rules/ were never meant to be added to the release. Now that we are not
*running* multi-arch binaries, we can remove the infrastructure that was
necessary to do so.
I may get back to this -- but we need to dust quite a bit off before
that happens.
We are using only a single trivial function `paths`, which can be
bundled. Makes things like test-zigcc[1] easier: less dependencies to
worry about.
[1]: https://git.jakstys.lt/motiejus/test-zig-cc/
This is a work in progress. Next steps:
1. Add instructions to the wiki.
2. Try the new tarball on a real repository.
3. Cut the actual release.
Test output for an upcoming `v1.0.2`:
$ bazel run //tools/releaser -- -skip_upgrades=true -tag v1.0.2
INFO: Analyzed target //tools/releaser:releaser (1 packages loaded, 29 targets configured).
INFO: Found 1 target...
Target //tools/releaser:releaser up-to-date:
bazel-bin/tools/releaser/releaser_/releaser
INFO: Elapsed time: 1.978s, Critical Path: 1.81s
INFO: 3 processes: 1 internal, 2 linux-sandbox.
INFO: Build completed successfully, 3 total actions
INFO: Running command line: bazel-bin/tools/releaser/releaser_/releaser '-skip_upgrades=true' -tag v1.0.2
Running pre-release checks:
- SKIPPING: go update commands
- gazelle
- checking if repository is clean
Creating tag v1.0.2
Creating archive bazel-zig-cc-v1.0.2.tar
Compressing bazel-zig-cc-v1.0.2.tar
Written /code/bazel-zig-cc/bazel-zig-cc-v1.0.2.tar.gz
Release boilerplate:
-----
load("@bazel_tools//tools/build_defs/repo:http.bzl", "http_archive")
http_archive(
name = "bazel-zig-cc",
sha256 = "b0e857f8b32062a112305931437c5a7e1762287e27379c6d2d7173f0fa74e270",
urls = [
"https://mirror.bazel.build/github.com/uber/bazel-zig-cc/releases/download/v1.0.2/bazel-zig-cc-v1.0.2.tar.gz",
"https://github.com/uber/bazel-zig-cc/releases/download/v1.0.2/bazel-zig-cc-v1.0.2.tar.gz",
],
)
load("@bazel-zig-cc//toolchain:defs.bzl", zig_toolchains = "toolchains")
# Argument-free will pick reasonable defaults.
zig_toolchains()
# version, url_formats and host_platform_sha256 are can be set for those who
# wish to control their Zig SDK version and where it is downloaded from
zig_toolchains(
version = "<...>",
url_formats = [
"https://example.org/zig/zig-{host_platform}-{version}.{_ext}",
],
host_platform_sha256 = { ... },
)
Sometimes the launcher fails to compile with the following error
messsage:
```
error: FileNotFound
```
We cannot reproduce this in a controlled environment, but see it
happening in the wild often enough to receive repeated questions.
Since this has been escalated to Zig Software Foundation, the most
meaningful thing we can ask our users to do is apply a workaround and
wait. Let's do just that.
I will be shutting down ~motiejus/bazel-zig-cc@lists.sr.ht within days.
Now that comms are in Slack and github issues/PRs, let's add the
archive for historical reference.
It can be opened and read through like this:
mutt -R -f mailing-list-archive.mbox
- ci only: use a separate zig cache dir for each run
- use `tools/bazel` everywhere.
- remove arm64 tests. They don't give enough value to be worth the
brittle environment.
- remove windows execution, except for launcher. Ditto. I will probably
bring them back.
Your old version of the software released under the old license can
still be used under the terms of the old license.
I have received the following statement from the past contributors
Luis Holanda, Jeremy Volkman and Fabian Hahn:
I hereby confirm that I am the copyright holder or authorized by the
copyright holder of this contribution. As such I hereby confirm that
all contributions made to bazel-zig-cc by me or on behalf of me,
hereby is licensed under the Apache 2.0 License
[http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0]. I am aware that my
previous contributions will still be available under the MIT license
as well. I confirm that I am aware of the bazel-zig-cc teams intention
to release bazel-zig-cc under the Apache 2.0 License from release
[1.0] and onwards, and that the bazel-zig-cc no longer will accept
contributions made under the MIT and that any future submissions from
myself will be considered to be licensed under Apache 2.0 unless I
expressly state otherwise.
Copyright and re-licensing for Google and Uber employees has been
resolved internally.
Since not all contributors took action to re-license the code yet,
portions of bazel-zig-cc remain licensed as MIT.
I have started this project during my personal time with my personal
resources. I am now handing over all copyrights to this code to Uber
Technologies, Inc.
`res_search` became a proper symbol only in glibc 2.34. Until that it
was re-defined in headers, hitting the (in-)famous
https://github.com/ziglang/zig/issues/9485
glibc 2.34+:
resolv/resolv.h:int res_search (const char *, int, int, unsigned char *, int)
Old glibc:
resolv/resolv.h:#define res_search __res_search
Also, remove the toplevel includes, as they should never be included in
the first place: the headers are included explicitly when needed.
Until now we needed to maintain two versions of the zig launcher: one
for Windows and one for everything else. This was problematic for two
reasons:
1. I do not know powershell and thus keep breaking the Windows wrapper
all the time (see git history of Fabian fixing stuff that I broke).
2. This makes bazel-zig-cc dependent on the system shell, making it not
really hermetic. So the recently added
`--experimental_use_hermetic_linux_sandbox` does not work with
bazel-zig-cc, unless we bind-mount a bunch of stuff: `/usr`, `/bin`,
`/lib`, `/usr/lib:/lib`, `/usr/lib64:/lib64` and `/proc`.
Switching to a Zig-based wrapper solves both issues, and we can do this:
bazel build "$@" \
--experimental_use_hermetic_linux_sandbox \
--sandbox_add_mount_pair=/proc \
<...>
Zig itself still depends on `/proc` for `/proc/self/exe`, so we need to
keep that. I will look into reducing even that dependency separately.
Not all is nice and shiny though: this commit replaces ~80 LOC worth of
shell scripts wrappers with a singe ~300 LOC zig program, which is
arguably harder to understand. However, it is easier to change, at least
for me, because it's a single file with unit tests! Most importantly,
the gnarly code (which resolves paths and sets environment variables) is
cross-platform.
Thanks to Fabian Hahn for testing this on Windows and pointing out
errors.
Now that we have more than one contributor, it's fair be explicit about
it. I never asked for CLA and who owns the copyright has been clearly
documented in the README.
Note that this is not a policy change.