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When building in a portage chroot, we do not have the environment needed to build pylibfdt. It is instead build as a separate package. Provide a build option to tell U-Boot to skip this part of the build. We still need it to use binman, etc. but don't need it to build its dependencies. Signed-off-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org> Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@chromium.org> [s/build bytes/builds bytes in tools.rst] Signed-off-by: Bin Meng <bmeng.cn@gmail.com> |
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libfdt | ||
pylibfdt | ||
.gitignore | ||
checks.c | ||
data.c | ||
dtc-lexer.l | ||
dtc-parser.y | ||
dtc.c | ||
dtc.h | ||
flattree.c | ||
fstree.c | ||
livetree.c | ||
Makefile | ||
Makefile.dtc | ||
README | ||
srcpos.c | ||
srcpos.h | ||
treesource.c | ||
update-dtc-source.sh | ||
util.c | ||
util.h | ||
version_gen.h |
The source tree contains the Device Tree Compiler (dtc) toolchain for working with device tree source and binary files and also libfdt, a utility library for reading and manipulating the binary format. DTC and LIBFDT are maintained by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au> Jon Loeliger <loeliger@gmail.com> Python library -------------- A Python library is also available. To build this you will need to install swig and Python development files. On Debian distributions: sudo apt-get install swig python3-dev The library provides an Fdt class which you can use like this: $ PYTHONPATH=../pylibfdt python3 >>> import libfdt >>> fdt = libfdt.Fdt(open('test_tree1.dtb', mode='rb').read()) >>> node = fdt.path_offset('/subnode@1') >>> print(node) 124 >>> prop_offset = fdt.first_property_offset(node) >>> prop = fdt.get_property_by_offset(prop_offset) >>> print('%s=%s' % (prop.name, prop.as_str())) compatible=subnode1 >>> node2 = fdt.path_offset('/') >>> print(fdt.getprop(node2, 'compatible').as_str()) test_tree1 You will find tests in tests/pylibfdt_tests.py showing how to use each method. Help is available using the Python help command, e.g.: $ cd pylibfdt $ python3 -c "import libfdt; help(libfdt)" If you add new features, please check code coverage: $ sudo apt-get install python3-coverage $ cd tests # It's just 'coverage' on most other distributions $ python3-coverage run pylibfdt_tests.py $ python3-coverage html # Open 'htmlcov/index.html' in your browser The library can be installed with pip from a local source tree: pip install . [--user|--prefix=/path/to/install_dir] Or directly from a remote git repo: pip install git+git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/utils/dtc/dtc.git@main The install depends on libfdt shared library being installed on the host system first. Generally, using --user or --prefix is not necessary and pip will use the default location for the Python installation which varies if the user is root or not. You can also install everything via make if you like, but pip is recommended. To install both libfdt and pylibfdt you can use: make install [PREFIX=/path/to/install_dir] To disable building the python library, even if swig and Python are available, use: make NO_PYTHON=1 More work remains to support all of libfdt, including access to numeric values. Adding a new function to libfdt.h --------------------------------- The shared library uses libfdt/version.lds to list the exported functions, so add your new function there. Check that your function works with pylibfdt. If it cannot be supported, put the declaration in libfdt.h behind #ifndef SWIG so that swig ignores it. Tests ----- Test files are kept in the tests/ directory. Use 'make check' to build and run all tests. If you want to adjust a test file, be aware that tree_tree1.dts is compiled and checked against a binary tree from assembler macros in trees.S. So if you change that file you must change tree.S also. Mailing list ------------ The following list is for discussion about dtc and libfdt implementation mailto:devicetree-compiler@vger.kernel.org Core device tree bindings are discussed on the devicetree-spec list: mailto:devicetree-spec@vger.kernel.org