view README.Porting @ 5067:61d53410eb41

Fixed bug #859 CREATE_SUBDIRS helps a lot if browsing HTML documentation in a file browser. ALWAYS_DETAILED_SEC makes sure everything has at least the automatic documentation like function prototype and source references. STRIP_FROM_PATH allows you to include only the relevant portions of the files' paths, cleaning up both the file list and directory tree, though you need to change the path listed here to match wherever you put SDL. ALIASES avoids some warnings generated by C:\source\svn.libsdl.org\trunk\SDL\src\joystick\darwin\10.3.9-FIX\IOHIDLib.h. It seems Apple uses a few commands which are not normally supported by Doxygen. BUILTIN_STL_SUPPORT adds support for parsing code which makes use of the standard template library. There isn't a lot of C++ in SDL (some in bwindow at least), but this still seems like a good idea. TYPEDEF_HIDES_STRUCT means that for code like this: typedef struct A {int B;} C; C is documented as a structure containing B instead of a typedef mapped to A. EXTRACT_ALL, EXTRACT_PRIVATE, EXTRACT_STATIC, EXTRACT_LOCAL_METHODS, EXTRACT_ANON_NSPACES and INTERNAL_DOCS make sure that _everything_ is documented. CASE_SENSE_NAMES = NO avoids potential conflicts when building documentation on case insensitive file systems like NTFS and FAT32. WARN_NO_PARAMDOC lets you know when you have documented some, but not all, of the parameters of a function. This is useful when you're working on adding such documentation since it makes partially documented functions easier to spot. WARN_LOGFILE writes warnings to a seperate file instead of mixing them in with stdout. When not running in quiet mode, these warnings can be hard to spot without this flag. I added *.h.in and *.h.default to FILE_PATTERNS to generate documentation for config.h.in and config.h.default. RECURSIVE tells doxygen to look not only in the input directory, but also in subfolders. EXCLUDE avoids documenting things like test programs, examples and templates which need to be documented separately. I've used EXCLUDE_PATTERNS to exclude non-source subdirectories that often find their way into source folders (such as obj or .svn). EXAMPLE_PATH lists directories doxygen will search to find included example code. So far, SDL doesn't really use this feature, but I've listed some likely locations. SOURCE_BROWSER adds syntax highlighted source code to the HTML output. USE_HTAGS is nice, but not available on Windows. INLINE_SOURCES adds the body of a function to it's documentation so you can quickly see exactly what it does. ALPHABETICAL_INDEX generates an alphabetical list of all structures, functions, etc., which makes it much easier to find what you're looking for. IGNORE_PREFIX skips the SDL_ prefix when deciding which index page to place an item on so you don't have everything show up under "S". HTML_DYNAMIC_SECTIONS hides the includes/included by diagrams by default and adds JavaScript to allow the user to show and hide them by clicking a link. ENUM_VALUES_PER_LINE = 1 makes enums easier to read by placing each value on it's own line. GENERATE_TREEVIEW produces a two frame index page with a navigation tree on the left. I have LaTeX and man pages turned off to speed up doxygen, you may want to turn them back on yourself. I added _WIN32=1 to PREDEFINED to cause SDL to output documentation related to Win32 builds of SDL. Normally, doxygen gets confused since there are multiple definitions for various structures and formats that vary by platform. Without this doxygen can produce broken documentation or, if you're lucky, output documentation only for the dummy drivers, which isn't very useful. You need to pick a platform. GENERATE_TAGFILE produces a file which can be used to link other doxygen documentation to the SDL documentation. CLASS_DIAGRAMS turns on class diagrams even when dot is not available. HAVE_DOT tells doxygen to try to use dot to generate diagrams. TEMPLATE_RELATIONS and INCLUDE_GRAPH add additional diagrams to the documentation. DOT_MULTI_TARGETS speeds up dot. OUTPUT_DIRECTORY, INPUT and other paths reflect the fact that this Doxyfile is intended to process src as well as include and is being run from a separate subdirectory. Doxygen produces several temporary files while it's running and if interrupted, can leave those files behind. It's easier to clean up if there aren't a hundred or so files in the same folder. I typically run doxygen in SDL/doxy and set the output directory to '.'. Since doxygen puts it's output in subfolders by type, this keeps things pretty well organised. You could use '../doc' instead and get the same results.
author Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org>
date Fri, 21 Jan 2011 12:57:01 -0800
parents 103760c3a5dc
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* Porting To A New Platform

  The first thing you have to do when porting to a new platform, is look at
include/SDL_platform.h and create an entry there for your operating system.
The standard format is __PLATFORM__, where PLATFORM is the name of the OS.
Ideally SDL_platform.h will be able to auto-detect the system it's building
on based on C preprocessor symbols.

There are two basic ways of building SDL at the moment:

1. The "UNIX" way:  ./configure; make; make install

   If you have a GNUish system, then you might try this.  Edit configure.in,
   take a look at the large section labelled:
	"Set up the configuration based on the target platform!"
   Add a section for your platform, and then re-run autogen.sh and build!

2. Using an IDE:

   If you're using an IDE or other non-configure build system, you'll probably
   want to create a custom SDL_config.h for your platform.  Edit SDL_config.h,
   add a section for your platform, and create a custom SDL_config_{platform}.h,
   based on SDL_config.h.minimal and SDL_config.h.in

   Add the top level include directory to the header search path, and then add
   the following sources to the project:
	src/*.c
	src/audio/*.c
	src/cdrom/*.c
	src/cpuinfo/*.c
	src/events/*.c
	src/file/*.c
	src/joystick/*.c
	src/stdlib/*.c
	src/thread/*.c
	src/timer/*.c
	src/video/*.c
	src/audio/disk/*.c
	src/audio/dummy/*.c
	src/video/dummy/*.c
	src/joystick/dummy/*.c
	src/cdrom/dummy/*.c
	src/thread/generic/*.c
	src/timer/dummy/*.c
	src/loadso/dummy/*.c


Once you have a working library without any drivers, you can go back to each
of the major subsystems and start implementing drivers for your platform.

If you have any questions, don't hesitate to ask on the SDL mailing list:
	http://www.libsdl.org/mailing-list.php

Enjoy!
	Sam Lantinga				(slouken@libsdl.org)