Since we set WINVER=601 after dropping Windows XP support, it is unnecessary to define LOCALE_SNAME. So, we should remove it to remove compiler warning.
MozReview-Commit-ID: EawbHAznXNA
--HG--
extra : histedit_source : d3157300315052048756c22ac2c999523d28679d
Final target Rust programs are currently not picked up and
symlinked/copied to ${objdir}/dist/bin because the RUST_PROGRAMS output
variable is missing from the if-condition.
This change causes Rust binaries from RUST_PROGRAMS to be placed alongside
the other final target programs.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 5OIH1UMmCq2
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : cfcff21e9371b920c895ad27df344008962d7471
These paths can contain spaces, particularly if they point into
${HOME}/.mozbuild on Windows. If people are bold enough to use the
Windows packages from llvm.org, the LLVM packages are installed by
default into C:\Program Files\LLVM, so paths from there would contain
spaces as well.
Procedural macros for rust are compiled as dynamic libraries.
The compiler subsequently loads those libraries at runtime
when it compiles crates which make use of them.
We pass the generic LDFLAGS to our linker wrapper which ensures
cargo links static libraries with the correct flags. However
this also means that any final system dependency libraries
end up linked into the procedural macro dynamic libraries
whether they use them or not.
When building on macOS 10.7, this causes a SIGTRAP when dlopen
calls CFInitialize for system libraries like Cocoa off the main
thread. We believe this is a macOS bug, reported fixed in macOS 10.9.
https://openradar.appspot.com/7209349
Work around the issue by stripping those libraries and Frameworks
from the linker flags we pass to cargo. We could do a more careful
job of parsing and removing all -framework and -lfoo arguments
inside the linker script, but since this is a temporary issue
while we're using older build machines, I thought just stripping
them once in the build system was simpler.
MozReview-Commit-ID: CGXD8ARvojj
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 33f28e8fbafb43dbdd257d9162a6e792fca79e51
We're getting an intermittent failure running `hg manifest` in CI. I
have no clue why.
What I do know is that we now have the mozversioncontrol Python package
for containing utility code for interacting with version control. It is
slightly more robust and I'm willing to support it more than I am
check_utils.py.
This commit adds a new API to our abstract repository class to obtain the
files in the working directory by querying version control.
Since I suspect cwd was coming into play in automation, I've also
added a utility function to mozversioncontrol to attempt to find
a version control checkout from the current working directory. It
simply traces ancestor paths looking for a .hg or .git directory.
Finally, I've ported all callers of the now-deleted API to the new
one. The old code had some "../.." paths in it, meaning it only
worked when cwd was just right. Since we resolve the absolute path
to the checkout and store it on the repo object, I've updated the
code so it should work no matter what cwd is as long as a repo can
be found. I'm not 100% confident I found all consumers assuming cwd.
But it's a start.
I'm not 100% confident this will fix the intermittent issues in CI. But
at least we should get a better error message and at least we'll be
running less hacky code.
MozReview-Commit-ID: AmCraHXcTEX
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extra : rebase_source : 815ae369776577ad374333920fd645d412a55148
gfx/skia/skia/src/core/SkCpu.cpp might use sys/auxv.h to detect CPU feature. So we should add it to system-headers
MozReview-Commit-ID: SijyUYvLgn
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 0b509c2f5b4f3272578ae511e9c69cf6b0999c42
We now have code that unconditionally requires the rust
compiler and are committed to adding more. Remove this
last vestige of conditional support.
MozReview-Commit-ID: EK6FBnAbR
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 6efda10a74f9ca0482304c2b1ffe6941e42138f8
Build system switch for optional inclusion of libaom
for support of the Alliance for Open Media AV1 video
codec.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 2C4o1ogRS9v
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : d4a68f1fc4654895f62a905666f0b75726e20e7f
The Java Addons mechanism never got traction and is not Web Extensions
compatible. Removing it simplifies the product and the build system.
MozReview-Commit-ID: ABUxkqqMISa
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 346f88882774f072316714cf637a54d771d81a9a
Several years ago, joey starting writing a handful of unit tests for
primitives in our make files. IIRC a lot of the impetus behind this
work was to flush out bugs between GNU make and pymake.
AFAICT the only survivor of these tests today is check_mkdir.py. The
test is a one-off and has been a bit fragile over the years,
contributing technical debt along the way. And as part of removing the
last references to pymake in automation, it is once again showing
itself and failing in a way that has to do with the way the test
is written and not an issue with the code it is testing. Enough is
enough. This commit removes the test and eliminates the technical
debt. I don't think it will be missed.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 3OzurtFbcyD
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 6d3cf6121c90e9c47948862b8c4117bb1d3e5afd
For linking static libraries, rustc will use whatever `cc` it finds (or
the equivalent on Windows). For our purposes, however, `cc` is not what
we use to link and we may have additional options we would like to pass
to the linker.
To do this, we need to tell Cargo about our alternate linker (currently
only used for target compilations, on the theory that the host compiler
rustc finds is probably good enough) and we also need to pass our linker
options into the process. We do this with environment variables, which
is not a great solution, but works surprisingly well.
This alternate linker is disabled for ASan builds due to peculiar
crashes when running Rust build scripts and for Windows, because we
don't do any interesting cross-compiling there.
This change paves the way for injecting target- or host-specific
environment variables for a particular `cargo build` invocation. Doing
this is not strictly necessary: all of our current `cargo build`
invocations use mostly target-specific environment
variables (e.g. PKG_CONFIG_ALLOW_CROSS). But separating things out
makes the code notationally cleaner and also avoids weirdness when
target==host.
rustc generates .lib files for its libraries when compiling for Windows
(even using MinGW on Linux). But MinGW expects .a files. So we add in
rust-specific prefix and suffixes so MinGW builds can find the libs that
rustc generates. (And the RUST_LIB- variables default to the same vales
as the LIB_ variables otherwise.)
MozReview-Commit-ID: ClsA0YuJaxh
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 7b46460c94ceb34b7a5a302ce91d3f1dca600041
By using $(REPORT_BUILD) instead of just echoing the filename, there is
no change during a regular build without REBUILD_CHECK, but specifying
REBUILD_CHECK in the environment will show which files triggered an .xpt
to rebuild. This is helpful in debugging why these files may be built
unnecessarily.
MozReview-Commit-ID: GGNaKAl02Ea
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 098a81265deed9afc0b284d9863f18ebd74fda33
Instead of using the -i flag to clean out the entire set of environment
variables, we explicitly just clear out the variables that are affected by
32- vs 64-bit builds in vcvars.bat. This still allows cargo to use it's
internal autodetection to do host/target builds as it wants when cross-compiling,
but also allows other things that rely on include directories and so on to
work properly.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 99SECKv1zQa
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 2c2a7d79201b66ac3262afcc5f060936ca2e8fa2
This change brings Cargo closer to what our C/C++ build already does,
and some forms of Cargo failure are only diagnosed when you pass
`--verbose`, so let's eliminate that extra step for people.
For people working on Rust code, compiling in debug mode (Cargo's "dev"
profile) is convenient: debug assertions are turned on, optimization is
turned off, and parallel compilation inside of rustc itself can be
used. These things make the build faster and the debugging experience
more pleasant.
To obtain that currently, one needs to --enable-debug at the Gecko
toplevel, which turns on debug assertions for the entire browser, which
makes things run unreasonably slowly. So it would be desirable to be
able to turn *off* debug mode for the entirety of the browser, but turn
on debug mode for the Rust code only.
Hence this added switch, --enable-rust-debug, which does what it
suggests and defaults to the value of --enable-debug. For our own
sanity and because we judge it a non-existent use case, we do not
support --enable-debug --disable-rust-debug.
This commit moves symbol dumping to the compile tier, to be run via "syms"
targets. Tracking files are used for the sake of incremental builds, because
dump_syms may genearate multiple outputs whose paths are not known ahead of
time.
Minimal changes to symbolstore.py are made here. More extensive
simplifications will be made in a future commit on the basis of symbolstore.py
handling one file at a time.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 3mOP8A6Y7iM
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : bfe97afcdfc05b9e79f01577701c83e8b00eb4e9
This creates "syms" targets that depend on the corresponding "target" for
directories containing shared libraries or programs. These targets are added
to the main compile graph in automation, and can be invoked through a special
"symbols" target. A future commit will use these targets to dump symbols for
shared libraries and programs during the compile tier.
MozReview-Commit-ID: KLuvmqsK4Zj
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 8d76b999cb6fac8f11168ac6ebfb58774dfc2d3c