README.md: Ongoing beautification

Signed-off-by: Jan Lindemann <jan@janware.com>
This commit is contained in:
Jan Lindemann 2019-07-01 14:22:24 +00:00
commit d3f05b12b2

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@ -14,8 +14,8 @@ makefile snippets from your own projects' makefiles, like so:
include $(JWBDIR)/make/cpp.mk
```
where `JWBDIR` needs to point to jw-build's installation directory. In this
example the snippet `cpp.mk` would by default take all C++ files it finds in
where `JWBDIR` needs to point to JW-Build's installation directory. In this
example, the snippet `cpp.mk` would by default take all C++ files it finds in
the directory where its included, compile them and and add them to a shared
package library. `js.mk` would by default minify all JavaSript it finds,
`java.mk` jar up .java files into classes and jar-files, and so on. JW-Build
@ -24,14 +24,15 @@ locations with standardish defaults.
JW-Build is small. It's small enough to be self-documenting. Well, okay,
somewhat self-documenting. You have to know GNU Makefile syntax to understand
what it does. You can install it with your distribution's package manager, or
you can keep it within your code versioning system, alongside your own code.
It's also designed to be the lightest possible touch on any given source code
package, in terms of code you need to add to a package you want to build with
it, and also in terms of needed prerequisite software packages. This way, it's
easily introduced - and it's also easy to get rid of, should you choose to do
so at some point in time. You will then have all your settings and compiler
flags in well-defined places already.
what it does, and dig into its code, ideally with a working example. You can
install it with your distribution's package manager, or you can keep it within
your code versioning system, alongside your own code. It's also designed to be
the lightest possible touch on any given source code package, in terms of code
you need to add to a package you want to build with it, and also in terms of
needed prerequisite software packages. This way, it's easily introduced - and
it's also easy to get rid of, should you choose to do so at some point in time.
You will then have all your settings like file system path definitions and
compiler flags in well-defined places already.
JW-Build runs a recursive make, so, with a few exceptions such as submodules,
you will need a makefile in every directory with source code. Most, if not all
@ -41,33 +42,33 @@ involving multiple packages - as centrally or as locally as you want. You can
override any of JW-Build's default variables - for many packages, for an entire
package, or for any subdirectory of a given package, at your option. You can
write your own snippets and reuse them in multiple places. You can keep
overrides in your versioning system or add them to a `local.mk` which only your
machine knows about. Or you can use environment variables, of course. JW-Build
avoids makefile code generation as seen with CMake or GNU Autotools. This keeps
the code small and readable for easy debugging. Okay, for relatively easy
debugging. To achieve this, JW-Build has to detect a couple of things in every
directory it enters, but it uses various caching mechanisms to keep builds
still reasonably fast.
overrides in your versioning system or add them to `local.mk`-files as needed,
which only your machine knows about. Or you can use environment variables, of
course. JW-Build avoids makefile code generation as seen with CMake or GNU
Autotools. This keeps the code small and readable for easy debugging. Okay, for
relatively easy debugging. To achieve this, JW-Build has to detect a couple of
things in every directory it enters, but it uses various caching mechanisms to
keep builds still reasonably fast.
JW-Build has makefile snippets for building libraries and executables, snippets
that output code compiled from C/C++, Python, Java, JavaScript and LaTeX, and
it's easily extendible to support any given programming language or task. It's
in use at janware for managing sub-builds of Maven, Ant, CMake and others, and
for packaging the results. It provides targets to produce Debian, RPM and IPK
packages, install them locally or remotely, or feed them into a DevOps
pipeline, taking note of released versions within GIT, SVN or CVS. It detects
if a package needs to be re-released because its source code changed. Or because
a package it depends on has changed incompatibly. JW-Build has built-in
support for collaboration over a set of remote Git repositories. It supports a
simple configuration file per package for specifying package metadata, e.g. its
dependencies, license, description, pre- and postinstall scriptlets, and so on.
It has a SAT-solver built in, for building multiple packages in the right
order, including packages that are not organized with jw-build, based on that
metadata. With the same metadata, it can also automatically generate BitBake
recipes and run Yocto-builds incorporating your software. It generates runtime,
development and source code package variants. It supports cross compilation
with MinGW and the GNU toolchain. It's tested on Debian, Ubuntu, OpenSUSE,
Fedora / CentOS / RHEL, and many Unices.
for packaging the results. It provides targets to flash binaries onto MCUs,
produce Debian, RPM and IPK packages, install them locally or remotely, or feed
them into a DevOps pipeline, taking note of released versions within GIT, SVN
or CVS. It detects if a package needs to be re-released because its source code
changed. Or because a package it depends on has changed incompatibly. JW-Build
has built-in support for collaboration over well-defined sets of remote Git
repositories. It supports a simple configuration file per package for
specifying package metadata, e.g. its dependencies, license, description, pre-
and postinstall scriptlets, and so on. It has a SAT-solver built in, for
building multiple packages in the right order, including packages that are not
organized with JW-Build, based on that metadata. With the same metadata, it can
also automatically generate BitBake recipes and run Yocto-builds incorporating
your software. It generates runtime, development and source code package
variants. It supports cross compilation with MinGW and the GNU toolchain. It's
tested on Debian, Ubuntu, OpenSUSE, Fedora / CentOS / RHEL, and many Unices.
JW-Build is designed to be friendly to both developers and integrators.
Developers can cd into any given directory, edit the source code, run `make`,
@ -82,10 +83,10 @@ TARGET_HOST=myserver.acme.com make pkg-remote-install
And of course, it can build, package and release itself. Without being
installed, which is a Good Thing (TM).
## Documentation
## Usage
See https://janware.com/wiki/pub/sw/build/ for documentation on how to get
and use JW-Build within a janware build tree.
and use JW-Build within the janware build tree.
If you want to use it standalone, OTOH, do the following to get a minimal
working example:
@ -101,9 +102,9 @@ containing two files:
```
`TOPDIR` points to, you guessed it, the toplevel directory of your package.
You will have defined it yourself, see the next point. Note that all
You will have defined it yourself, see the next point. Note that all
directory paths can be relative, which is nice if you want to organize
trees.
multiple packages in a fixed tree layout.
2. `project.conf`, containing
@ -126,10 +127,10 @@ Done. Well, in principle. Other notable snippets are `topdir.mk` for the
toplevel directory, `dirs.mk` for other directories with subdirectories,
`lib.mk` for `$(TOPDIR)/lib`, `include.mk` for `$(TOPDIR)/include`, and
`make.mk` for `$(TOPDIR)/make`. You should add them in the same manner. Once
you add those makefiles, running `make` will do - something. Try and see what
you add those makefiles, running `make` will do - something. Try and see what
happens. Every snippet supports at least the targets `all`, `install`, `clean`
and `distclean`. `make echo-makefiles` shows you all included snippets,
`cat-makefiles` concatenates them. Hitting TAB should show you all targets
`make cat-makefiles` concatenates them. Hitting TAB should show you all targets
supported in a particular directory. Good luck!
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