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intel/compile-time-init-build

cib - Compile-time Initialization and Build

Contributor Covenant Unit Tests

cib is a C++ header-only library for building embedded firmware with reusable components. It implements the compile-time initialization and build pattern. Instead of initializing components and registering callbacks at runtime, this process is executed at compile-time using constexpr or consteval functions.

Firmware using cib is implemented as a collection of components. Each component provides services and features to the build. Component features extend and provide new functionality to services.

emBO++ 2022 The constexpr init()/build() pattern: compose modular firmware with minimal runtime cost

Sub-projects

There are multiple sub-projects contained within cib. Some of them are used to implement cib and others extend cib.

  • Services
    • Flow - cib service used to compose sequences of dependent operations from multiple components.
    • Callback - cib service used to implement simple callback/listener pattern.
  • Support
    • string_constant - Compile-time string library with support for formatting similar to fmt/python format specifiers.
    • log (wip) - Logging library.

Compiler/Standard support

The main branch of cib currently uses C++20 and is tested with:

  • Clang 14 thru 18
  • GCC 12 thru 13

An older version of cib that uses C++17 is tagged at v1.7.0. It is tested with:

  • Clang 9 thru 15
  • GCC 9 thru 12

For the older version see this repo at that tag.

Installing / Getting started

The recommended way to use cib is with CMake and CPM. With this method,add the following to your CMakeLists.txt:

CPMAddPackage("gh:intel/compile-time-init-build#047aab6")
target_link_libraries(your_target PRIVATE cib)

Where 047aab6 is the git hash (or tag, or branch) that you want to use.

cib is also released as a single header file as well as the zipped github repo. To get started quickly, download the cib.hpp header from the release area:

wget https://github.com/intel/compile-time-init-build/releases/download/v1.0.0/cib.hpp

Another option is to include cib as a git submodule in your repo and add the cib directory in your CMakeLists.txt file:

add_subdirectory(extern/compile-time-init-build)
target_link_libraries(your_target PRIVATE cib)

With any of these methods, include the cib.hpp header in your code to use it.

Hello, world!

Since cib is a library for efficiently building firmware through composition a simple example takes a few more lines than a typical "Hello, world!"

#include <cib/cib.hpp>
#include <iostream>

struct say_message : public callback::service<>{};

// the 'core' component exposes the 'say_message' service for others to extend
struct core {
    constexpr static auto config = cib::exports<say_message>;
};

// the 'say_hello_world' component extends 'say_message' with its own functionality
struct say_hello_world {
    constexpr static auto config =
        cib::extend<say_message>([](){
            std::cout << "Hello, world!" << std::endl;
        });
};

// the 'hello_world' project composes 'core' and 'say_hello_world'
struct hello_world {
    constexpr static auto config =
        cib::components<core, say_hello_world>;
};

// the nexus instantiates the project
cib::nexus<hello_world> nexus{};

int main() {
    // the fully extended and built services are ready to be used
    nexus.service<say_message>();
    return 0;
}

Try out this example live at Compiler Explorer.

A larger and more illustrative example can be found in this repo at examples/hello_world.

For more details on how to use cib, see the User Guide.

Building

cib is built with CMake. The single header is built with the release_header target:

git clone https://github.com/intel/compile-time-init-build.git
cmake -B build
cmake --build build -t release_header
ls build/include/cib/ | grep cib.hpp

This combines all the cib header files in the include tree by recursively including the #include directives and ignoring all other macros.

NOTE: cib uses CPM.cmake to fetch its dependencies. When first running cmake, the dependencies will be downloaded. To avoid re-downloading dependencies when reconfiguring cmake, it's recommended to designate a cache directory and set the CPM_SOURCE_CACHE environment variable.

Unit tests are registered with CTest, and will build and run as part of the built-in all target.

cmake -B build
cmake --build build

This will build and run all the unit tests with Catch2 and GTest. To re-run them:

ctest --test-dir build

Features

  • Compose modular firmware systems with high-level abstractions
  • Perform registration of components at compile-time
    • 🏎 Optimize runtime-performance and memory usage
    • 🦺 Catch undefined behavior during initialization

See the full documentation.

Contributing

If you'd like to contribute, please fork the repository and use a feature branch. Pull requests are warmly welcome.

For more details on contributing, please see CONTRIBUTING.md

Links

Licensing

The code in this project is licensed under the BSL-1.0 license. See LICENSE for more details.