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179 строки
12 KiB
Plaintext
179 строки
12 KiB
Plaintext
To build and run WebRender in Gecko:
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1. Install Rust if you don't have it already
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If you are doing gecko builds already, you should already have Rust as it is a build requirement.
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If not, you can install it using |mach bootstrap| (recommended) or from https://www.rust-lang.org/
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Note: If installing manually, use the stable 64-bit release - on Windows make sure to use the MSVC ABI installer.
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Ensure that rustc and cargo are in your $PATH (adding $HOME/.cargo/bin/ should be sufficient)
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2. Build using |mach build|.
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You don't need anything special in your mozconfig for local builds; webrender will be built by default.
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If you are building a non-nightly version (e.g. beta) you may need to add |ac_add_options --enable-webrender=build| to your mozconfig.
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3. Run with |MOZ_WEBRENDER=1| in your environment. e.g. |MOZ_WEBRENDER=1 ./mach run|.
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Alternatively, you can set the gfx.webrender.enabled pref to true (browser restart required).
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Note that on Linux, acceleration is disabled by default and it needs to be enabled for WebRender to work.
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On Linux you can enable acceleration by putting |MOZ_ACCELERATED=1| in your environment, or setting layers.acceleration.force-enabled to true in about:config.
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4. Verify WebRender is enabled. You can do this by going to about:support and checking the "Compositing" line in the Graphics section. It should say "WebRender".
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There should also be a WebRender section under "Decision Log" in about:support, which will provide some more detail on what caused it to be enabled/disabled.
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When making changes:
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- Make the changes you want.
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- Run |mach build| or |mach build binaries| as desired.
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For a debug webrender build:
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Use a debug mozconfig (ac_add_options --enable-debug)
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You can also use an opt build but make webrender less optimized by putting opt-level=0 in the [profile.release] section of your toolkit/library/rust/Cargo.toml file
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See also https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/mozilla.dev.servo/MbeMcqqO1fs
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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What if you have to pull in an update to webrender itself? You have two options,
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listed below. Both options will give you a set of patches and the ability to do
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try pushes to verify the update. After that, continue with the steps below to
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actually land the update into the tree.
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Option A:
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Use a script to do the update for you. This will usually work, if you satisfy
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all the assumptions the script is making. The script can be found at
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https://github.com/staktrace/moz-scripts/blob/master/try-latest-webrender.sh
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and contains documentation on how to use it. Read the documentation carefully
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before trying to use it. The only extra change you need to make with this
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option is to manually update the revision at the bottom of gfx/doc/README.webrender
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so that it points to the new WR version you are landing. The script doesn't
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do that yet.
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Option B:
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Do the update manually. This is a little more cumbersome but may be required
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if the script doesn't work or the repos are in a state that violates hidden
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assumptions in the script (e.g. if the webrender_bindings/Cargo.toml file is
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no longer in the format expected by the script). The steps to do this are,
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roughly:
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- Update your mozilla-central checkout to the latest code on mozilla-central.
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- Check out and update the webrender repo to the version you want
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- Copy over the webrender and webrender_api folders into gfx/. The best way
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to do this is to simply delete the gfx/webrender and gfx/webrender_api
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folders and use |cp -R| to copy them in again from the webrender repo. Update
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the "latest commit" information at the bottom of this file with the version.
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- If you need to modify webrender_bindings/Cargo.toml file, do so now. Changes
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at this step usually consist of:
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(a) Updating version numbers. Go through the version numbers of ALL the
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dependencies in the Cargo.toml file (webrender, euclid, etc.) and make
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sure the version numbers listed match what's in the new
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gfx/webrender/Cargo.toml and gfx/webrender_api/Cargo.toml files.
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(b) Turning on or off any new features that were added in upstream WR. This
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used to happen a lot but is pretty rare now.
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- Go to toolkit/library/rust and run |cargo update -p webrender -p webrender_api|.
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If it complains about version numbers of other crates not lining up, add those
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as well, e.g. |cargo update -p webrender -p webrender_api -p gleam -p euclid|.
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You may need to do this a few times until you get all the crates to make it
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happy.
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- Run the same cargo update command from the previous step in the
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toolkit/library/gtest/rust folder.
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- Commit your changes locally. You'll need to do this before the next step or
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it will complain.
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- At the top of the tree, run |mach vendor rust| to update the rust
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dependencies in third_party/rust.
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- Commit your changes locally.
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- Build and test. You may need to make changes in bindings.rs or on the C++
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side depending on what changed in webrender. This can potentially be quite
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tricky if you don't fully understand the API changes on the webrender side.
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Get help if you need it. For simplicity in bisecting, try to not use your
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new features yet, just get the build working with the minimal changes.
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- Commit any changes from the previous step, and do a try push to make sure
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everything is good. Generally we do two try pushes, one for builds and
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linux tests. This should be totally green. The other forces WR enabled on
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Windows and runs reftests, which currently fails. However if it fails with
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more than just regular reftest failures (e.g. it crashes or has an assertion
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failure) then that's potentially going to be a problem for Windows users
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running WebRender and will need investigation.
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- You now have an updated webrender, so you can land it or write gecko
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code against the new features.
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Once you have followed either Option A or Option B and have a good update, you
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might want to land it in the tree. To do this:
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- Find the current wr-future-update bug, by going to https://bugzil.la/wr-future-update
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- Clone this bug (there is a little dropdown in the bottom right corner of the
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page which gives you an option to "Create a new bug ... as a clone of this bug").
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- This will take you to a bug entry page with some stuff prepopulated. Do NOT
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submit it yet, but make the following changes:
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(a) Modify the "Description" to remove the SECOND instance of the text "+++ This
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bug was initially created as a clone of ... +++". Keep the first instance
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as it points to the bug you just cloned, and keep the rest of the text unless
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you feel it needs changing.
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(b) Add wr-future-update into the "Alias" field
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(c) Clear the bugs in the "Depends on" field
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(d) For each bug in the "Blocks" field, except for 1311790 and 1386670, go
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to the bug and check the "See Also" link for the corresponding WR issue/PR,
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if any. If there is a WR issue that is not yet resolved in the update you
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are landing, leave the bug in the "Blocks" field of your clone. In a later
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step you will remove the dependency from the update you are landing. At
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end of this step the "Blocks" field should contain 1311790, 1386670, and
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any bugs tracking upstream WR issues that are not fixed in the update.
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(e) You still cannot submit the clone as a new bug, because you can't have two
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bugs in the system with the same alias. So hold on a sec.
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- Go back to the tab with the current wr-future-update bug, and click on the edit
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button. Make the following changes:
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(a) Assign the bug to yourself.
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(b) Clear the "Alias" field.
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(c) Remove bugs from the "Blocks" field that you kept in step (d), other than
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1311790 and 1386670. In other words, update the "Blocks" field so that it
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contains 1311790, 1386670, and any bugs that are actually fixed by the
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update.
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(d) Submit your changes to this bug.
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- Now you can submit your changes to the clone bug which will create a new
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wr-future-update bug.
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- Update your patch queue so that the patches are properly formatted with
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bug number, reviewer, etc. and push to MozReview. This is kind of important,
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because you want these patches to land on autoland rather than inbound. If it
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lands on inbound there's a high chance of it conflicting with the servo-vcs-sync
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bot that is regularly pushing to autoland, and then you'll only find out about
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it when the sheriff tries to do a merge and backs you out. If you push to
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autoland you're likely to find out about the problem at push time, when the
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patches won't rebase.
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Troubleshooting tips:
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1. Note that when webrender is built as part of gecko, it may end up using slightly
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different versions of its dependencies than when it is built standalone from the
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webrender repo. The reason is that the Cargo.lock files in m-c and in the WR
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repo may reference different versions of the dependencies. Both builds will be
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compatible in terms of semantic versioning, but may produce different results -
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for example the standalone webrender might use euclid 0.10.4 while the
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one in gecko uses euclid 0.10.3. Although both choices are "valid" per
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the semantic versioning rules in webrender's Cargo.toml, the 0.2.3 may provide
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a bugfix that is needed for correct behaviour in webrender. If this is the case,
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the technically "correct" fix is to change the upstream webrender Cargo.toml
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file to require the correct version. Alternnatively, you can update the
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Cargo.lock files in m-c to pull in the new version. The way to do this is as
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follows:
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- Go to toolkit/library/rust and run |cargo update -p <package> --precise <version>|.
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Repeat this for as many libraries as you need to update. Run the same commands
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in toolkit/library/gtest/rust and js/src (ignore any errors about unmatched
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packages). Commit all the changes locally.
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- Run |mach vendor rust|, which will update the corresponding libraries in
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third_party/rust to the versions you specified.
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The reason we don't do this by default is to work around bug 1336528. Specifically,
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there is another crate in m-c called mozjs_sys which is built separately but uses
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the same folder to store its rust dependencies. If one of the libraries that is
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required by both mozjs_sys and webrender is updated without updating the other
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project's Cargo.lock file, that results in build bustage.
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This means that any time you do this sort of manual update of packages, you need
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to make sure that mozjs_sys also has its Cargo.lock file updated if needed, hence
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the need to run the cargo update command in js/src as well. Hopefully this will
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be resolved soon.
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2. Sometimes autoland tip has changed enough from mozilla-central (because of the
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servo vcs-sync-bot, which will sync servo into m-c and often re-vendor third-
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party rust dependencies) that trying to land an update based on mozilla-central
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will not work well. As in, you'll get conflicts in Cargo.lock files or in the
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third_party/rust directory. This is best handled by running your update steps
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on top of autoland tip rather than central. (The script-based update in option A
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has an env var you can set to do this). In theory you can get the same
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result by resolving the conflict manually but Cargo.lock files are usually not
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trivial to merge by hand. If it's just the third_party/rust dir that has conflicts
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you can delete it and run |mach vendor rust| again to repopulate it.
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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The version of WebRender currently in the tree is:
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1142dfc557c319119a5117450718c5b67a93cb9f
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