mirror of
https://github.com/libguestfs/libguestfs.git
synced 2026-03-21 22:53:37 +00:00
Replace strange $TEST_FUNCTIONS variable/expansion thing with something more like what we use in nbdkit, a simple tests/functions.sh script that gets sourced into each test script. Update the common submodule to get: commit 8137d47d0e654065391151eb275e3b64f230f6f5 Author: Richard W.M. Jones <rjones@redhat.com> Date: Thu Feb 13 11:13:55 2025 +0000 mlcustomize, mltools: Replace $TEST_FUNCTIONS TEST_FUNCTIONS is being removed from libguestfs and guestfs-tools (it was removed from virt-v2v a while back). Make the same adjustment in the common submodule. (and some other commits which are not relevant to libguestfs)
This program generates a large amount of code and documentation for all the daemon actions. To add a new action there are only two files you need to change, 'actions_*.ml' to describe the interface, and daemon/<somefile>.c to write the implementation. After editing these files, build it (make -C generator) to regenerate all the output files. 'make' will rerun this automatically when necessary. IMPORTANT: This program should NOT print any warnings at compile time or run time. If it prints warnings, you should treat them as errors. OCaml tips: (1) In emacs, install tuareg-mode to display and format OCaml code correctly. 'vim' comes with a good OCaml editing mode by default. (2) Read the resources at http://ocaml.org/learn/ (3) A module called 'Foo' is defined in one or two files called 'foo.mli' and 'foo.ml' (NB: lowercase first letter). The *.mli file, if present, defines the public interface for the module. The *.ml file is the implementation. If the *.mli file is missing then everything is exported. Some notable files in this directory: actions_*.ml The libguestfs API. proc_nr.ml Procedure numbers associated with each API. structs.ml Structures returned by the API. c.ml Generate C API. <lang>.ml Generate bindings for <lang>. main.ml The main generator program. Note about long descriptions: When referring to another action, use the format C<guestfs_other> (ie. the full name of the C function). This will be replaced as appropriate in other language bindings. Apart from that, long descriptions are just perldoc paragraphs. Note about extending functions: In general you cannot change the name, number of required arguments or type of required arguments of a function, since this would break backwards compatibility. You may add another optional argument, *if* the function has >= 1 optional arguments already. Add it at the end of the list. You may add optional arguments to a function that doesn't have any. However you *must* set the once_had_no_optargs flag to true, so that the relevant backwards compatibility bindings can be added.