Packaging Guidelines for MinGW Windows cross-compiler
Introduction
The Fedora MinGW project's mission is to provide an excellent development environment for Fedora users who wish to cross-compile their programs to run on Windows, minimizing the need to use Windows at all. In the past developers have had to port and compile all of the libraries and tools they have needed, and this huge effort has happened independently many times over. We aim to eliminate duplication of work for application developers by providing a range of libraries and development tools which have already been ported to the cross-compiler environment. This means that developers will not need to recompile the application stack themselves, but can concentrate just on the changes needed to their own application.
Note that when deciding to contribute a new library to the Fedora MinGW project, it is advisable to start with our example specfile: http://hg.et.redhat.com/misc/fedora-mingw--devel/?fl=c010b6ca7d68;file=example/mingw-example.spec
Track Fedora native package versions
In general terms, MinGW packages which provide cross-compiled versions of packages already natively available in Fedora, should follow the native Fedora package as closely as possible. This means they should stay at the same version, include all the same patches as the native Fedora package, and be built with the same configuration options.
The MinGW SIG have written an RPM comparison tool which makes it possible to compare MinGW packages with the Fedora native packages, in order to determine whether versions, patches and configuration are aligned.
Follow Fedora policy
MinGW packages must follow Fedora policy, except where noted in this document. MinGW packages go through the same review process, CVS admin process etc as other Fedora packages.
Package naming
Packages should be named by prefixing the upstream package name
with mingw32-
Base packages
The base packages provide a root filesystem, base libraries, binutils
(basic programs like 'strip', 'ld' etc), the compiler (gcc) and the
Win32 API. Packages may need to depend on one or more of these. In
particular, almost any conceivable package should depend on
mingw32-filesystem
and mingw32-runtime
.
mingw32-filesystem |
Core filesystem directory layout, and RPM macros for spec files. Equivalent to 'filesystem' RPM |
mingw32-runtime |
Base libraries for core MinGW runtime & development environment. Equivalent to glibc & glibc-devel RPMs |
mingw32-binutils |
Cross-compiled binutils (utilities like 'strip', 'as', 'ld') which understand Windows executables and DLLs. Equivalent to 'binutils' RPM |
mingw32-w32api |
Win32 API. A free (public domain) reimplementation of the header files required to link to the Win32 API. No direct equivalent in base Fedora - glibc-devel is closest |
mingw32-gcc |
GNU compiler collection. Compilers for C and C++ which cross-compile to a Windows target. Equivalent to gcc RPM |
Filesystem layout
[root] | +- etc | | | +- rpm | | | +- macros.mingw32 | +- usr | +- bin - Links to cross compiler toolchain | | | +- i686-pc-mingw32-cpp | +- i686-pc-mingw32-gcc | +- i686-pc-mingw32-g++ | +- ... etc.. | +- lib | | | +- rpm | | | +- mingw32-defs - custom helper scripts for auto-requires, binary stripping, etc | +- mingw32-find-provides.sh - extra DLL names | +- mingw32-find-requires.sh - discover required DLL names | +- i686-pc-mingw32 - root of mingw toolchain and binaries - see next diagram
/usr/i686-pc-mingw32 | +- bin - Cross compiler toolchain | | | +- cpp | +- gcc | +- g++ | +- ... etc ... | +- lib - Cross compiler toolchain support libraries / files | +- sys-root - root for cross compiled binaries | +- mingw | +- bin - cross-compiled binaries & runtime DLL parts +- doc - documentation +- include - include files for cross compiled libs +- lib - cross-compiled static libraries & linktime DLL parts | | | +- pkgconfig - pkg-config definitions for libraries | +- share | +- man
Filenames of the cross-compilers and binutils
The cross-compilers and binutils are Fedora binaries and are therefore
placed in %{_bindir}
(ie. /usr/bin
)
according to the FHS and Fedora guidelines.
The cross-compilers and binutils which generate i686 binaries for Windows are named:
%{_bindir}/i686-pc-mingw32-gcc %{_bindir}/i686-pc-mingw32-g++ %{_bindir}/i686-pc-mingw32-ld %{_bindir}/i686-pc-mingw32-as %{_bindir}/i686-pc-mingw32-strip etc.
The same binaries are present in
%{_prefix}/i686-pc-mingw32/bin
without any prefix in the
name, ie:
%{_prefix}/i686-pc-mingw32/bin/gcc %{_prefix}/i686-pc-mingw32/bin/g++ %{_prefix}/i686-pc-mingw32/bin/ld %{_prefix}/i686-pc-mingw32/bin/as %{_prefix}/i686-pc-mingw32/bin/strip etc.
Naming of the root filesystem
The root filesystem contains Windows executables and DLLs and any other Windows-only files. It is necessary both because we need to store Windows libraries in order to link further libraries which depend on them, and also because MinGW requires a root filesystem location. The location (for i686 target) is provided by the macro:
%{_mingw32_sysroot} %{_prefix}/i686-pc-mingw32/sys-root
Standard mingw RPM macros
The mingw32-filesystem
package provides a number of
convenience macros for the cross compiled sysroot directories, and
toolchain. It is mandatory to use these macros in all MinGW packages
submitted to Fedora.
Toolchain macros
The following macros are for the %build and %install section of the spec
_mingw32_ar | i686-pc-mingw32-ar | cross compiler 'ar' binary |
_mingw32_cc | i686-pc-mingw32-gcc | cross compiler 'gcc' binary |
_mingw32_cflags | -O2 -g -pipe -Wall -Wp,-D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=2 -fexceptions --param=ssp-buffer-size=4 | |
_mingw32_configure | CC="%{_mingw32_cc}" CFLAGS="%{_mingw32_cflags}" ./configure --build=%_build --host=%{_mingw32_host} --target=%{_mingw32_target} --prefix=%{_mingw32_prefix} | standard invocation for autotools 'configure' scripts |
_mingw32_cpp | i686-pc-mingw32-gcc -E | cross compiler 'cpp' binary |
_mingw32_host | i686-pc-mingw32 | Host platform for build |
_mingw32_objdump | i686-pc-mingw32-objdump | cross compiler 'objdump' binary |
_mingw32_ranlib | i686-pc-mingw32-ranlib | cross compiler 'ranlib' binary |
_mingw32_strip | i686-pc-mingw32-strip | cross compiler 'strip' binary |
_mingw32_target | i686-pc-mingw32 | Target platform for build |
Filesystem location macros
The following macros are for use in %build, %install and %files sections of the RPM spec
_mingw32_bindir | %{_mingw32_prefix}/bin | Location of Windows executables. |
_mingw32_datadir | %{_mingw32_prefix}/share | Shared data used under Windows. |
_mingw32_docdir | %{_mingw32_prefix}/share/doc | Documentation. |
_mingw32_infodir | %{_mingw32_prefix}/share/info | Info files (see note below). |
_mingw32_includedir | %{_mingw32_prefix}/include | Header files used when cross-compiling for Windows. |
_mingw32_libdir | %{_mingw32_prefix}/lib | Windows libraries (see sections below). |
_mingw32_libexecdir | %{_mingw32_prefix}/libexec | |
_mingw32_mandir | %{_mingw32_prefix}/share/man | Man pages (see note below). |
_mingw32_prefix | %{_mingw32_sysroot}/mingw | Windows equivalent of %{_prefix}, required by MinGW. |
_mingw32_sbindir | %{_mingw32_prefix}/sbin | |
_mingw32_sysconfdir | %{_mingw32_prefix}/etc | Configuration files used when running under Windows. |
_mingw32_sysroot | %{_prefix}/i686-pc-mingw32/sys-root | Windows system root. |
Dependencies
If a package contains binaries which depend on a DLL provided by another package, these dependencies should be expressed in the form:
mingw32(foo.dll)
where foo.dll
is the name of the DLL. The name must be
converted to lowercase because Windows binaries contain case
insensitive dependencies.
All packages should depend on mingw32-filesystem
.
Correct dependency generation is done automatically. Packagers should include these lines in all library packages:
%define _use_internal_dependency_generator 0 %define __find_requires %{_mingw32_findrequires} %define __find_provides %{_mingw32_findprovides}
All specfiles should BuildRequire at least:
BuildRequires: mingw32-filesystem >= minimum-version
and any other BuildRequires that they need.
Build architecture
All packages should have:
BuildArch: noarch
unless they contain Fedora native executables.
Libraries (DLLs)
All libraries must be built as DLLs.
Because of the peculiarity of Windows, DLLs are stored in the
%{_mingw32_bindir}
directory, along with a control file in
the %{_mingw32_libdir}
directory. For example, for a
library called foo
there would be:
%{_mingw32_bindir}/foo.dll %{_mingw32_bindir}/foo.def %{_mingw32_libdir}/foo.dll.a %{_mingw32_libdir}/foo.la
All files are required in those locations in order to link
successfully, except that the .def
file is not always
built by libtool for reasons unknown, and the .dll
may
contain a version number although not always
(eg. foo-0.dll
).
Do not use %{_mingw32_bindir}/* or %{_mingw32_libdir}/* in %files section
The %files
section must list DLLs separately. Packages
must NOT use %{_mingw32_bindir}/*
or
%{_mingw32_libdir}/*
The reason for this is that libtool is very fragile and will give up
on building a DLL very easily. Therefore we force the name of the DLL
to be listed explicitly in the %files
section in order to
catch this during RPM builds.
Manpages and info files
If manpages or info files are simply duplicates of equivalent documentation found in Fedora native packages, then they should not be packaged in the MinGW package.
Static libraries
In accordance with ordinary Fedora policy, static libraries should not
be built, and if they are then they should be placed in a
-static
subpackage.
The exception is the base package mingw32-w32api
which
contains static libraries that are required for GCC to create
executables.
Stripping
Libraries and executables should be stripped. This is done correctly and automatically if the spec file includes these lines:
%define __strip %{_mingw32_strip} %define __objdump %{_mingw32_objdump}
(Note that if __strip and __objdump are not overridden in the specfile then this can sometimes cause Windows binaries to be corrupted).