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ci-emsdk/bazel/emscripten_cache.bzl

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BUILD_FILE_CONTENT_TEMPLATE = """
package(default_visibility = ['//visibility:public'])
exports_files(['emscripten_config'])
"""
EMBUILDER_CONFIG_TEMPLATE = """
CACHE = '{cache}'
BINARYEN_ROOT = '{binaryen_root}'
LLVM_ROOT = '{llvm_root}'
"""
def get_root_and_script_ext(repository_ctx):
Bazel: Migrate to bzlmod (#1530) This migrates the bazel integration to the new Bazel dependency system "bzlmod". bzlmod is becoming mandatory this year (see second sentence here: https://bazel.build/external/migration). This is a backwards incompatible migration, directly removing the old WORKSPACE based approach. Users will have to change how they depend on bzlmod, however I assume pretty much every user will be happy about it, because they are forced to use bzlmod anyway or add extra flags to continue to build with newer Bazel versions. Given that users normally depend on specific git commits in the old system, they won't be hit with this until they decide to upgrade emsdk. The basic principle here is simple: I took everything that WORKSPACE did and searched an alternative in bzlmod. Some interesting bits: - We have less worries about multiple versions and people depending on emscripten multiple times in different ways. This is resolved by the new system: Bazel first iterates through the MODULE.bazel files recursively, then finds the minimum version needed for each module and then executes the module extensions that define repos exactly once at that version. So no more ifs needed to detect multiple inclusions. - A bunch of nodejs stuff moves to MODULE.bazel, because that is how the nodejs module works now. As their module extension gets executed only once you need to declare everything that you could need before that in the MODULE.bazel file. A side effect of that is that we have to make a fake repository when emscripten doesn't have an arm64 binary for linux, because we can't actually figure that out in MODULE.bazel, so we have to declare that it always exists and then create one in all cases. There is a bunch of autoformatter changes in here as well, I could try to revert them if you prefer. Closes #1509
2025-04-09 23:38:12 +02:00
if repository_ctx.os.name.startswith("linux"):
if "amd64" in repository_ctx.os.arch or "x86_64" in repository_ctx.os.arch:
return (repository_ctx.path(Label("@emscripten_bin_linux//:BUILD.bazel")).dirname, "")
elif "aarch64" in repository_ctx.os.arch:
return (repository_ctx.path(Label("@emscripten_bin_linux_arm64//:BUILD.bazel")).dirname, "")
else:
Bazel: Migrate to bzlmod (#1530) This migrates the bazel integration to the new Bazel dependency system "bzlmod". bzlmod is becoming mandatory this year (see second sentence here: https://bazel.build/external/migration). This is a backwards incompatible migration, directly removing the old WORKSPACE based approach. Users will have to change how they depend on bzlmod, however I assume pretty much every user will be happy about it, because they are forced to use bzlmod anyway or add extra flags to continue to build with newer Bazel versions. Given that users normally depend on specific git commits in the old system, they won't be hit with this until they decide to upgrade emsdk. The basic principle here is simple: I took everything that WORKSPACE did and searched an alternative in bzlmod. Some interesting bits: - We have less worries about multiple versions and people depending on emscripten multiple times in different ways. This is resolved by the new system: Bazel first iterates through the MODULE.bazel files recursively, then finds the minimum version needed for each module and then executes the module extensions that define repos exactly once at that version. So no more ifs needed to detect multiple inclusions. - A bunch of nodejs stuff moves to MODULE.bazel, because that is how the nodejs module works now. As their module extension gets executed only once you need to declare everything that you could need before that in the MODULE.bazel file. A side effect of that is that we have to make a fake repository when emscripten doesn't have an arm64 binary for linux, because we can't actually figure that out in MODULE.bazel, so we have to declare that it always exists and then create one in all cases. There is a bunch of autoformatter changes in here as well, I could try to revert them if you prefer. Closes #1509
2025-04-09 23:38:12 +02:00
fail("Unsupported architecture for Linux")
elif repository_ctx.os.name.startswith("mac"):
if "amd64" in repository_ctx.os.arch or "x86_64" in repository_ctx.os.arch:
return (repository_ctx.path(Label("@emscripten_bin_mac//:BUILD.bazel")).dirname, "")
elif "aarch64" in repository_ctx.os.arch:
return (repository_ctx.path(Label("@emscripten_bin_mac_arm64//:BUILD.bazel")).dirname, "")
else:
Bazel: Migrate to bzlmod (#1530) This migrates the bazel integration to the new Bazel dependency system "bzlmod". bzlmod is becoming mandatory this year (see second sentence here: https://bazel.build/external/migration). This is a backwards incompatible migration, directly removing the old WORKSPACE based approach. Users will have to change how they depend on bzlmod, however I assume pretty much every user will be happy about it, because they are forced to use bzlmod anyway or add extra flags to continue to build with newer Bazel versions. Given that users normally depend on specific git commits in the old system, they won't be hit with this until they decide to upgrade emsdk. The basic principle here is simple: I took everything that WORKSPACE did and searched an alternative in bzlmod. Some interesting bits: - We have less worries about multiple versions and people depending on emscripten multiple times in different ways. This is resolved by the new system: Bazel first iterates through the MODULE.bazel files recursively, then finds the minimum version needed for each module and then executes the module extensions that define repos exactly once at that version. So no more ifs needed to detect multiple inclusions. - A bunch of nodejs stuff moves to MODULE.bazel, because that is how the nodejs module works now. As their module extension gets executed only once you need to declare everything that you could need before that in the MODULE.bazel file. A side effect of that is that we have to make a fake repository when emscripten doesn't have an arm64 binary for linux, because we can't actually figure that out in MODULE.bazel, so we have to declare that it always exists and then create one in all cases. There is a bunch of autoformatter changes in here as well, I could try to revert them if you prefer. Closes #1509
2025-04-09 23:38:12 +02:00
fail("Unsupported architecture for MacOS")
elif repository_ctx.os.name.startswith("windows"):
return (repository_ctx.path(Label("@emscripten_bin_win//:BUILD.bazel")).dirname, ".bat")
else:
Bazel: Migrate to bzlmod (#1530) This migrates the bazel integration to the new Bazel dependency system "bzlmod". bzlmod is becoming mandatory this year (see second sentence here: https://bazel.build/external/migration). This is a backwards incompatible migration, directly removing the old WORKSPACE based approach. Users will have to change how they depend on bzlmod, however I assume pretty much every user will be happy about it, because they are forced to use bzlmod anyway or add extra flags to continue to build with newer Bazel versions. Given that users normally depend on specific git commits in the old system, they won't be hit with this until they decide to upgrade emsdk. The basic principle here is simple: I took everything that WORKSPACE did and searched an alternative in bzlmod. Some interesting bits: - We have less worries about multiple versions and people depending on emscripten multiple times in different ways. This is resolved by the new system: Bazel first iterates through the MODULE.bazel files recursively, then finds the minimum version needed for each module and then executes the module extensions that define repos exactly once at that version. So no more ifs needed to detect multiple inclusions. - A bunch of nodejs stuff moves to MODULE.bazel, because that is how the nodejs module works now. As their module extension gets executed only once you need to declare everything that you could need before that in the MODULE.bazel file. A side effect of that is that we have to make a fake repository when emscripten doesn't have an arm64 binary for linux, because we can't actually figure that out in MODULE.bazel, so we have to declare that it always exists and then create one in all cases. There is a bunch of autoformatter changes in here as well, I could try to revert them if you prefer. Closes #1509
2025-04-09 23:38:12 +02:00
fail("Unsupported operating system")
Bazel: Migrate to bzlmod (#1530) This migrates the bazel integration to the new Bazel dependency system "bzlmod". bzlmod is becoming mandatory this year (see second sentence here: https://bazel.build/external/migration). This is a backwards incompatible migration, directly removing the old WORKSPACE based approach. Users will have to change how they depend on bzlmod, however I assume pretty much every user will be happy about it, because they are forced to use bzlmod anyway or add extra flags to continue to build with newer Bazel versions. Given that users normally depend on specific git commits in the old system, they won't be hit with this until they decide to upgrade emsdk. The basic principle here is simple: I took everything that WORKSPACE did and searched an alternative in bzlmod. Some interesting bits: - We have less worries about multiple versions and people depending on emscripten multiple times in different ways. This is resolved by the new system: Bazel first iterates through the MODULE.bazel files recursively, then finds the minimum version needed for each module and then executes the module extensions that define repos exactly once at that version. So no more ifs needed to detect multiple inclusions. - A bunch of nodejs stuff moves to MODULE.bazel, because that is how the nodejs module works now. As their module extension gets executed only once you need to declare everything that you could need before that in the MODULE.bazel file. A side effect of that is that we have to make a fake repository when emscripten doesn't have an arm64 binary for linux, because we can't actually figure that out in MODULE.bazel, so we have to declare that it always exists and then create one in all cases. There is a bunch of autoformatter changes in here as well, I could try to revert them if you prefer. Closes #1509
2025-04-09 23:38:12 +02:00
def _emscripten_cache_repository_impl(repository_ctx):
# Read the default emscripten configuration file
default_config = repository_ctx.read(
repository_ctx.path(
Bazel: Migrate to bzlmod (#1530) This migrates the bazel integration to the new Bazel dependency system "bzlmod". bzlmod is becoming mandatory this year (see second sentence here: https://bazel.build/external/migration). This is a backwards incompatible migration, directly removing the old WORKSPACE based approach. Users will have to change how they depend on bzlmod, however I assume pretty much every user will be happy about it, because they are forced to use bzlmod anyway or add extra flags to continue to build with newer Bazel versions. Given that users normally depend on specific git commits in the old system, they won't be hit with this until they decide to upgrade emsdk. The basic principle here is simple: I took everything that WORKSPACE did and searched an alternative in bzlmod. Some interesting bits: - We have less worries about multiple versions and people depending on emscripten multiple times in different ways. This is resolved by the new system: Bazel first iterates through the MODULE.bazel files recursively, then finds the minimum version needed for each module and then executes the module extensions that define repos exactly once at that version. So no more ifs needed to detect multiple inclusions. - A bunch of nodejs stuff moves to MODULE.bazel, because that is how the nodejs module works now. As their module extension gets executed only once you need to declare everything that you could need before that in the MODULE.bazel file. A side effect of that is that we have to make a fake repository when emscripten doesn't have an arm64 binary for linux, because we can't actually figure that out in MODULE.bazel, so we have to declare that it always exists and then create one in all cases. There is a bunch of autoformatter changes in here as well, I could try to revert them if you prefer. Closes #1509
2025-04-09 23:38:12 +02:00
Label("@emsdk//emscripten_toolchain:default_config"),
),
)
if repository_ctx.attr.targets or repository_ctx.attr.configuration:
root, script_ext = get_root_and_script_ext(repository_ctx)
llvm_root = root.get_child("bin")
cache = repository_ctx.path("cache")
Bazel: Migrate to bzlmod (#1530) This migrates the bazel integration to the new Bazel dependency system "bzlmod". bzlmod is becoming mandatory this year (see second sentence here: https://bazel.build/external/migration). This is a backwards incompatible migration, directly removing the old WORKSPACE based approach. Users will have to change how they depend on bzlmod, however I assume pretty much every user will be happy about it, because they are forced to use bzlmod anyway or add extra flags to continue to build with newer Bazel versions. Given that users normally depend on specific git commits in the old system, they won't be hit with this until they decide to upgrade emsdk. The basic principle here is simple: I took everything that WORKSPACE did and searched an alternative in bzlmod. Some interesting bits: - We have less worries about multiple versions and people depending on emscripten multiple times in different ways. This is resolved by the new system: Bazel first iterates through the MODULE.bazel files recursively, then finds the minimum version needed for each module and then executes the module extensions that define repos exactly once at that version. So no more ifs needed to detect multiple inclusions. - A bunch of nodejs stuff moves to MODULE.bazel, because that is how the nodejs module works now. As their module extension gets executed only once you need to declare everything that you could need before that in the MODULE.bazel file. A side effect of that is that we have to make a fake repository when emscripten doesn't have an arm64 binary for linux, because we can't actually figure that out in MODULE.bazel, so we have to declare that it always exists and then create one in all cases. There is a bunch of autoformatter changes in here as well, I could try to revert them if you prefer. Closes #1509
2025-04-09 23:38:12 +02:00
# Create configuration file
embuilder_config_content = EMBUILDER_CONFIG_TEMPLATE.format(
Bazel: Migrate to bzlmod (#1530) This migrates the bazel integration to the new Bazel dependency system "bzlmod". bzlmod is becoming mandatory this year (see second sentence here: https://bazel.build/external/migration). This is a backwards incompatible migration, directly removing the old WORKSPACE based approach. Users will have to change how they depend on bzlmod, however I assume pretty much every user will be happy about it, because they are forced to use bzlmod anyway or add extra flags to continue to build with newer Bazel versions. Given that users normally depend on specific git commits in the old system, they won't be hit with this until they decide to upgrade emsdk. The basic principle here is simple: I took everything that WORKSPACE did and searched an alternative in bzlmod. Some interesting bits: - We have less worries about multiple versions and people depending on emscripten multiple times in different ways. This is resolved by the new system: Bazel first iterates through the MODULE.bazel files recursively, then finds the minimum version needed for each module and then executes the module extensions that define repos exactly once at that version. So no more ifs needed to detect multiple inclusions. - A bunch of nodejs stuff moves to MODULE.bazel, because that is how the nodejs module works now. As their module extension gets executed only once you need to declare everything that you could need before that in the MODULE.bazel file. A side effect of that is that we have to make a fake repository when emscripten doesn't have an arm64 binary for linux, because we can't actually figure that out in MODULE.bazel, so we have to declare that it always exists and then create one in all cases. There is a bunch of autoformatter changes in here as well, I could try to revert them if you prefer. Closes #1509
2025-04-09 23:38:12 +02:00
cache = cache,
binaryen_root = root,
llvm_root = llvm_root,
)
repository_ctx.file("embuilder_config", embuilder_config_content)
embuilder_config_path = repository_ctx.path("embuilder_config")
embuilder_path = "{}{}".format(root.get_child("emscripten").get_child("embuilder"), script_ext)
Bazel: Migrate to bzlmod (#1530) This migrates the bazel integration to the new Bazel dependency system "bzlmod". bzlmod is becoming mandatory this year (see second sentence here: https://bazel.build/external/migration). This is a backwards incompatible migration, directly removing the old WORKSPACE based approach. Users will have to change how they depend on bzlmod, however I assume pretty much every user will be happy about it, because they are forced to use bzlmod anyway or add extra flags to continue to build with newer Bazel versions. Given that users normally depend on specific git commits in the old system, they won't be hit with this until they decide to upgrade emsdk. The basic principle here is simple: I took everything that WORKSPACE did and searched an alternative in bzlmod. Some interesting bits: - We have less worries about multiple versions and people depending on emscripten multiple times in different ways. This is resolved by the new system: Bazel first iterates through the MODULE.bazel files recursively, then finds the minimum version needed for each module and then executes the module extensions that define repos exactly once at that version. So no more ifs needed to detect multiple inclusions. - A bunch of nodejs stuff moves to MODULE.bazel, because that is how the nodejs module works now. As their module extension gets executed only once you need to declare everything that you could need before that in the MODULE.bazel file. A side effect of that is that we have to make a fake repository when emscripten doesn't have an arm64 binary for linux, because we can't actually figure that out in MODULE.bazel, so we have to declare that it always exists and then create one in all cases. There is a bunch of autoformatter changes in here as well, I could try to revert them if you prefer. Closes #1509
2025-04-09 23:38:12 +02:00
# Prepare the command line
if repository_ctx.attr.targets:
targets = repository_ctx.attr.targets
else:
# If no targets are requested, build everything
targets = ["ALL"]
flags = ["--em-config", embuilder_config_path] + repository_ctx.attr.configuration
embuilder_args = [embuilder_path] + flags + ["build"] + targets
Bazel: Migrate to bzlmod (#1530) This migrates the bazel integration to the new Bazel dependency system "bzlmod". bzlmod is becoming mandatory this year (see second sentence here: https://bazel.build/external/migration). This is a backwards incompatible migration, directly removing the old WORKSPACE based approach. Users will have to change how they depend on bzlmod, however I assume pretty much every user will be happy about it, because they are forced to use bzlmod anyway or add extra flags to continue to build with newer Bazel versions. Given that users normally depend on specific git commits in the old system, they won't be hit with this until they decide to upgrade emsdk. The basic principle here is simple: I took everything that WORKSPACE did and searched an alternative in bzlmod. Some interesting bits: - We have less worries about multiple versions and people depending on emscripten multiple times in different ways. This is resolved by the new system: Bazel first iterates through the MODULE.bazel files recursively, then finds the minimum version needed for each module and then executes the module extensions that define repos exactly once at that version. So no more ifs needed to detect multiple inclusions. - A bunch of nodejs stuff moves to MODULE.bazel, because that is how the nodejs module works now. As their module extension gets executed only once you need to declare everything that you could need before that in the MODULE.bazel file. A side effect of that is that we have to make a fake repository when emscripten doesn't have an arm64 binary for linux, because we can't actually figure that out in MODULE.bazel, so we have to declare that it always exists and then create one in all cases. There is a bunch of autoformatter changes in here as well, I could try to revert them if you prefer. Closes #1509
2025-04-09 23:38:12 +02:00
# Run embuilder
repository_ctx.report_progress("Building secondary cache")
result = repository_ctx.execute(
embuilder_args,
Bazel: Migrate to bzlmod (#1530) This migrates the bazel integration to the new Bazel dependency system "bzlmod". bzlmod is becoming mandatory this year (see second sentence here: https://bazel.build/external/migration). This is a backwards incompatible migration, directly removing the old WORKSPACE based approach. Users will have to change how they depend on bzlmod, however I assume pretty much every user will be happy about it, because they are forced to use bzlmod anyway or add extra flags to continue to build with newer Bazel versions. Given that users normally depend on specific git commits in the old system, they won't be hit with this until they decide to upgrade emsdk. The basic principle here is simple: I took everything that WORKSPACE did and searched an alternative in bzlmod. Some interesting bits: - We have less worries about multiple versions and people depending on emscripten multiple times in different ways. This is resolved by the new system: Bazel first iterates through the MODULE.bazel files recursively, then finds the minimum version needed for each module and then executes the module extensions that define repos exactly once at that version. So no more ifs needed to detect multiple inclusions. - A bunch of nodejs stuff moves to MODULE.bazel, because that is how the nodejs module works now. As their module extension gets executed only once you need to declare everything that you could need before that in the MODULE.bazel file. A side effect of that is that we have to make a fake repository when emscripten doesn't have an arm64 binary for linux, because we can't actually figure that out in MODULE.bazel, so we have to declare that it always exists and then create one in all cases. There is a bunch of autoformatter changes in here as well, I could try to revert them if you prefer. Closes #1509
2025-04-09 23:38:12 +02:00
quiet = True,
environment = {
"EM_IGNORE_SANITY": "1",
"EM_NODE_JS": "empty",
Bazel: Migrate to bzlmod (#1530) This migrates the bazel integration to the new Bazel dependency system "bzlmod". bzlmod is becoming mandatory this year (see second sentence here: https://bazel.build/external/migration). This is a backwards incompatible migration, directly removing the old WORKSPACE based approach. Users will have to change how they depend on bzlmod, however I assume pretty much every user will be happy about it, because they are forced to use bzlmod anyway or add extra flags to continue to build with newer Bazel versions. Given that users normally depend on specific git commits in the old system, they won't be hit with this until they decide to upgrade emsdk. The basic principle here is simple: I took everything that WORKSPACE did and searched an alternative in bzlmod. Some interesting bits: - We have less worries about multiple versions and people depending on emscripten multiple times in different ways. This is resolved by the new system: Bazel first iterates through the MODULE.bazel files recursively, then finds the minimum version needed for each module and then executes the module extensions that define repos exactly once at that version. So no more ifs needed to detect multiple inclusions. - A bunch of nodejs stuff moves to MODULE.bazel, because that is how the nodejs module works now. As their module extension gets executed only once you need to declare everything that you could need before that in the MODULE.bazel file. A side effect of that is that we have to make a fake repository when emscripten doesn't have an arm64 binary for linux, because we can't actually figure that out in MODULE.bazel, so we have to declare that it always exists and then create one in all cases. There is a bunch of autoformatter changes in here as well, I could try to revert them if you prefer. Closes #1509
2025-04-09 23:38:12 +02:00
},
)
if result.return_code != 0:
fail("Embuilder exited with a non-zero return code")
Bazel: Migrate to bzlmod (#1530) This migrates the bazel integration to the new Bazel dependency system "bzlmod". bzlmod is becoming mandatory this year (see second sentence here: https://bazel.build/external/migration). This is a backwards incompatible migration, directly removing the old WORKSPACE based approach. Users will have to change how they depend on bzlmod, however I assume pretty much every user will be happy about it, because they are forced to use bzlmod anyway or add extra flags to continue to build with newer Bazel versions. Given that users normally depend on specific git commits in the old system, they won't be hit with this until they decide to upgrade emsdk. The basic principle here is simple: I took everything that WORKSPACE did and searched an alternative in bzlmod. Some interesting bits: - We have less worries about multiple versions and people depending on emscripten multiple times in different ways. This is resolved by the new system: Bazel first iterates through the MODULE.bazel files recursively, then finds the minimum version needed for each module and then executes the module extensions that define repos exactly once at that version. So no more ifs needed to detect multiple inclusions. - A bunch of nodejs stuff moves to MODULE.bazel, because that is how the nodejs module works now. As their module extension gets executed only once you need to declare everything that you could need before that in the MODULE.bazel file. A side effect of that is that we have to make a fake repository when emscripten doesn't have an arm64 binary for linux, because we can't actually figure that out in MODULE.bazel, so we have to declare that it always exists and then create one in all cases. There is a bunch of autoformatter changes in here as well, I could try to revert them if you prefer. Closes #1509
2025-04-09 23:38:12 +02:00
# Override Emscripten's cache with the secondary cache
default_config += "CACHE = '{}'\n".format(cache)
# Create the configuration file for the toolchain and export
Bazel: Migrate to bzlmod (#1530) This migrates the bazel integration to the new Bazel dependency system "bzlmod". bzlmod is becoming mandatory this year (see second sentence here: https://bazel.build/external/migration). This is a backwards incompatible migration, directly removing the old WORKSPACE based approach. Users will have to change how they depend on bzlmod, however I assume pretty much every user will be happy about it, because they are forced to use bzlmod anyway or add extra flags to continue to build with newer Bazel versions. Given that users normally depend on specific git commits in the old system, they won't be hit with this until they decide to upgrade emsdk. The basic principle here is simple: I took everything that WORKSPACE did and searched an alternative in bzlmod. Some interesting bits: - We have less worries about multiple versions and people depending on emscripten multiple times in different ways. This is resolved by the new system: Bazel first iterates through the MODULE.bazel files recursively, then finds the minimum version needed for each module and then executes the module extensions that define repos exactly once at that version. So no more ifs needed to detect multiple inclusions. - A bunch of nodejs stuff moves to MODULE.bazel, because that is how the nodejs module works now. As their module extension gets executed only once you need to declare everything that you could need before that in the MODULE.bazel file. A side effect of that is that we have to make a fake repository when emscripten doesn't have an arm64 binary for linux, because we can't actually figure that out in MODULE.bazel, so we have to declare that it always exists and then create one in all cases. There is a bunch of autoformatter changes in here as well, I could try to revert them if you prefer. Closes #1509
2025-04-09 23:38:12 +02:00
repository_ctx.file("emscripten_config", default_config)
repository_ctx.file("BUILD.bazel", BUILD_FILE_CONTENT_TEMPLATE)
Bazel: Migrate to bzlmod (#1530) This migrates the bazel integration to the new Bazel dependency system "bzlmod". bzlmod is becoming mandatory this year (see second sentence here: https://bazel.build/external/migration). This is a backwards incompatible migration, directly removing the old WORKSPACE based approach. Users will have to change how they depend on bzlmod, however I assume pretty much every user will be happy about it, because they are forced to use bzlmod anyway or add extra flags to continue to build with newer Bazel versions. Given that users normally depend on specific git commits in the old system, they won't be hit with this until they decide to upgrade emsdk. The basic principle here is simple: I took everything that WORKSPACE did and searched an alternative in bzlmod. Some interesting bits: - We have less worries about multiple versions and people depending on emscripten multiple times in different ways. This is resolved by the new system: Bazel first iterates through the MODULE.bazel files recursively, then finds the minimum version needed for each module and then executes the module extensions that define repos exactly once at that version. So no more ifs needed to detect multiple inclusions. - A bunch of nodejs stuff moves to MODULE.bazel, because that is how the nodejs module works now. As their module extension gets executed only once you need to declare everything that you could need before that in the MODULE.bazel file. A side effect of that is that we have to make a fake repository when emscripten doesn't have an arm64 binary for linux, because we can't actually figure that out in MODULE.bazel, so we have to declare that it always exists and then create one in all cases. There is a bunch of autoformatter changes in here as well, I could try to revert them if you prefer. Closes #1509
2025-04-09 23:38:12 +02:00
_emscripten_cache_repository = repository_rule(
implementation = _emscripten_cache_repository_impl,
attrs = {
"configuration": attr.string_list(),
"targets": attr.string_list(),
},
)
Bazel: Migrate to bzlmod (#1530) This migrates the bazel integration to the new Bazel dependency system "bzlmod". bzlmod is becoming mandatory this year (see second sentence here: https://bazel.build/external/migration). This is a backwards incompatible migration, directly removing the old WORKSPACE based approach. Users will have to change how they depend on bzlmod, however I assume pretty much every user will be happy about it, because they are forced to use bzlmod anyway or add extra flags to continue to build with newer Bazel versions. Given that users normally depend on specific git commits in the old system, they won't be hit with this until they decide to upgrade emsdk. The basic principle here is simple: I took everything that WORKSPACE did and searched an alternative in bzlmod. Some interesting bits: - We have less worries about multiple versions and people depending on emscripten multiple times in different ways. This is resolved by the new system: Bazel first iterates through the MODULE.bazel files recursively, then finds the minimum version needed for each module and then executes the module extensions that define repos exactly once at that version. So no more ifs needed to detect multiple inclusions. - A bunch of nodejs stuff moves to MODULE.bazel, because that is how the nodejs module works now. As their module extension gets executed only once you need to declare everything that you could need before that in the MODULE.bazel file. A side effect of that is that we have to make a fake repository when emscripten doesn't have an arm64 binary for linux, because we can't actually figure that out in MODULE.bazel, so we have to declare that it always exists and then create one in all cases. There is a bunch of autoformatter changes in here as well, I could try to revert them if you prefer. Closes #1509
2025-04-09 23:38:12 +02:00
def _emscripten_cache_impl(ctx):
all_configuration = []
all_targets = []
for mod in ctx.modules:
for configuration in mod.tags.configuration:
all_configuration += configuration.flags
for targets in mod.tags.targets:
all_targets += targets.targets
_emscripten_cache_repository(
name = "emscripten_cache",
Bazel: Migrate to bzlmod (#1530) This migrates the bazel integration to the new Bazel dependency system "bzlmod". bzlmod is becoming mandatory this year (see second sentence here: https://bazel.build/external/migration). This is a backwards incompatible migration, directly removing the old WORKSPACE based approach. Users will have to change how they depend on bzlmod, however I assume pretty much every user will be happy about it, because they are forced to use bzlmod anyway or add extra flags to continue to build with newer Bazel versions. Given that users normally depend on specific git commits in the old system, they won't be hit with this until they decide to upgrade emsdk. The basic principle here is simple: I took everything that WORKSPACE did and searched an alternative in bzlmod. Some interesting bits: - We have less worries about multiple versions and people depending on emscripten multiple times in different ways. This is resolved by the new system: Bazel first iterates through the MODULE.bazel files recursively, then finds the minimum version needed for each module and then executes the module extensions that define repos exactly once at that version. So no more ifs needed to detect multiple inclusions. - A bunch of nodejs stuff moves to MODULE.bazel, because that is how the nodejs module works now. As their module extension gets executed only once you need to declare everything that you could need before that in the MODULE.bazel file. A side effect of that is that we have to make a fake repository when emscripten doesn't have an arm64 binary for linux, because we can't actually figure that out in MODULE.bazel, so we have to declare that it always exists and then create one in all cases. There is a bunch of autoformatter changes in here as well, I could try to revert them if you prefer. Closes #1509
2025-04-09 23:38:12 +02:00
configuration = all_configuration,
targets = all_targets,
)
Bazel: Migrate to bzlmod (#1530) This migrates the bazel integration to the new Bazel dependency system "bzlmod". bzlmod is becoming mandatory this year (see second sentence here: https://bazel.build/external/migration). This is a backwards incompatible migration, directly removing the old WORKSPACE based approach. Users will have to change how they depend on bzlmod, however I assume pretty much every user will be happy about it, because they are forced to use bzlmod anyway or add extra flags to continue to build with newer Bazel versions. Given that users normally depend on specific git commits in the old system, they won't be hit with this until they decide to upgrade emsdk. The basic principle here is simple: I took everything that WORKSPACE did and searched an alternative in bzlmod. Some interesting bits: - We have less worries about multiple versions and people depending on emscripten multiple times in different ways. This is resolved by the new system: Bazel first iterates through the MODULE.bazel files recursively, then finds the minimum version needed for each module and then executes the module extensions that define repos exactly once at that version. So no more ifs needed to detect multiple inclusions. - A bunch of nodejs stuff moves to MODULE.bazel, because that is how the nodejs module works now. As their module extension gets executed only once you need to declare everything that you could need before that in the MODULE.bazel file. A side effect of that is that we have to make a fake repository when emscripten doesn't have an arm64 binary for linux, because we can't actually figure that out in MODULE.bazel, so we have to declare that it always exists and then create one in all cases. There is a bunch of autoformatter changes in here as well, I could try to revert them if you prefer. Closes #1509
2025-04-09 23:38:12 +02:00
emscripten_cache = module_extension(
tag_classes = {
"configuration": tag_class(attrs = {"flags": attr.string_list()}),
"targets": tag_class(attrs = {"targets": attr.string_list()}),
},
implementation = _emscripten_cache_impl,
)