gerrit/tools/download_jar.py

174 lines
4.6 KiB
Python
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Build with Buck Implement a new build system using Buck[1], Facebook's open source clone of Google's internal build system. Pros: - Concise build language - Test and build output is concise - Test failures and stack traces show on terminal - Reliable incrementals; clean is unnecessary - Extensible with simple blocks of Python - Fast buck: clean: 0.452s, full 1m21.083s [*], no-op: 7.145s, mvn: clean: 4.596s, full 2m53.776s, no-op: 59.108s, [*] full build includes downloading all dependencies, time can vary due to remote server performance. Cons: - No Windows support - No native Maven Central support (added by macros) - No native GWT, Prolog, or WAR support (added by macros) - Bootstrap of buck requires Ant Getting started: git clone https://gerrit.googlesource.com/buck cd buck ant Mac OS X: PATH="`pwd`/bin:/System/Library/Frameworks/JavaVM.framework/Versions/Current/Commands:$PATH" Linux: PATH="`pwd`/bin:$PATH" Importing into Eclipse: $ time buck build :eclipse 0m48.949s Import existing project from `pwd` Import 'gerrit' (do not import other Maven based projects) Expand 'gerrit' Right click 'buck-out' > Properties Under Attributes check 'Derived' If the code doesn't currently compile but an updated classpath is needed, refresh the configs and obtain missing JARs: $ buck build :eclipse_project :download Running JUnit tests: $ time buck test --all -e slow # skip slow tests 0m19.320s $ time buck test --all # includes acceptance tests 5m17.517s Building WAR: $ buck build :gerrit $ java -jar buck-out/gen/gerrit.war Building release: $ buck test --all && buck build :api :release $ java -jar buck-out/gen/release.war $ ls -lh buck-out/gen/{extension,plugin}-api.jar Downloading dependencies: Dependencies are normally downloaded automatically, but Buck can inspect its graph and download missing dependencies so future compiles can run without the network: $ buck build :download [1] http://facebook.github.io/buck/ Change-Id: I40853b108bd8e153cefa0896a5280a9a5ff81655
2013-05-08 14:14:24 -07:00
#!/usr/bin/python
# Copyright (C) 2013 The Android Open Source Project
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
from __future__ import print_function
Build with Buck Implement a new build system using Buck[1], Facebook's open source clone of Google's internal build system. Pros: - Concise build language - Test and build output is concise - Test failures and stack traces show on terminal - Reliable incrementals; clean is unnecessary - Extensible with simple blocks of Python - Fast buck: clean: 0.452s, full 1m21.083s [*], no-op: 7.145s, mvn: clean: 4.596s, full 2m53.776s, no-op: 59.108s, [*] full build includes downloading all dependencies, time can vary due to remote server performance. Cons: - No Windows support - No native Maven Central support (added by macros) - No native GWT, Prolog, or WAR support (added by macros) - Bootstrap of buck requires Ant Getting started: git clone https://gerrit.googlesource.com/buck cd buck ant Mac OS X: PATH="`pwd`/bin:/System/Library/Frameworks/JavaVM.framework/Versions/Current/Commands:$PATH" Linux: PATH="`pwd`/bin:$PATH" Importing into Eclipse: $ time buck build :eclipse 0m48.949s Import existing project from `pwd` Import 'gerrit' (do not import other Maven based projects) Expand 'gerrit' Right click 'buck-out' > Properties Under Attributes check 'Derived' If the code doesn't currently compile but an updated classpath is needed, refresh the configs and obtain missing JARs: $ buck build :eclipse_project :download Running JUnit tests: $ time buck test --all -e slow # skip slow tests 0m19.320s $ time buck test --all # includes acceptance tests 5m17.517s Building WAR: $ buck build :gerrit $ java -jar buck-out/gen/gerrit.war Building release: $ buck test --all && buck build :api :release $ java -jar buck-out/gen/release.war $ ls -lh buck-out/gen/{extension,plugin}-api.jar Downloading dependencies: Dependencies are normally downloaded automatically, but Buck can inspect its graph and download missing dependencies so future compiles can run without the network: $ buck build :download [1] http://facebook.github.io/buck/ Change-Id: I40853b108bd8e153cefa0896a5280a9a5ff81655
2013-05-08 14:14:24 -07:00
from hashlib import sha1
from optparse import OptionParser
from os import link, makedirs, path, symlink
Build with Buck Implement a new build system using Buck[1], Facebook's open source clone of Google's internal build system. Pros: - Concise build language - Test and build output is concise - Test failures and stack traces show on terminal - Reliable incrementals; clean is unnecessary - Extensible with simple blocks of Python - Fast buck: clean: 0.452s, full 1m21.083s [*], no-op: 7.145s, mvn: clean: 4.596s, full 2m53.776s, no-op: 59.108s, [*] full build includes downloading all dependencies, time can vary due to remote server performance. Cons: - No Windows support - No native Maven Central support (added by macros) - No native GWT, Prolog, or WAR support (added by macros) - Bootstrap of buck requires Ant Getting started: git clone https://gerrit.googlesource.com/buck cd buck ant Mac OS X: PATH="`pwd`/bin:/System/Library/Frameworks/JavaVM.framework/Versions/Current/Commands:$PATH" Linux: PATH="`pwd`/bin:$PATH" Importing into Eclipse: $ time buck build :eclipse 0m48.949s Import existing project from `pwd` Import 'gerrit' (do not import other Maven based projects) Expand 'gerrit' Right click 'buck-out' > Properties Under Attributes check 'Derived' If the code doesn't currently compile but an updated classpath is needed, refresh the configs and obtain missing JARs: $ buck build :eclipse_project :download Running JUnit tests: $ time buck test --all -e slow # skip slow tests 0m19.320s $ time buck test --all # includes acceptance tests 5m17.517s Building WAR: $ buck build :gerrit $ java -jar buck-out/gen/gerrit.war Building release: $ buck test --all && buck build :api :release $ java -jar buck-out/gen/release.war $ ls -lh buck-out/gen/{extension,plugin}-api.jar Downloading dependencies: Dependencies are normally downloaded automatically, but Buck can inspect its graph and download missing dependencies so future compiles can run without the network: $ buck build :download [1] http://facebook.github.io/buck/ Change-Id: I40853b108bd8e153cefa0896a5280a9a5ff81655
2013-05-08 14:14:24 -07:00
import shutil
from subprocess import check_call, CalledProcessError
Build with Buck Implement a new build system using Buck[1], Facebook's open source clone of Google's internal build system. Pros: - Concise build language - Test and build output is concise - Test failures and stack traces show on terminal - Reliable incrementals; clean is unnecessary - Extensible with simple blocks of Python - Fast buck: clean: 0.452s, full 1m21.083s [*], no-op: 7.145s, mvn: clean: 4.596s, full 2m53.776s, no-op: 59.108s, [*] full build includes downloading all dependencies, time can vary due to remote server performance. Cons: - No Windows support - No native Maven Central support (added by macros) - No native GWT, Prolog, or WAR support (added by macros) - Bootstrap of buck requires Ant Getting started: git clone https://gerrit.googlesource.com/buck cd buck ant Mac OS X: PATH="`pwd`/bin:/System/Library/Frameworks/JavaVM.framework/Versions/Current/Commands:$PATH" Linux: PATH="`pwd`/bin:$PATH" Importing into Eclipse: $ time buck build :eclipse 0m48.949s Import existing project from `pwd` Import 'gerrit' (do not import other Maven based projects) Expand 'gerrit' Right click 'buck-out' > Properties Under Attributes check 'Derived' If the code doesn't currently compile but an updated classpath is needed, refresh the configs and obtain missing JARs: $ buck build :eclipse_project :download Running JUnit tests: $ time buck test --all -e slow # skip slow tests 0m19.320s $ time buck test --all # includes acceptance tests 5m17.517s Building WAR: $ buck build :gerrit $ java -jar buck-out/gen/gerrit.war Building release: $ buck test --all && buck build :api :release $ java -jar buck-out/gen/release.war $ ls -lh buck-out/gen/{extension,plugin}-api.jar Downloading dependencies: Dependencies are normally downloaded automatically, but Buck can inspect its graph and download missing dependencies so future compiles can run without the network: $ buck build :download [1] http://facebook.github.io/buck/ Change-Id: I40853b108bd8e153cefa0896a5280a9a5ff81655
2013-05-08 14:14:24 -07:00
from sys import stderr
from zipfile import ZipFile, BadZipfile, LargeZipFile
REPO_ROOTS = {
'GERRIT': 'http://gerrit-maven.commondatastorage.googleapis.com',
'MAVEN_CENTRAL': 'http://repo1.maven.org/maven2',
}
GERRIT_HOME = path.expanduser('~/.gerritcodereview')
CACHE_DIR = path.join(GERRIT_HOME, 'buck-cache')
LOCAL_PROPERTIES = 'local.properties'
Build with Buck Implement a new build system using Buck[1], Facebook's open source clone of Google's internal build system. Pros: - Concise build language - Test and build output is concise - Test failures and stack traces show on terminal - Reliable incrementals; clean is unnecessary - Extensible with simple blocks of Python - Fast buck: clean: 0.452s, full 1m21.083s [*], no-op: 7.145s, mvn: clean: 4.596s, full 2m53.776s, no-op: 59.108s, [*] full build includes downloading all dependencies, time can vary due to remote server performance. Cons: - No Windows support - No native Maven Central support (added by macros) - No native GWT, Prolog, or WAR support (added by macros) - Bootstrap of buck requires Ant Getting started: git clone https://gerrit.googlesource.com/buck cd buck ant Mac OS X: PATH="`pwd`/bin:/System/Library/Frameworks/JavaVM.framework/Versions/Current/Commands:$PATH" Linux: PATH="`pwd`/bin:$PATH" Importing into Eclipse: $ time buck build :eclipse 0m48.949s Import existing project from `pwd` Import 'gerrit' (do not import other Maven based projects) Expand 'gerrit' Right click 'buck-out' > Properties Under Attributes check 'Derived' If the code doesn't currently compile but an updated classpath is needed, refresh the configs and obtain missing JARs: $ buck build :eclipse_project :download Running JUnit tests: $ time buck test --all -e slow # skip slow tests 0m19.320s $ time buck test --all # includes acceptance tests 5m17.517s Building WAR: $ buck build :gerrit $ java -jar buck-out/gen/gerrit.war Building release: $ buck test --all && buck build :api :release $ java -jar buck-out/gen/release.war $ ls -lh buck-out/gen/{extension,plugin}-api.jar Downloading dependencies: Dependencies are normally downloaded automatically, but Buck can inspect its graph and download missing dependencies so future compiles can run without the network: $ buck build :download [1] http://facebook.github.io/buck/ Change-Id: I40853b108bd8e153cefa0896a5280a9a5ff81655
2013-05-08 14:14:24 -07:00
def hashfile(p):
d = sha1()
with open(p, 'rb') as f:
while True:
b = f.read(8192)
if not b:
break
d.update(b)
return d.hexdigest()
def safe_mkdirs(d):
if path.isdir(d):
return
try:
makedirs(d)
except OSError as err:
if not path.isdir(d):
raise err
def download_properties(root_dir):
""" Get the download properties.
First tries to find the properties file in the given root directory,
and if not found there, tries in the Gerrit settings folder in the
user's home directory.
Returns a set of download properties, which may be empty.
"""
p = {}
local_prop = path.join(root_dir, LOCAL_PROPERTIES)
if not path.isfile(local_prop):
local_prop = path.join(GERRIT_HOME, LOCAL_PROPERTIES)
if path.isfile(local_prop):
try:
with open(local_prop) as fd:
for line in fd:
if line.startswith('download.'):
d = [e.strip() for e in line.split('=', 1)]
name, url = d[0], d[1]
p[name[len('download.'):]] = url
except OSError:
pass
return p
def cache_entry(args):
if args.v:
h = args.v
else:
h = sha1(args.u).hexdigest()
name = '%s-%s' % (path.basename(args.o), h)
return path.join(CACHE_DIR, name)
def resolve_url(url, redirects):
s = url.find(':')
if s < 0:
return url
scheme, rest = url[:s], url[s+1:]
if scheme not in REPO_ROOTS:
return url
if scheme in redirects:
root = redirects[scheme]
else:
root = REPO_ROOTS[scheme]
root = root.rstrip('/')
rest = rest.lstrip('/')
return '/'.join([root, rest])
Build with Buck Implement a new build system using Buck[1], Facebook's open source clone of Google's internal build system. Pros: - Concise build language - Test and build output is concise - Test failures and stack traces show on terminal - Reliable incrementals; clean is unnecessary - Extensible with simple blocks of Python - Fast buck: clean: 0.452s, full 1m21.083s [*], no-op: 7.145s, mvn: clean: 4.596s, full 2m53.776s, no-op: 59.108s, [*] full build includes downloading all dependencies, time can vary due to remote server performance. Cons: - No Windows support - No native Maven Central support (added by macros) - No native GWT, Prolog, or WAR support (added by macros) - Bootstrap of buck requires Ant Getting started: git clone https://gerrit.googlesource.com/buck cd buck ant Mac OS X: PATH="`pwd`/bin:/System/Library/Frameworks/JavaVM.framework/Versions/Current/Commands:$PATH" Linux: PATH="`pwd`/bin:$PATH" Importing into Eclipse: $ time buck build :eclipse 0m48.949s Import existing project from `pwd` Import 'gerrit' (do not import other Maven based projects) Expand 'gerrit' Right click 'buck-out' > Properties Under Attributes check 'Derived' If the code doesn't currently compile but an updated classpath is needed, refresh the configs and obtain missing JARs: $ buck build :eclipse_project :download Running JUnit tests: $ time buck test --all -e slow # skip slow tests 0m19.320s $ time buck test --all # includes acceptance tests 5m17.517s Building WAR: $ buck build :gerrit $ java -jar buck-out/gen/gerrit.war Building release: $ buck test --all && buck build :api :release $ java -jar buck-out/gen/release.war $ ls -lh buck-out/gen/{extension,plugin}-api.jar Downloading dependencies: Dependencies are normally downloaded automatically, but Buck can inspect its graph and download missing dependencies so future compiles can run without the network: $ buck build :download [1] http://facebook.github.io/buck/ Change-Id: I40853b108bd8e153cefa0896a5280a9a5ff81655
2013-05-08 14:14:24 -07:00
opts = OptionParser()
opts.add_option('-o', help='local output file')
opts.add_option('-u', help='URL to download')
opts.add_option('-v', help='expected content SHA-1')
opts.add_option('-x', action='append', help='file to delete from ZIP')
opts.add_option('--exclude_java_sources', action='store_true')
args, _ = opts.parse_args()
root_dir = args.o
while root_dir:
root_dir, n = path.split(root_dir)
if n == 'buck-out':
break
redirects = download_properties(root_dir)
cache_ent = cache_entry(args)
src_url = resolve_url(args.u, redirects)
Build with Buck Implement a new build system using Buck[1], Facebook's open source clone of Google's internal build system. Pros: - Concise build language - Test and build output is concise - Test failures and stack traces show on terminal - Reliable incrementals; clean is unnecessary - Extensible with simple blocks of Python - Fast buck: clean: 0.452s, full 1m21.083s [*], no-op: 7.145s, mvn: clean: 4.596s, full 2m53.776s, no-op: 59.108s, [*] full build includes downloading all dependencies, time can vary due to remote server performance. Cons: - No Windows support - No native Maven Central support (added by macros) - No native GWT, Prolog, or WAR support (added by macros) - Bootstrap of buck requires Ant Getting started: git clone https://gerrit.googlesource.com/buck cd buck ant Mac OS X: PATH="`pwd`/bin:/System/Library/Frameworks/JavaVM.framework/Versions/Current/Commands:$PATH" Linux: PATH="`pwd`/bin:$PATH" Importing into Eclipse: $ time buck build :eclipse 0m48.949s Import existing project from `pwd` Import 'gerrit' (do not import other Maven based projects) Expand 'gerrit' Right click 'buck-out' > Properties Under Attributes check 'Derived' If the code doesn't currently compile but an updated classpath is needed, refresh the configs and obtain missing JARs: $ buck build :eclipse_project :download Running JUnit tests: $ time buck test --all -e slow # skip slow tests 0m19.320s $ time buck test --all # includes acceptance tests 5m17.517s Building WAR: $ buck build :gerrit $ java -jar buck-out/gen/gerrit.war Building release: $ buck test --all && buck build :api :release $ java -jar buck-out/gen/release.war $ ls -lh buck-out/gen/{extension,plugin}-api.jar Downloading dependencies: Dependencies are normally downloaded automatically, but Buck can inspect its graph and download missing dependencies so future compiles can run without the network: $ buck build :download [1] http://facebook.github.io/buck/ Change-Id: I40853b108bd8e153cefa0896a5280a9a5ff81655
2013-05-08 14:14:24 -07:00
if not path.exists(cache_ent):
try:
safe_mkdirs(path.dirname(cache_ent))
print('Download %s' % src_url, file=stderr)
check_call(['curl', '--proxy-anyauth', '-sfo', cache_ent, src_url])
except OSError as err:
print('error creating directory %s: %s' %
(path.dirname(cache_ent), err), file=stderr)
exit(1)
except CalledProcessError as err:
print('error using curl: %s' % err, file=stderr)
Build with Buck Implement a new build system using Buck[1], Facebook's open source clone of Google's internal build system. Pros: - Concise build language - Test and build output is concise - Test failures and stack traces show on terminal - Reliable incrementals; clean is unnecessary - Extensible with simple blocks of Python - Fast buck: clean: 0.452s, full 1m21.083s [*], no-op: 7.145s, mvn: clean: 4.596s, full 2m53.776s, no-op: 59.108s, [*] full build includes downloading all dependencies, time can vary due to remote server performance. Cons: - No Windows support - No native Maven Central support (added by macros) - No native GWT, Prolog, or WAR support (added by macros) - Bootstrap of buck requires Ant Getting started: git clone https://gerrit.googlesource.com/buck cd buck ant Mac OS X: PATH="`pwd`/bin:/System/Library/Frameworks/JavaVM.framework/Versions/Current/Commands:$PATH" Linux: PATH="`pwd`/bin:$PATH" Importing into Eclipse: $ time buck build :eclipse 0m48.949s Import existing project from `pwd` Import 'gerrit' (do not import other Maven based projects) Expand 'gerrit' Right click 'buck-out' > Properties Under Attributes check 'Derived' If the code doesn't currently compile but an updated classpath is needed, refresh the configs and obtain missing JARs: $ buck build :eclipse_project :download Running JUnit tests: $ time buck test --all -e slow # skip slow tests 0m19.320s $ time buck test --all # includes acceptance tests 5m17.517s Building WAR: $ buck build :gerrit $ java -jar buck-out/gen/gerrit.war Building release: $ buck test --all && buck build :api :release $ java -jar buck-out/gen/release.war $ ls -lh buck-out/gen/{extension,plugin}-api.jar Downloading dependencies: Dependencies are normally downloaded automatically, but Buck can inspect its graph and download missing dependencies so future compiles can run without the network: $ buck build :download [1] http://facebook.github.io/buck/ Change-Id: I40853b108bd8e153cefa0896a5280a9a5ff81655
2013-05-08 14:14:24 -07:00
exit(1)
if args.v:
have = hashfile(cache_ent)
if args.v != have:
o = cache_ent[len(root_dir) + 1:]
print((
Build with Buck Implement a new build system using Buck[1], Facebook's open source clone of Google's internal build system. Pros: - Concise build language - Test and build output is concise - Test failures and stack traces show on terminal - Reliable incrementals; clean is unnecessary - Extensible with simple blocks of Python - Fast buck: clean: 0.452s, full 1m21.083s [*], no-op: 7.145s, mvn: clean: 4.596s, full 2m53.776s, no-op: 59.108s, [*] full build includes downloading all dependencies, time can vary due to remote server performance. Cons: - No Windows support - No native Maven Central support (added by macros) - No native GWT, Prolog, or WAR support (added by macros) - Bootstrap of buck requires Ant Getting started: git clone https://gerrit.googlesource.com/buck cd buck ant Mac OS X: PATH="`pwd`/bin:/System/Library/Frameworks/JavaVM.framework/Versions/Current/Commands:$PATH" Linux: PATH="`pwd`/bin:$PATH" Importing into Eclipse: $ time buck build :eclipse 0m48.949s Import existing project from `pwd` Import 'gerrit' (do not import other Maven based projects) Expand 'gerrit' Right click 'buck-out' > Properties Under Attributes check 'Derived' If the code doesn't currently compile but an updated classpath is needed, refresh the configs and obtain missing JARs: $ buck build :eclipse_project :download Running JUnit tests: $ time buck test --all -e slow # skip slow tests 0m19.320s $ time buck test --all # includes acceptance tests 5m17.517s Building WAR: $ buck build :gerrit $ java -jar buck-out/gen/gerrit.war Building release: $ buck test --all && buck build :api :release $ java -jar buck-out/gen/release.war $ ls -lh buck-out/gen/{extension,plugin}-api.jar Downloading dependencies: Dependencies are normally downloaded automatically, but Buck can inspect its graph and download missing dependencies so future compiles can run without the network: $ buck build :download [1] http://facebook.github.io/buck/ Change-Id: I40853b108bd8e153cefa0896a5280a9a5ff81655
2013-05-08 14:14:24 -07:00
'%s:\n' +
'expected %s\n' +
'received %s\n' +
' %s\n') % (src_url, args.v, have, o), file=stderr)
Build with Buck Implement a new build system using Buck[1], Facebook's open source clone of Google's internal build system. Pros: - Concise build language - Test and build output is concise - Test failures and stack traces show on terminal - Reliable incrementals; clean is unnecessary - Extensible with simple blocks of Python - Fast buck: clean: 0.452s, full 1m21.083s [*], no-op: 7.145s, mvn: clean: 4.596s, full 2m53.776s, no-op: 59.108s, [*] full build includes downloading all dependencies, time can vary due to remote server performance. Cons: - No Windows support - No native Maven Central support (added by macros) - No native GWT, Prolog, or WAR support (added by macros) - Bootstrap of buck requires Ant Getting started: git clone https://gerrit.googlesource.com/buck cd buck ant Mac OS X: PATH="`pwd`/bin:/System/Library/Frameworks/JavaVM.framework/Versions/Current/Commands:$PATH" Linux: PATH="`pwd`/bin:$PATH" Importing into Eclipse: $ time buck build :eclipse 0m48.949s Import existing project from `pwd` Import 'gerrit' (do not import other Maven based projects) Expand 'gerrit' Right click 'buck-out' > Properties Under Attributes check 'Derived' If the code doesn't currently compile but an updated classpath is needed, refresh the configs and obtain missing JARs: $ buck build :eclipse_project :download Running JUnit tests: $ time buck test --all -e slow # skip slow tests 0m19.320s $ time buck test --all # includes acceptance tests 5m17.517s Building WAR: $ buck build :gerrit $ java -jar buck-out/gen/gerrit.war Building release: $ buck test --all && buck build :api :release $ java -jar buck-out/gen/release.war $ ls -lh buck-out/gen/{extension,plugin}-api.jar Downloading dependencies: Dependencies are normally downloaded automatically, but Buck can inspect its graph and download missing dependencies so future compiles can run without the network: $ buck build :download [1] http://facebook.github.io/buck/ Change-Id: I40853b108bd8e153cefa0896a5280a9a5ff81655
2013-05-08 14:14:24 -07:00
exit(1)
exclude = []
if args.x:
exclude += args.x
if args.exclude_java_sources:
try:
zf = ZipFile(cache_ent, 'r')
try:
for n in zf.namelist():
if n.endswith('.java'):
exclude.append(n)
finally:
zf.close()
except (BadZipfile, LargeZipFile) as err:
print("error opening %s: %s" % (cache_ent, err), file=stderr)
Build with Buck Implement a new build system using Buck[1], Facebook's open source clone of Google's internal build system. Pros: - Concise build language - Test and build output is concise - Test failures and stack traces show on terminal - Reliable incrementals; clean is unnecessary - Extensible with simple blocks of Python - Fast buck: clean: 0.452s, full 1m21.083s [*], no-op: 7.145s, mvn: clean: 4.596s, full 2m53.776s, no-op: 59.108s, [*] full build includes downloading all dependencies, time can vary due to remote server performance. Cons: - No Windows support - No native Maven Central support (added by macros) - No native GWT, Prolog, or WAR support (added by macros) - Bootstrap of buck requires Ant Getting started: git clone https://gerrit.googlesource.com/buck cd buck ant Mac OS X: PATH="`pwd`/bin:/System/Library/Frameworks/JavaVM.framework/Versions/Current/Commands:$PATH" Linux: PATH="`pwd`/bin:$PATH" Importing into Eclipse: $ time buck build :eclipse 0m48.949s Import existing project from `pwd` Import 'gerrit' (do not import other Maven based projects) Expand 'gerrit' Right click 'buck-out' > Properties Under Attributes check 'Derived' If the code doesn't currently compile but an updated classpath is needed, refresh the configs and obtain missing JARs: $ buck build :eclipse_project :download Running JUnit tests: $ time buck test --all -e slow # skip slow tests 0m19.320s $ time buck test --all # includes acceptance tests 5m17.517s Building WAR: $ buck build :gerrit $ java -jar buck-out/gen/gerrit.war Building release: $ buck test --all && buck build :api :release $ java -jar buck-out/gen/release.war $ ls -lh buck-out/gen/{extension,plugin}-api.jar Downloading dependencies: Dependencies are normally downloaded automatically, but Buck can inspect its graph and download missing dependencies so future compiles can run without the network: $ buck build :download [1] http://facebook.github.io/buck/ Change-Id: I40853b108bd8e153cefa0896a5280a9a5ff81655
2013-05-08 14:14:24 -07:00
exit(1)
safe_mkdirs(path.dirname(args.o))
if exclude:
shutil.copyfile(cache_ent, args.o)
try:
check_call(['zip', '-d', args.o] + exclude)
except CalledProcessError as err:
print('error removing files from zip: %s' % err, file=stderr)
Build with Buck Implement a new build system using Buck[1], Facebook's open source clone of Google's internal build system. Pros: - Concise build language - Test and build output is concise - Test failures and stack traces show on terminal - Reliable incrementals; clean is unnecessary - Extensible with simple blocks of Python - Fast buck: clean: 0.452s, full 1m21.083s [*], no-op: 7.145s, mvn: clean: 4.596s, full 2m53.776s, no-op: 59.108s, [*] full build includes downloading all dependencies, time can vary due to remote server performance. Cons: - No Windows support - No native Maven Central support (added by macros) - No native GWT, Prolog, or WAR support (added by macros) - Bootstrap of buck requires Ant Getting started: git clone https://gerrit.googlesource.com/buck cd buck ant Mac OS X: PATH="`pwd`/bin:/System/Library/Frameworks/JavaVM.framework/Versions/Current/Commands:$PATH" Linux: PATH="`pwd`/bin:$PATH" Importing into Eclipse: $ time buck build :eclipse 0m48.949s Import existing project from `pwd` Import 'gerrit' (do not import other Maven based projects) Expand 'gerrit' Right click 'buck-out' > Properties Under Attributes check 'Derived' If the code doesn't currently compile but an updated classpath is needed, refresh the configs and obtain missing JARs: $ buck build :eclipse_project :download Running JUnit tests: $ time buck test --all -e slow # skip slow tests 0m19.320s $ time buck test --all # includes acceptance tests 5m17.517s Building WAR: $ buck build :gerrit $ java -jar buck-out/gen/gerrit.war Building release: $ buck test --all && buck build :api :release $ java -jar buck-out/gen/release.war $ ls -lh buck-out/gen/{extension,plugin}-api.jar Downloading dependencies: Dependencies are normally downloaded automatically, but Buck can inspect its graph and download missing dependencies so future compiles can run without the network: $ buck build :download [1] http://facebook.github.io/buck/ Change-Id: I40853b108bd8e153cefa0896a5280a9a5ff81655
2013-05-08 14:14:24 -07:00
else:
try:
link(cache_ent, args.o)
except OSError as err:
symlink(cache_ent, args.o)