Last time it was updated is bug 1436208, and the crashes we patched it
for back then has been fixed upstream a few months later.
For some reason, they renamed the executable from llvm-dsymutil to
dsymutil.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D4741
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
We add a wrapper for llvm-dsymutil for macosx CI builds such that when
it crashes, we attempt to get a reduced test case and upload it as a
build artifact. This will allow to more easily report such crashes
upstream.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : be208e6a46b60659a4e51acbe2bd7c4081189d1c
With all of our builds in Taskcluster now, we should never be uploading
symbols from build tasks. Unfortunately Windows builds were still doing so.
This patch removes MOZ_AUTOMATION_UPLOAD_SYMBOLS from all the in-tree
mozconfigs and a few other places so that it should always default off
(per moz-automation.mk). The rest of the uploadsymbols bits will be
removed once Thunderbird fixes their automation.
This patch was mostly autogenerated by running:
rg --files-with-matches UPLOAD_SYMBOLS browser/config/mozconfigs/ mobile/android/config/mozconfigs/ | xargs sed -ri '/.*UPLOAD_SYMBOLS.*/d'
sed -ri '/.*UPLOAD_SYMBOLS.*/d' build/unix/mozconfig.linux build/mozconfig.win-common build/macosx/local-mozconfig.common build/mozconfig.automation
Then mobile/android/config/mozconfigs/common and
taskcluster/scripts/builder/build-linux.sh were hand-edited.
MozReview-Commit-ID: Cy8kSEodSg4
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 01caf1651b4eb428313e1f371aa585f8f34c4151
LLVM_CONFIG, per the contents of toolkit/moz.configure, is tied to
--enable-stylo, but it currently is set on all types of builds. It
currently happens to work, but it's actually not meant to, and sure
enough, the fix for bug 1374727 exacerbates that.
So we create a new mozconfig.stylo file that enables stylo and sets
LLVM_CONFIG, such that only build types that do enable stylo have
LLVM_CONFIG set.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 01277a79951888046c0b8e29c61cfc3b049ee0f0
Enable stylo in Firefox Nightly builds for macOS so we can
get testing feedback until we have addressed issues blocking
enabling it for developer builds.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 3y0QT4oiBpt
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 531162da334a6d124dcd7328f45d677cb4933551
When cross-compiling, rust-bindgen needs the -isysroot
flag we pass to the C++ compiler to find the correct
headers. Add a new BINDGEN_CFLAGS environment variable
for passing this and other relevant options, and reformat
its contents in toolchain.configure so we can use autoconf-
style template substitution to poke it into a bindgen.toml
file to be read by build scripts like build_gecko.rs.
Set this variable from the macosx/cross-mozconfig.common
to the same extra flags we pass to CXX so automation
builds work correctly with --enable-stylo.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 7wabObiFtVb
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : eeba30e3d64112da65e2e6830ef5fc1b54965529
With the fix for bug 1365993, building rust code with cargo as part of the
Firefox build on OS X 10.7 builders no longer fails, so we don't need to
disable webrender there any more.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 4kulJNZjsfG
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 3d4b4fee86490c5d9bbe41d11414f2b4d0323132
It's already included by the nightly and debug mozconfigs which end up including
cross-mozconfig.common, including it again appears ineffectual and causes
failures in artifact builds.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 1DH4r8mgNXe
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : d01254a2140ad6fc90321c8a5d1f4c439e93f7b1
This removes the UNIFY_DIST and UNIFIED_BUILD variables, as well as the
--unify flag from the packager and UnifiedBuildFinder from mozpack. As a
result the STAGEPATH variable is never defined anymore, so its uses can
be removed as well.
test_unify.py is currently the only mozbuild/mozpack test that fails
without running configure first, and there isn't much point in fixing
tests for things that we don't actually use anymore.
MozReview-Commit-ID: F5q1FPW3Did
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : cadbd237f51c23ea1983135294521d628d16f0df
CLOSED TREE
Backed out changeset 158233bce738 (bug 1197325)
Backed out changeset b5ac3fa0bbe7 (bug 1197325)
Backed out changeset 55a8ad127517 (bug 1197325)
The ld that we use for Mac builds is old (Xcode circa OS X 10.7), and
also crashes in various ways when we try to use newer Rust versions
and/or pass options to make the linker work with newer Rust versions.
To mitigate this, let's build with a newer linker, compiled from:
https://github.com/tpoechtrager/cctools-port
We use this port, rather than the packages from opensource.apple.com,
because the packages from Apple have decidely non-intuitive build
systems, and require some hacking to get to build. This port, in
contrast, is simply built with:
CFLAGS='-mcpu=generic -mtune=generic' ./configure --target=x86_64-apple-darwin11
env MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET=10.7 make
and the resulting x86_64-apple-darwin11-ld is renamed as 'ld' and
packaged up for automation's purposes.
However, since this linker is newer, it also produces bits of Mach-O
that our older build tools don't understand. Fortunately, we can pass
appropriate options to the linker to turn off generation of those Mach-O
bits.
The ld that we use for Mac builds is old (Xcode circa OS X 10.7), and
also crashes in various ways when we try to use newer Rust versions
and/or pass options to make the linker work with newer Rust versions.
To mitigate this, let's build with a newer linker, compiled from:
https://github.com/tpoechtrager/cctools-port
We use this port, rather than the packages from opensource.apple.com,
because the packages from Apple have decidely non-intuitive build
systems, and require some hacking to get to build. This port, in
contrast, is simply built with:
CFLAGS='-mcpu=generic -mtune=generic' ./configure --target=x86_64-apple-darwin11
env MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET=10.7 make
and the resulting x86_64-apple-darwin11-ld is renamed as 'ld' and
packaged up for automation's purposes.
However, since this linker is newer, it also produces bits of Mach-O
that our older build tools don't understand. Fortunately, we can pass
appropriate options to the linker to turn off generation of those Mach-O
bits.
At this point, the only remaining part of the postflight for OSX
universal builds dates back to bug 834228. Since then, many things have
changed, one of them being that automation build steps have dependencies
that can be expressed through make dependencies.
While this is not directly related to bug 1244446, fixing this bug gets
more complicated if postflight needs to happen before some of the
automation build steps.
At this point, the only remaining part of the postflight for OSX
universal builds dates back to bug 834228. Since then, many things have
changed, one of them being that automation build steps have dependencies
that can be expressed through make dependencies.
While this is not directly related to bug 1244446, fixing this bug gets
more complicated if postflight needs to happen before some of the
automation build steps.
Gonk, Android, and the generic cross-compilation setup all were using a
different yet similar way to prefix the toolchain. The latter was even
wrong, since the target and target alias usually don't match actual
toolchain prefixes (which don't include the machine part of the target).
Now that we have cross-compilation tooltool packages for OS X, we can
use the common mozconfig to enable Rust on all OS X builds, regardless
of host OS.
Update tooltool manifest for macosx with a custom build of rustc 1.4.0
with --enable-rpath --disable-elf-tls and MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET=10.7
on MacOS X 10.10.5, Xcode 7.1.1 (clang-700.1.76).
Built for x86_64-apple-darwin with the rustlib from a separate
i686-apple-darwin build copied into the tree to support 32-bit cross
for universal builds.
Since we've enabled rpath, we can drop the DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH setting
from mozconfig.rust. This method seems cleaner since the add/append
decision for DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH is verbose in shell.