$Id$ ============================================================================= HOW TO CREATE A SELF-CONTAINED PHP EXTENSION A self-contained extension can be distributed independently of the PHP source. To create such an extension, three things are required: - Makefile template (Makefile.in) - Configuration file (config.m4) - Source code for your module We will describe now how to create these and how to put things together. CONVERTING AN EXISTING EXTENSION Just to show you how easy it is to create a self-contained extension, we will convert an embedded extension into a self-contained one. Install PHP and execute the following commands. $ mkdir /tmp/newext $ cd /tmp/newext You now have an empty directory. We will copy the files from the mysql extension: $ cp -rp php-4.0.X/ext/mysql/* . It is time to finish the module. Run: $ phpize You can now ship the contents of the directory - the extension can live completely on its own. The user instructions boil down to $ ./configure \ [--with-php-config=/path/to/php-config] \ [--with-mysql=MYSQL-DIR] $ make install The MySQL module will either use the embedded MySQL client library or the MySQL installation in MYSQL-DIR. DEFINING THE NEW EXTENSION Our demo extension is called "foobar". It consists of two source files "foo.c" and "bar.c" (and any arbitrary amount of header files, but that is not important here). The demo extension does not reference any external libraries (that is important, because the user does not need to specify anything). CREATING THE MAKEFILE TEMPLATE The Makefile Template (Makefile.in) contains three lines: ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ LTLIBRARY_SHARED_NAME = foobar.la LTLIBRARY_SOURCES = foo.c bar.c include $(top_srcdir)/build/rules.mk ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ LTLIBRARY_SHARED_NAME specifies the name of the extension. It must be of the form `ext-name.la'. LTLIBRARY_SOURCES specifies the names of the sources files. You can name an arbitrary number of source files here. The final include directive includes the build rules (you usually don't need to care about what happens there). rules.mk and other files are installed by phpize which we will cover later. CREATING THE M4 CONFIGURATION FILE The m4 configuration can perform additional checks. For a self-contained extension, you do not need more than a few macro calls. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ PHP_ARG_ENABLE(foobar,whether to enable foobar, [ --enable-foobar Enable foobar]) PHP_EXTENSION(foobar, $ext_shared) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ PHP_ARG_ENABLE will automatically set the correct variables, so that the extension will be enabled by PHP_EXTENSION in shared mode. CREATING SOURCE FILES [You are currently alone here. There are a lot of existing modules, use a simply module as a starting point and add your own code.] CREATING THE SELF-CONTAINED EXTENSION Put Makefile.in, config.m4 and the source files into one directory. Then run phpize (this is installed during make install by PHP 4.0). For example, if you configured PHP with --prefix=/php, you would run $ /php/bin/phpize This will automatically copy the necessary build files and create configure from your config.m4. And that's it. You now have a self-contained extension. INSTALLING A SELF-CONTAINED EXTENSION An extension can be installed by running: $ ./configure \ [--with-php-config=/path/to/php-config] $ make install