Building_the_X_Window_System

Building the X Window System from Source

Introduction

This guide is for developers who wish to build the X Window System from source. If your area of interest is limited to a single package, like a driver or an application, check with your O/S first for development facilities.

Required Tools and Software Dependencies

The most common cause of build failures for first time builders is the lack of required tools. There are over 30 tools required to build all of the X Window System 200+ packages and half of them are not installed by default on most O/S or Linux distributions. The minimum version needed is shown in brackets where applicable.

It is strongly advised you install such packages from your O/S official packaging system. Check the RequiredPackages for your O/S. Some of the tools may not be required to build some areas of X. Some GNU utility, like make, have native O/S equivalent on non GNU systems.

Source Code Version Control

GNU Build System

Development Tools

Development Tools/Libraries

Cryptography

The X server requires one of the following cryptographic libraries.

Fonts

Documentation/XML Tools

These tools are optionals. If they are missing, the documentation will not be generated.

Freedesktop.org Dependencies

These freedesktop.org projects are required software dependencies to build X. If you use a build process based on the build.sh script or on JHBuild, the source will be obtained for you.

Selecting a Build Process

We are assuming you have installed the required tools but nothing else. There are two maintained build processes you can use. One is based on a simple Bourne script (build.sh) and one is a customization of the Gnome JHBuild process.

Build Process Based on build.sh Script

This build process simply runs a build.sh script that downloads the source code from the git repositories and builds each package in dependency order.

The source tree is where the source code is extracted from git. It would typically be something like $HOME/src. The installation tree is where the build generated objects (binaries, scripts, etc...) are created, typically $HOME/build.

The script is itself part of a package which needs to be obtained from a git repository. The following command will extract the source code from git:

cd $HOME/src
git clone git://anongit.freedesktop.org/git/xorg/util/modular util/modular

You are now ready to launch a full build by invoking the build script.

mkdir $HOME/build
cd $HOME/src
./util/modular/build.sh --clone $HOME/build

There are a good number of environment variables to be set and directories to be created. The script does a good job of setting default values. The --help option will list those variables and what they are used for. A common one is PREFIX which you may set to the installation directory. There is no variable for the source tree, you invoke commands from the top of the tree.

Take a look at the features available in that script. You will certainly appreciate the --autoresume when the build stops on error. If you do not need to build all the packages, you can customize a list using the -L and use it with the --modfile options.

Building from Archive Files

Alternatively, the script can build the source from archive files. X.Org regularly publishes versions of the source code in the form of tarballs. The example shown involves tarballs from the X11R7.6 release. The script can also build a mixture of tarballs and source from git.

You must first download the tarballs before running the build script. An input file containing URLs to read can be provided. You do not need to extract the tarballs. A sample command:

wget http://www.x.org/releases/X11R7.6/src/util/util-macros-1.11.0.tar.gz

You are now ready to launch a full build by invoking the build script. You can leave the --clone option in, any missing source will be obtained from git, at the current development level.

mkdir $HOME/build
cd $HOME/src
./util/modular/build.sh $HOME/build

Build Process Based on JHBuild

The second build process uses jhbuild, a program written by James Henstridge that can be used to automatically download module components from Git and then build them in the correct dependency order. Refrer to the JhBuildInstructions.

Features of the Build Script

The build script first sets up environment variables and creates missing directories. It then cycles through a list of packages in dependency order to download them and run the Autotools from the GNU Build System. Some of the features require a conceptual understanding of Autoconf and Automake. Use the --help for a complete list of options.

Environment Variables

You normally do not need to have any environment variable set to run a full build. The script assigns reasonable defaults. The --help option will list those variables and what they are used for.

Downloading and Updating Source Code

As seen when launching a full build, the --clone option will download the source code from git if it is missing on disk. The -p option will issue a git -pull --rebase to obtain the latest code currently in git.

Stop/Continue/Resume On Error

All builds eventually stop due to errors, sooner rather than later. The -n option allows the build script to continue the build with the next module. When the script terminates, it reports which ones failed. The --autoresume option writes a list of modules and can restart where it left off after you fixed the build error.

Specifying Modules to Build

The build script contains a full list of all X.Org modules and its dependent projects. That's a lot, over 200. You will most likely not need all of them. The -L will write this list to a file which you can edit and feed back to script using --modfile option. Make sure you understand the dependencies so as not to remove critical modules.

Making Tarballs

The X.Org modules are published as tarballs on the web. To create such tarballs, one can simply specify the -D option, but preferably -d as it performs a number of tests while creating the tarballs.

Debug Mode

The Automake default CFLAGS are -g and -O2. Using the -g option will add -g3 -O0 for additional debugging.

The Automake silent rules are enabled by default at version 1.11 and higher. You may need additional context to debug the error. The --retry-v1 will cause a rebuild of the module with the silent rules disabled.

Advanced Commands and Configuration

The build script provides additional flexibility in letting you specify arbitrary commands. You need more internal knowledge of the script and good experience with configuring and building modules. There is no checking to ensure that what you are trying to do makes sense.

The -a option will skip the Autoconf configuration. This speeds up the build when you know that all modules have already been configured and do not need their source to be updated. You can rely, up to a point, on the make build rules to reconfigure the module if it is out of date.

The --cmd option allows you to invoke a custom make or git command. You may want to run git status on all modules to ensure there are no local code changes for example.

The --confflags option allows you to supply any Autoconf configure option. One example that comes to mind is --disable-docs which will suppress the building of user documention. These may conflict will default values assigned to environment variables set by the script.

Building Individual Modules Yourself

The build script does not mind if you cd to an individual module and build it yourself. It will have no adverse affect on the build when you resume the use of the script. You just need some basic understanding of the Autotools. Beware that the build script sets environment variables for you which are not available when you type the commands yourself in the terminal.

Let's set those variables the way the script does it for you:

export PREFIX=$HOME/build
export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=$PREFIX/lib/pkgconfig:$PREFIX/share/pkgconfig
export ACLOCAL="aclocal -I $PREFIX/share/aclocal"
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$PREFIX/lib
export PATH=$PREFIX/bin:$PATH

Now that have exported those variables, the build script will use them in lieu of its internal defaults. You can now switch back and forth between the build script and the terminal and keep the same environment.

The script also creates directories for you:

mkdir -p $PREFIX/share/aclocal
mkdir -p $PREFIX/var/log

Download the font/util module and its dependency util/macros from git.

cd $HOME/src
git clone git://anongit.freedesktop.org/git/xorg/util/macros util/macros
git clone git://anongit.freedesktop.org/git/xorg/font/util font/util

Run the autogen.sh script, which will create and run the Autoconf configuration, and invoke the make command.

cd $HOME/src/util/macros
./autogen.sh --prefix $PREFIX && make install
cd $HOME/src/font/util
./autogen.sh --prefix $PREFIX && make install

This is exactly what the script does for you, note the order and the importance of running the install target. Without it, the font util module would not be able to use xorg-macros.m4 in $PREFIX/share/aclocal. For complete details on the packaging structure of a module read the INSTALL file in the root directory of the module.

When building from tarballs, the configuration has already been created and only needs to be run. The commands would be:

cd $HOME/src/util/macros
./configure --prefix $PREFIX && make install
cd $HOME/src/font/util
./configure --prefix $PREFIX && make install

The autogen.sh script is not part of the GNU Build System architecture and is kept for historical reasons. Other projects have different name and content for it. It should not be included in the tarball. If you need to recreate the configuration, autoreconf -vfi will do and is only what autogen.sh calls.

Using the Build

This section describes how to use the newly compiled X libraries, applications and X server.

X libraries

The X libraries which are built will typically be in $PREFIX/lib.

To use them you have to configure the linker to find them. On GNU/Linux systems you do:

export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$PREFIX/lib

Alternately, you might edit the /etc/ld.so.conf file and run ldconfig. There may be other ways to configure the linker on other systems.

Once this is done X applications should use the newly compiled libraries.

X applications

The X client programs which are built will be found in $PREFIX/bin. Generally, these programs can be run with the default user permissions.

Running the X server

Verify that the Xorg binary that will get executed is really the one you just build. If not, adjust $PATH.

ls -l `which Xorg`

The Xorg binary needs to be suid root which requires root privilege.

chown root Xorg
chmod 4711 Xorg

Run the new X server using the most basic command. Your computer screen will blank out and your desktop will be replaced with a small X terminal window with no borders. To return to your desktop, you can type exit or you can press Ctrl Alt F7 (on most platforms).

Please read the above paragraph carefully before issuing the following command.

Xorg :1 -terminate & sleep 2 ; DISPLAY=:1 xterm

Working with git submodules

Submodules allow foreign repositories to be embedded within a dedicated subdirectory of the source tree, always pointed at a particular commit. This section assumes you are comfortable with the similar tasks when performed without git submodules. You might be interested in the Kernel Git Submodule Tutorial.

Cloning a module with submodules

After cloning the module, the git submodule command will clone and initialize the submodules specified in the .gitmodules file. In this example, the submodule path is m4. Git keeps track of which submodule commit to checkout. Later versions of the git clone command have a --recursive option.

git clone git://anongit.freedesktop.org/xcb/util
git submodule update --init

Updating a module

It may be that only the module has changed since the last update, or that both the module and the submodule have changed.

git pull --rebase
git submodule update

It may be that only the submodule has changed and that these changes should be picked-up by the module.

cd m4
git pull origin master
git status
cd ..
git commit -a -s

Rolling back a module

It may happen you need to revert the state of a module and a submodule to a previous point in time. The module should then point to the matching commit of the submodule. The commit numbers are valid, you can run the commands.

git reset --hard 02289ca
git submodule update

You should see this output:

HEAD is now at 02289ca Bump version to 0.3.8
Submodule path 'm4': checked out '55e8069773efd794a91d5fb37bfceeebae2e378a'

The log http://cgit.freedesktop.org/xcb/util/log/m4 will show the commit history for the submodule.

Hooking up a submodule to a module

A submodule has a git repository like any other module. It is only different in the way it gets used. Several modules can include the submodule containing reusable code.

git submodule add git://anongit.freedesktop.org/xcb/util-common-m4 m4
git submodule update --init

You should see this output from git status:

# On branch master
# Changes to be committed:
#   (use "git reset HEAD <file>..." to unstage)
#
#       new file:   .gitmodules
#       new file:   m4
#

Detaching a submodule from a module

There is no git submodule remove command. Given our example where the submodule path is m4,

git config --remove-section submodule.m4
git config --file .gitmodules --remove-section submodule.m4
git rm --cached m4
rm -fr m4

Create a commit for the changes incurred by the module and you are done. Note that the submodule still exists at fdo.org, you have only detached and deleted your module copy.

Applying changes to a submodule

Working from within a submodule

To directly modify sources referenced by a submodule, just change to the directory of the submodule and work with it like with a normal repository. Note however, that the state of a submodule is controlled by the supermodule and that under certain conditions it might even be possible to lose unpublished work. For more, see the Gotchas section of the Kernel Git Submodule Tutorial.

Using a local clone of a submodule

It is also possible to separately clone the repository and redirect the upstream URL of the submodule to the local version. For example, the configuration of a submodule m4 in m4/.git/config could look like:

[remote "origin"]
        fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
        url = git://anongit.freedesktop.org/xcb/util-common-m4.git

Simply set the value of url to the path of the local repository.

[remote "origin"]
        fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
        url = /path/to/util-common-m4.git

Note, that we are changing the configuration of the submodule at m4/.git/config and not the configuration of the supermodule at .git/config.

To use a different location from the start, it is also possible to change the submodule configuration in the supermodule before updating the submodule for the first time. The file .gitmodules specifies the official location of the submodule and changes to it are being tracked. But that file does not need to be changed for our purpose. The following command copies the contents of .gitmodules to the configuration of the supermodule at .git/config:

git submodule init

The submodule has not been checked out yet, and so it is possible to select a different location. For example, the configuration in .git/config could look like:

[submodule "m4"]
        url = git://anongit.freedesktop.org/xcb/util-common-m4.git

Insert the preferred location like above and then update the submodule with:

git submodule update

Creating a submodule

A git submodule is created just like any other git module. The reasons for using a module as a submodule is beyond the scope of this section. In the XCB example, the goal was code reuse.

Crosscompiling

There is a separate page dedicated to issues around CrossCompilingXorg.

New Modules

When adding modules to the tree, you may want to read the NewModuleGuidelines.