platform_build_soong/ui/build/ninja.go

226 lines
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Add a Go replacement for our top-level Make wrapper Right now this mostly just copies what Make is doing in build/core/ninja.mk and build/core/soong.mk. The only major feature it adds is a rotating log file with some verbose logging. There is one major functional difference -- you cannot override random Make variables during the Make phase anymore. The environment variable is set, and if Make uses ?= or the equivalent, it can still use those variables. We already made this change for Kati, which also loads all of the same code and actually does the build, so it has been half-removed for a while. The only "UI" this implements is what I'll call "Make Emulation" mode -- it's expected that current command lines will continue working, and we'll explore alternate user interfaces later. We're still using Make as a wrapper, but all it does is call into this single Go program, it won't even load the product configuration. Once this is default, we can start moving individual users over to using this directly (still in Make emulation mode), skipping the Make wrapper. Ideas for the future: * Generating trace files showing time spent in Make/Kati/Soong/Ninja (also importing ninja traces into the same stream). I had this working in a previous version of this patch, but removed it to keep the size down and focus on the current features. * More intelligent SIGALRM handling, once we fully remove the Make wrapper (which hides the SIGALRM) * Reading the experimental binary output stream from Ninja, so that we can always save the verbose log even if we're not printing it out to the console Test: USE_SOONG_UI=true m -j blueprint_tools Change-Id: I884327b9a8ae24499eb6c56f6e1ad26df1cfa4e4
2016-08-22 00:17:17 +02:00
// Copyright 2017 Google Inc. All rights reserved.
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
package build
import (
"fmt"
"os"
"path/filepath"
"sort"
Add a Go replacement for our top-level Make wrapper Right now this mostly just copies what Make is doing in build/core/ninja.mk and build/core/soong.mk. The only major feature it adds is a rotating log file with some verbose logging. There is one major functional difference -- you cannot override random Make variables during the Make phase anymore. The environment variable is set, and if Make uses ?= or the equivalent, it can still use those variables. We already made this change for Kati, which also loads all of the same code and actually does the build, so it has been half-removed for a while. The only "UI" this implements is what I'll call "Make Emulation" mode -- it's expected that current command lines will continue working, and we'll explore alternate user interfaces later. We're still using Make as a wrapper, but all it does is call into this single Go program, it won't even load the product configuration. Once this is default, we can start moving individual users over to using this directly (still in Make emulation mode), skipping the Make wrapper. Ideas for the future: * Generating trace files showing time spent in Make/Kati/Soong/Ninja (also importing ninja traces into the same stream). I had this working in a previous version of this patch, but removed it to keep the size down and focus on the current features. * More intelligent SIGALRM handling, once we fully remove the Make wrapper (which hides the SIGALRM) * Reading the experimental binary output stream from Ninja, so that we can always save the verbose log even if we're not printing it out to the console Test: USE_SOONG_UI=true m -j blueprint_tools Change-Id: I884327b9a8ae24499eb6c56f6e1ad26df1cfa4e4
2016-08-22 00:17:17 +02:00
"strconv"
"strings"
"time"
Add a unified status reporting UI This adds a new status package that merges the running of "actions" (ninja calls them edges) of multiple tools into one view of the current state, and gives that to a number of different outputs. For inputs: Kati's output parser has been rewritten (and moved) to map onto the StartAction/FinishAction API. A byproduct of this is that the build servers should be able to extract errors from Kati better, since they look like the errors that Ninja used to write. Ninja is no longer directly connected to the terminal, but its output is read via the protobuf frontend API, so it's just another tool whose output becomes merged together. multiproduct_kati loses its custom status routines, and uses the common one instead. For outputs: The primary output is the ui/terminal.Status type, which along with ui/terminal.Writer now controls everything about the terminal output. Today, this doesn't really change any behaviors, but having all terminal output going through here allows a more complicated (multi-line / full window) status display in the future. The tracer acts as an output of the status package, tracing all the action start / finish events. This replaces reading the .ninja_log file, so it now properly handles multiple output files from a single action. A new rotated log file (out/error.log, or out/dist/logs/error.log) just contains a description of all of the errors that happened during the current build. Another new compressed and rotated log file (out/verbose.log.gz, or out/dist/logs/verbose.log.gz) contains the full verbose (showcommands) log of every execution run by the build. Since this is now written on every build, the showcommands argument is now ignored -- if you want to get the commands run, look at the log file after the build. Test: m Test: <built-in tests> Test: NINJA_ARGS="-t list" m Test: check the build.trace.gz Test: check the new log files Change-Id: If1d8994890d43ef68f65aa10ddd8e6e06dc7013a
2018-05-18 01:37:09 +02:00
"android/soong/ui/metrics"
Add a unified status reporting UI This adds a new status package that merges the running of "actions" (ninja calls them edges) of multiple tools into one view of the current state, and gives that to a number of different outputs. For inputs: Kati's output parser has been rewritten (and moved) to map onto the StartAction/FinishAction API. A byproduct of this is that the build servers should be able to extract errors from Kati better, since they look like the errors that Ninja used to write. Ninja is no longer directly connected to the terminal, but its output is read via the protobuf frontend API, so it's just another tool whose output becomes merged together. multiproduct_kati loses its custom status routines, and uses the common one instead. For outputs: The primary output is the ui/terminal.Status type, which along with ui/terminal.Writer now controls everything about the terminal output. Today, this doesn't really change any behaviors, but having all terminal output going through here allows a more complicated (multi-line / full window) status display in the future. The tracer acts as an output of the status package, tracing all the action start / finish events. This replaces reading the .ninja_log file, so it now properly handles multiple output files from a single action. A new rotated log file (out/error.log, or out/dist/logs/error.log) just contains a description of all of the errors that happened during the current build. Another new compressed and rotated log file (out/verbose.log.gz, or out/dist/logs/verbose.log.gz) contains the full verbose (showcommands) log of every execution run by the build. Since this is now written on every build, the showcommands argument is now ignored -- if you want to get the commands run, look at the log file after the build. Test: m Test: <built-in tests> Test: NINJA_ARGS="-t list" m Test: check the build.trace.gz Test: check the new log files Change-Id: If1d8994890d43ef68f65aa10ddd8e6e06dc7013a
2018-05-18 01:37:09 +02:00
"android/soong/ui/status"
Add a Go replacement for our top-level Make wrapper Right now this mostly just copies what Make is doing in build/core/ninja.mk and build/core/soong.mk. The only major feature it adds is a rotating log file with some verbose logging. There is one major functional difference -- you cannot override random Make variables during the Make phase anymore. The environment variable is set, and if Make uses ?= or the equivalent, it can still use those variables. We already made this change for Kati, which also loads all of the same code and actually does the build, so it has been half-removed for a while. The only "UI" this implements is what I'll call "Make Emulation" mode -- it's expected that current command lines will continue working, and we'll explore alternate user interfaces later. We're still using Make as a wrapper, but all it does is call into this single Go program, it won't even load the product configuration. Once this is default, we can start moving individual users over to using this directly (still in Make emulation mode), skipping the Make wrapper. Ideas for the future: * Generating trace files showing time spent in Make/Kati/Soong/Ninja (also importing ninja traces into the same stream). I had this working in a previous version of this patch, but removed it to keep the size down and focus on the current features. * More intelligent SIGALRM handling, once we fully remove the Make wrapper (which hides the SIGALRM) * Reading the experimental binary output stream from Ninja, so that we can always save the verbose log even if we're not printing it out to the console Test: USE_SOONG_UI=true m -j blueprint_tools Change-Id: I884327b9a8ae24499eb6c56f6e1ad26df1cfa4e4
2016-08-22 00:17:17 +02:00
)
func runNinja(ctx Context, config Config) {
ctx.BeginTrace(metrics.PrimaryNinja, "ninja")
defer ctx.EndTrace()
Add a unified status reporting UI This adds a new status package that merges the running of "actions" (ninja calls them edges) of multiple tools into one view of the current state, and gives that to a number of different outputs. For inputs: Kati's output parser has been rewritten (and moved) to map onto the StartAction/FinishAction API. A byproduct of this is that the build servers should be able to extract errors from Kati better, since they look like the errors that Ninja used to write. Ninja is no longer directly connected to the terminal, but its output is read via the protobuf frontend API, so it's just another tool whose output becomes merged together. multiproduct_kati loses its custom status routines, and uses the common one instead. For outputs: The primary output is the ui/terminal.Status type, which along with ui/terminal.Writer now controls everything about the terminal output. Today, this doesn't really change any behaviors, but having all terminal output going through here allows a more complicated (multi-line / full window) status display in the future. The tracer acts as an output of the status package, tracing all the action start / finish events. This replaces reading the .ninja_log file, so it now properly handles multiple output files from a single action. A new rotated log file (out/error.log, or out/dist/logs/error.log) just contains a description of all of the errors that happened during the current build. Another new compressed and rotated log file (out/verbose.log.gz, or out/dist/logs/verbose.log.gz) contains the full verbose (showcommands) log of every execution run by the build. Since this is now written on every build, the showcommands argument is now ignored -- if you want to get the commands run, look at the log file after the build. Test: m Test: <built-in tests> Test: NINJA_ARGS="-t list" m Test: check the build.trace.gz Test: check the new log files Change-Id: If1d8994890d43ef68f65aa10ddd8e6e06dc7013a
2018-05-18 01:37:09 +02:00
fifo := filepath.Join(config.OutDir(), ".ninja_fifo")
nr := status.NewNinjaReader(ctx, ctx.Status.StartTool(), fifo)
defer nr.Close()
Add a unified status reporting UI This adds a new status package that merges the running of "actions" (ninja calls them edges) of multiple tools into one view of the current state, and gives that to a number of different outputs. For inputs: Kati's output parser has been rewritten (and moved) to map onto the StartAction/FinishAction API. A byproduct of this is that the build servers should be able to extract errors from Kati better, since they look like the errors that Ninja used to write. Ninja is no longer directly connected to the terminal, but its output is read via the protobuf frontend API, so it's just another tool whose output becomes merged together. multiproduct_kati loses its custom status routines, and uses the common one instead. For outputs: The primary output is the ui/terminal.Status type, which along with ui/terminal.Writer now controls everything about the terminal output. Today, this doesn't really change any behaviors, but having all terminal output going through here allows a more complicated (multi-line / full window) status display in the future. The tracer acts as an output of the status package, tracing all the action start / finish events. This replaces reading the .ninja_log file, so it now properly handles multiple output files from a single action. A new rotated log file (out/error.log, or out/dist/logs/error.log) just contains a description of all of the errors that happened during the current build. Another new compressed and rotated log file (out/verbose.log.gz, or out/dist/logs/verbose.log.gz) contains the full verbose (showcommands) log of every execution run by the build. Since this is now written on every build, the showcommands argument is now ignored -- if you want to get the commands run, look at the log file after the build. Test: m Test: <built-in tests> Test: NINJA_ARGS="-t list" m Test: check the build.trace.gz Test: check the new log files Change-Id: If1d8994890d43ef68f65aa10ddd8e6e06dc7013a
2018-05-18 01:37:09 +02:00
executable := config.PrebuiltBuildTool("ninja")
Add a Go replacement for our top-level Make wrapper Right now this mostly just copies what Make is doing in build/core/ninja.mk and build/core/soong.mk. The only major feature it adds is a rotating log file with some verbose logging. There is one major functional difference -- you cannot override random Make variables during the Make phase anymore. The environment variable is set, and if Make uses ?= or the equivalent, it can still use those variables. We already made this change for Kati, which also loads all of the same code and actually does the build, so it has been half-removed for a while. The only "UI" this implements is what I'll call "Make Emulation" mode -- it's expected that current command lines will continue working, and we'll explore alternate user interfaces later. We're still using Make as a wrapper, but all it does is call into this single Go program, it won't even load the product configuration. Once this is default, we can start moving individual users over to using this directly (still in Make emulation mode), skipping the Make wrapper. Ideas for the future: * Generating trace files showing time spent in Make/Kati/Soong/Ninja (also importing ninja traces into the same stream). I had this working in a previous version of this patch, but removed it to keep the size down and focus on the current features. * More intelligent SIGALRM handling, once we fully remove the Make wrapper (which hides the SIGALRM) * Reading the experimental binary output stream from Ninja, so that we can always save the verbose log even if we're not printing it out to the console Test: USE_SOONG_UI=true m -j blueprint_tools Change-Id: I884327b9a8ae24499eb6c56f6e1ad26df1cfa4e4
2016-08-22 00:17:17 +02:00
args := []string{
"-d", "keepdepfile",
"-d", "keeprsp",
"--frontend_file", fifo,
Add a Go replacement for our top-level Make wrapper Right now this mostly just copies what Make is doing in build/core/ninja.mk and build/core/soong.mk. The only major feature it adds is a rotating log file with some verbose logging. There is one major functional difference -- you cannot override random Make variables during the Make phase anymore. The environment variable is set, and if Make uses ?= or the equivalent, it can still use those variables. We already made this change for Kati, which also loads all of the same code and actually does the build, so it has been half-removed for a while. The only "UI" this implements is what I'll call "Make Emulation" mode -- it's expected that current command lines will continue working, and we'll explore alternate user interfaces later. We're still using Make as a wrapper, but all it does is call into this single Go program, it won't even load the product configuration. Once this is default, we can start moving individual users over to using this directly (still in Make emulation mode), skipping the Make wrapper. Ideas for the future: * Generating trace files showing time spent in Make/Kati/Soong/Ninja (also importing ninja traces into the same stream). I had this working in a previous version of this patch, but removed it to keep the size down and focus on the current features. * More intelligent SIGALRM handling, once we fully remove the Make wrapper (which hides the SIGALRM) * Reading the experimental binary output stream from Ninja, so that we can always save the verbose log even if we're not printing it out to the console Test: USE_SOONG_UI=true m -j blueprint_tools Change-Id: I884327b9a8ae24499eb6c56f6e1ad26df1cfa4e4
2016-08-22 00:17:17 +02:00
}
args = append(args, config.NinjaArgs()...)
var parallel int
if config.UseRemoteBuild() {
Add a Go replacement for our top-level Make wrapper Right now this mostly just copies what Make is doing in build/core/ninja.mk and build/core/soong.mk. The only major feature it adds is a rotating log file with some verbose logging. There is one major functional difference -- you cannot override random Make variables during the Make phase anymore. The environment variable is set, and if Make uses ?= or the equivalent, it can still use those variables. We already made this change for Kati, which also loads all of the same code and actually does the build, so it has been half-removed for a while. The only "UI" this implements is what I'll call "Make Emulation" mode -- it's expected that current command lines will continue working, and we'll explore alternate user interfaces later. We're still using Make as a wrapper, but all it does is call into this single Go program, it won't even load the product configuration. Once this is default, we can start moving individual users over to using this directly (still in Make emulation mode), skipping the Make wrapper. Ideas for the future: * Generating trace files showing time spent in Make/Kati/Soong/Ninja (also importing ninja traces into the same stream). I had this working in a previous version of this patch, but removed it to keep the size down and focus on the current features. * More intelligent SIGALRM handling, once we fully remove the Make wrapper (which hides the SIGALRM) * Reading the experimental binary output stream from Ninja, so that we can always save the verbose log even if we're not printing it out to the console Test: USE_SOONG_UI=true m -j blueprint_tools Change-Id: I884327b9a8ae24499eb6c56f6e1ad26df1cfa4e4
2016-08-22 00:17:17 +02:00
parallel = config.RemoteParallel()
} else {
parallel = config.Parallel()
}
args = append(args, "-j", strconv.Itoa(parallel))
if config.keepGoing != 1 {
args = append(args, "-k", strconv.Itoa(config.keepGoing))
}
args = append(args, "-f", config.CombinedNinjaFile())
args = append(args,
"-o", "usesphonyoutputs=yes",
"-w", "dupbuild=err",
"-w", "missingdepfile=err")
Add a Go replacement for our top-level Make wrapper Right now this mostly just copies what Make is doing in build/core/ninja.mk and build/core/soong.mk. The only major feature it adds is a rotating log file with some verbose logging. There is one major functional difference -- you cannot override random Make variables during the Make phase anymore. The environment variable is set, and if Make uses ?= or the equivalent, it can still use those variables. We already made this change for Kati, which also loads all of the same code and actually does the build, so it has been half-removed for a while. The only "UI" this implements is what I'll call "Make Emulation" mode -- it's expected that current command lines will continue working, and we'll explore alternate user interfaces later. We're still using Make as a wrapper, but all it does is call into this single Go program, it won't even load the product configuration. Once this is default, we can start moving individual users over to using this directly (still in Make emulation mode), skipping the Make wrapper. Ideas for the future: * Generating trace files showing time spent in Make/Kati/Soong/Ninja (also importing ninja traces into the same stream). I had this working in a previous version of this patch, but removed it to keep the size down and focus on the current features. * More intelligent SIGALRM handling, once we fully remove the Make wrapper (which hides the SIGALRM) * Reading the experimental binary output stream from Ninja, so that we can always save the verbose log even if we're not printing it out to the console Test: USE_SOONG_UI=true m -j blueprint_tools Change-Id: I884327b9a8ae24499eb6c56f6e1ad26df1cfa4e4
2016-08-22 00:17:17 +02:00
cmd := Command(ctx, config, "ninja", executable, args...)
cmd.Sandbox = ninjaSandbox
if config.HasKatiSuffix() {
cmd.Environment.AppendFromKati(config.KatiEnvFile())
}
Add a Go replacement for our top-level Make wrapper Right now this mostly just copies what Make is doing in build/core/ninja.mk and build/core/soong.mk. The only major feature it adds is a rotating log file with some verbose logging. There is one major functional difference -- you cannot override random Make variables during the Make phase anymore. The environment variable is set, and if Make uses ?= or the equivalent, it can still use those variables. We already made this change for Kati, which also loads all of the same code and actually does the build, so it has been half-removed for a while. The only "UI" this implements is what I'll call "Make Emulation" mode -- it's expected that current command lines will continue working, and we'll explore alternate user interfaces later. We're still using Make as a wrapper, but all it does is call into this single Go program, it won't even load the product configuration. Once this is default, we can start moving individual users over to using this directly (still in Make emulation mode), skipping the Make wrapper. Ideas for the future: * Generating trace files showing time spent in Make/Kati/Soong/Ninja (also importing ninja traces into the same stream). I had this working in a previous version of this patch, but removed it to keep the size down and focus on the current features. * More intelligent SIGALRM handling, once we fully remove the Make wrapper (which hides the SIGALRM) * Reading the experimental binary output stream from Ninja, so that we can always save the verbose log even if we're not printing it out to the console Test: USE_SOONG_UI=true m -j blueprint_tools Change-Id: I884327b9a8ae24499eb6c56f6e1ad26df1cfa4e4
2016-08-22 00:17:17 +02:00
// Allow both NINJA_ARGS and NINJA_EXTRA_ARGS, since both have been
// used in the past to specify extra ninja arguments.
if extra, ok := cmd.Environment.Get("NINJA_ARGS"); ok {
cmd.Args = append(cmd.Args, strings.Fields(extra)...)
Add a Go replacement for our top-level Make wrapper Right now this mostly just copies what Make is doing in build/core/ninja.mk and build/core/soong.mk. The only major feature it adds is a rotating log file with some verbose logging. There is one major functional difference -- you cannot override random Make variables during the Make phase anymore. The environment variable is set, and if Make uses ?= or the equivalent, it can still use those variables. We already made this change for Kati, which also loads all of the same code and actually does the build, so it has been half-removed for a while. The only "UI" this implements is what I'll call "Make Emulation" mode -- it's expected that current command lines will continue working, and we'll explore alternate user interfaces later. We're still using Make as a wrapper, but all it does is call into this single Go program, it won't even load the product configuration. Once this is default, we can start moving individual users over to using this directly (still in Make emulation mode), skipping the Make wrapper. Ideas for the future: * Generating trace files showing time spent in Make/Kati/Soong/Ninja (also importing ninja traces into the same stream). I had this working in a previous version of this patch, but removed it to keep the size down and focus on the current features. * More intelligent SIGALRM handling, once we fully remove the Make wrapper (which hides the SIGALRM) * Reading the experimental binary output stream from Ninja, so that we can always save the verbose log even if we're not printing it out to the console Test: USE_SOONG_UI=true m -j blueprint_tools Change-Id: I884327b9a8ae24499eb6c56f6e1ad26df1cfa4e4
2016-08-22 00:17:17 +02:00
}
if extra, ok := cmd.Environment.Get("NINJA_EXTRA_ARGS"); ok {
cmd.Args = append(cmd.Args, strings.Fields(extra)...)
Add a Go replacement for our top-level Make wrapper Right now this mostly just copies what Make is doing in build/core/ninja.mk and build/core/soong.mk. The only major feature it adds is a rotating log file with some verbose logging. There is one major functional difference -- you cannot override random Make variables during the Make phase anymore. The environment variable is set, and if Make uses ?= or the equivalent, it can still use those variables. We already made this change for Kati, which also loads all of the same code and actually does the build, so it has been half-removed for a while. The only "UI" this implements is what I'll call "Make Emulation" mode -- it's expected that current command lines will continue working, and we'll explore alternate user interfaces later. We're still using Make as a wrapper, but all it does is call into this single Go program, it won't even load the product configuration. Once this is default, we can start moving individual users over to using this directly (still in Make emulation mode), skipping the Make wrapper. Ideas for the future: * Generating trace files showing time spent in Make/Kati/Soong/Ninja (also importing ninja traces into the same stream). I had this working in a previous version of this patch, but removed it to keep the size down and focus on the current features. * More intelligent SIGALRM handling, once we fully remove the Make wrapper (which hides the SIGALRM) * Reading the experimental binary output stream from Ninja, so that we can always save the verbose log even if we're not printing it out to the console Test: USE_SOONG_UI=true m -j blueprint_tools Change-Id: I884327b9a8ae24499eb6c56f6e1ad26df1cfa4e4
2016-08-22 00:17:17 +02:00
}
logPath := filepath.Join(config.OutDir(), ".ninja_log")
ninjaHeartbeatDuration := time.Minute * 5
if overrideText, ok := cmd.Environment.Get("NINJA_HEARTBEAT_INTERVAL"); ok {
// For example, "1m"
overrideDuration, err := time.ParseDuration(overrideText)
if err == nil && overrideDuration.Seconds() > 0 {
ninjaHeartbeatDuration = overrideDuration
}
}
// Filter the environment, as ninja does not rebuild files when environment variables change.
//
// Anything listed here must not change the output of rules/actions when the value changes,
// otherwise incremental builds may be unsafe. Vars explicitly set to stable values
// elsewhere in soong_ui are fine.
//
// For the majority of cases, either Soong or the makefiles should be replicating any
// necessary environment variables in the command line of each action that needs it.
if cmd.Environment.IsEnvTrue("ALLOW_NINJA_ENV") {
ctx.Println("Allowing all environment variables during ninja; incremental builds may be unsafe.")
} else {
cmd.Environment.Allow(append([]string{
"ASAN_SYMBOLIZER_PATH",
"HOME",
"JAVA_HOME",
"LANG",
"LC_MESSAGES",
"OUT_DIR",
"PATH",
"PWD",
"PYTHONDONTWRITEBYTECODE",
"TMPDIR",
"USER",
// TODO: remove these carefully
"ASAN_OPTIONS",
"TARGET_BUILD_APPS",
"TARGET_BUILD_VARIANT",
"TARGET_PRODUCT",
// b/147197813 - used by art-check-debug-apex-gen
"EMMA_INSTRUMENT_FRAMEWORK",
// Goma -- gomacc may not need all of these
"GOMA_DIR",
"GOMA_DISABLED",
"GOMA_FAIL_FAST",
"GOMA_FALLBACK",
"GOMA_GCE_SERVICE_ACCOUNT",
"GOMA_TMP_DIR",
"GOMA_USE_LOCAL",
// RBE client
"RBE_compare",
"RBE_exec_root",
"RBE_exec_strategy",
"RBE_invocation_id",
"RBE_log_dir",
"RBE_platform",
"RBE_remote_accept_cache",
"RBE_remote_update_cache",
"RBE_server_address",
// TODO: remove old FLAG_ variables.
"FLAG_compare",
"FLAG_exec_root",
"FLAG_exec_strategy",
"FLAG_invocation_id",
"FLAG_log_dir",
"FLAG_platform",
"FLAG_remote_accept_cache",
"FLAG_remote_update_cache",
"FLAG_server_address",
// ccache settings
"CCACHE_COMPILERCHECK",
"CCACHE_SLOPPINESS",
"CCACHE_BASEDIR",
"CCACHE_CPP2",
"CCACHE_DIR",
}, config.BuildBrokenNinjaUsesEnvVars()...)...)
}
cmd.Environment.Set("DIST_DIR", config.DistDir())
cmd.Environment.Set("SHELL", "/bin/bash")
ctx.Verboseln("Ninja environment: ")
envVars := cmd.Environment.Environ()
sort.Strings(envVars)
for _, envVar := range envVars {
ctx.Verbosef(" %s", envVar)
}
// Poll the ninja log for updates; if it isn't updated enough, then we want to show some diagnostics
done := make(chan struct{})
defer close(done)
ticker := time.NewTicker(ninjaHeartbeatDuration)
defer ticker.Stop()
checker := &statusChecker{}
go func() {
for {
select {
case <-ticker.C:
checker.check(ctx, config, logPath)
case <-done:
return
}
}
}()
ctx.Status.Status("Starting ninja...")
cmd.RunAndStreamOrFatal()
Add a Go replacement for our top-level Make wrapper Right now this mostly just copies what Make is doing in build/core/ninja.mk and build/core/soong.mk. The only major feature it adds is a rotating log file with some verbose logging. There is one major functional difference -- you cannot override random Make variables during the Make phase anymore. The environment variable is set, and if Make uses ?= or the equivalent, it can still use those variables. We already made this change for Kati, which also loads all of the same code and actually does the build, so it has been half-removed for a while. The only "UI" this implements is what I'll call "Make Emulation" mode -- it's expected that current command lines will continue working, and we'll explore alternate user interfaces later. We're still using Make as a wrapper, but all it does is call into this single Go program, it won't even load the product configuration. Once this is default, we can start moving individual users over to using this directly (still in Make emulation mode), skipping the Make wrapper. Ideas for the future: * Generating trace files showing time spent in Make/Kati/Soong/Ninja (also importing ninja traces into the same stream). I had this working in a previous version of this patch, but removed it to keep the size down and focus on the current features. * More intelligent SIGALRM handling, once we fully remove the Make wrapper (which hides the SIGALRM) * Reading the experimental binary output stream from Ninja, so that we can always save the verbose log even if we're not printing it out to the console Test: USE_SOONG_UI=true m -j blueprint_tools Change-Id: I884327b9a8ae24499eb6c56f6e1ad26df1cfa4e4
2016-08-22 00:17:17 +02:00
}
type statusChecker struct {
prevTime time.Time
}
func (c *statusChecker) check(ctx Context, config Config, pathToCheck string) {
info, err := os.Stat(pathToCheck)
var newTime time.Time
if err == nil {
newTime = info.ModTime()
}
if newTime == c.prevTime {
// ninja may be stuck
dumpStucknessDiagnostics(ctx, config, pathToCheck, newTime)
}
c.prevTime = newTime
}
// dumpStucknessDiagnostics gets called when it is suspected that Ninja is stuck and we want to output some diagnostics
func dumpStucknessDiagnostics(ctx Context, config Config, statusPath string, lastUpdated time.Time) {
ctx.Verbosef("ninja may be stuck; last update to %v was %v. dumping process tree...", statusPath, lastUpdated)
// The "pstree" command doesn't exist on Mac, but "pstree" on Linux gives more convenient output than "ps"
// So, we try pstree first, and ps second
pstreeCommandText := fmt.Sprintf("pstree -pal %v", os.Getpid())
psCommandText := "ps -ef"
commandText := pstreeCommandText + " || " + psCommandText
cmd := Command(ctx, config, "dump process tree", "bash", "-c", commandText)
output := cmd.CombinedOutputOrFatal()
ctx.Verbose(string(output))
ctx.Verbosef("done\n")
}