Anforderungen  |   Konzepte  |   Entwurf  |   Entwicklung  |   Qualitätssicherung  |   Lebenszyklus  |   Steuerung
 
 
 
 


Quelle  rust.configure   Sprache: unbekannt

 
# -*- Mode: python; indent-tabs-mode: nil; tab-width: 40 -*-
# vim: set filetype=python:
# This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
# License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this
# file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/.


# Rust is required by `rust_compiler` below. We allow_missing here
# to propagate failures to the better error message there.
option(env="RUSTC", nargs=1, help="Path to the rust compiler")
option(env="CARGO", nargs=1, help="Path to the Cargo package manager")

rustc = check_prog(
    "_RUSTC",
    ["rustc"],
    what="rustc",
    paths=rust_search_path,
    input="RUSTC",
    allow_missing=True,
)
cargo = check_prog(
    "_CARGO",
    ["cargo"],
    what="cargo",
    paths=rust_search_path,
    input="CARGO",
    allow_missing=True,
)


@template
def unwrap_rustup(prog, name):
    # rustc and cargo can either be rustup wrappers, or they can be the actual,
    # plain executables. For cargo, on OSX, rustup sets DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH (at
    # least until https://github.com/rust-lang/rustup.rs/pull/1752 is merged
    # and shipped) and that can wreak havoc (see bug 1536486). Similarly, for
    # rustc, rustup silently honors toolchain overrides set by vendored crates
    # (see bug 1547196).
    #
    # In either case, we need to find the plain executables.
    #
    # To achieve that, try to run `PROG +stable`. When the rustup wrapper is in
    # use, it either prints PROG's help and exits with status 0, or prints
    # an error message (error: toolchain 'stable' is not installed) and exits
    # with status 1. In the cargo case, when plain cargo is in use, it exits
    # with a different error message (e.g. "error: no such subcommand:
    # `+stable`"), and exits with status 101.
    #
    # Unfortunately, in the rustc case, when plain rustc is in use,
    # `rustc +stable` will exit with status 1, complaining about a missing
    # "+stable" file. We'll examine the error output to try and distinguish
    # between failing rustup and failing rustc.
    @depends(prog, dependable(name))
    @imports(_from="__builtin__", _import="open")
    @imports("os")
    def unwrap(prog, name):
        if not prog:
            return

        def from_rustup_which():
            out = check_cmd_output("rustup", "which", name, executable=prog).rstrip()
            # If for some reason the above failed to return something, keep the
            # PROG we found originally.
            if out:
                log.info("Actually using '%s'", out)
                return out

            log.info("No `rustup which` output, using '%s'", prog)
            return prog

        (retcode, stdout, stderr) = get_cmd_output(prog, "+stable")

        if name == "cargo" and retcode != 101:
            prog = from_rustup_which()
        elif name == "rustc":
            if retcode == 0:
                prog = from_rustup_which()
            elif "+stable" in stderr:
                # PROG looks like plain `rustc`.
                pass
            else:
                # Assume PROG looks like `rustup`. This case is a little weird,
                # insofar as the user doesn't have the "stable" toolchain
                # installed, but go ahead and unwrap anyway: the user might
                # have only certain versions, beta, or nightly installed, and
                # we'll catch invalid versions later.
                prog = from_rustup_which()

        return normalize_path(prog)

    return unwrap


rustc = unwrap_rustup(rustc, "rustc")
cargo = unwrap_rustup(cargo, "cargo")


set_config("CARGO", cargo)
set_config("RUSTC", rustc)


@depends_if(rustc)
@checking("rustc version", lambda info: info.version)
def rustc_info(rustc):
    if not rustc:
        return
    out = check_cmd_output(rustc, "--version", "--verbose").splitlines()
    info = dict((s.strip() for s in line.split(":", 1)) for line in out[1:])
    return namespace(
        version=Version(info.get("release", "0")),
        commit=info.get("commit-hash", "unknown"),
        host=info["host"],
        llvm_version=Version(info.get("LLVM version", "0")),
    )


set_config(
    "RUSTC_VERSION",
    depends(rustc_info)(lambda info: str(info.version) if info else None),
)


set_config(
    "RUSTC_LLVM_VERSION",
    depends(rustc_info)(lambda info: str(info.llvm_version) if info else None),
)

set_config(
    "MOZ_CLANG_NEWER_THAN_RUSTC_LLVM",
    depends(c_compiler, rustc_info)(
        lambda c_compiler, rustc_info: rustc_info
        and c_compiler.type == "clang"
        and c_compiler.version.major > rustc_info.llvm_version.major
    ),
)


@depends_if(cargo)
@checking("cargo version", lambda info: info.version)
@imports("re")
def cargo_info(cargo):
    if not cargo:
        return
    out = check_cmd_output(cargo, "--version", "--verbose").splitlines()
    info = dict((s.strip() for s in line.split(":", 1)) for line in out[1:])
    version = info.get("release")
    # Older versions of cargo didn't support --verbose, in which case, they
    # only output a not-really-pleasant-to-parse output. Fortunately, they
    # don't error out, so we can just try some regexp matching on the output
    # we already got.
    if version is None:
        VERSION_FORMAT = r"^cargo (\d\.\d+\.\d+).*"

        m = re.search(VERSION_FORMAT, out[0])
        # Fail fast if cargo changes its output on us.
        if not m:
            die("Could not determine cargo version from output: %s", out)
        version = m.group(1)

    return namespace(
        version=Version(version),
    )


@depends(rustc_info, cargo_info, target)
@imports(_from="mozboot.util", _import="MINIMUM_RUST_VERSION")
@imports(_from="textwrap", _import="dedent")
def rust_compiler(rustc_info, cargo_info, target):
    if not rustc_info:
        die(
            dedent(
                """\
        Rust compiler not found.
        To compile rust language sources, you must have 'rustc' in your path.
        See https://www.rust-lang.org/ for more information.

        You can install rust by running './mach bootstrap'
        or by directly running the installer from https://rustup.rs/
        """
            )
        )
    rustc_min_version = Version(MINIMUM_RUST_VERSION)
    cargo_min_version = rustc_min_version

    version = rustc_info.version
    is_nightly = "nightly" in version.version
    is_version_number_match = (
        version.major == rustc_min_version.major
        and version.minor == rustc_min_version.minor
        and version.patch == rustc_min_version.patch
    )

    if version < rustc_min_version or (is_version_number_match and is_nightly):
        die(
            dedent(
                """\
        Rust compiler {} is too old.

        To compile Rust language sources please install at least
        version {} of the 'rustc' toolchain (or, if using nightly,
        at least one version newer than {}) and make sure it is
        first in your path.

        You can verify this by typing 'rustc --version'.

        If you have the 'rustup' tool installed you can upgrade
        to the latest release by typing 'rustup update'. The
        installer is available from https://rustup.rs/
        """.format(
                    version, rustc_min_version, rustc_min_version
                )
            )
        )

    if target.kernel == "WINNT" and (version.major, version.minor) == (1, 56):
        die(
            dedent(
                """\
        Rust compiler 1.56.* is not supported for Windows builds.

        Use a newer or an older version.

        See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/88576.
        """
            )
        )

    if not cargo_info:
        die(
            dedent(
                """\
        Cargo package manager not found.
        To compile Rust language sources, you must have 'cargo' in your path.
        See https://www.rust-lang.org/ for more information.

        You can install cargo by running './mach bootstrap'
        or by directly running the installer from https://rustup.rs/
        """
            )
        )

    version = cargo_info.version
    if version < cargo_min_version:
        die(
            dedent(
                """\
        Cargo package manager {} is too old.

        To compile Rust language sources please install at least
        version {} of 'cargo' and make sure it is first in your path.

        You can verify this by typing 'cargo --version'.
        """
            ).format(version, cargo_min_version)
        )

    return True


@depends(rustc, when=rust_compiler)
@imports(_from="__builtin__", _import="ValueError")
def rust_supported_targets(rustc):
    out = check_cmd_output(rustc, "--print", "target-list").splitlines()
    data = {}
    for t in out:
        try:
            info = split_triplet(t, allow_wasi=True)
        except ValueError:
            if t.startswith("thumb"):
                cpu, rest = t.split("-", 1)
                retry = "-".join(("arm", rest))
            else:
                continue
            try:
                info = split_triplet(retry, allow_wasi=True)
            except ValueError:
                continue
        key = (info.cpu, info.endianness, info.os)
        data.setdefault(key, []).append(namespace(rust_target=t, target=info))
    return data


def detect_rustc_target(
    host_or_target, compiler_info, arm_target, rust_supported_targets
):
    # Rust's --target options are similar to, but not exactly the same
    # as, the autoconf-derived targets we use.  An example would be that
    # Rust uses distinct target triples for targetting the GNU C++ ABI
    # and the MSVC C++ ABI on Win32, whereas autoconf has a single
    # triple and relies on the user to ensure that everything is
    # compiled for the appropriate ABI.  We need to perform appropriate
    # munging to get the correct option to rustc.
    # We correlate the autoconf-derived targets with the list of targets
    # rustc gives us with --print target-list.
    candidates = rust_supported_targets.get(
        (host_or_target.cpu, host_or_target.endianness, host_or_target.os), []
    )

    def find_candidate(candidates):
        if len(candidates) == 1:
            return candidates[0].rust_target
        elif not candidates:
            return None

        # We have multiple candidates. There are two cases where we can try to
        # narrow further down using extra information from the build system.
        # - For windows targets, correlate with the C compiler type
        if host_or_target.kernel == "WINNT":
            if host_or_target.abi:
                if host_or_target.abi == "msvc":
                    suffix = "windows-msvc"
                elif host_or_target.abi == "mingw":
                    suffix = "windows-gnu"
            elif compiler_info.type in ("gcc", "clang"):
                suffix = "windows-gnu"
            else:
                suffix = "windows-msvc"
            narrowed = [
                c for c in candidates if c.rust_target.endswith("-{}".format(suffix))
            ]
            if len(narrowed) == 1:
                return narrowed[0].rust_target
            elif narrowed:
                candidates = narrowed

            vendor_aliases = {"pc": ("w64", "windows")}
            narrowed = [
                c
                for c in candidates
                if host_or_target.vendor in vendor_aliases.get(c.target.vendor, ())
            ]

            if len(narrowed) == 1:
                return narrowed[0].rust_target

        # - For arm targets, correlate with arm_target
        #   we could be more thorough with the supported rust targets, but they
        #   don't support OSes that are supported to build Gecko anyways.
        #   Also, sadly, the only interface to check the rust target cpu features
        #   is --print target-spec-json, and it's unstable, so we have to rely on
        #   our own knowledge of what each arm target means.
        if host_or_target.cpu == "arm" and host_or_target.endianness == "little":
            prefixes = []
            if arm_target.arm_arch >= 7:
                if arm_target.thumb2 and arm_target.fpu == "neon":
                    prefixes.append("thumbv7neon")
                if arm_target.thumb2:
                    prefixes.append("thumbv7a")
                prefixes.append("armv7")
            if arm_target.arm_arch >= 6:
                prefixes.append("armv6")
                if host_or_target.os != "Android":
                    # arm-* rust targets are armv6... except arm-linux-androideabi
                    prefixes.append("arm")
            if arm_target.arm_arch >= 5:
                prefixes.append("armv5te")
                if host_or_target.os == "Android":
                    # arm-* rust targets are armv6... except arm-linux-androideabi
                    prefixes.append("arm")
            if arm_target.arm_arch >= 4:
                prefixes.append("armv4t")
            # rust freebsd targets are the only ones that don't have a 'hf' suffix
            # for hard-float. Technically, that means if the float abi ever is not
            # hard-float, this will pick a wrong target, but since rust only
            # supports hard-float, let's assume that means freebsd only support
            # hard-float.
            if arm_target.float_abi == "hard" and host_or_target.os != "FreeBSD":
                suffix = "hf"
            else:
                suffix = ""
            for p in prefixes:
                for c in candidates:
                    if c.rust_target.startswith(
                        "{}-".format(p)
                    ) and c.rust_target.endswith(suffix):
                        return c.rust_target

        # See if we can narrow down on the exact alias.
        # We use the sub_configure_alias to keep support mingw32 triplets as input.
        narrowed = [
            c
            for c in candidates
            if c.target.sub_configure_alias == host_or_target.sub_configure_alias
        ]
        if len(narrowed) == 1:
            return narrowed[0].rust_target
        elif narrowed:
            candidates = narrowed

        # See if we can narrow down with the raw OS
        narrowed = [c for c in candidates if c.target.raw_os == host_or_target.raw_os]
        if len(narrowed) == 1:
            return narrowed[0].rust_target
        elif narrowed:
            candidates = narrowed

        # The wasm32-wasi target was renamed to wasm32-wasip1
        if host_or_target.raw_os == "wasi":
            narrowed = [c for c in candidates if c.target.raw_os == "wasip1"]
            if len(narrowed) == 1:
                return narrowed[0].rust_target
            elif narrowed:
                candidates = narrowed

        # See if we can narrow down with the raw OS and raw CPU
        narrowed = [
            c
            for c in candidates
            if c.target.raw_os == host_or_target.raw_os
            and c.target.raw_cpu == host_or_target.raw_cpu
        ]
        if len(narrowed) == 1:
            return narrowed[0].rust_target

        # Finally, see if the vendor can be used to disambiguate.
        narrowed = [c for c in candidates if c.target.vendor == host_or_target.vendor]
        if len(narrowed) == 1:
            return narrowed[0].rust_target

        return None

    rustc_target = find_candidate(candidates)

    if rustc_target is None:
        die("Don't know how to translate {} for rustc".format(host_or_target.alias))

    return rustc_target


@imports("os")
@imports(_from="textwrap", _import="dedent")
@imports(_from="mozbuild.configure.util", _import="LineIO")
@imports(_from="__builtin__", _import="open")
def assert_rust_compile(host_or_target, rustc_target, rustc):
    # Check to see whether our rustc has a reasonably functional stdlib
    # for our chosen target.
    target_arg = "--target=" + rustc_target
    with create_temporary_file(suffix=".rs") as in_path, create_temporary_file(
        suffix=".rlib"
    ) as out_path:
        with open(in_path, "w") as fd:
            source = b'pub extern "C" fn hello() { println!("Hello world"); }'
            log.debug("Creating `%s` with content:", in_path)
            with LineIO(lambda l: log.debug("| %s", l)) as out:
                out.write(source)

            fd.write(source.decode())

        cmd = [
            rustc,
            "--crate-type",
            "staticlib",
            target_arg,
            "-o",
            out_path,
            in_path,
        ]

        def failed():
            die(
                dedent(
                    """\
            Cannot compile for {} with {}
            The target may be unsupported, or you may not have
            a rust std library for that target installed. Try:

              rustup target add {}
            """.format(
                        host_or_target.alias, rustc, rustc_target
                    )
                )
            )

        check_cmd_output(*cmd, onerror=failed)
        if not os.path.exists(out_path) or os.path.getsize(out_path) == 0:
            failed()


@depends(
    rustc,
    host,
    host_c_compiler,
    rustc_info.host,
    rust_supported_targets,
    arm_target,
    when=rust_compiler,
)
@checking("for rust host triplet")
@imports(_from="textwrap", _import="dedent")
def rust_host_triple(
    rustc, host, compiler_info, rustc_host, rust_supported_targets, arm_target
):
    rustc_target = detect_rustc_target(
        host, compiler_info, arm_target, rust_supported_targets
    )
    if rustc_target != rustc_host:
        if host.alias == rustc_target:
            configure_host = host.alias
        else:
            configure_host = "{}/{}".format(host.alias, rustc_target)
        die(
            dedent(
                """\
        The rust compiler host ({rustc}) is not suitable for the configure host ({configure}).

        You can solve this by:
        * Set your configure host to match the rust compiler host by editing your
        mozconfig and adding "ac_add_options --host={rustc}".
        * Or, install the rust toolchain for {configure}, if supported, by running
        "rustup default stable-{rustc_target}"
        """.format(
                    rustc=rustc_host,
                    configure=configure_host,
                    rustc_target=rustc_target,
                )
            )
        )
    assert_rust_compile(host, rustc_target, rustc)
    return rustc_target


@depends(
    rustc, target, c_compiler, rust_supported_targets, arm_target, when=rust_compiler
)
@checking("for rust target triplet")
def rust_target_triple(
    rustc, target, compiler_info, rust_supported_targets, arm_target
):
    rustc_target = detect_rustc_target(
        target, compiler_info, arm_target, rust_supported_targets
    )
    assert_rust_compile(target, rustc_target, rustc)
    return rustc_target


set_config("RUST_TARGET", rust_target_triple)
set_config("RUST_HOST_TARGET", rust_host_triple)


# This is used for putting source info into symbol files.
set_config("RUSTC_COMMIT", depends(rustc_info)(lambda i: i.commit))

# Rustdoc is required by Rust tests below.
option(env="RUSTDOC", nargs=1, help="Path to the rustdoc program")

rustdoc = check_prog(
    "RUSTDOC",
    ["rustdoc"],
    paths=rust_search_path,
    input="RUSTDOC",
    allow_missing=True,
)

# This option is separate from --enable-tests because Rust tests are particularly
# expensive in terms of compile time (especially for code in libxul).
option(
    "--enable-rust-tests",
    help="Enable building and running of Rust tests during `make check`",
)


@depends("--enable-rust-tests", rustdoc)
def rust_tests(enable_rust_tests, rustdoc):
    if enable_rust_tests and not rustdoc:
        die("--enable-rust-tests requires rustdoc")
    return bool(enable_rust_tests)


set_config("MOZ_RUST_TESTS", rust_tests)


@depends(target, c_compiler, rustc)
@imports("os")
def rustc_natvis_ldflags(target, compiler_info, rustc):
    if target.kernel == "WINNT" and compiler_info.type == "clang-cl":
        sysroot = check_cmd_output(rustc, "--print", "sysroot").strip()
        etc = os.path.join(sysroot, "lib/rustlib/etc")
        ldflags = []
        if os.path.isdir(etc):
            for f in os.listdir(etc):
                if f.endswith(".natvis"):
                    ldflags.append("-NATVIS:" + normsep(os.path.join(etc, f)))
        return ldflags


set_config("RUSTC_NATVIS_LDFLAGS", rustc_natvis_ldflags)


option(
    "--enable-rust-debug",
    default=depends(when="--enable-debug")(lambda: True),
    help="{Build|Do not build} Rust code with debug assertions turned on",
)


@depends(when="--enable-rust-debug")
def debug_rust():
    return True


set_config("MOZ_DEBUG_RUST", debug_rust)
set_define("MOZ_DEBUG_RUST", debug_rust)

# ==============================================================

option(env="RUSTFLAGS", nargs=1, help="Rust compiler flags")
set_config("RUSTFLAGS", depends("RUSTFLAGS")(lambda flags: flags))


# Rust compiler flags
# ==============================================================


@depends(moz_optimize)
def rustc_opt_level_default(moz_optimize):
    return "2" if moz_optimize else "0"


option(
    env="RUSTC_OPT_LEVEL",
    default=rustc_opt_level_default,
    nargs=1,
    help="Rust compiler optimization level (-C opt-level=%s)",
)


@depends("RUSTC_OPT_LEVEL")
def rustc_opt_level(opt_level_option):
    return opt_level_option[0]


set_config("CARGO_PROFILE_RELEASE_OPT_LEVEL", rustc_opt_level)
set_config("CARGO_PROFILE_DEV_OPT_LEVEL", rustc_opt_level)


@depends(
    rustc_opt_level,
    debug_rust,
    target,
    "--enable-debug-symbols",
    "--enable-frame-pointers",
    path_remapping,
    path_remappings,
)
def rust_compile_flags(
    opt_level,
    debug_rust,
    target,
    debug_symbols,
    frame_pointers,
    path_remapping,
    path_remappings,
):
    # Cargo currently supports only two interesting profiles for building:
    # development and release. Those map (roughly) to --enable-debug and
    # --disable-debug in Gecko, respectively.
    #
    # But we'd also like to support an additional axis of control for
    # optimization level. Since Cargo only supports 2 profiles, we're in
    # a bit of a bind.
    #
    # Code here derives various compiler options given other configure options.
    # The options defined here effectively override defaults specified in
    # Cargo.toml files.

    debug_assertions = None
    debug_info = None

    # opt-level=0 implies -C debug-assertions, which may not be desired
    # unless Rust debugging is enabled.
    if opt_level == "0" and not debug_rust:
        debug_assertions = False

    if debug_symbols:
        debug_info = "2"

    opts = []

    if debug_assertions is not None:
        opts.append("debug-assertions=%s" % ("yes" if debug_assertions else "no"))
    if debug_info is not None:
        opts.append("debuginfo=%s" % debug_info)
    if frame_pointers:
        opts.append("force-frame-pointers=yes")
    # CFG for arm64 is crashy, see `def security_hardening_cflags`.
    if target.kernel == "WINNT" and target.cpu != "aarch64":
        opts.append("control-flow-guard=yes")

    flags = []
    for opt in opts:
        flags.extend(["-C", opt])

    if "rust" in path_remapping:
        # rustc has supported --remap-path-prefix since version 1.26, well
        # before our required minimum Rust version, so there's no need to
        # feature-detect or gate on versions.
        for old, new in path_remappings:
            flags.append(f"--remap-path-prefix={old}={new}")

    return flags


# Rust incremental compilation
# ==============================================================


option("--disable-cargo-incremental", help="Disable incremental rust compilation")


@depends(
    developer_options,
    debug_rust,
    "MOZ_AUTOMATION",
    code_coverage,
    "--disable-cargo-incremental",
    using_sccache,
    "RUSTC_WRAPPER",
)
@imports("os")
def cargo_incremental(
    developer_options,
    debug_rust,
    automation,
    code_coverage,
    enabled,
    using_sccache,
    rustc_wrapper,
):
    """Return a value for the CARGO_INCREMENTAL environment variable."""

    if not enabled:
        return "0"
    elif enabled.origin != "default":
        return "1"

    # We never want to use incremental compilation in automation.  sccache
    # handles our automation use case much better than incremental compilation
    # would.
    if automation:
        return "0"

    # Coverage instrumentation doesn't play well with incremental compilation
    # https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/50203.
    if code_coverage:
        return "0"

    # Incremental compilation doesn't work as well as it should, and if we're
    # using sccache, it's better to use sccache than incremental compilation.
    if not using_sccache and rustc_wrapper:
        rustc_wrapper = os.path.basename(rustc_wrapper[0])
        if os.path.splitext(rustc_wrapper)[0].lower() == "sccache":
            using_sccache = True
    if using_sccache:
        return "0"

    # Incremental compilation is automatically turned on for debug builds, so
    # we don't need to do anything special here.
    if debug_rust:
        return

    # Don't enable on --enable-release builds, because of the runtime
    # performance cost.
    if not developer_options:
        return

    # We're clear to use incremental compilation!
    return "1"


set_config("CARGO_INCREMENTAL", cargo_incremental)


@depends(rust_compile_flags, "--enable-warnings-as-errors")
def rust_flags(compile_flags, warnings_as_errors):
    warning_flags = []

    # Note that cargo passes --cap-lints warn to rustc for third-party code, so
    # we don't need a very complicated setup.
    if warnings_as_errors:
        warning_flags.append("-Dwarnings")
    else:
        warning_flags.extend(("--cap-lints", "warn"))

    return compile_flags + warning_flags


set_config("MOZ_RUST_DEFAULT_FLAGS", rust_flags)

[ Dauer der Verarbeitung: 0.30 Sekunden  (vorverarbeitet)  ]

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     


Neuigkeiten

     Aktuelles
     Motto des Tages

Software

     Produkte
     Quellcodebibliothek

Aktivitäten

     Artikel über Sicherheit
     Anleitung zur Aktivierung von SSL

Muße

     Gedichte
     Musik
     Bilder

Jenseits des Üblichen ....
    

Besucherstatistik

Besucherstatistik

Monitoring

Montastic status badge