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# Buck2 builds | ||
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> [!NOTE] | ||
> This document is primarily of interest to developers. See also [Contributing] | ||
> for more information on how to contribute in general. | ||
There is experimental support for building `jj` with [Buck2], a hermetic and | ||
reproducible build system, an alternative to Cargo. | ||
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> [!IMPORTANT] | ||
> Buck2 support is a work in progress, and is not yet complete. It is not | ||
> recommended for primary development use. | ||
## Step 0: Installing Dotslash | ||
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We use [Dotslash] to manage Buck2 build tooling in a way that's consistent | ||
across all developers and amenable to version control. This helps ensure every | ||
developer gets consistent results (which is a big part of the selling point of | ||
hermetic build tools.) | ||
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You can install Dotslash binaries by following the instructions at: | ||
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- <https://dotslash-cli.com/docs/installation/> | ||
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Or, if you have Rust installed, you can install Dotslash by running: | ||
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```sh | ||
cargo install dotslash | ||
``` | ||
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Or, if you have Nix, you can install Dotslash with Nix by running: | ||
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```sh | ||
nix profile install 'nixpkgs#dotslash' | ||
``` | ||
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## Building `jj` with Buck2 | ||
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Assuming `dotslash` exists somewhere in your `$PATH`, you can now build `jj` | ||
with the included `buck2` dotslash file that exists under `./tools/bin`: | ||
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```sh | ||
./tools/bin/buck2 run cli -- version | ||
``` | ||
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Dotslash will transparently run the correct version of `buck2`, and `buck2` will | ||
build everything needed to run `jj`. | ||
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## Buck2 crash course | ||
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The following is an extremely minimal crash course in Buck2 concepts and how to | ||
use it. | ||
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### Targets | ||
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Buck2 is used to build **targets**, that exists in **packages**, which are part | ||
of a **cell**. The most explicit syntax for referring to a target is the | ||
following: | ||
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```text | ||
cell//path/to/package:target-name | ||
``` | ||
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You normally use a so-called "fully qualified" name like the above as an | ||
argument to `buck2 build`. | ||
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A cell is a short name that maps to a directory in the code repository. A | ||
package is a subdirectory underneath the cell that contains the build rules for | ||
the targets. A target is a buildable unit of code, like a binary or a library, | ||
named in the `BUILD` file inside that package. | ||
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A fully-qualified reference to a target works anywhere in the source code tree, | ||
so you can build or test any component no matter what directory you're in. | ||
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So, given a cell named `foobar//` located underneath `code/foobar`, and a | ||
package `bar/baz` in that cell, leads to a file | ||
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```text | ||
code/foobar/bar/baz/BUILD | ||
``` | ||
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Which contains the targets that can be built. | ||
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There are several shorthands for a target: | ||
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- NIH. | ||
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### Graphs: Target & Action | ||
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NIH. | ||
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### Package files | ||
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NIH. | ||
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### Mode files | ||
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In order to support concepts like debug and release builds, we use the concept | ||
of "mode files" in Buck2. These are files that contain a list of command line | ||
options to apply to a build to achieve the desired effect. | ||
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For example, to build in debug mode, you can simply include the contents of the | ||
file `mode//debug` (using cell syntax) onto the command line. This can | ||
conveniently be done with "at-file" syntax when invoking `buck2`: | ||
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```sh | ||
buck2 build cli @mode//debug | ||
buck2 build cli @mode//release | ||
``` | ||
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Where `@path/to/file` is the at-file syntax for including the contents of a file | ||
on the command line. This syntax supports `cell//` references to Buck cells, as | ||
well. | ||
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In short, `buck2 build @mode//file` will apply the contents of `file` to your | ||
invocation. We keep a convenient set of these files maintained under the | ||
`mode//` cell, located under [`./buck/mode`](../buck/mode). | ||
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#### At-file syntax | ||
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The `buck2` CLI supports a convenient modern feature called "at-file" syntax, | ||
where the invocation `buck2 @path/to/file` is effectively equivalent to the | ||
bash-ism `buck2 $(cat path/to/file)`, where each line of the file is a single | ||
command line entry, in a consistent and portable way that doesn't have any limit | ||
to the size of the underlying file. | ||
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For example, assuming the file `foo/bar` contained the contents | ||
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```text | ||
--foo=1 | ||
--bar=false | ||
``` | ||
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Then `buck2 --test @foo/bar` and `buck2 --test --foo=1 --bar=false` are | ||
equivalent. | ||
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### Buck Extension Language (BXL) | ||
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NIH. | ||
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## Examples | ||
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Some examples are included below. | ||
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### Run BoringSSL speed tests | ||
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```sh | ||
buck2 run third-party//bssl:bssl @mode//release -- speed | ||
``` | ||
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### Build all third-party Rust dependencies | ||
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```sh | ||
buck2 build third-party//rust | ||
``` | ||
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### Build all `http_archive` dependencies | ||
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```sh | ||
buck2 build $(buck2 uquery "kind('http_archive', deps('//...'))" | grep third-party//) | ||
``` | ||
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## Development notes | ||
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Notes for `jj` developers using Buck2. | ||
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### Build mode reference | ||
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- `@mode//debug` | ||
- `@mode//release` | ||
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### Cargo dependency management | ||
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Although Buck2 downloads and runs `rustc` on its own to build crate | ||
dependencies, our `Cargo.toml` build files act as the source of truth for | ||
dependency information in both Cargo and Buck2. | ||
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Updating the dependency graph for Cargo-based projects typically comes in one of | ||
two forms: | ||
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- Updating a dependency version in the top-level workspace `Cargo.toml` file | ||
- Adding a newly required dependency to `[dependencies]` in the `Cargo.toml` | ||
file for a crate | ||
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After doing either of these actions, you can synchronize the Buck2 dependencies | ||
with the Cargo dependencies with the following script: | ||
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```bash | ||
./buck/third-party/rust/synchronize.py | ||
``` | ||
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This must be run from the root of the repository. | ||
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This will re-synchronize all `third-party//rust` crates with the versions in the | ||
workspace Cargo file, and then also update the `BUILD` files in the source code | ||
with any newly added build dependencies that were added or removed (not just | ||
updated). | ||
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### `rust-analyzer` support | ||
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Coming soon. | ||
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<!-- References --> | ||
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[Contributing]: https://martinvonz.github.io/jj/latest/contributing/ | ||
[Buck2]: https://buck2.build/ | ||
[Dotslash]: https://dotslash-cli.com/ |