Adding Functionality

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If you find the need to modify or extend gem5, you may be tempted to just start editing files in your local gem5 repository. While this approach will work initially, it will cause problems if/when you decide to update your copy of gem5 with changes that have been made since you originally cloned the repository. It's very likely that you will want to update your code to get bug fixes and new features. Thus we strongly advise you to follow one of the following methods. It will save you a great deal of time in the future and allow you to take advantage of new gem5 versions without the error prone process of manually diffing and patching versions.

There are two recommend ways to add your own functionality to gem5 and retain the ability to revision control your own code: Mercurial Queues (MQ) and the EXTRAS feature of our build system.

Mercurial Queues is the most powerful option, as it tracks changes you make to the existing gem5 code as well as files you may add to the source tree. It's also the recommended path for developing changes that you contribute back to the public code base (see Submitting Contributions). For more information, see Managing Local Changes with Mercurial Queues.

The EXTRAS option is more limited, in that it only allows you to compile additional files in to the gem5 code base, rather than changing or overriding existing files. However, the code compiled with EXTRAS is completely decoupled from the gem5 repository, and thus can be managed separately (e.g., in a different Mercurial repository, or using a completely different revision control system). EXTRAS can also be used to incorporate code that can't be distributed with gem5 due to licensing issues (e.g., the "encumbered" repository). Often users end up using EXTRAS to incorporate new SimObject models while they concurrently manage a (ideally much smaller) set of changes using MQ. See the EXTRAS page for more details.