gecko-dev/gfx/doc
Kartikaya Gupta 31a38cab53 Bug 1369152 - Update webrender to cset b2614e4eb58f9dee08b8c38f96bc3bac834c837b. r=jrmuizel
MozReview-Commit-ID: 5PRr2dZLTZ4

--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 234b8e9632cd02d9949cac761ca9523615b3d9a3
2017-06-05 16:42:02 -04:00
..
AsyncPanZoom-HighLevel.png
AsyncPanZoom.md Bug 1302493 - Update the in-tree APZ documentation to reflect various changes since it was last updated. r=botond 2016-09-14 07:54:46 -04:00
B2GInputFlow.svg Bug 1203132 - Add an SVG for the B2G flow of touch events. r=botond 2015-09-11 14:36:36 -04:00
GraphicsOverview.md
LayersHistory.md Bug 1235223 - Fix another typo in the layers history document. 2016-01-27 13:33:56 +01:00
MainPage.md
MozSurface.md
README.displayitem Bug 1340282 - Update docs on how to create a new webrender display item. r=gfx? DONTBUILD 2017-02-16 12:53:13 -08:00
README.webrender Bug 1369152 - Update webrender to cset b2614e4eb58f9dee08b8c38f96bc3bac834c837b. r=jrmuizel 2017-06-05 16:42:02 -04:00
SharedMozSurface.md
Silk.md Bug 1336311 - Change code comments with http://hg.mozilla.org to https://. r=gps 2017-02-07 17:52:56 +01:00
silkArchitecture.png Bug 1134385. Silk documentation. r=kats 2015-04-20 17:28:25 -07:00

README.webrender

Step 1: Install Rust if you don't have it already
    If you are doing gecko builds already, you should already have Rust as it is a build requirement.
    If not, you can install it using |mach bootstrap| (recommended) or from https://www.rust-lang.org/
        Note: If installing manually, use the stable 64-bit release - on Windows make sure to use the MSVC ABI installer.
    Ensure that rustc and cargo are in your $PATH (adding $HOME/.cargo/bin/ should be sufficient)

Step 2: Set up mozconfig
    Add the following line to your mozconfig:
        ac_add_options --enable-webrender
    The first time you do a build with this changes, you should also run |mach clobber|

Step 3:
    Build using |mach build|


When making changes:
    - Make the changes you want.
    - Run |mach build| or |mach build binaries| as desired.


For a debug webrender build:
    Use a debug mozconfig (ac_add_options --enable-debug)
    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
    See also https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/mozilla.dev.servo/MbeMcqqO1fs


What if you have to pull in an update to webrender itself?

1) Update your graphics branch checkout to the latest code on the
   graphics branch
2) Check out and update the webrender repo to the version you want
3) Copy over the webrender and webrender_traits folders into gfx/. The best way
   to do this is to simply delete the gfx/webrender and gfx/webrender_traits
   folders and use |cp -R| to copy them in again from the webrender repo. Update
   the "latest commit" information at the bottom of this file with the version.
4) If you need to modify webrender_bindings/Cargo.toml to include or remove
   features, do so now.
4) Commit your changes to the graphics branch locally
5) Run |mach vendor rust| to update the rust dependencies in third_party/rust
6) Commit the vendored changes locally
7) Build and test. You may need to make changes in bindings.rs or on
   the C++ side depending on what changed in webrender. This can
   potentially be quite tricky if you don't fully understand the API
   changes on the webrender side. In this step, try to not use your new
   features yet, just get the build working with the minimal changes.
8) Commit the changes locally from step 7, and push everything to the
   graphics branch.
9) Now you have an update webrender with the new features you wanted,
   so you can write gecko code against them.

Yes, this is somewhat painful. It used to be worse. :)

Note that when webrender is built as part of gecko, it may end up using slightly
different versions of its dependencies than when it is built standalone from the
webrender repo. The reason is that the Cargo.lock files in m-c and in the WR
repo may reference different versions of the dependencies. Both builds will be
compatible in terms of semantic versioning, but may produce different results -
for example the standalone webrender might use euclid 0.10.4 while the
one in gecko uses euclid 0.10.3. Although both choices are "valid" per
the semantic versioning rules in webrender's Cargo.toml, the 0.2.3 may provide
a bugfix that is needed for correct behaviour in webrender. If this is the case,
the technically "correct" fix is to change the upstream webrender Cargo.toml
file to require the correct version. Alternnatively, you can update the
Cargo.lock files in m-c to pull in the new version. The way to do this is as
follows:
- Go to toolkit/library/rust and run |cargo update -p <package> --precise <version>|.
  Repeat this for as many libraries as you need to update. Run the same commands
  in toolkit/library/gtest/rust and js/src (ignore any errors about unmatched
  packages). Commit all the changes locally.
- Run |mach vendor rust|, which will update the corresponding libraries in
  third_party/rust to the versions you specified.
The reason we don't do this by default is to work around bug 1336528. Specifically,
there is another crate in m-c called mozjs_sys which is built separately but uses
the same folder to store its rust dependencies. If one of the libraries that is
required by both mozjs_sys and webrender is updated without updating the other
project's Cargo.lock file, that results in build bustage.
This means that any time you do this sort of manual update of packages, you need
to make sure that mozjs_sys also has its Cargo.lock file updated if needed, hence
the need to run the cargo update command in js/src as well. Hopefully this will
be resolved soon.

Latest Commit: b2614e4eb58f9dee08b8c38f96bc3bac834c837b