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Ruby gem binary distribution of the V8 JavaScript engine

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libv8

Gem Version Number of downloads Build Status Join the chat at https://gitter.im/cowboyd/therubyracer Code Triagers Badge

A gem for distributing the v8 runtime libraries and headers in both source and binary form.

Status: UNMAINTAINED

This project is UNMAINTAINED.

Why?

  • The binding to libv8 that therubyracer implements is quite tight, making updating libv8 a huge amount of work. mini_racer has a thinner interface for that reason.
  • So many issues come from depot tools and the bespoke v8 toolchain, which only support what Google Chrome needs to support. libv8-node has been created to tackle those issues, leveraging the good work of Node.js people, and mini_racer uses that.

If you use a mini_racer that depends on libv8, please move to a more recent version.

If you use therubyracer and are thus stuck with v8 3.16, please move to mini_racer. If one of your dependencies uses therubyracer, please reach out to them so that they upgrade to mini_racer.

If there are needs coming from either libv8 or therubyracer that you feel are unmet by mini_racer + libv8-node, please open issues on their respective repositories.

Why?

The goal of libv8 is two fold: provide a binary gem containing the a pre-compiled libv8_monolith.a for as many platforms as possible while at the same time supporting for an automated compilation for all others.

Not only does this drastically reduce gem install times, but it also reduces dependencies on the local machine receiving the gem. It also opens the door for supporting Windows.

Do I get a binary?

That depends on your platform. Right now, we support the following platforms.

  • x86_64-darwin-19
  • x86_64-darwin-18
  • x86_64-darwin-17
  • x86_64-linux
  • x86-linux

If you don't see your platform on this list, first, make sure that it installs from source, and second talk to us about setting up a binary distro for you.

Note on OS X macOS binaries

If you're installing libv8 on a macOS system that is present in the list above, and despite that, RubyGems insists on downloading a source version and compiling it, check the output of ruby -e 'puts Gem::Platform.local'. If it does not reflect the current version of your OS, recompile Ruby.

The platform gets hardcoded in Ruby during compilation and if you've updated your OS since you've compiled Ruby, it does not represent correctly your current platform which leads to RubyGems trying to download a platform-specific gem for the older version of your OS.

Versioning

Versions of the libv8 gem track the version of V8 itself, adding its own point release after the main V8 version. So libv8 5.0.71.35.5 and 5.0.71.35.14 both correspond to V8 version 5.0.71.35. Another way to think about it would be that 5.0.71.35.14 is the 14th release of the libv8 rubygem based on V8 version 5.0.71.35

Source and Binary Releases

Starting with libv8 3.11.8.0, all even point releases contain only a source-based distribution, while odd point releases contain both a source-based distribution and binary distributions. However both point releases correspond to the exact underlying code. The only difference is the version number.

This way, the most recent version of the gem always has binary distributions, but if, for whatever reason, you have problems with the binaries, you can always "lock in" your dependency a single point version down, forcing it to compile from source.

So for example, 5.0.71.35.3 contains all the binary distributions, while 5.0.71.35.2 is the exact same code, but contain only a source-based distribution

This step release system is a workaround to rubygems/bundler#1537

Requirements

Building the V8 library from source imposes the following requirements:

  • An x86/x86_64 CPU. See #261 for ARM state.
  • Linux with glibc or macOS. See #259, #253 and #217 for state of other platforms.
  • Python 2
  • pkg-config
  • GLib 2

Using a git version

If you want to use the latest unstable version of the gem you can do so by specifying the git repo as a gem source. Just make sure you add the following to your Gemfile:

gem "libv8", github: "rubyjs/libv8", submodules: true

You can find more info on using a git repo as a gem source in Bundler's documentation.

What if I can't install from source?

If you can fix V8's build system so that it correctly compiles for your platform, we'll pull it right in!

To get the source, these commands will get you started:

git clone --recursive git://github.com/rubyjs/libv8.git
cd libv8
bundle install
bundle exec rake compile

About

This project spun off of therubyracer which depends on having a specific version of V8 to compile and run against. However, actually delivering that version reliably to all the different platforms proved to be a challenge to say the least.

We got tired of waiting 5 minutes for V8 to compile every time we installed that gem.

Sponsored by

The Frontside

License

(The MIT License)

Copyright (c) 2009,2010 Charles Lowell

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the 'Software'), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED 'AS IS', WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.