diff --git a/.github/workflows/platform-tools-solana.yml b/.github/workflows/platform-tools-solana.yml index abceaff..8678f90 100644 --- a/.github/workflows/platform-tools-solana.yml +++ b/.github/workflows/platform-tools-solana.yml @@ -52,6 +52,9 @@ jobs: sudo apt -y install clang-${{ env.LLVM_VERSION }} cmake lld-${{ env.LLVM_VERSION }} ninja-build echo /usr/lib/llvm-${{ env.LLVM_VERSION }}/bin >> $GITHUB_PATH + - name: Checkout code + uses: actions/checkout@v2 + - name: Checkout Rust code uses: actions/checkout@v2 with: @@ -60,6 +63,7 @@ jobs: - name: Build Rust run: | + cp ../binaries/platform-tools-solana/config.toml . ./x.py build --stage 1 --target ${{ matrix.target }},sbf-solana-solana - name: Checkout Cargo code diff --git a/platform-tools-solana/config.toml b/platform-tools-solana/config.toml new file mode 100644 index 0000000..eaa13ea --- /dev/null +++ b/platform-tools-solana/config.toml @@ -0,0 +1,552 @@ +changelog-seen = 2 +# Sample TOML configuration file for building Rust. +# +# To configure rustbuild, copy this file to the directory from which you will be +# running the build, and name it config.toml. +# +# All options are commented out by default in this file, and they're commented +# out with their default values. The build system by default looks for +# `config.toml` in the current directory of a build for build configuration, but +# a custom configuration file can also be specified with `--config` to the build +# system. + +# ============================================================================= +# Tweaking how LLVM is compiled +# ============================================================================= +[llvm] + +# Indicates whether the LLVM build is a Release or Debug build +optimize = true + +# Indicates whether LLVM should be built with ThinLTO. Note that this will +# only succeed if you use clang, lld, llvm-ar, and llvm-ranlib in your C/C++ +# toolchain (see the `cc`, `cxx`, `linker`, `ar`, and `ranlib` options below). +# More info at: https://clang.llvm.org/docs/ThinLTO.html#clang-bootstrap +#thin-lto = false + +# Indicates whether an LLVM Release build should include debug info +release-debuginfo = false + +# Indicates whether the LLVM assertions are enabled or not +assertions = false + +# Indicates whether ccache is used when building LLVM +#ccache = false +# or alternatively ... +#ccache = "/path/to/ccache" + +# If an external LLVM root is specified, we automatically check the version by +# default to make sure it's within the range that we're expecting, but setting +# this flag will indicate that this version check should not be done. +#version-check = true + +# Link libstdc++ statically into the librustc_llvm instead of relying on a +# dynamic version to be available. +#static-libstdcpp = false + +# Tell the LLVM build system to use Ninja instead of the platform default for +# the generated build system. This can sometimes be faster than make, for +# example. +#ninja = false + +# LLVM targets to build support for. +# Note: this is NOT related to Rust compilation targets. However, as Rust is +# dependent on LLVM for code generation, turning targets off here WILL lead to +# the resulting rustc being unable to compile for the disabled architectures. +# Also worth pointing out is that, in case support for new targets are added to +# LLVM, enabling them here doesn't mean Rust is automatically gaining said +# support. You'll need to write a target specification at least, and most +# likely, teach rustc about the C ABI of the target. Get in touch with the +# Rust team and file an issue if you need assistance in porting! +#targets = "AArch64;ARM;Hexagon;MSP430;Mips;NVPTX;PowerPC;RISCV;Sparc;SystemZ;WebAssembly;X86" +targets = "AArch64;X86" + +# LLVM experimental targets to build support for. These targets are specified in +# the same format as above, but since these targets are experimental, they are +# not built by default and the experimental Rust compilation targets that depend +# on them will not work unless the user opts in to building them. By default the +# `WebAssembly`, `RISCV`, and `BPF` targets are enabled when compiling LLVM from scratch. +experimental-targets = "BPF;SBF" + +# Cap the number of parallel linker invocations when compiling LLVM. +# This can be useful when building LLVM with debug info, which significantly +# increases the size of binaries and consequently the memory required by +# each linker process. +# If absent or 0, linker invocations are treated like any other job and +# controlled by rustbuild's -j parameter. +link-jobs = 2 + +# When invoking `llvm-config` this configures whether the `--shared` argument is +# passed to prefer linking to shared libraries. +link-shared = false + +# When building llvm, this configures what is being appended to the version. +# If absent, we let the version as-is. +#version-suffix = "-rust" + +# On MSVC you can compile LLVM with clang-cl, but the test suite doesn't pass +# with clang-cl, so this is special in that it only compiles LLVM with clang-cl +#clang-cl = '/path/to/clang-cl.exe' + +# Pass extra compiler and linker flags to the LLVM CMake build. +#cflags = "-fextra-flag" +#cxxflags = "-fextra-flag" +#ldflags = "-Wl,extra-flag" + +# Use libc++ when building LLVM instead of libstdc++. This is the default on +# platforms already use libc++ as the default C++ library, but this option +# allows you to use libc++ even on platforms when it's not. You need to ensure +# that your host compiler ships with libc++. +#use-libcxx = true + +# The value specified here will be passed as `-DLLVM_USE_LINKER` to CMake. +#use-linker = "lld" + +# Whether or not to specify `-DLLVM_TEMPORARILY_ALLOW_OLD_TOOLCHAIN=YES` +#allow-old-toolchain = false + +# Which LLVM projects to build along with the LLVM base libraries/tools +enable-projects = "clang;lld;lldb" + +download-ci-llvm = false + +# ============================================================================= +# General build configuration options +# ============================================================================= +[build] + +# Build triple for the original snapshot compiler. This must be a compiler that +# nightlies are already produced for. The current platform must be able to run +# binaries of this build triple and the nightly will be used to bootstrap the +# first compiler. +#build = "x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu" # defaults to your host platform + +# In addition to the build triple, other triples to produce full compiler +# toolchains for. Each of these triples will be bootstrapped from the build +# triple and then will continue to bootstrap themselves. This platform must +# currently be able to run all of the triples provided here. +#host = ["x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu"] # defaults to just the build triple + +# In addition to all host triples, other triples to produce the standard library +# for. Each host triple will be used to produce a copy of the standard library +# for each target triple. +#target = ["x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu"] # defaults to just the build triple + +# Instead of downloading the src/stage0.txt version of Cargo specified, use +# this Cargo binary instead to build all Rust code +#cargo = "/path/to/bin/cargo" + +# Instead of downloading the src/stage0.txt version of the compiler +# specified, use this rustc binary instead as the stage0 snapshot compiler. +#rustc = "/path/to/bin/rustc" + +# Flag to specify whether any documentation is built. If false, rustdoc and +# friends will still be compiled but they will not be used to generate any +# documentation. +docs = false + +# Indicate whether the compiler should be documented in addition to the standard +# library and facade crates. +#compiler-docs = false + +# Indicate whether git submodules are managed and updated automatically. +#submodules = true + +# Update git submodules only when the checked out commit in the submodules differs +# from what is committed in the main rustc repo. +#fast-submodules = true + +# The path to (or name of) the GDB executable to use. This is only used for +# executing the debuginfo test suite. +#gdb = "gdb" + +# The node.js executable to use. Note that this is only used for the emscripten +# target when running tests, otherwise this can be omitted. +#nodejs = "node" + +# Python interpreter to use for various tasks throughout the build, notably +# rustdoc tests, the lldb python interpreter, and some dist bits and pieces. +# Note that Python 2 is currently required. +# +# Defaults to python2.7, then python2. If neither executable can be found, then +# it defaults to the Python interpreter used to execute x.py. +#python = "python2.7" + +# Force Cargo to check that Cargo.lock describes the precise dependency +# set that all the Cargo.toml files create, instead of updating it. +#locked-deps = false + +# Indicate whether the vendored sources are used for Rust dependencies or not +#vendor = false + +# Typically the build system will build the rust compiler twice. The second +# compiler, however, will simply use its own libraries to link against. If you +# would rather to perform a full bootstrap, compiling the compiler three times, +# then you can set this option to true. You shouldn't ever need to set this +# option to true. +#full-bootstrap = false + +# Enable a build of the extended rust tool set which is not only the compiler +# but also tools such as Cargo. This will also produce "combined installers" +# which are used to install Rust and Cargo together. This is disabled by +# default. +#extended = false + +# Installs chosen set of extended tools if enabled. By default builds all. +# If chosen tool failed to build the installation fails. +#tools = ["cargo", "rls", "clippy", "rustfmt", "analysis", "src"] + +# Verbosity level: 0 == not verbose, 1 == verbose, 2 == very verbose +#verbose = 0 + +# Build the sanitizer runtimes +#sanitizers = false + +# Build the profiler runtime +#profiler = false + +# Indicates whether the native libraries linked into Cargo will be statically +# linked or not. +#cargo-native-static = false + +# Run the build with low priority, by setting the process group's "nice" value +# to +10 on Unix platforms, and by using a "low priority" job object on Windows. +#low-priority = false + +# Arguments passed to the `./configure` script, used during distcheck. You +# probably won't fill this in but rather it's filled in by the `./configure` +# script. +#configure-args = [] + +# Indicates that a local rebuild is occurring instead of a full bootstrap, +# essentially skipping stage0 as the local compiler is recompiling itself again. +#local-rebuild = false + +# Print out how long each rustbuild step took (mostly intended for CI and +# tracking over time) +#print-step-timings = false + +# ============================================================================= +# General install configuration options +# ============================================================================= +[install] + +# Instead of installing to /usr/local, install to this path instead. +prefix = "opt/sbf-rust" + +# Where to install system configuration files +# If this is a relative path, it will get installed in `prefix` above +#sysconfdir = "/etc" + +# Where to install documentation in `prefix` above +#docdir = "share/doc/rust" + +# Where to install binaries in `prefix` above +#bindir = "bin" + +# Where to install libraries in `prefix` above +#libdir = "lib" + +# Where to install man pages in `prefix` above +#mandir = "share/man" + +# Where to install data in `prefix` above (currently unused) +#datadir = "share" + +# Where to install additional info in `prefix` above (currently unused) +#infodir = "share/info" + +# Where to install local state (currently unused) +# If this is a relative path, it will get installed in `prefix` above +#localstatedir = "/var/lib" + +# ============================================================================= +# Options for compiling Rust code itself +# ============================================================================= +[rust] + +# Whether or not to optimize the compiler and standard library. +# +# Note: the slowness of the non optimized compiler compiling itself usually +# outweighs the time gains in not doing optimizations, therefore a +# full bootstrap takes much more time with `optimize` set to false. +optimize = true + +# Indicates that the build should be configured for debugging Rust. A +# `debug`-enabled compiler and standard library will be somewhat +# slower (due to e.g. checking of debug assertions) but should remain +# usable. +# +# Note: If this value is set to `true`, it will affect a number of +# configuration options below as well, if they have been left +# unconfigured in this file. +# +# Note: changes to the `debug` setting do *not* affect `optimize` +# above. In theory, a "maximally debuggable" environment would +# set `optimize` to `false` above to assist the introspection +# facilities of debuggers like lldb and gdb. To recreate such an +# environment, explicitly set `optimize` to `false` and `debug` +# to `true`. In practice, everyone leaves `optimize` set to +# `true`, because an unoptimized rustc with debugging +# enabled becomes *unusably slow* (e.g. rust-lang/rust#24840 +# reported a 25x slowdown) and bootstrapping the supposed +# "maximally debuggable" environment (notably libstd) takes +# hours to build. +# +debug = false + +# Number of codegen units to use for each compiler invocation. A value of 0 +# means "the number of cores on this machine", and 1+ is passed through to the +# compiler. +#codegen-units = 1 + +# Sets the number of codegen units to build the standard library with, +# regardless of what the codegen-unit setting for the rest of the compiler is. +#codegen-units-std = 1 + +# Whether or not debug assertions are enabled for the compiler and standard +# library. +debug-assertions = false + +# Debuginfo level for most of Rust code, corresponds to the `-C debuginfo=N` option of `rustc`. +# `0` - no debug info +# `1` - line tables only +# `2` - full debug info with variable and type information +# Can be overriden for specific subsets of Rust code (rustc, std or tools). +# Debuginfo for tests run with compiletest is not controlled by this option +# and needs to be enabled separately with `debuginfo-level-tests`. +#debuginfo-level = if debug { 2 } else { 0 } + +# Debuginfo level for the compiler. +#debuginfo-level-rustc = debuginfo-level + +# Debuginfo level for the standard library. +#debuginfo-level-std = debuginfo-level + +# Debuginfo level for the tools. +#debuginfo-level-tools = debuginfo-level + +# Debuginfo level for the test suites run with compiletest. +# FIXME(#61117): Some tests fail when this option is enabled. +#debuginfo-level-tests = 0 + +# Whether or not `panic!`s generate backtraces (RUST_BACKTRACE) +#backtrace = true + +# Whether to always use incremental compilation when building rustc +#incremental = false + +# Build a multi-threaded rustc +#parallel-compiler = false + +# The default linker that will be hard-coded into the generated compiler for +# targets that don't specify linker explicitly in their target specifications. +# Note that this is not the linker used to link said compiler. +#default-linker = "cc" + +# The "channel" for the Rust build to produce. The stable/beta channels only +# allow using stable features, whereas the nightly and dev channels allow using +# nightly features +#channel = "dev" + +# By default the `rustc` executable is built with `-Wl,-rpath` flags on Unix +# platforms to ensure that the compiler is usable by default from the build +# directory (as it links to a number of dynamic libraries). This may not be +# desired in distributions, for example. +#rpath = true + +# Emits extraneous output from tests to ensure that failures of the test +# harness are debuggable just from logfiles. +#verbose-tests = false + +# Flag indicating whether tests are compiled with optimizations (the -O flag). +#optimize-tests = true + +# Flag indicating whether codegen tests will be run or not. If you get an error +# saying that the FileCheck executable is missing, you may want to disable this. +# Also see the target's llvm-filecheck option. +#codegen-tests = true + +# Flag indicating whether git info will be retrieved from .git automatically. +# Having the git information can cause a lot of rebuilds during development. +# Note: If this attribute is not explicitly set (e.g. if left commented out) it +# will default to true if channel = "dev", but will default to false otherwise. +#ignore-git = true + +# When creating source tarballs whether or not to create a source tarball. +#dist-src = false + +# After building or testing extended tools (e.g. clippy and rustfmt), append the +# result (broken, compiling, testing) into this JSON file. +#save-toolstates = "/path/to/toolstates.json" + +# This is an array of the codegen backends that will be compiled for the rustc +# that's being compiled. The default is to only build the LLVM codegen backend, +# but you can also optionally enable the "emscripten" backend for asm.js or +# make this an empty array (but that probably won't get too far in the +# bootstrap) +#codegen-backends = ["llvm"] + +# This is the name of the directory in which codegen backends will get installed +#codegen-backends-dir = "codegen-backends" + +# Indicates whether LLD will be compiled and made available in the sysroot for +# rustc to execute. +lld = true + +# Indicates whether some LLVM tools, like llvm-objdump, will be made available in the +# sysroot. +#llvm-tools = false + +# Indicates whether LLDB will be made available in the sysroot. +# This is only built if LLVM is also being built. +#lldb = false + +# Whether to deny warnings in crates +#deny-warnings = true + +# Print backtrace on internal compiler errors during bootstrap +#backtrace-on-ice = false + +# Whether to verify generated LLVM IR +#verify-llvm-ir = false + +# Map all debuginfo paths for libstd and crates to `/rust/$sha/$crate/...`, +# generally only set for releases +#remap-debuginfo = false + +# Link the compiler against `jemalloc`, where on Linux and OSX it should +# override the default allocator for rustc and LLVM. +#jemalloc = false + +# Run tests in various test suites with the "nll compare mode" in addition to +# running the tests in normal mode. Largely only used on CI and during local +# development of NLL +#test-compare-mode = false + +# Use LLVM libunwind as the implementation for Rust's unwinder. +#llvm-libunwind = false + +# ============================================================================= +# Options for specific targets +# +# Each of the following options is scoped to the specific target triple in +# question and is used for determining how to compile each target. +# ============================================================================= +[target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu] + +# C compiler to be used to compiler C code. Note that the +# default value is platform specific, and if not specified it may also depend on +# what platform is crossing to what platform. +cc = "clang" + +# C++ compiler to be used to compiler C++ code (e.g. LLVM and our LLVM shims). +# This is only used for host targets. +cxx = "clang++" + +# Archiver to be used to assemble static libraries compiled from C/C++ code. +# Note: an absolute path should be used, otherwise LLVM build will break. +ar = "llvm-ar" + +# Ranlib to be used to assemble static libraries compiled from C/C++ code. +# Note: an absolute path should be used, otherwise LLVM build will break. +ranlib = "llvm-ranlib" + +# Linker to be used to link Rust code. Note that the +# default value is platform specific, and if not specified it may also depend on +# what platform is crossing to what platform. +linker = "clang" + +# Path to the `llvm-config` binary of the installation of a custom LLVM to link +# against. Note that if this is specified we don't compile LLVM at all for this +# target. +#llvm-config = "../path/to/llvm/root/bin/llvm-config" + +# Normally the build system can find LLVM's FileCheck utility, but if +# not, you can specify an explicit file name for it. +#llvm-filecheck = "/path/to/FileCheck" + +# If this target is for Android, this option will be required to specify where +# the NDK for the target lives. This is used to find the C compiler to link and +# build native code. +#android-ndk = "/path/to/ndk" + +# Force static or dynamic linkage of the standard library for this target. If +# this target is a host for rustc, this will also affect the linkage of the +# compiler itself. This is useful for building rustc on targets that normally +# only use static libraries. If unset, the target's default linkage is used. +#crt-static = false + +# The root location of the MUSL installation directory. The library directory +# will also need to contain libunwind.a for an unwinding implementation. Note +# that this option only makes sense for MUSL targets that produce statically +# linked binaries +#musl-root = "..." + +# The root location of the `wasm32-wasi` sysroot. +#wasi-root = "..." + +# Used in testing for configuring where the QEMU images are located, you +# probably don't want to use this. +#qemu-rootfs = "..." + +[target.x86_64-unknown-linux-musl] +cc = "clang" +cxx = "clang++" +ar = "llvm-ar" +ranlib = "llvm-ranlib" +linker = "clang" + +[target.aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu] +cc = "clang" +cxx = "clang++" +ar = "llvm-ar" +ranlib = "llvm-ranlib" +linker = "clang" + +[target.aarch64-unknown-linux-musl] +cc = "clang" +cxx = "clang++" +ar = "llvm-ar" +ranlib = "llvm-ranlib" +linker = "clang" + +# ============================================================================= +# Distribution options +# +# These options are related to distribution, mostly for the Rust project itself. +# You probably won't need to concern yourself with any of these options +# ============================================================================= +[dist] + +# This is the folder of artifacts that the build system will sign. All files in +# this directory will be signed with the default gpg key using the system `gpg` +# binary. The `asc` and `sha256` files will all be output into the standard dist +# output folder (currently `build/dist`) +# +# This folder should be populated ahead of time before the build system is +# invoked. +#sign-folder = "path/to/folder/to/sign" + +# This is a file which contains the password of the default gpg key. This will +# be passed to `gpg` down the road when signing all files in `sign-folder` +# above. This should be stored in plaintext. +#gpg-password-file = "path/to/gpg/password" + +# The remote address that all artifacts will eventually be uploaded to. The +# build system generates manifests which will point to these urls, and for the +# manifests to be correct they'll have to have the right URLs encoded. +# +# Note that this address should not contain a trailing slash as file names will +# be appended to it. +#upload-addr = "https://example.com/folder" + +# Whether to build a plain source tarball to upload +# We disable that on Windows not to override the one already uploaded on S3 +# as the one built on Windows will contain backslashes in paths causing problems +# on linux +#src-tarball = true +# + +# Whether to allow failures when building tools +#missing-tools = false