use rsconf::{LinkType, Target}; use std::error::Error; fn main() { cc::Build::new().file("src/compat.c").compile("libcompat.a"); let rust_dir = std::env::var("CARGO_MANIFEST_DIR").expect("Env var CARGO_MANIFEST_DIR missing"); let target_dir = std::env::var("FISH_RUST_TARGET_DIR").unwrap_or(format!("{}/../{}", rust_dir, "target/")); let fish_src_dir = format!("{}/{}", rust_dir, "../src/"); // Where cxx emits its header. let cxx_include_dir = format!("{}/{}", target_dir, "cxxbridge/rust/"); // If FISH_BUILD_DIR is given by CMake, then use it; otherwise assume it's at ../build. let fish_build_dir = std::env::var("FISH_BUILD_DIR").unwrap_or(format!("{}/{}", rust_dir, "../build/")); // Where autocxx should put its stuff. let autocxx_gen_dir = std::env::var("FISH_AUTOCXX_GEN_DIR") .unwrap_or(format!("{}/{}", fish_build_dir, "fish-autocxx-gen/")); let mut build = cc::Build::new(); // Add to the default library search path build.flag_if_supported("-L/usr/local/lib/"); rsconf::add_library_search_path("/usr/local/lib"); let mut detector = Target::new_from(build).unwrap(); // Keep verbose mode on until we've ironed out rust build script stuff // Note that if autocxx fails to compile any rust code, you'll see the full and unredacted // stdout/stderr output, which will include things that LOOK LIKE compilation errors as rsconf // tries to build various test files to try and figure out which libraries and symbols are // available. IGNORE THESE and scroll to the very bottom of the build script output, past all // these errors, to see the actual issue. detector.set_verbose(true); detect_features(detector); // Emit cxx junk. // This allows "Rust to be used from C++" // This must come before autocxx so that cxx can emit its cxx.h header. let source_files = vec![ "src/abbrs.rs", "src/ast.rs", "src/builtins/shared.rs", "src/builtins/function.rs", "src/common.rs", "src/env/env_ffi.rs", "src/env_dispatch.rs", "src/event.rs", "src/fd_monitor.rs", "src/fd_readable_set.rs", "src/fds.rs", "src/ffi_init.rs", "src/ffi_tests.rs", "src/fish_indent.rs", "src/function.rs", "src/future_feature_flags.rs", "src/highlight.rs", "src/job_group.rs", "src/kill.rs", "src/null_terminated_array.rs", "src/output.rs", "src/parse_constants.rs", "src/parse_tree.rs", "src/parse_util.rs", "src/print_help.rs", "src/redirection.rs", "src/signal.rs", "src/smoke.rs", "src/spawn.rs", "src/termsize.rs", "src/threads.rs", "src/timer.rs", "src/tokenizer.rs", "src/topic_monitor.rs", "src/trace.rs", "src/util.rs", "src/wait_handle.rs", ]; cxx_build::bridges(&source_files) .flag_if_supported("-std=c++11") .include(&fish_src_dir) .include(&fish_build_dir) // For config.h .include(&cxx_include_dir) // For cxx.h .flag("-Wno-comment") .compile("fish-rust"); // Emit autocxx junk. // This allows "C++ to be used from Rust." let include_paths = [&fish_src_dir, &fish_build_dir, &cxx_include_dir]; let mut builder = autocxx_build::Builder::new("src/ffi.rs", include_paths); // Use autocxx's custom output directory unless we're being called by `rust-analyzer` and co., // in which case stick to the default target directory so code intelligence continues to work. if std::env::var("RUSTC_WRAPPER").map_or(true, |wrapper| { !(wrapper.contains("rust-analyzer") || wrapper.contains("intellij-rust-native-helper")) }) { // We need this reassignment because of how the builder pattern works builder = builder.custom_gendir(autocxx_gen_dir.into()); } let mut b = builder.build().unwrap(); b.flag_if_supported("-std=c++11") .flag("-Wno-comment") .compile("fish-rust-autocxx"); rsconf::rebuild_if_paths_changed(&source_files); } /// Dynamically enables certain features at build-time, without their having to be explicitly /// enabled in the `cargo build --features xxx` invocation. /// /// This can be used to enable features that we check for and conditionally compile according to in /// our own codebase, but [can't be used to pull in dependencies](0) even if they're gated (in /// `Cargo.toml`) behind a feature we just enabled. /// /// [0]: https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/issues/5499 fn detect_features(target: Target) { for (feature, handler) in [ // Ignore the first entry, it just sets up the type inference. Model new entries after the // second line. ( "", &(|_: &Target| Ok(false)) as &dyn Fn(&Target) -> Result>, ), ("bsd", &detect_bsd), ("gettext", &have_gettext), ] { match handler(&target) { Err(e) => rsconf::warn!("{}: {}", feature, e), Ok(true) => rsconf::enable_feature(feature), Ok(false) => (), } } } /// Detect if we're being compiled for a BSD-derived OS, allowing targeting code conditionally with /// `#[cfg(feature = "bsd")]`. /// /// Rust offers fine-grained conditional compilation per-os for the popular operating systems, but /// doesn't necessarily include less-popular forks nor does it group them into families more /// specific than "windows" vs "unix" so we can conditionally compile code for BSD systems. fn detect_bsd(_: &Target) -> Result> { // Instead of using `uname`, we can inspect the TARGET env variable set by Cargo. This lets us // support cross-compilation scenarios. let mut target = std::env::var("TARGET").unwrap(); if !target.chars().all(|c| c.is_ascii_lowercase()) { target = target.to_ascii_lowercase(); } let result = target.ends_with("bsd") || target.ends_with("dragonfly"); #[cfg(any( target_os = "dragonfly", target_os = "freebsd", target_os = "netbsd", target_os = "openbsd", ))] assert!(result, "Target incorrectly detected as not BSD!"); Ok(result) } /// Detect libintl/gettext and its needed symbols to enable internationalization/localization /// support. fn have_gettext(target: &Target) -> Result> { // The following script correctly detects and links against gettext, but so long as we are using // C++ and generate a static library linked into the C++ binary via CMake, we need to account // for the CMake option WITH_GETTEXT being explicitly disabled. rsconf::rebuild_if_env_changed("CMAKE_WITH_GETTEXT"); if let Some(with_gettext) = std::env::var_os("CMAKE_WITH_GETTEXT") { if with_gettext.eq_ignore_ascii_case("0") { return Ok(false); } } // In order for fish to correctly operate, we need some way of notifying libintl to invalidate // its localizations when the locale environment variables are modified. Without the libintl // symbol _nl_msg_cat_cntr, we cannot use gettext even if we find it. let mut libraries = Vec::new(); let mut found = 0; let symbols = ["gettext", "_nl_msg_cat_cntr"]; for symbol in &symbols { // Historically, libintl was required in order to use gettext() and co, but that // functionality was subsumed by some versions of libc. if target.has_symbol_in::<&str>(symbol, &[]) { // No need to link anything special for this symbol found += 1; continue; } for library in ["intl", "gettextlib"] { if target.has_symbol(symbol, library) { libraries.push(library); found += 1; continue; } } } match found { 0 => Ok(false), 1 => Err(format!("gettext found but cannot be used without {}", symbols[1]).into()), _ => { rsconf::link_libraries(&libraries, LinkType::Default); Ok(true) } } }