mirror of
https://github.com/Zenithsiz/ftmemsim-valgrind.git
synced 2026-02-03 10:05:29 +00:00
following improvements: - Arch/OS/platform-specific files are now included/excluded via the preprocessor, rather than via the build system. This is more consistent (we use the pre-processor for small arch/OS/platform-specific chunks within files) and makes the build system much simpler, as the sources for all programs are the same on all platforms. - Vast amounts of cut+paste Makefile.am code has been factored out. If a new platform is implemented, you need to add 11 extra Makefile.am lines. Previously it was over 100 lines. - Vex has been autotoolised. Dependency checking now works in Vex (no more incomplete builds). Parallel builds now also work. --with-vex no longer works; it's little use and a pain to support. VEX/Makefile is still in the Vex repository and gets overwritten at configure-time; it should probably be renamed Makefile-gcc to avoid possible problems, such as accidentally committing a generated Makefile. There's a bunch of hacky copying to deal with the fact that autotools don't handle same-named files in different directories. Julian plans to rename the files to avoid this problem. - Various small Makefile.am things have been made more standard automake style, eg. the use of pkginclude/pkglib prefixes instead of rolling our own. - The existing five top-level Makefile.am include files have been consolidated into three. - Most Makefile.am files now are structured more clearly, with comment headers separating sections, declarations relating to the same things next to each other, better spacing and layout, etc. - Removed the unused exp-ptrcheck/tests/x86 directory. - Renamed some XML files. - Factored out some duplicated dSYM handling code. - Split auxprogs/ into auxprogs/ and mpi/, which allowed the resulting Makefile.am files to be much more standard. - Cleaned up m_coredump by merging a bunch of files that had been overzealously separated. The net result is 630 fewer lines of Makefile.am code, or 897 if you exclude the added Makefile.vex.am, or 997 once the hacky file copying for Vex is removed. And the build system is much simpler. git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@10364
Valgrind Documentation
----------------------
This text assumes the following directory structure:
Distribution text files (eg. AUTHORS, NEWS, ...):
valgrind/
Main /docs/ dir:
valgrind/docs/
Top-level XML files:
valgrind/docs/xml/
Tool specific XML docs:
valgrind/<toolname>/docs/
All images used in the docs:
valgrind/docs/images/
Stylesheets, catalogs, parsing/formatting scripts:
valgrind/docs/lib/
Some files of note:
docs/xml/index.xml: Top-level book-set wrapper
docs/xml/FAQ.xml: The FAQ
docs/valgrind-manpage.xml The valgrind manpage
docs/xml/vg-entities.xml: Various strings, dates etc. used all over
docs/xml/xml_help.txt: Basic guide to common XML tags.
The docs/internals directory contains some useful high-level stuff about
Valgrind's internals. It's not relevant for the rest of this discussion.
Overview
---------
The Documentation Set contains all books, articles, manpages,
etc. pertaining to Valgrind, and is designed to be built as:
- chunked html files
- PDF file
- PS file
- manpage
The whole thing is a "book set", made up of multiple books (the user
manual, the FAQ, the tech-docs, the licenses). Each book could be
made individually, but the build system doesn't do that.
CSS: the style-sheet used by the docs is the same as that used by the
website (consistency is king). It might be worth doing a pre-build diff
to check whether the website stylesheet has changed.
The build process
-----------------
It's not obvious exactly when things get built, and so on. Here's an
overview:
- The HTML docs can be built manually by running 'make html-docs' in
valgrind/docs/. (Don't use 'make html'; that is a valid built-in
automake target, but does nothing.) Likewise for PDF/PS with 'make
print-docs'.
- 'make dist' (nb: at the top level, not in docs/) puts the XML files
into the tarball. It also builds the HTML docs and puts them in too,
in valgrind/docs/html/ (including style sheets, images, etc).
- 'make install' installs the HTML docs in
$(install)/share/doc/valgrind/html/, if they are present. (They will
be present if you are installing from the result of a 'make dist'.
They might not be present if you are developing in a Subversion
workspace and have not built them.) It doesn't install the XML docs,
as they're not useful installed.
If the XML processing tools ever mature enough to become standard, we
could just build the docs from XML when doing 'make install', which
would be simpler.
The XML Toolchain
------------------
I spent some time on the docbook-apps list in order to ascertain
the most-useful / widely-available / least-fragile / advanced
toolchain. Basically, everything has problems of one sort or
another, so I ended up going with what I felt was the
least-problematical of the various options.
The maintainer is responsible for ensure the following tools are
present on his system:
- xmllint: using libxml version 20620
- xsltproc: Using libxml 20620, libxslt 10114 and libexslt 812
(Nb:be sure to use a version based on libxml2
version 2.6.11 or later. There was a bug in
xml:base processing in versions before that.)
- pdfxmltex: pdfeTeX 3.141592-1.21a-2.2 (Web2C 7.5.4)
- pdftops: version 3.00
- DocBook: version 4.2
- bzip2
A big problem is latency. Norman Walsh is constantly updating
DocBook, but the tools tend to lag behind somewhat. It is
important that the versions get on with each other. If you
decide to upgrade something, then it is your responsibility to
ascertain whether things still work nicely - this *cannot* be
assumed.
Print output: if make expires with an error, cat output.
If you see something like this:
! TeX capacity exceeded, sorry [pool size=436070]
then look at this:
http://lists.debian.org/debian-doc/2003/12/msg00020.html
and modify your texmf files accordingly.
Catalog/Stylesheet Location
---------------------------
/etc/xml/ seems to have become the standard place for catalogs
in recent distros.
Notes [May 2009]
-----------------
For Ubuntu 9.04, to do non-print-docs builds (ie. with BUILD_ALL_DOCS
commented out) I had to:
sudo apt-get install docbook docbook-xsl
Actually, I'm not sure if the 'docbook' is necessary, but 'docbook-xsl'
definitely is.
Then I had to change the value of XSL_MAN_STYLE from this:
/usr/share/xml/docbook/stylesheet/nwalsh/current/manpages/docbook.xsl
to this:
/usr/share/xml/docbook/stylesheet/nwalsh/manpages/docbook.xsl
Notes [Mar. 2007]
-----------------
For SuSE 10.1, I have to install the following packages to get a
working toolchain. Non-indented ones I asked YaST to install;
indented ones are extras it added on:
docbook_4
iso_ent
xmlcharent
docbook-dsssl-stylesheets
docbook_3
docbook-xsl-stylesheets
xmltex
gd
latex-ucs
te_latex
tetex
xaw3d
passivetex
xpdf
xpdf-tools
pdfxmltex still bombs when building the print docs. On SuSE 10.1 I
edited /etc/texmf/web2c/texmf.cnf and changed
pool_size.pdfxmltex = 500000
to
pool_size.pdfxmltex = 1500000
and that fixes it.
It is also reported that the print docs build OK on Fedora Core 5.
Notes [Nov. 2005]
-----------------
After upgrading to Suse 10, found a (known) bug in PassiveTex which
broke the build, so added a bug-fix to 'docs/lib/vg-fo.xsl'.
Bug-fix related links:
http://lists.oasis-open.org/archives/docbook/200509/msg00032.html
http://www.dpawson.co.uk/docbook/tools.html#d850e300
http://www.haskell.org/pipermail/glasgow-haskell-bugs/2005-January.txt
Notes [July 2005]
-----------------
jrs had to install zillions of packages on SuSE 9.2 in order to
build the print docs (make print-docs), including
passivetex
xpdf (for pdftops, which does the nicest job)
Even then, pdfxmltex eventually dies with "TeX capacity exceeded,
sorry [pool size = 67555]" or some such. To fix this, he edited
/etc/texmf/texmf.cnf and changed
pool_size.pdfxmltex = 500000
to
pool_size.pdfxmltex = 1500000
and that fixed it.
Notes [Nov. 2004]:
-----------------
- the end of file.xml must have only ONE newline after the last tag:
</book>
- pdfxmltex barfs if given a filename with an underscore in it
References:
----------
- samba have got all the stuff
http://websvn.samba.org/listing.php?rep=4&path=/trunk/&opt=dir&sc=1
excellent on-line howto reference:
- http://www.cogent.ca/
using automake with docbook:
- http://www.movement.uklinux.net/docs/docbook-autotools/index.html
Debugging catalog processing:
- http://xmlsoft.org/catalog.html#Declaring
xmlcatalog -v <catalog-file>
shell script to generate xml catalogs for docbook 4.1.2:
- http://xmlsoft.org/XSLT/docbook.html
configure.in re pdfxmltex
- http://cvs.sourceforge.net/viewcvs.py/logreport/service/configure.in?rev=1.325
some useful xls stylesheets in cvs:
- http://cvs.sourceforge.net/viewcvs.py/perl-xml/perl-xml-faq/
TODO LESS CRUCIAL:
------------------
- concat titlepage + subtitle page in fo output
- try and get the QuickStart and FAQ titlepage+toc+content onto one page