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Tangram Bootstrap

This package provides the preliminary components required to bootstrap the Tangram ecosystem on Linux and macOS.

TL;DR Run make -j"$(nproc)" && tg test in this directory.

Use the provided Makefile to produce these components ahead of running Tangram. Basic usage:

  • make - Build all host platform components.
  • make list - Enumerate the host platform components.
  • make clean - Remove all build artifacts but retain downloaded sources.
  • make clean_all - Remove all build artifacts AND sources.

After make completes, use tg test to assert that each expected component in the dist/ directory is populated.

On macOS, the list_all_platforms target enumerates every available component/platform combination. The makefile can optionally build the Linux targets as well using Docker Desktop. Use make all_platforms to build every available target.

See Prerequisites about the required host environment, Components about the included software, and Usage about additional provided targets.

Definitions

  • artifact - Anything produced as a result of running a make target.
  • component - A component the bootstrap package expects to provide, such as dash or toolchain.
  • platform - Either x86_64_linux, aarch64_linux, or universal_darwin.
  • target - An action supported by this makefile. These can be "phony" (clean, toolchain) or refer to an actual output file: $SOURCEDIR/dash-0.5.12.tar.gz.

Prerequisites

This makefile is intended to be as portable as possible. However, it must necessarily assume some properties about the computer you're running it on.

Your host system must run of of these operating systems:

  • macOS 13+.
  • Linux. Confirmed to build on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS (Bionic Beaver) and higher.

You also need some standard system utilities for compiling C code, fetching and verifying network content, manipulating text, and traversing your filesystem. To see a complete list, use make list_needed_commands. This is the full set on macOS:

$ make list_needed_commands
ar awk bash bzip2 c++ cc cd chmod cp curl find gpg gsed gzip install ld lipo ln make mkdir rm shasum strip tar touch xz zstd

MacOS

xcode-select --install && brew install gnu-sed zstd

Unfortunately, you must install GNU sed and have it available as gsed on your $PATH to build the utils target.

Alpine

Tested on version 3.15 and higher.

apk add alpine-sdk bash curl gpg gpg-agent xz zstd

Fedora

Tested on version 37 and higher.

dnf install bzip2 gcc make musl-libc xz zstd

Ubuntu

Tested on version 18.04 and higher.

apt update && apt install build-essential curl musl zstd

Docker Platform

This prerequisite is optional. Docker is not required to use the host-only targets on either macOS or Linux.

The Docker rules require Docker Desktop. The environment setup depends on the multi-platform capabilities provided by BuildKit via docker buildx. Alternate container runtimes like Colima will not work out of the box.

NOTE As of July 5, 2023 with Docker Desktop v4.21.1 (114176), successfully building the x86_64_linux targets requires the beta feature "Use Rosetta for x86/amd64 emulation on Apple Silicon" to be toggled OFF. Until this limitation is resolved, x86_64_linux builds on Apple Silicon hosts are slow. Go make a cup of tea.

Components

Each component can be used as a make target. For example, running make dash on an x86_64 Linux computer will produce $(DESTDIR)/dash_x86_64_linux.

Common

Provided for both Linux and MacOS platforms:

  • dash - A minimal POSIX-compliant shell. Sourced from gondor.apana.org.au.
  • toolchain - On Linux, this is a statically-linked musl-based GCC toolchain sourced from musl.cc. On MacOS, this is the standard Apple Clang distribution.
  • utils - On Linux, this bundle solely contains busybox. On macOS, it contains toybox alongside expr, gawk, grep, and tr, all from GNU.

Linux-only

MacOS-only

  • sdk - Versioned headers and metadata for macOS APIs. Not to be confused with the Tangram SDK!

On macOS, the distribution platform is always universal_darwin. Phony targets created for x86_64_darwin and aarch64_darwin can be used to manage intermediate build artifacts, but will not appear in DESTDIR.

Usage

The build manages the following directories:

  • DESTDIR - Output artifacts ready to be included in the Tangram bootstrap module. Default: dist.
  • BUILDDIR - Intermediate build artifacts. Default: build.
  • SOURCEDIR - Source code, signatures, checksums. Default: sources.

The bootstrap Tangram package expects the contents produced at DESTDIR to be available at .dist/, adjacent to tangram.tg. Use tg test to assert that all required components are present after running the build.

The locations and contents of BUILDDIR and SOURCEDIR are not meaningful or known to the Tangram package.

Building

  • all - equivalent to running make with no target defined. Build each supported entrypoint for your host platform.
  • all_platforms - On MacOS, additionally build the x86_64_linux and aarch64_linux targets for supported components.
  • <component> - Build a single component for your detected host platform.
  • <component>_<platform> - Build a single component for a specific platform, if supported.
  • tarballs - Create compressed tarballs for each component.
  • validate_environment - Check for the existence of all required tools in $PATH. It is not necessary to call this target manually.

Cleaning

The top-level clean targets are not component-aware and obliterate entire directories:

  • clean - clear DESTDIR and BUILDDIR, but retain SOURCEDIR contents.
  • clean_all - clear everything. Equivalent to running the clean and clean_sources targets.
  • clean_dist - just clear DESTDIR.
  • clean_sources - just clear SOURCEDIR.

Additionally, each component defines cleaning targets which only remove its own artifacts, with the same semantics as above:

  • clean_<component>(_<platform>)?
  • clean_<component>(_<platform>)?_all
  • clean_<component>(_<platform>)?_dist
  • clean_<component>(_<platform>)?_sources

Omitting the platform is equivalent to specifying your host platform. For example, clean_dash_dist and clean_dash_universal_darwin_dist are equivalent on a macOS computer.

Note that multiple platforms may depend on the same sources. Using a platform-specific target to clean sources will affect all platforms that share that source. For example, running make clean_dash_x86_64_linux_sources will force make dash_universal_darwin to re-download the source code as well.

Listing

None of these targets will catalyze any builds or downloads.

  • list - Enumerate all targets that will be produced by make all.
  • list_all_targets - Enumerate every single available target.
  • list_needed_commands - Enumerate every utility that must be present in your $PATH to build successfully.
  • list_cross_targets - On macOS, enumerate all available cross-platform distribution targets.
  • list_all_platforms - On macOS, enumerate all targets that will be produced by make all_platforms. This set is the union of the targets given by list and list_cross_targets.

Docker

On MacOS, the following targets can be used to manage the Docker containers and images required for building the Linux components:

  • docker_images - build the Docker images for Linux builds.
  • docker_stopall - stop any container this Makefile can create.
  • clean_docker - Stop and remove all docker containers and images created by this Makefile.

You do not need to manually call docker_images before building these components, it's just provided for completeness.