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Provide a zig cc
-based image.
#860
Comments
This was previously mentioned in #764. zig cc is rather small, I think it's fine to include it in the images. We'd need to include one more flag for setting the glibc version though. |
It might be worth having a single zig cc image, since to my recollection it comes bundled with all the relevant standard libraries by default and comes as its own compiler for C and C++. So it's probably worth creating a single image for zig, and use this if |
I'm not fully sure of what you mean, but I think below would work nicely. We provide zero zig images, and instead
|
I like the feature idea a lot and would try my hand at implementing this. @Emilgardis, could you give me a pointer on where such a custom Dockerfile would be created in cross? |
@mntns definitely! Here's all the pre-build/dockerfile logic. Lines 404 to 474 in 48d2b7b
|
I think a better idea is to only have zig-cc for the image, and we can export every single environment variable. Something like: FROM ubuntu:16.04
ARG $ZIG_DOWNLOAD_URL
RUN curl --retry 3 "${ZIG_DOWNLOAD_URL}" -O && /* untar & whatever else zig needs to setup */
# add a full qemu installation
CARGO_TARGET_AARCH64_UNKNOWN_LINUX_GNU_LINKER=aarch64-linux-gnu-gcc \
CARGO_TARGET_AARCH64_UNKNOWN_LINUX_GNU_RUNNER="/linux-runner aarch64" \
CARGO_TARGET_ARM_UNKNOWN_LINUX_GNUEABIHF_LINKER=arm-unknown-linux-gnueabihf-gcc \
CARGO_TARGET_ARM_UNKNOWN_LINUX_GNUEABIHF_RUNNER=qemu-arm \
BINDGEN_EXTRA_CLANG_ARGS_arm_unknown_linux_gnueabihf="--sysroot=/x-tools/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabihf/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabihf/sysroot/" \
ZIG_CC="zig cc" \
ZIG_CX="zig c++" And then we provide the entrypoint.sh libc=""
if [[ -n "${GLIBC_VER}" ]]; then
libc=".${GLIBC_VER}}
fi
export CC_aarch64_unknown_linux_gnu="${ZIG_CC} --target aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu${libc}"
export CXX_aarch64_unknown_linux_gnu="${ZIG_CXX} --target aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu${libc}"
export CC_arm_unknown_linux_gnueabihf="${ZIG_CC} --target arm-unknown-linux-gnueabihf${libc}"
export CXX_arm_unknown_linux_gnueabihf="${ZIG_CXX} --target arm-unknown-linux-gnueabihf{$libc}"
exec "${@}" And do this for all targets. This way, we have a single, shared image for everything, which will be very compact, and it will support all targets out-of-the-box. This would mean if FYI: I'm planning on doing just this. We should obviously also export |
Oh yeah, didn't think about that zig cc gives everything needed 😄 |
Yeah we might want a way to deduplicate some of our code because then we have to ensure the definitions are identical between our other images and our zig cc one, but other than that we're good. |
I'm currently working on this, although there's a few hiccups so far. Currently when compiling, Rust expects libgcc to be passed, which $ cross build --target arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi
Compiling hello v0.1.0 (/project)
error: linking with `zig-cc` failed: exit status: 1
|
= note: "zig-cc" "/tmp/rustcXSVBDR/symbols.o" "/target/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/debug/deps/hello-7ddbc5fb91e19054.1mm29ubbwuz8s7tw.rcgu.o" "/target/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/debug/deps/hello-7d
dbc5fb91e19054.39yjj3n05ap8v7wi.rcgu.o" "/target/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/debug/deps/hello-7ddbc5fb91e19054.3c3sh9qmv9xaoi8k.rcgu.o" "/target/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/debug/deps/hello-7ddbc5fb91
e19054.3f27pkp96oxdmtyc.rcgu.o" "/target/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/debug/deps/hello-7ddbc5fb91e19054.40m3wrv8wu3s80hs.rcgu.o" "/target/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/debug/deps/hello-7ddbc5fb91e19054.5
armrqmsk1t4s2mo.rcgu.o" "/target/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/debug/deps/hello-7ddbc5fb91e19054.5c023hewojurnpqw.rcgu.o" "/target/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/debug/deps/hello-7ddbc5fb91e19054.w24kmmgpv
wuuy6m.rcgu.o" "/target/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/debug/deps/hello-7ddbc5fb91e19054.1ctupkzk3ymebr7n.rcgu.o" "-Wl,--as-needed" "-L" "/target/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/debug/deps" "-L" "/target/deb
ug/deps" "-L" "/rust/lib/rustlib/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/lib" "-Wl,--start-group" "-Wl,-Bstatic" "/rust/lib/rustlib/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/lib/libstd-c44f223b81cbc265.rlib" "/rust/lib/rustlib
/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/lib/libpanic_unwind-e337a541de70384a.rlib" "/rust/lib/rustlib/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/lib/libobject-63d0354c15ba72ed.rlib" "/rust/lib/rustlib/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi
/lib/libmemchr-75bff3fc76c53b72.rlib" "/rust/lib/rustlib/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/lib/libaddr2line-6aa5dfeb670effb4.rlib" "/rust/lib/rustlib/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/lib/libgimli-662b8c32ab27763
2.rlib" "/rust/lib/rustlib/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/lib/librustc_demangle-c71ddf2caceab29f.rlib" "/rust/lib/rustlib/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/lib/libstd_detect-c72b7765d9081eda.rlib" "/rust/lib/r
ustlib/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/lib/libhashbrown-5fd9196c3c9ef8ef.rlib" "/rust/lib/rustlib/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/lib/libminiz_oxide-94b5c12daf6ca5ad.rlib" "/rust/lib/rustlib/arm-unknown-linux
-gnueabi/lib/libadler-f57abdca5f5d1fb9.rlib" "/rust/lib/rustlib/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/lib/librustc_std_workspace_alloc-daa9b2520afd4f30.rlib" "/rust/lib/rustlib/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/lib/l
ibunwind-cea6091b3d8becdc.rlib" "/rust/lib/rustlib/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/lib/libcfg_if-9bb90634d22884cd.rlib" "/rust/lib/rustlib/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/lib/liblibc-cc64347f456a2e42.rlib" "/
rust/lib/rustlib/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/lib/liballoc-07b4d0493ef243fc.rlib" "/rust/lib/rustlib/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/lib/librustc_std_workspace_core-16c9d9a485713471.rlib" "/rust/lib/rustli
b/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/lib/libcore-21d632ec5a739f36.rlib" "-Wl,--end-group" "/rust/lib/rustlib/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/lib/libcompiler_builtins-867068f5f547f8aa.rlib" "-Wl,-Bdynamic" "-lgcc
_s" "-lutil" "-lrt" "-lpthread" "-lm" "-ldl" "-lc" "-Wl,--eh-frame-hdr" "-Wl,-znoexecstack" "-L" "/rust/lib/rustlib/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/lib" "-o" "/target/arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi/debug/dep
s/hello-7ddbc5fb91e19054" "-Wl,--gc-sections" "-pie" "-Wl,-zrelro,-znow" "-nodefaultlibs"
= note: warning: unsupported linker arg: -znoexecstack
warning: unsupported linker arg: -zrelro
warning: unsupported linker arg: -znow
warning: ignoring superfluous library 'gcc_s': this dependency is fulfilled instead by compiler-rt which zig unconditionally provides
error: AccessDenied
error: could not compile `hello` due to previous error There current work can be seen at zigcc. It's probably required to remove some packages like gcc and libgcc_s (which I think we can do easily) before this will work. |
Oh this was a silly mistake on my part: it's the zig cache trying to write as a normal user to root directories. |
Uses cargo-zigbuild as a backend, and adds configuration options for zig under `[build.zig]` and `[target.(...).zig]`. If enabled, and an image override is not provided, `cross` will always use the `zig` image. It supports custom `glibc` versions by parsing the libc portion of the target, and extracting a the libc version if present. The target, if built-in, is then the triple/libc pair, otherwise, it's just the triple. The image does not provide runners, `bindgen` Clang args, or `pkg-config` paths, since `zig cc` does not provide the dynamic library loader (`ld-linux*.so`) required, meaning none of the binaries can be run. For `bindgen`, `zig cc` has an unusual directory structure, so there is no traditional sysroot with `usr`, `lib`, and `include` subdirectories. Finally, since we don't have system packages we can work with, exporting a `pkg-config` path makes little sense. Closes cross-rs#860.
Uses cargo-zigbuild as a backend, and adds configuration options for zig under `[build.zig]` and `[target.(...).zig]`. If enabled, and an image override is not provided, `cross` will always use the `zig` image. It supports custom `glibc` versions by parsing the libc portion of the target, and extracting a the libc version if present. The target, if built-in, is then the triple/libc pair, otherwise, it's just the triple. The image does not provide runners, `bindgen` Clang args, or `pkg-config` paths, since `zig cc` does not provide the dynamic library loader (`ld-linux*.so`) required, meaning none of the binaries can be run. For `bindgen`, `zig cc` has an unusual directory structure, so there is no traditional sysroot with `usr`, `lib`, and `include` subdirectories. Finally, since we don't have system packages we can work with, exporting a `pkg-config` path makes little sense. Closes cross-rs#860.
Uses cargo-zigbuild as a backend, and adds configuration options for zig under `[build.zig]` and `[target.(...).zig]`. If enabled, and an image override is not provided, `cross` will always use the `zig` image. It supports custom `glibc` versions by parsing the libc portion of the target, and extracting a the libc version if present. The target, if built-in, is then the triple/libc pair, otherwise, it's just the triple. The image does not provide runners, `bindgen` Clang args, or `pkg-config` paths, since `zig cc` does not provide the dynamic library loader (`ld-linux*.so`) required, meaning none of the binaries can be run. For `bindgen`, `zig cc` has an unusual directory structure, so there is no traditional sysroot with `usr`, `lib`, and `include` subdirectories. Finally, since we don't have system packages we can work with, exporting a `pkg-config` path makes little sense. Closes cross-rs#860.
Uses cargo-zigbuild as a backend, and adds configuration options for zig under `[build.zig]` and `[target.(...).zig]`. If enabled, and an image override is not provided, `cross` will always use the `zig` image. It supports custom `glibc` versions by parsing the libc portion of the target, and extracting a the libc version if present. The target, if built-in, is then the triple/libc pair, otherwise, it's just the triple. The image does not provide runners, `bindgen` Clang args, or `pkg-config` paths, since `zig cc` does not provide the dynamic library loader (`ld-linux*.so`) required, meaning none of the binaries can be run. For `bindgen`, `zig cc` has an unusual directory structure, so there is no traditional sysroot with `usr`, `lib`, and `include` subdirectories. Finally, since we don't have system packages we can work with, exporting a `pkg-config` path makes little sense. Closes cross-rs#860.
Uses cargo-zigbuild as a backend, and adds configuration options for zig under `[build.zig]` and `[target.(...).zig]`. If enabled, and an image override is not provided, `cross` will always use the `zig` image. The feature can be enabled by providing `zig` as a table, bool, or string. It supports custom glibc versions by passing the `zig.version` key, and `zig` can be separately enabled or disabled by providing `zig.enable`. ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.zig] enable = true # enable use of the zig image version = "2.17" # glibc version to use image = "ghcr.io/cross-rs/zig:local" # custom image to use ``` If provided as a bool, it will use the default glibc version: ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu] zig = true ``` If provided as a string, `zig` will be automatically enabled: ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu] zig = "2.17" ``` The image does not provide runners, `bindgen` Clang args, or `pkg-config` paths, since `zig cc` does not provide the dynamic library loader (`ld-linux*.so`) required, meaning none of the binaries can be run. For `bindgen`, `zig cc` has an unusual directory structure, so there is no traditional sysroot with `usr`, `lib`, and `include` subdirectories. Finally, since we don't have system packages we can work with, exporting a `pkg-config` path makes little sense. Closes cross-rs#860.
Uses cargo-zigbuild as a backend, and adds configuration options for zig under `[build.zig]` and `[target.(...).zig]`. If enabled, and an image override is not provided, `cross` will always use the `zig` image. The feature can be enabled by providing `zig` as a table, bool, or string. It supports custom glibc versions by passing the `zig.version` key, and `zig` can be separately enabled or disabled by providing `zig.enable`. ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.zig] enable = true # enable use of the zig image version = "2.17" # glibc version to use image = "ghcr.io/cross-rs/zig:local" # custom image to use ``` If provided as a bool, it will use the default glibc version: ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu] \# equivalent to { enable = true } zig = true ``` If provided as a string, `zig` will be automatically enabled: ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu] \# equivalent to { enable = true, version = "2.17" } zig = "2.17" ``` The image does not provide runners, `bindgen` Clang args, or `pkg-config` paths, since `zig cc` does not provide the dynamic library loader (`ld-linux*.so`) required, meaning none of the binaries can be run. For `bindgen`, `zig cc` has an unusual directory structure, so there is no traditional sysroot with `usr`, `lib`, and `include` subdirectories. Finally, since we don't have system packages we can work with, exporting a `pkg-config` path makes little sense. Closes cross-rs#860.
Uses cargo-zigbuild as a backend, and adds configuration options for zig under `[build.zig]` and `[target.(...).zig]`. If enabled, and an image override is not provided, `cross` will always use the `zig` image. The feature can be enabled by providing `zig` as a table, bool, or string. It supports custom glibc versions by passing the `zig.version` key, and `zig` can be separately enabled or disabled by providing `zig.enable`. ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.zig] enable = true # enable use of the zig image version = "2.17" # glibc version to use image = "ghcr.io/cross-rs/zig:local" # custom image to use ``` If provided as a bool, it will use the default glibc version: ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu] \# equivalent to { enable = true } zig = true ``` If provided as a string, `zig` will be automatically enabled: ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu] \# equivalent to { enable = true, version = "2.17" } zig = "2.17" ``` The image does not provide runners, `bindgen` Clang args, or `pkg-config` paths, since `zig cc` does not provide the dynamic library loader (`ld-linux*.so`) required, meaning none of the binaries can be run. For `bindgen`, `zig cc` has an unusual directory structure, so there is no traditional sysroot with `usr`, `lib`, and `include` subdirectories. Finally, since we don't have system packages we can work with, exporting a `pkg-config` path makes little sense. Closes cross-rs#860.
Uses cargo-zigbuild as a backend, and adds configuration options for zig under `[build.zig]` and `[target.(...).zig]`. If enabled, and an image override is not provided, `cross` will always use the `zig` image. The feature can be enabled by providing `zig` as a table, bool, or string. It supports custom glibc versions by passing the `zig.version` key, and `zig` can be separately enabled or disabled by providing `zig.enable`. ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.zig] enable = true # enable use of the zig image version = "2.17" # glibc version to use image = "ghcr.io/cross-rs/zig:local" # custom image to use ``` If provided as a bool, it will use the default glibc version: ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu] \# equivalent to { enable = true } zig = true ``` If provided as a string, `zig` will be automatically enabled: ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu] \# equivalent to { enable = true, version = "2.17" } zig = "2.17" ``` The image does not provide runners, `bindgen` Clang args, or `pkg-config` paths, since `zig cc` does not provide the dynamic library loader (`ld-linux*.so`) required, meaning none of the binaries can be run. For `bindgen`, `zig cc` has an unusual directory structure, so there is no traditional sysroot with `usr`, `lib`, and `include` subdirectories. Finally, since we don't have system packages we can work with, exporting a `pkg-config` path makes little sense. Closes cross-rs#860.
Uses cargo-zigbuild as a backend, and adds configuration options for zig under `[build.zig]` and `[target.(...).zig]`. If enabled, and an image override is not provided, `cross` will always use the `zig` image. The feature can be enabled by providing `zig` as a table, bool, or string. It supports custom glibc versions by passing the `zig.version` key, and `zig` can be separately enabled or disabled by providing `zig.enable`. ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.zig] enable = true # enable use of the zig image version = "2.17" # glibc version to use image = "ghcr.io/cross-rs/zig:local" # custom image to use ``` If provided as a bool, it will use the default glibc version: ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu] \# equivalent to { enable = true } zig = true ``` If provided as a string, `zig` will be automatically enabled: ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu] \# equivalent to { enable = true, version = "2.17" } zig = "2.17" ``` The image does not provide runners, `bindgen` Clang args, or `pkg-config` paths, since `zig cc` does not provide the dynamic library loader (`ld-linux*.so`) required, meaning none of the binaries can be run. For `bindgen`, `zig cc` has an unusual directory structure, so there is no traditional sysroot with `usr`, `lib`, and `include` subdirectories. Finally, since we don't have system packages we can work with, exporting a `pkg-config` path makes little sense. Closes cross-rs#860.
Uses cargo-zigbuild as a backend, and adds configuration options for zig under `[build.zig]` and `[target.(...).zig]`. If enabled, and an image override is not provided, `cross` will always use the `zig` image. The feature can be enabled by providing `zig` as a table, bool, or string. It supports custom glibc versions by passing the `zig.version` key, and `zig` can be separately enabled or disabled by providing `zig.enable`. ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.zig] enable = true # enable use of the zig image version = "2.17" # glibc version to use image = "ghcr.io/cross-rs/zig:local" # custom image to use ``` If provided as a bool, it will use the default glibc version: ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu] \# equivalent to { enable = true } zig = true ``` If provided as a string, `zig` will be automatically enabled: ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu] \# equivalent to { enable = true, version = "2.17" } zig = "2.17" ``` The image does not provide runners, `bindgen` Clang args, or `pkg-config` paths, since `zig cc` does not provide the dynamic library loader (`ld-linux*.so`) required, meaning none of the binaries can be run. For `bindgen`, `zig cc` has an unusual directory structure, so there is no traditional sysroot with `usr`, `lib`, and `include` subdirectories. Finally, since we don't have system packages we can work with, exporting a `pkg-config` path makes little sense. Closes cross-rs#860.
Uses cargo-zigbuild as a backend, and adds configuration options for zig under `[build.zig]` and `[target.(...).zig]`. If enabled, and an image override is not provided, `cross` will always use the `zig` image. The feature can be enabled by providing `zig` as a table, bool, or string. It supports custom glibc versions by passing the `zig.version` key, and `zig` can be separately enabled or disabled by providing `zig.enable`. ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.zig] enable = true # enable use of the zig image version = "2.17" # glibc version to use image = "ghcr.io/cross-rs/zig:local" # custom image to use ``` If provided as a bool, it will use the default glibc version: ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu] \# equivalent to { enable = true } zig = true ``` If provided as a string, `zig` will be automatically enabled: ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu] \# equivalent to { enable = true, version = "2.17" } zig = "2.17" ``` The image does not provide runners, `bindgen` Clang args, or `pkg-config` paths, since `zig cc` does not provide the dynamic library loader (`ld-linux*.so`) required, meaning none of the binaries can be run. For `bindgen`, `zig cc` has an unusual directory structure, so there is no traditional sysroot with `usr`, `lib`, and `include` subdirectories. Finally, since we don't have system packages we can work with, exporting a `pkg-config` path makes little sense. Closes cross-rs#860.
Uses cargo-zigbuild as a backend, and adds configuration options for zig under `[build.zig]` and `[target.(...).zig]`. If enabled, and an image override is not provided, `cross` will always use the `zig` image. The feature can be enabled by providing `zig` as a table, bool, or string. It supports custom glibc versions by passing the `zig.version` key, and `zig` can be separately enabled or disabled by providing `zig.enable`. ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.zig] enable = true # enable use of the zig image version = "2.17" # glibc version to use image = "ghcr.io/cross-rs/zig:local" # custom image to use ``` If provided as a bool, it will use the default glibc version: ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu] \# equivalent to { enable = true } zig = true ``` If provided as a string, `zig` will be automatically enabled: ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu] \# equivalent to { enable = true, version = "2.17" } zig = "2.17" ``` The image does not provide runners, `bindgen` Clang args, or `pkg-config` paths, since `zig cc` does not provide the dynamic library loader (`ld-linux*.so`) required, meaning none of the binaries can be run. For `bindgen`, `zig cc` has an unusual directory structure, so there is no traditional sysroot with `usr`, `lib`, and `include` subdirectories. Finally, since we don't have system packages we can work with, exporting a `pkg-config` path makes little sense. Closes cross-rs#860.
Uses cargo-zigbuild as a backend, and adds configuration options for zig under `[build.zig]` and `[target.(...).zig]`. If enabled, and an image override is not provided, `cross` will always use the `zig` image. The feature can be enabled by providing `zig` as a table, bool, or string. It supports custom glibc versions by passing the `zig.version` key, and `zig` can be separately enabled or disabled by providing `zig.enable`. ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.zig] enable = true # enable use of the zig image version = "2.17" # glibc version to use image = "ghcr.io/cross-rs/zig:local" # custom image to use ``` If provided as a bool, it will use the default glibc version: ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu] \# equivalent to { enable = true } zig = true ``` If provided as a string, `zig` will be automatically enabled: ``` [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu] \# equivalent to { enable = true, version = "2.17" } zig = "2.17" ``` The image does not provide runners, `bindgen` Clang args, or `pkg-config` paths, since `zig cc` does not provide the dynamic library loader (`ld-linux*.so`) required, meaning none of the binaries can be run. For `bindgen`, `zig cc` has an unusual directory structure, so there is no traditional sysroot with `usr`, `lib`, and `include` subdirectories. Finally, since we don't have system packages we can work with, exporting a `pkg-config` path makes little sense. Closes cross-rs#860.
Checklist
Describe your request
Inspired by the suggestion on reddit, which would then allow users to favor using
zig cc
or similar, which would allow use of custom glibc versions, etc.Effectively, we'd have a config option like:
And then a composite image for all targets
zig cc
supports, and it would ensure we set the appropriateCC_$target
andCXX_$target
environment variables tozig cc
andzig c++
appropriately.Describe why this would be a good inclusion for
cross
It would allow passing in custom glibc versions for
*-linux-gnu
targets, if done correctly, and could reduce image sizes by a lot. The only caveat would be is issues withzig
respecting all C, C++ and link flags, which I know have been issues in the past. Making it opt-in, however, solves all of these.The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: