This lets one avoid any decisions as to when to chdir there during its
execution and leads to better sandboxing because the pwd doesn't leak to
init() functions anymore.
Test: Manual.
Change-Id: I1560da8ed3a621249426f9e8908aa890c21e13ba
Create a highmem pool based on the total RAM and the number of CPUs,
with an override via the NINJA_HIGHMEM_NUM_JOBS variable. Put
metalava into the highmem pool.
Ninja does not support nested pools, and when goma or RBE is enabled
the maximum ninja parallelism is set very high with local jobs in a
local pool. When both the local pool and highmem pool are enabled,
the total number of local jobs will be as high as the sum of the sizes
of the two pools. Keep the highmem pool limited to 1/16th of the
local pool when remote builds are enabled to try to minimize the
effect while still limiting highmem jobs.
Fixes: 142644983
Test: m nothing, examine pools
Test: m USE_GOMA=true nothing, examine pools
Change-Id: Id79f11f44948992960ac34ecf831dacbe21bd332
The idea is that we'd move the installation and packaging tasks over to
it, using data from Soong & the Kati reading Android.mk files.
This would allow us to make more fundamental changes about how we
package things without having to adjust makefiles throughout the tree.
Possible use cases:
* Moving some information from Soong's Android.mk output to a file read
by the packaging step may allow us to read the Android.mk files less
often, speeding up builds.
* Refactoring our current two-stage ASAN builds to run the Kati build
step twice, writing into different object directories, then have a
single packaging step that reads both outputs. Soong already has the
capability of writing out a single ninja file with all the asan
combinations.
* Running two build steps, one building the system-related modules
using a "generic" device configuration, and one building the vendor
modules using a specific device configuration. This could enforce a
GSI/mainline system vs vendor split in a single build invocation.
* If all installation is through this tool, it will be much easier to
track what should no longer be installed on an incremental build,
reducing the need for installclean.
* Changing PRODUCT_PACKAGES should be a much faster operation, which
means we could keep track of local additions to the images. Then
`mma` would be more persistent, instead of installing something once,
then never updating it again.
Eventually we plan on switching from Kati to something Go-based, but
this is a more incremental approach while we clean up everything else.
Currently, this just moves the dist-for-goal handling over to the
packaging step, so that we don't need to read Android.mk files when
DIST_DIR changes, or we switch between dist vs not.
Bug: 116968624
Bug: 117463001
Test: m nothing
Change-Id: Idec5ac6f7c7475397ba0fb65bd3785128a7517df
This ensures that the current locale supports UTF-8, and that we're
getting a consistent (but still supported by the system) locale for
every configuration except user-facing messages. This should eliminate
any reproducibility problems around sorting, formatting, etc for all
built products, while still showing localized error messages where
available.
Bug: 71573630
Test: LANG=es_ES LANGUAGE=es: m (check env in soong.log)
Change-Id: If33311899eaed8c44573113ee35c5a71cee503a0
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