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| +Building with Skia Tutorial |
| +=========================== |
| + |
| +dsinclair@chromium.org |
| + |
| + |
| +This document describes the steps used to create an application that uses Skia. The assumptions are that you're using: |
| + |
| + * [git](http://git-scm.com) |
| + * [gclient](https://code.google.com/p/gclient/) |
| + * [gyp](https://code.google.com/p/gyp/) |
| + * [ninja](http://martine.github.io/ninja/) |
| + |
| +I'm going to describe up to the point where we can build a simple application that prints out an SkPaint. |
| + |
| +Overview |
| +-------- |
| + |
| + 1. Create remote repository. |
| + 1. Configure and sync using gclient. |
| + 1. Create DEPS file to pull in third party repositories. |
| + 1. Setup gitignore for directories pulled in from DEPS. |
| + 1. Configure GYP. |
| + 1. Setup GYP auto-run when gclient sync is executed. |
| + |
| +gclient setup |
| +------------- |
| +The first step is to setup a remote git repo, take your pick of provider. In |
| +my case, the repo is called UsingSkia and lives on |
| +[bitbucket](https://bitbucket.org). |
| + |
| +With the remote repo created, we create a .gclient configuration file. The |
| +gclient config command will write the file for us: |
| + |
| + $ gclient config --name=src https://bitbucket.org/dj2/usingskia.git |
| + |
| +This will create the following: |
| + |
| + solutions = [ |
| + { "name" : "src", |
| + "url" : "https://bitbucket.org/dj2/usingskia.git", |
| + "deps_file" : "DEPS", |
| + "managed" : True, |
| + "custom_deps" : { |
| + }, |
| + "safesync_url": "", |
| + }, |
| + ] |
| + cache_dir = None |
| + |
| +The name that we configured is the directory in which the repo will be checked |
| +out. This is done by running gclient sync. There is a bit of magic that |
| +gclient does around the url to determine if the repo is SVN or GIT. I've found |
| +the use of ssh:// and the .git on the end seem to work to get the right SCM |
| +type. |
| + |
| + $ gclient sync |
|
jcgregorio
2015/01/07 13:53:23
4 leading spaces
|
| + |
| +This should execute a bunch of commands (and, in this case, may end with an |
| +error because the repo was empty. That seems to be fine.) When finished, you |
| +should have a src directory with your git repository checked out. |
| + |
| +DEPS |
| +---- |
| + |
| +With the repo created we can go ahead and create our src/DEPS file. The DEPS |
| +file is used by gclient to checkout the dependent repositories of our |
| +application. In this case, the Skia repository. |
| + |
| +Create a src/DEPS file with the following: |
| + |
| +~~~~ |
| + |
| + vars = { |
| + "skia_revision": "a6a8f00a3977e71dbce9da50a32c5e9a51c49285", |
| + } |
| + |
| + deps = { |
| + "src/third_party/skia/": |
| + "http://skia.googlecode.com/skia.git@" + Var("skia_revision"), |
| + } |
| + |
| +~~~~ |
| + |
| +There are two sections to the `DEPS` file at the moment, `vars` and `deps`. |
| +The `vars` sections defines variables we can use later in the file with the |
| +`Var()` accessor. In this case, we define our root directory, a shorter name |
| +for any googlecode repositories and a specific revision of Skia that we're |
| +going to use. I've pinned to a specific version to insulate the application |
| +from changes in the Skia tree. This lets us know that when someone checks out |
| +the repo they'll be using the same version of Skia that we've built and tested |
| +against. |
| + |
| +The `deps` section defines our dependencies. Currently we have one dependency |
| +which we're going to checkout into the `src/third_party/skia` directory. |
| + |
| +Once the deps file is created, commit and push it to the remote repository. |
| +Once done, we can use gclient to checkout our dependencies. |
| + |
| + $ gclient sync |
| + |
| +This should output a whole bunch of lines about files that are being added to |
| +your project. This may also be a good time to create a `.gitignore` file. You |
| +don't want to check the `third_party/skia directory` into your repository as |
| +it's being managed by gclient. |
| + |
| +Now, we've run into a problem. Skia itself has a `DEPS` file which defines the |
| +`third_party` libraries it needs to build. None of those dependencies are being |
| +checked out so Skia will fail to build. |
| + |
| +The way I found around that is to add a second solution to the `.gclient` |
| +file. This solution tells gclient about Skia and will pull in the needed |
| +dependencies. I edited my `.gclient` file (created by the `gclient config` |
| +command above) to look as follows: |
| + |
| + solutions = [ |
| + { "name" : "src", |
| + "url" : "https://bitbucket.org/dj2/usingskia.git", |
| + "deps_file" : "DEPS", |
| + "managed" : True, |
| + "custom_deps" : { |
| + }, |
| + "safesync_url": "", |
| + }, |
| + { "name" : "src/third_party/skia", |
| + "url" : "http://skia.googlecode.com/skia.git@a6a8f00a3977e71dbce9da50a32c5e9a51c49285", |
| + "deps_file" : "DEPS", |
| + "managed" : True, |
| + "custom_deps" : { |
| + }, |
| + "safesync_url": "", |
| + }, |
| + ] |
| + cache_dir = None |
| + |
| +This is a little annoying at the moment since I've duplicated the repository |
| +revision number in the `.gclient` file. I'm hoping to find a way to do this |
| +through the `DEPS` file, but until then, this seems to work. |
| + |
| +With that done, re-run `gclient sync` and you should see a whole lot more |
| +repositories being checked out. The |
| +`src/third_party/skia/third_party/externals` directory should now be |
| +populated. |
| + |
| +GYP |
| +--- |
| + |
| +The final piece of infrastructure we need to set up is GYP. GYP is a build |
| +system generator, in this project we're going to have it build ninja |
| +configuration files. |
| + |
| +First, we need to add GYP to our project. We'll do that by adding a new entry |
| +to the deps section of the `DEPS` file. |
| + |
| + "src/tools/gyp": |
| + (Var("googlecode_url") % "gyp") + "/trunk@1700", |
| + |
| +As you can see, I'm going to put the library into `src/tools/gyp` and checkout |
| +revision 1700 (note, the revision used here, 1700, was the head revision at |
| +the time the `DEPS` file was written. You're probably safe to use the |
| +tip-of-tree revision in your `DEPS` file). A quick `gclient sync` and we |
| +should have everything checked out. |
| + |
| +In order to run GYP we'll create a wrapper script. I've called this |
| +`src/build/gyp_using_skia`. |
| + |
| +~~~~ |
| +#!/usr/bin/python |
| +import os |
| +import sys |
| + |
| +script_dir = os.path.dirname(__file__) |
| +using_skia_src = os.path.abspath(os.path.join(script_dir, os.pardir)) |
| + |
| +sys.path.insert(0, os.path.join(using_skia_src, 'tools', 'gyp', 'pylib')) |
| +import gyp |
| + |
| +if __name__ == '__main__': |
| + args = sys.argv[1:] |
| + |
| + if not os.environ.get('GYP_GENERATORS'): |
| + os.environ['GYP_GENERATORS'] = 'ninja' |
| + |
| + args.append('--check') |
| + args.append('-I%s/third_party/skia/gyp/common.gypi' % using_skia_src) |
| + |
| + args.append(os.path.join(script_dir, '..', 'using_skia.gyp')) |
| + |
| + print 'Updating projects from gyp files...' |
| + sys.stdout.flush() |
| + |
| + sys.exit(gyp.main(args)) |
| +~~~~ |
| + |
| +Most of this is just setup code. The two interesting bits are: |
| + |
| + 1. `args.append('-I%s/third_party/skia/gyp/common.gypi' % using_skia_src)` |
| + 1. `args.append(os.path.join(script_dir, '..', 'using_skia.gyp'))` |
| + |
| +In the case of 1, we're telling GYP to include (-I) the |
| +`src/third_party/skia/gyp/common.gypi` file which will define necessary |
| +variables for Skia to compile. In the case of 2, we're telling GYP that the |
| +main configuration file for our application is `src/using_skia.gyp`. |
| + |
| +The `src/using_skia.gyp` file is as follows: |
| + |
| +~~~~ |
| +{ |
| + 'targets': [ |
| + { |
| + 'configurations': { |
| + 'Debug': { }, |
| + 'Release': { } |
| + }, |
| + 'target_name': 'using_skia', |
| + 'type': 'executable', |
| + 'dependencies': [ |
| + 'third_party/skia/gyp/skia_lib.gyp:skia_lib' |
| + ], |
| + 'include_dirs': [ |
| + 'third_party/skia/include/config', |
| + 'third_party/skia/include/core', |
| + ], |
| + 'sources': [ |
| + 'app/main.cpp' |
| + ], |
| + 'ldflags': [ |
| + '-lskia', '-stdlib=libc++', '-std=c++11' |
| + ], |
| + 'cflags': [ |
| + '-Werror', '-W', '-Wall', '-Wextra', '-Wno-unused-parameter', '-g', '-O0' |
| + ] |
| + } |
| + ] |
| +} |
| +~~~~ |
| + |
| +There is a lot going on in there, I'll touch on some of the highlights. The |
| +`configurations` section allows us to have different build flags for our `Debug` |
| +and `Release` build (in this case they're the same, but I wanted to define |
| +them.) The `target_name` defines the name of the build target which we'll |
| +provide to ninja. It will also be the name of the executable that we build. |
| + |
| +The dependencies section lists our build dependencies. These will be built |
| +before our sources are built. In this case, we depend on the `skia_lib` target |
| +inside `third_party/skia/gyp/skia_lib.gyp`. |
| + |
| +The include_dirs will be added to the include path when our files are built. |
| +We need to reference code in the config and core directories of Skia. |
| + |
| +`sources`, `ldflags` and `cflags` should be obvious. |
| + |
| +Our application is defined in `src/app/main.cpp` as: |
| + |
| +~~~~ |
| +#include "SkPaint.h" |
| +#include "SkString.h" |
| + |
| +int main(int argc, char** argv) { |
| + SkPaint paint; |
| + paint.setColor(SK_ColorRED); |
| + |
| + SkString* str = new SkString(); |
| + paint.toString(str); |
| + |
| + fprintf(stdout, "%s\n", str->c_str()); |
| + |
| + return 0; |
| +} |
| +~~~~ |
| + |
| +We're just printing out an SkPaint to show that everything is linking correctly. |
| + |
| +Now, we can run: |
| + |
| + $ ./build/gyp_using_skia |
| + |
| +And, we get an error. Turns out, Skia is looking for a `find\_mac\_sdk.py` file in |
| +a relative tools directory which doesn't exist. Luckily, that's easy to fix |
| +with another entry in our DEPS file. |
| + |
| + "src/tools/": |
| + File((Var("googlecode_url") % "skia") + "/trunk/tools/find_mac_sdk.py@" + |
| + Var("skia_revision")), |
| + |
| +Here we using the `File()` function of `gclient` to specify that we're checking |
| +out an individual file. Running `gclient sync` should pull the necessary file |
| +into `src/tools`. |
| + |
| +With that, running `build/gyp\_using\_skia` should complete successfully. You |
| +should now have an `out/` directory with a `Debug/` and `Release/` directory inside. |
| +These correspond to the configurations we specified in `using\_skia.gyp`. |
| + |
| +With all that out of the way, if you run: |
| + |
| + $ ninja -C out/Debug using_skia |
| + |
| +The build should execute and you'll end up with an `out/Debug/using\_skia` which |
| +when executed, prints out our SkPaint entry. |
| + |
| +Autorun GYP |
| +----------- |
| + |
| +One last thing, having to run `build/gyp\_using\_skia` after each sync is a bit of |
| +a pain. We can fix that by adding a `hooks` section to our `DEPS` file. The `hooks` |
| +section lets you list a set of hooks to execute after `gclient` has finished the |
| +sync. |
| + |
| + hooks = [ |
| + { |
| + # A change to a .gyp, .gypi or to GYP itself should run the generator. |
| + "name": "gyp", |
| + "pattern": ".", |
| + "action": ["python", "src/build/gyp_using_skia"] |
| + } |
| + ] |
| + |
| +Adding the above to the end of DEPS and running gclient sync should show the |
| +GYP files being updated at the end of the sync procedure. |
| + |