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mirror of https://github.com/RIOT-OS/RIOT.git synced 2024-12-29 00:09:46 +01:00
RIOT/examples/subfolders
Mikolai Gütschow 518f75f687
docs: link to subfolders example in documentation
Co-authored-by: plmorange <pierre1.lemeur@orange.com>
2024-11-04 11:15:28 +01:00
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folder examples: add example showcasing application subfolders 2024-11-04 11:15:19 +01:00
module examples: add example showcasing application subfolders 2024-11-04 11:15:19 +01:00
main.c examples: add example showcasing application subfolders 2024-11-04 11:15:19 +01:00
Makefile examples: add example showcasing application subfolders 2024-11-04 11:15:19 +01:00
README.md docs: link to subfolders example in documentation 2024-11-04 11:15:28 +01:00

Application Example with Subfolders

This example demonstrates the usage of subfolders in a RIOT application (or in a RIOT module in general) show-casing two possible approaches: RIOT modules and simple subfolders.

Details

Consider the following folder structure of this example. The source files in module are incorporated as a RIOT module, while the source files in folder are considered part of the application itself.

.
├── folder
│   ├── a.c
│   └── subfolder
│       └── b.c
├── main.c
├── Makefile
├── module
│   ├── a.c
│   ├── b.c
│   └── Makefile
└── README.md

RIOT modules

At a minimum, each module in RIOT requires a Makefile with the following content:

MODULE := my_module

include $(RIOTBASE)/Makefile.base

If MODULE is not specified, the name of the module's directory is automatically used, leaving only the last line as minimal content. It is important to note that module names have to be unique both among all RIOT modules, i.e., including the modules that are part of RIOT itself.

If not manually specified via SRC, all source files which reside directly in the module's directory are considered part of the module. RIOT modules are also described in greater detail in the documentation.

Two lines need to be added to the application's Makefile in order to compile and use the module:

DIRS += module
USEMODULE += my_module

The string added to DIRS has to match the directory name, while the string added to USEMODULE has to match the module's name as defined above.

Subfolders

Compared to the module approach, no additional Makefile is needed in the subfolder. The application's Makefile needs to add all source files explicitly, including the ones residing directly in the application directory:

SRC += main.c
SRC += folder/a.c folder/subfolder/b.c

To avoid listing all source files individually, it is of course possible to use normal GNU make functions such as wildcard:

SRC += $(wildcard *.c folder/*.c folder/**/*.c)

Which approach should I use?

In general, modules in RIOT are well-defined units of code that provide a set of features to your application. If this matches your use-case, i.e., you have all your application tests separated into a subfolder, RIOT modules are probably the best approach. It is good practice to prefix all your application modules to avoid name clashes.

If however you barely want to organize your files in a sensible folder structure, but always require all source files to be part of your application, the more straight-forward subfolder approach is probably the better pick.