docs/build_system
Build System
There are many ways to build YARP, which means the build system is a bit more complicated than usual.
Requirements
- It must work to build YARP for all 6 uses-cases below.
- It must be possible to build YARP without needing ruby/rake/etc. Because once YARP is the single parser in TruffleRuby, JRuby or CRuby there won’t be another Ruby parser around to parse such Ruby code. Most/every Ruby implementations want to avoid depending on another Ruby during the build process as that is very brittle.
- It is desirable to compile YARP with the same or very similar compiler flags for all use-cases (e.g. optimization level, warning flags, etc). Otherwise, there is the risk YARP does not work correctly with those different compiler flags.
The main solution for the second point seems a Makefile, otherwise many of the usages would have to duplicate the logic to build YARP.
General Design
- Templates are generated by
templates/template.rb
autoconf
creates./configure
andautoheader
createsconfig.h.in
(both files are platform-independent)./configure
createsinclude/yarp/config.h
(which containsHAVE_*
macros, platform-specific) and theMakefile
- The
Makefile
compiles bothlibrubyparser.a
andlibrubyparser.{so,dylib,dll}
from thesrc/**/*.c
andinclude/**/*.h
files - The
Rakefile
:compile
task ensures the above prerequisites are done, then callsmake
, and usesRake::ExtensionTask
to compile the C extension (using itsextconf.rb
), which useslibrubyparser.a
This way there is minimal duplication, and each layer builds on the previous one and has its own responsibilities.
The static library exports no symbols, to avoid any conflict.
The shared library exports some symbols, and this is fine since there should only be one librubyparser shared library
loaded per process (i.e., at most one version of the yarp gem loaded in a process, only the gem uses the shared library).
The various ways to build YARP
Building from ruby/yarp repository with bundle exec rake
rake
calls make
and then uses Rake::ExtensionTask
to compile the C extension (see above).
Building the yarp gem by gem install/bundle install
The gem contains the pre-generated templates, as well as configure
and config.h.in
When installing the gem, extconf.rb
is used and that:
- runs
./configure
which creates theMakefile
andinclude/yarp/config.h
- runs
make build/librubyparser.a
- compiles the C extension with mkmf
When installing the gem on JRuby and TruffleRuby, no C extension is built, so instead of the last step,
there is Ruby code using Fiddle which uses librubyparser.{so,dylib,dll}
to implement the same methods as the C extension, but using serialization instead of many native calls/accesses
(JRuby does not support C extensions, serialization is faster on TruffleRuby than the C extension).
Building the yarp gem from git, e.g. gem 'yarp', github: 'ruby/yarp'
The same as above, except the extconf.rb
additionally runs first:
templates/template.rb
to generate the templatesautoconf
andautoheader
to generateconfigure
andconfig.h.in
Because of course those files are not part of the git repository.
Building YARP as part of CRuby
This script imports YARP sources in CRuby.
The script generates the templates when importing.
include/yarp/config.h
is replaced by #include "ruby/config.h"
.
It is assumed that CRuby’s ./configure
is a superset of YARP’s configure checks.
YARP’s autotools
is not used at all in CRuby and in fact YARP’s Makefile
is not used either.
Instead, CRuby’s autotools
setup is used, and CRuby
‘s Makefiles are used.
Building YARP as part of TruffleRuby
This script imports YARP sources in TruffleRuby.
The script generates the templates when importing.
It also generates configure
and config.h.in
(to avoid needing autotools
on every machine building TruffleRuby).
Then when mx build
builds TruffleRuby and the yarp
mx project inside, it:
- runs
./configure
- runs
make
Then the yarp bindings
mx project is built, which contains the bindings
and links to librubyparser.a
(to avoid exporting symbols, so no conflict when installing the yarp gem).
Building YARP as part of JRuby
TODO, probably similar to TruffleRuby.