| The Zephyr repository contain :file:`CMakeLists.txt` and :file:`Kconfig` build |
| files for certain known Zephyr modules. |
| |
| Those files are located under |
| |
| .. code-block:: none |
| |
| <ZEPHYR_BASE> |
| └── modules |
| └── <module_name> |
| ├── CMakeLists.txt |
| └── Kconfig |
| |
| Module integration files in a custom location |
| --------------------------------------------- |
| |
| You can create a similar ``MODULE_EXT_ROOT`` for additional modules, and make |
| those modules known to Zephyr build system. |
| |
| Create a ``MODULE_EXT_ROOT`` with the following structure |
| |
| .. code-block:: none |
| |
| <MODULE_EXT_ROOT> |
| └── modules |
| ├── modules.cmake |
| └── <module_name> |
| ├── CMakeLists.txt |
| └── Kconfig |
| |
| and then build your application by specifying ``-DMODULE_EXT_ROOT`` parameter to |
| the CMake build system. The ``MODULE_EXT_ROOT`` accepts a CMake list of roots as |
| argument. |
| |
| A Zephyr module can automatically be added to the ``MODULE_EXT_ROOT`` |
| list using the module description file :file:`zephyr/module.yml`, see |
| :ref:`modules_build_settings`. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| ``ZEPHYR_BASE`` is always added as a ``MODULE_EXT_ROOT`` with the lowest |
| priority. |
| This allows you to overrule any integration files under |
| ``<ZEPHYR_BASE>/modules/<module_name>`` with your own implementation your own |
| ``MODULE_EXT_ROOT``. |
| |
| The :file:`modules.cmake` file must contain the logic that specifies the |
| integration files for Zephyr modules via specifically named CMake variables. |
| |
| To include a module's CMake file, set the variable ``ZEPHYR_<MODULE_NAME>_CMAKE_DIR`` |
| to the path containing the CMake file. |
| |
| To include a module's Kconfig file, set the variable ``ZEPHYR_<MODULE_NAME>_KCONFIG`` |
| to the path to the Kconfig file. |
| |
| The following is an example on how to add support the the ``FOO`` module. |
| |
| Create the following structure |
| |
| .. code-block:: none |
| |
| <MODULE_EXT_ROOT> |
| └── modules |
| ├── modules.cmake |
| └── foo |
| ├── CMakeLists.txt |
| └── Kconfig |
| |
| and inside the :file:`modules.cmake` file, add the following content |
| |
| .. code-block:: cmake |
| |
| set(ZEPHYR_FOO_CMAKE_DIR ${CMAKE_CURRENT_LIST_DIR}/foo) |
| set(ZEPHYR_FOO_KCONFIG ${CMAKE_CURRENT_LIST_DIR}/foo/Kconfig) |
| |
| Module integration files (zephyr/module.yml) |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The module description file :file:`zephyr/module.yml` can be used to specify |
| that the build files, :file:`CMakeLists.txt` and :file:`Kconfig`, are located |
| in a :ref:`modules_module_ext_root`. |
| |
| Build files located in a ``MODULE_EXT_ROOT`` can be described as: |
| |
| .. code-block:: yaml |
| |
| build: |
| cmake-ext: True |
| kconfig-ext: True |
| |
| This allows control of the build inclusion to be described externally to the |
| Zephyr module. |
| |
| The Zephyr repository itself is always added as a Zephyr module ext root. |
| |
| .. _modules_build_settings: |
| |
| Build settings |
| ============== |
| |
| It is possible to specify additional build settings that must be used when |
| including the module into the build system. |
| |
| All ``root`` settings are relative to the root of the module. |
| |
| Build settings supported in the :file:`module.yml` file are: |
| |
| - ``board_root``: Contains additional boards that are available to the build |
| system. Additional boards must be located in a :file:`<board_root>/boards` |
| folder. |
| - ``dts_root``: Contains additional dts files related to the architecture/soc |
| families. Additional dts files must be located in a :file:`<dts_root>/dts` |
| folder. |
| - ``soc_root``: Contains additional SoCs that are available to the build |
| system. Additional SoCs must be located in a :file:`<soc_root>/soc` folder. |
| - ``arch_root``: Contains additional architectures that are available to the |
| build system. Additional architectures must be located in a |
| :file:`<arch_root>/arch` folder. |
| - ``module_ext_root``: Contains :file:`CMakeLists.txt` and :file:`Kconfig` files |
| for Zephyr modules, see also :ref:`modules_module_ext_root`. |
| |
| Example of a :file:`module.yaml` file containing additional roots, and the |
| corresponding file system layout. |
| |
| .. code-block:: yaml |
| |
| build: |
| settings: |
| board_root: . |
| dts_root: . |
| soc_root: . |
| arch_root: . |
| module_ext_root: . |
| |
| |
| requires the following folder structure: |
| |
| .. code-block:: none |
| |
| <zephyr-module-root> |
| ├── arch |
| ├── boards |
| ├── dts |
| ├── modules |
| └── soc |
| |
| |
| |
| Twister (Test Runner) |
| ===================== |
| |
| To execute both tests and samples available in modules, the Zephyr test runner |
| (twister) should be pointed to the directories containing those samples and |
| tests. This can be done by specifying the path to both samples and tests in the |
| :file:`zephyr/module.yml` file. Additionally, if a module defines out of tree |
| boards, the module file can point twister to the path where those files |
| are maintained in the module. For example: |
| |
| |
| .. code-block:: yaml |
| |
| build: |
| cmake: . |
| samples: |
| - samples |
| tests: |
| - tests |
| boards: |
| - boards |
| |
| |
| Module Inclusion |
| ================ |
| |
| .. _modules_using_west: |
| |
| Using West |
| ---------- |
| |
| If west is installed and :makevar:`ZEPHYR_MODULES` is not already set, the |
| build system finds all the modules in your :term:`west installation` and uses |
| those. It does this by running :ref:`west list <west-built-in-misc>` to get |
| the paths of all the projects in the installation, then filters the results to |
| just those projects which have the necessary module metadata files. |
| |
| Each project in the ``west list`` output is tested like this: |
| |
| - If the project contains a file named :file:`zephyr/module.yml`, then the |
| content of that file will be used to determine which files should be added |
| to the build, as described in the previous section. |
| |
| - Otherwise (i.e. if the project has no :file:`zephyr/module.yml`), the |
| build system looks for :file:`zephyr/CMakeLists.txt` and |
| :file:`zephyr/Kconfig` files in the project. If both are present, the project |
| is considered a module, and those files will be added to the build. |
| |
| - If neither of those checks succeed, the project is not considered a module, |
| and is not added to :makevar:`ZEPHYR_MODULES`. |
| |
| .. _modules_without_west: |
| |
| Without West |
| ------------ |
| |
| If you don't have west installed or don't want the build system to use it to |
| find Zephyr modules, you can set :makevar:`ZEPHYR_MODULES` yourself using one |
| of the following options. Each of the directories in the list must contain |
| either a :file:`zephyr/module.yml` file or the files |
| :file:`zephyr/CMakeLists.txt` and :file:`Kconfig`, as described in the previous |
| section. |
| |
| #. At the CMake command line, like this: |
| |
| .. code-block:: console |
| |
| cmake -DZEPHYR_MODULES=<path-to-module1>[;<path-to-module2>[...]] ... |
| |
| #. At the top of your application's top level :file:`CMakeLists.txt`, like this: |
| |
| .. code-block:: cmake |
| |
| set(ZEPHYR_MODULES <path-to-module1> <path-to-module2> [...]) |
| find_package(Zephyr REQUIRED HINTS $ENV{ZEPHYR_BASE}) |
| |
| If you choose this option, make sure to set the variable **before** calling |
| ``find_package(Zephyr ...)``, as shown above. |
| |
| #. In a separate CMake script which is pre-loaded to populate the CMake cache, |
| like this: |
| |
| .. code-block:: cmake |
| |
| # Put this in a file with a name like "zephyr-modules.cmake" |
| set(ZEPHYR_MODULES <path-to-module1> <path-to-module2> |
| CACHE STRING "pre-cached modules") |
| |
| You can tell the build system to use this file by adding ``-C |
| zephyr-modules.cmake`` to your CMake command line. |
| |
| Not using modules |
| ----------------- |
| |
| If you don't have west installed and don't specify :makevar:`ZEPHYR_MODULES` |
| yourself, then no additional modules are added to the build. You will still be |
| able to build any applications that don't require code or Kconfig options |
| defined in an external repository. |
| |
| Submitting changes to modules |
| ****************************** |
| |
| When submitting new or making changes to existing modules the main repository |
| Zephyr needs a reference to the changes to be able to verify the changes. In the |
| main tree this is done using revisions. For code that is already merged and part |
| of the tree we use the commit hash, a tag, or a branch name. For pull requests |
| however, we require specifying the pull request number in the revision field to |
| allow building the zephyr main tree with the changes submitted to the |
| module. |
| |
| To avoid merging changes to master with pull request information, the pull |
| request should be marked as ``DNM`` (Do Not Merge) or preferably a draft pull |
| request to make sure it is not merged by mistake and to allow for the module to |
| be merged first and be assigned a permanent commit hash. Once the module is |
| merged, the revision will need to be changed either by the submitter or by the |
| maintainer to the commit hash of the module which reflects the changes. |
| |
| Note that multiple and dependent changes to different modules can be submitted |
| using exactly the same process. In this case you will change multiple entries of |
| all modules that have a pull request against them. |
| |
| .. _submitting_new_modules: |
| |
| Process for submitting a new module |
| =================================== |
| |
| Please follow the process in :ref:`external-src-process` and obtain the TSC |
| approval to integrate the external source code as a module |
| |
| If the request is approved, a new repository will |
| created by the project team and initialized with basic information that would |
| allow submitting code to the module project following the project contribution |
| guidelines. |
| |
| If a module is maintained as a fork of another project on Github, the Zephyr |
| module related files and changes in relation to upstream need to be maintained |
| in a special branch named ``zephyr``. |
| |
| Maintainers from the Zephyr project will create the repository and initialize |
| it. You will be added as a collaborator in the new repository. Submit the |
| module content (code) to the new repository following the guidelines described |
| :ref:`here <modules_using_west>`, and then add a new entry to the |
| :zephyr_file:`west.yml` with the following information: |
| |
| .. code-block:: console |
| |
| - name: <name of repository> |
| path: <path to where the repository should be cloned> |
| revision: <ref pointer to module pull request> |
| |
| |
| For example, to add *my_module* to the manifest: |
| |
| .. code-block:: console |
| |
| - name: my_module |
| path: modules/lib/my_module |
| revision: pull/23/head |
| |
| |
| Where 23 in the example above indicated the pull request number submitted to the |
| *my_module* repository. Once the module changes are reviewed and merged, the |
| revision needs to be changed to the commit hash from the module repository. |
| |
| .. _changes_to_existing_module: |
| |
| Process for submitting changes to existing modules |
| ================================================== |
| |
| #. Submit the changes using a pull request to an existing repository following |
| the :ref:`contribution guidelines <contribute_guidelines>`. |
| #. Submit a pull request changing the entry referencing the module into the |
| :zephyr_file:`west.yml` of the main Zephyr tree with the following |
| information: |
| |
| .. code-block:: console |
| |
| - name: <name of repository> |
| path: <path to where the repository should be cloned> |
| revision: <ref pointer to module pull request> |
| |
| |
| For example, to add *my_module* to the manifest: |
| |
| .. code-block:: console |
| |
| - name: my_module |
| path: modules/lib/my_module |
| revision: pull/23/head |
| |
| Where 23 in the example above indicated the pull request number submitted to the |
| *my_module* repository. Once the module changes are reviewed and merged, the |
| revision needs to be changed to the commit hash from the module repository. |
| |
| |
| |
| .. _CMake list: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/manual/cmake-language.7.html#lists |
| .. _add_subdirectory(): https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/command/add_subdirectory.html |
| |
| .. _GitHub issues: https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/zephyr/issues |