This makes it easier to lint a path that otherwise wouldn't have been linted due to the include/exclude
directives. Now, you can pass in -n/--no-filter instead of needing to modify the linter configuration file.
MozReview-Commit-ID: GMJuE2C1NyY
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 03627e930f76903ad629cb01b58c4ae7372e4bb1
The wizard has been ported to the version-control-tools repository
and in-tree consumers have been switched to consume it from there. This
code is now dead. Kill it.
References to the now-defunct code have been removed/updated.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 5fpCXdNIp8L
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 6c1e2363793fe2cd3a506ce5d962788657871203
extra : histedit_source : c40d2203aaa54bbd48e4e2b46178e277dcdc2e3f
The Mercurial setup wizard has now been ported to the version-control-tools
repository, where it has testing and integrates better with Mercurial
configs.
The bootstrapper has been taught how to invoke the new version of the
Mercurial setup wizard.
This commit switched `mach mercurial-setup` to call the bootstrapper
code for invoking the Mercurial setup wizard from version-control-tools.
As of this commit, the Mercurial setup wizard in tools/mercurial is
unused.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 3xzgOYZWTZn
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 56697d504ff41ad02d77ddd1241cebafe610751a
extra : histedit_source : feb7450130c447dc74e059173f5b54544c020929
If a state directory is available and we're running in interactive mode
(or have been told otherwise), we now configure Mercurial during
bootstrap.
This consists of cloning version-control-tools to the state directory
(mimicking code in `mach mercurial-setup` today) and running the
config wizard from version-control-tools.
Code for cloning/updating repositories has been stolen from
tools/mercurial/hgsetup.
As the inline TODO notes, I'd like to eventually support
configuring Git during bootstrap. Since Mercurial is the canonical VCS
for Firefox and since we already have a Mercurial setup wizard (and
don't have a Git one yet), I don't think we should block on implementing
Git support.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 1FZyWIlHZNy
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : c727017bbdc703399fa67e1d831280441026614b
extra : histedit_source : fdb124447b4e80277cfd70fb65a24e0947c89c60
Currently, on first run of `mach` it prompts you to create a state
directory. The hand-off between bootstrap and `mach` has always
bothered me because bootstrap is supposed to get your system in a good
state.
In this commit, we teach the bootstrap tool to create the state
directory when not present. This duplicates functionality from `mach`.
The justification for the duplication is explained by inline comment.
In future commits, we'll build on this work to have the bootstrapper
run the Mercurial config wizard, which needs this state directory.
MozReview-Commit-ID: CPKVuRJ3peM
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 085b67183ec4fda8a23ead3328130c962c95617d
extra : histedit_source : 3ba31232521f624bcf9d0cc5a99033083c1f3657
This begins the consolidation of `mach mercurial-setup` into
`mach bootstrap`. The first step is to move the content of the
mach_commands.py file into the bootstrapper's.
I'm not crazy about adding the sys.path entry for tools/mercurial.
I intend to clean this up later.
MozReview-Commit-ID: Cq56wPG8sO1
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 48d6d2631760c9333bf99285673430948085630e
extra : histedit_source : e062f6fbc0ae9678347801b4a1f1c9b6912afd52
Killing the sccache background daemon is part of postflight_all, but in
the current setup, postflight_all happens at the end of a "normal" build,
but we run automation build steps after that.
What happens then is that more compilations happen (gtests), which start
sccache again, but there's nothing to kill sccache again once this is
all done.
Now that the OSX universal builds postflight is gone, it is not
necessary for postflight_all to happen before the automation build steps.
So ensure postflight_all scripts happen last.
The downside of this change is that this now prevents sccache.log from
being uploaded, but we should probably send processed data to the graph
server instead.
Killing the sccache background daemon is part of postflight_all, but in
the current setup, postflight_all happens at the end of a "normal" build,
but we run automation build steps after that.
What happens then is that more compilations happen (gtests), which start
sccache again, but there's nothing to kill sccache again once this is
all done.
Now that the OSX universal builds postflight is gone, it is not
necessary for postflight_all to happen before the automation build steps.
So ensure postflight_all scripts happen last.
The downside of this change is that this now prevents sccache.log from
being uploaded, but we should probably send processed data to the graph
server instead.
The correct version of Python will get installed from the install_python method instead of with the system packages.
This is more in-line with how a bootstrapper *should* extend from the base bootstrapper.
MozReview-Commit-ID: JIMGF7XKL02
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : dc70bdf555afe0a0dfb253e01381b5e6fa52eee3
Overrode BaseBootstrapper.which to append '.exe' to any which checks since (hopefully) anything the bootstrapper looks for, must be a windows executable.
Changed base bootstrapper class to use str instead of unicode to avoid a bug in the MinGW version of Python where subprocces.Popen will not accept environment variables that are in unicode instead of str.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 4m8xNifawYS
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 455b518b099fdba347626ab93b85ddbd44f1f977
Added convenience method for installing from pip.
Windows bootstrapper implements upgrade_mercurial to install mercurial from pip.
MozReview-Commit-ID: ClqNA2NmQcc
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 8107bbca70b0e1e6208cc37f114ad524472174b8
Windows bootstrapper checks if pacman is installed before continuing.
Added a convenience method similar to BaseBootstrapper.which that works with the mingw version of python in msys2.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 6AG2c18KF0U
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : a76fecf19d81d05e1515647b60f118c590dd3518
These new convenience methods let the bootstrapper update the local package list, upgrade all installed packages, and install new packages.
MozReview-Commit-ID: KZPyBl0OU6Z
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 6a345b5e0cce7c0095dc1213d6609c1ca6a58920
Created a WindowsBootstrapper class that raises a NotImplementedError when initialized.
As WindowsBootstrapper is implemented, set $MOZ_WINDOWS_BOOTSTRAP to '1' in your environment to test it.
Bootstrapper now detects if the system is being run on Windows, and if it is dispatches to the WindowsBootstrapper.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 3x6PDPuLtzs
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 250232493a19f20cf3c2218618373cd9ae4b966f
This is a really simple and ugly formatter that is compatible with
treeherder's error highlighting mechanism. It is designed to be identical
to the current eslint output on treeherder:
https://dxr.mozilla.org/mozilla-central/rev/4d63dde701b47b8661ab7990f197b6b60e543839/tools/lint/eslint-formatter.js
Eventually eslint will also use this and we can remove that file. Once
bug 1276486 is fixed, we can make this look a little nicer. But for now
it gets the job done.
MozReview-Commit-ID: CwfWPcwWFxF
--HG--
extra : transplant_source : %F3PJ%CB%27%A5%82U%D2%CF%B3%9E%A7%9F%0F%A4%F4%E9%5D%BB
This is a really simple and ugly formatter that is compatible with
treeherder's error highlighting mechanism. It is designed to be identical
to the current eslint output on treeherder:
https://dxr.mozilla.org/mozilla-central/rev/4d63dde701b47b8661ab7990f197b6b60e543839/tools/lint/eslint-formatter.js
Eventually eslint will also use this and we can remove that file. Once
bug 1276486 is fixed, we can make this look a little nicer. But for now
it gets the job done.
MozReview-Commit-ID: CwfWPcwWFxF
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 8dd39aefec1064e0836c847c6d223db43df4755b
These variables specify a version of Mercurial that is considered
modern and won't trigger giant warnings about being out of date.
We bump to 3.7.3 because 3.7.3 contains security fixes and it is
important for as many users as possible to get these security fixes.
We also update the messaging to indicate security issues with older
releases.
MozReview-Commit-ID: H4utKINrW0V
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 5247fec94d7df351ef3c7bb2aa60396bb19a6196
extra : amend_source : 70b9aa52cde71d11e2b6d65a1a83567b8a0c7965
Now that the VisualStudio backend will no-op if nothing has changed, it
should be safe to always run this backend.
On first run, backend generation takes ~3.5s on my machine. On subsequent run,
it takes ~1.5s. Wall time for a no-op config.status is now ~15.7s. We could like
make the Visual Studio backend faster by not writing so many project files.
But this would require consolidating libraries in moz.build files. And that's
out of scope for this change.
We drop the check for MSVS_VERSION because it won't always be defined on
MinGW/GCC builds. We simply default to "2015" if it isn't set.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 5W38HMGmcuV
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 302d76277058819c115f3c2518b8cb2067971950
extra : source : 408319d87eacb28848efeab0346eb815440adade
Should be a stopgap until bootstrapper is ported to Python 3.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 2NNC3jMftr9
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 9d903dc0830369a84206c56136fb90006f9ad842
There is probably a way to dynamically retrieve the version. But rather
than take the chance we'd query the wrong thing, let's just parse the
version that Visual Studio writes to the solution file when saving it and
use it.
With this change, generating the VisualStudio build backend should not change
any files unless the build config has changed. This means we can generate
Visual Studio files at will without causing Visual Studio to complain
about the solution and other files changing and needing reloading.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 1udZ72SLEzP
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : d15bff5b30a021dc1180e48fb7bb0d6c84871b69
Visual Studio will write this variable to an ancient Visual Studio
version (2010 I believe) if we don't specify it. Explicitly write the
variable to the minimum Visual Studio version we support.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 8Y0im48OM2G
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 7b1f4cfe778c6258dce068b2aec8b6acd8e85102
Upon further examination, VS2013 and VS2015 share the same file format
version. They also write the internal version number in a comment, not
the user-facing production version.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 92HB0pEzeI6
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : ebf00ae704ccd44415f8d7054359c87287734926
GetConsoleWindow() can return NULL. Previously, we may have passed a NULL
console reference into FlashWindowEx(). On my machine (when running in a
console), passing NULL doesn't seem to cause an error. But since we have
a report of this function hanging, it is quite possible it can cause
hangs in other scenarios. Since a NULL console won't result in any
notification, let's not call FlashWindowEx() when no console is available.
MozReview-Commit-ID: LrKX8weUkzX
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 6c3fc724dbc038f6b51bbdc14d985202c47074e8
Before, ./mach build would try to use terminal-notifier after building, but would not be able to since it isn't installed.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 4oBAVfOdcNs
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 0930e9d4dc038e59f18beb85b4911552c76c0eed
The label has been there for years. It isn't really experimental.
The Visual Studio solution still leaves a lot to be desired. But
let's not scare people away by calling it experimental.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 7UvsbsKNnWw
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : a7d3f824859629297a782a0883ebf78af1d8fa70
By using self._write_file() and FileAvoidWrite, we avoid writing files
unless they change. This means that Visual Studio won't want you to
reload the solution and projects whenever the backend is generated.
This means you can regenerate the backend all you want and chances are
it won't disrupt your Visual Studio experience.
Since self._write_file() creates parent directories for us, we were
able to remove this code.
If you run `mach build-backend --diff` with this commit, output will
change. For reasons I don't understand, we were producing XML with
e.g. \r\r\n sequences. This patch appears to restore \r\n. How
we got \r\r I don't know because I can't find anywhere in the code
where that can occur. But this commit does appear to restore sanity.
Also, it appears modern versions of Visual Studio (perhaps only VS2015)
doesn't write your project files. When I initially implemented Visual
Studio project generation several years ago, as soon as you loaded
the solution and hit "Save All" Visual Studio would re-save your files
using a slightly different formatting (it did some gnarly things with
XML indentation). VS2015 doesn't do this. So your files on disk should
be unmodified for longer, making Visual Studio a more viable development
environment. Yay.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 7CSk0dsLOli
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 3cd04ba8ffed8fc8880de66b1f4fce1f6300b51c
Currently, self._write_file() instantiates FileAvoidWrite instances
with the default mode of 'rU' which uses universal newlines (\n).
Visual Studio project files use CRLF newlines. We want to use
self._write_file() in the Visual Studio backend (which predates
self._write_file). Prepare for this by passing the mode argument
through.
MozReview-Commit-ID: LHCUf3IrpJ8
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : be08d8e043ef625f8f846c38446e1430e072a665
If we're running VS2013, we generate VS2013 files. If we're running VS2015,
we generate VS2015 files. If we don't have a Visual Studio version
defined, refuse to generate project files (hopefully this doesn't
happen in the real world but I'm sure someone will complain if it does).
MozReview-Commit-ID: 5GdsbGmWPLB
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 1a50c0fa5b7980ad25fb3ed3c1ec2c95f16996b6
We only support building with VS2013 and VS2015. Remove references
to older versions in the Visual Studio build backend.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 6QTSylqLwLF
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : d654f0e415dd5c1bfa1258633e26d467bea5535a
These imports make an out-of-tree build of SpiderMonkey depend on
the reftest module, which means SpiderMonkey implicitly depends on
layout/tools/reftest.
Firefox automation now uploads resource usage JSON files as
job artifacts (see bug 1272202). Now that the build system
writes the same data format and `mach resource-usage` can
read this data format, let's teach `mach resource-usage`
to load arbitrary URLs. This allows people to view system
resource usage for arbitrary jobs in automation.
Currently, you have to look at Treeherder to find the URL to
the build-resources.json artifact. Perhaps in the future
we can make finding the URL easier. Or we could integrate
source resource viewing into Treeherder itself (this is
probably preferred).
This commit continues the tradition of `mach resource-usage`
being a hacked up mess. Instead of loading the URL in
the browser, we download the URL from Python then serve it
from the HTTP server running as part of `mach resource-usage`.
This is somewhat horrible. But it was easiest to implement.
It also conveniently bypasses any cross origin request
restrictions the browser may impose. So it is useful.
MozReview-Commit-ID: IR1Cfs7SrRN
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : b33231d482ca891c1b3331f472009518bf57f8c3