loader: merge roots from both Go and TinyGo in a cached directory
This commit changes the way that packages are looked up. Instead of
working around the loader package by modifying the GOROOT variable for
specific packages, create a new GOROOT using symlinks. This GOROOT is
cached for the specified configuration (Go version, underlying GOROOT
path, TinyGo path, whether to override the syscall package).
This will also enable go module support in the future.
Windows is a bit harder to support, because it only allows the creation
of symlinks when developer mode is enabled. This is worked around by
using symlinks and if that fails, using directory junctions or hardlinks
instead. This should work in the vast majority of cases. The only case
it doesn't work, is if developer mode is disabled and TinyGo, the Go
toolchain, and the cache directory are not all on the same filesystem.
If this is a problem, it is still possible to improve the code by using
file copies instead.
As a side effect, this also makes diagnostics use a relative file path
only when the file is not in GOROOT or in TINYGOROOT.
5 years ago
|
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package loader
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// This file constructs a new temporary GOROOT directory by merging both the
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// standard Go GOROOT and the GOROOT from TinyGo using symlinks.
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//
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// The goal is to replace specific packages from Go with a TinyGo version. It's
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// never a partial replacement, either a package is fully replaced or it is not.
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// This is important because if we did allow to merge packages (e.g. by adding
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// files to a package), it would lead to a dependency on implementation details
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// with all the maintenance burden that results in. Only allowing to replace
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// packages as a whole avoids this as packages are already designed to have a
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// public (backwards-compatible) API.
|
loader: merge roots from both Go and TinyGo in a cached directory
This commit changes the way that packages are looked up. Instead of
working around the loader package by modifying the GOROOT variable for
specific packages, create a new GOROOT using symlinks. This GOROOT is
cached for the specified configuration (Go version, underlying GOROOT
path, TinyGo path, whether to override the syscall package).
This will also enable go module support in the future.
Windows is a bit harder to support, because it only allows the creation
of symlinks when developer mode is enabled. This is worked around by
using symlinks and if that fails, using directory junctions or hardlinks
instead. This should work in the vast majority of cases. The only case
it doesn't work, is if developer mode is disabled and TinyGo, the Go
toolchain, and the cache directory are not all on the same filesystem.
If this is a problem, it is still possible to improve the code by using
file copies instead.
As a side effect, this also makes diagnostics use a relative file path
only when the file is not in GOROOT or in TINYGOROOT.
5 years ago
|
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import (
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"crypto/sha512"
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"encoding/hex"
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"errors"
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"fmt"
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"io"
|
loader: merge roots from both Go and TinyGo in a cached directory
This commit changes the way that packages are looked up. Instead of
working around the loader package by modifying the GOROOT variable for
specific packages, create a new GOROOT using symlinks. This GOROOT is
cached for the specified configuration (Go version, underlying GOROOT
path, TinyGo path, whether to override the syscall package).
This will also enable go module support in the future.
Windows is a bit harder to support, because it only allows the creation
of symlinks when developer mode is enabled. This is worked around by
using symlinks and if that fails, using directory junctions or hardlinks
instead. This should work in the vast majority of cases. The only case
it doesn't work, is if developer mode is disabled and TinyGo, the Go
toolchain, and the cache directory are not all on the same filesystem.
If this is a problem, it is still possible to improve the code by using
file copies instead.
As a side effect, this also makes diagnostics use a relative file path
only when the file is not in GOROOT or in TINYGOROOT.
5 years ago
|
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"io/ioutil"
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"os"
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"os/exec"
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"path"
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"path/filepath"
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"runtime"
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"sync"
|
loader: merge roots from both Go and TinyGo in a cached directory
This commit changes the way that packages are looked up. Instead of
working around the loader package by modifying the GOROOT variable for
specific packages, create a new GOROOT using symlinks. This GOROOT is
cached for the specified configuration (Go version, underlying GOROOT
path, TinyGo path, whether to override the syscall package).
This will also enable go module support in the future.
Windows is a bit harder to support, because it only allows the creation
of symlinks when developer mode is enabled. This is worked around by
using symlinks and if that fails, using directory junctions or hardlinks
instead. This should work in the vast majority of cases. The only case
it doesn't work, is if developer mode is disabled and TinyGo, the Go
toolchain, and the cache directory are not all on the same filesystem.
If this is a problem, it is still possible to improve the code by using
file copies instead.
As a side effect, this also makes diagnostics use a relative file path
only when the file is not in GOROOT or in TINYGOROOT.
5 years ago
|
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"github.com/tinygo-org/tinygo/compileopts"
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"github.com/tinygo-org/tinygo/goenv"
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)
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var gorootCreateMutex sync.Mutex
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|
loader: merge roots from both Go and TinyGo in a cached directory
This commit changes the way that packages are looked up. Instead of
working around the loader package by modifying the GOROOT variable for
specific packages, create a new GOROOT using symlinks. This GOROOT is
cached for the specified configuration (Go version, underlying GOROOT
path, TinyGo path, whether to override the syscall package).
This will also enable go module support in the future.
Windows is a bit harder to support, because it only allows the creation
of symlinks when developer mode is enabled. This is worked around by
using symlinks and if that fails, using directory junctions or hardlinks
instead. This should work in the vast majority of cases. The only case
it doesn't work, is if developer mode is disabled and TinyGo, the Go
toolchain, and the cache directory are not all on the same filesystem.
If this is a problem, it is still possible to improve the code by using
file copies instead.
As a side effect, this also makes diagnostics use a relative file path
only when the file is not in GOROOT or in TINYGOROOT.
5 years ago
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// GetCachedGoroot creates a new GOROOT by merging both the standard GOROOT and
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// the GOROOT from TinyGo using lots of symbolic links.
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func GetCachedGoroot(config *compileopts.Config) (string, error) {
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goroot := goenv.Get("GOROOT")
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if goroot == "" {
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return "", errors.New("could not determine GOROOT")
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}
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tinygoroot := goenv.Get("TINYGOROOT")
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if tinygoroot == "" {
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return "", errors.New("could not determine TINYGOROOT")
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}
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// Determine the location of the cached GOROOT.
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version, err := goenv.GorootVersionString(goroot)
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if err != nil {
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return "", err
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}
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// This hash is really a cache key, that contains (hopefully) enough
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// information to make collisions unlikely during development.
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// By including the Go version and TinyGo version, cache collisions should
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// not happen outside of development.
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hash := sha512.New512_256()
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fmt.Fprintln(hash, goroot)
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fmt.Fprintln(hash, version)
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fmt.Fprintln(hash, goenv.Version)
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fmt.Fprintln(hash, tinygoroot)
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gorootsHash := hash.Sum(nil)
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gorootsHashHex := hex.EncodeToString(gorootsHash[:])
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cachedgorootName := "goroot-" + version + "-" + gorootsHashHex
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cachedgoroot := filepath.Join(goenv.Get("GOCACHE"), cachedgorootName)
|
loader: merge roots from both Go and TinyGo in a cached directory
This commit changes the way that packages are looked up. Instead of
working around the loader package by modifying the GOROOT variable for
specific packages, create a new GOROOT using symlinks. This GOROOT is
cached for the specified configuration (Go version, underlying GOROOT
path, TinyGo path, whether to override the syscall package).
This will also enable go module support in the future.
Windows is a bit harder to support, because it only allows the creation
of symlinks when developer mode is enabled. This is worked around by
using symlinks and if that fails, using directory junctions or hardlinks
instead. This should work in the vast majority of cases. The only case
it doesn't work, is if developer mode is disabled and TinyGo, the Go
toolchain, and the cache directory are not all on the same filesystem.
If this is a problem, it is still possible to improve the code by using
file copies instead.
As a side effect, this also makes diagnostics use a relative file path
only when the file is not in GOROOT or in TINYGOROOT.
5 years ago
|
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if needsSyscallPackage(config.BuildTags()) {
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cachedgoroot += "-syscall"
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}
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// Do not try to create the cached GOROOT in parallel, that's only a waste
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// of I/O bandwidth and thus speed. Instead, use a mutex to make sure only
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// one goroutine does it at a time.
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// This is not a way to ensure atomicity (a different TinyGo invocation
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// could be creating the same directory), but instead a way to avoid
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// creating it many times in parallel when running tests in parallel.
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gorootCreateMutex.Lock()
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defer gorootCreateMutex.Unlock()
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|
loader: merge roots from both Go and TinyGo in a cached directory
This commit changes the way that packages are looked up. Instead of
working around the loader package by modifying the GOROOT variable for
specific packages, create a new GOROOT using symlinks. This GOROOT is
cached for the specified configuration (Go version, underlying GOROOT
path, TinyGo path, whether to override the syscall package).
This will also enable go module support in the future.
Windows is a bit harder to support, because it only allows the creation
of symlinks when developer mode is enabled. This is worked around by
using symlinks and if that fails, using directory junctions or hardlinks
instead. This should work in the vast majority of cases. The only case
it doesn't work, is if developer mode is disabled and TinyGo, the Go
toolchain, and the cache directory are not all on the same filesystem.
If this is a problem, it is still possible to improve the code by using
file copies instead.
As a side effect, this also makes diagnostics use a relative file path
only when the file is not in GOROOT or in TINYGOROOT.
5 years ago
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if _, err := os.Stat(cachedgoroot); err == nil {
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return cachedgoroot, nil
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}
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err = os.MkdirAll(goenv.Get("GOCACHE"), 0777)
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if err != nil {
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return "", err
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}
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tmpgoroot, err := ioutil.TempDir(goenv.Get("GOCACHE"), cachedgorootName+".tmp")
|
loader: merge roots from both Go and TinyGo in a cached directory
This commit changes the way that packages are looked up. Instead of
working around the loader package by modifying the GOROOT variable for
specific packages, create a new GOROOT using symlinks. This GOROOT is
cached for the specified configuration (Go version, underlying GOROOT
path, TinyGo path, whether to override the syscall package).
This will also enable go module support in the future.
Windows is a bit harder to support, because it only allows the creation
of symlinks when developer mode is enabled. This is worked around by
using symlinks and if that fails, using directory junctions or hardlinks
instead. This should work in the vast majority of cases. The only case
it doesn't work, is if developer mode is disabled and TinyGo, the Go
toolchain, and the cache directory are not all on the same filesystem.
If this is a problem, it is still possible to improve the code by using
file copies instead.
As a side effect, this also makes diagnostics use a relative file path
only when the file is not in GOROOT or in TINYGOROOT.
5 years ago
|
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if err != nil {
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return "", err
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}
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// Remove the temporary directory if it wasn't moved to the right place
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// (for example, when there was an error).
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defer os.RemoveAll(tmpgoroot)
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for _, name := range []string{"bin", "lib", "pkg"} {
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err = symlink(filepath.Join(goroot, name), filepath.Join(tmpgoroot, name))
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if err != nil {
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return "", err
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}
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}
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err = mergeDirectory(goroot, tinygoroot, tmpgoroot, "", pathsToOverride(needsSyscallPackage(config.BuildTags())))
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if err != nil {
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return "", err
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}
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err = os.Rename(tmpgoroot, cachedgoroot)
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if err != nil {
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if os.IsExist(err) {
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// Another invocation of TinyGo also seems to have created a GOROOT.
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// Use that one instead. Our new GOROOT will be automatically
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// deleted by the defer above.
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return cachedgoroot, nil
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}
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if runtime.GOOS == "windows" && os.IsPermission(err) {
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// On Windows, a rename with a destination directory that already
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// exists does not result in an IsExist error, but rather in an
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// access denied error. To be sure, check for this case by checking
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// whether the target directory exists.
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if _, err := os.Stat(cachedgoroot); err == nil {
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return cachedgoroot, nil
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}
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|
}
|
loader: merge roots from both Go and TinyGo in a cached directory
This commit changes the way that packages are looked up. Instead of
working around the loader package by modifying the GOROOT variable for
specific packages, create a new GOROOT using symlinks. This GOROOT is
cached for the specified configuration (Go version, underlying GOROOT
path, TinyGo path, whether to override the syscall package).
This will also enable go module support in the future.
Windows is a bit harder to support, because it only allows the creation
of symlinks when developer mode is enabled. This is worked around by
using symlinks and if that fails, using directory junctions or hardlinks
instead. This should work in the vast majority of cases. The only case
it doesn't work, is if developer mode is disabled and TinyGo, the Go
toolchain, and the cache directory are not all on the same filesystem.
If this is a problem, it is still possible to improve the code by using
file copies instead.
As a side effect, this also makes diagnostics use a relative file path
only when the file is not in GOROOT or in TINYGOROOT.
5 years ago
|
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|
return "", err
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}
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return cachedgoroot, nil
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}
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// mergeDirectory merges two roots recursively. The tmpgoroot is the directory
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// that will be created by this call by either symlinking the directory from
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// goroot or tinygoroot, or by creating the directory and merging the contents.
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func mergeDirectory(goroot, tinygoroot, tmpgoroot, importPath string, overrides map[string]bool) error {
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if mergeSubdirs, ok := overrides[importPath+"/"]; ok {
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if !mergeSubdirs {
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// This directory and all subdirectories should come from the TinyGo
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// root, so simply make a symlink.
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newname := filepath.Join(tmpgoroot, "src", importPath)
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oldname := filepath.Join(tinygoroot, "src", importPath)
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return symlink(oldname, newname)
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}
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// Merge subdirectories. Start by making the directory to merge.
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err := os.Mkdir(filepath.Join(tmpgoroot, "src", importPath), 0777)
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if err != nil {
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return err
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}
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// Symlink all files from TinyGo, and symlink directories from TinyGo
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// that need to be overridden.
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tinygoEntries, err := ioutil.ReadDir(filepath.Join(tinygoroot, "src", importPath))
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if err != nil {
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return err
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|
}
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|
hasTinyGoFiles := false
|
loader: merge roots from both Go and TinyGo in a cached directory
This commit changes the way that packages are looked up. Instead of
working around the loader package by modifying the GOROOT variable for
specific packages, create a new GOROOT using symlinks. This GOROOT is
cached for the specified configuration (Go version, underlying GOROOT
path, TinyGo path, whether to override the syscall package).
This will also enable go module support in the future.
Windows is a bit harder to support, because it only allows the creation
of symlinks when developer mode is enabled. This is worked around by
using symlinks and if that fails, using directory junctions or hardlinks
instead. This should work in the vast majority of cases. The only case
it doesn't work, is if developer mode is disabled and TinyGo, the Go
toolchain, and the cache directory are not all on the same filesystem.
If this is a problem, it is still possible to improve the code by using
file copies instead.
As a side effect, this also makes diagnostics use a relative file path
only when the file is not in GOROOT or in TINYGOROOT.
5 years ago
|
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|
for _, e := range tinygoEntries {
|
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|
|
if e.IsDir() {
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// A directory, so merge this thing.
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err := mergeDirectory(goroot, tinygoroot, tmpgoroot, path.Join(importPath, e.Name()), overrides)
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|
|
if err != nil {
|
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return err
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|
}
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|
} else {
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// A file, so symlink this.
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newname := filepath.Join(tmpgoroot, "src", importPath, e.Name())
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oldname := filepath.Join(tinygoroot, "src", importPath, e.Name())
|
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err := symlink(oldname, newname)
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|
|
if err != nil {
|
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|
return err
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|
|
|
}
|
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hasTinyGoFiles = true
|
loader: merge roots from both Go and TinyGo in a cached directory
This commit changes the way that packages are looked up. Instead of
working around the loader package by modifying the GOROOT variable for
specific packages, create a new GOROOT using symlinks. This GOROOT is
cached for the specified configuration (Go version, underlying GOROOT
path, TinyGo path, whether to override the syscall package).
This will also enable go module support in the future.
Windows is a bit harder to support, because it only allows the creation
of symlinks when developer mode is enabled. This is worked around by
using symlinks and if that fails, using directory junctions or hardlinks
instead. This should work in the vast majority of cases. The only case
it doesn't work, is if developer mode is disabled and TinyGo, the Go
toolchain, and the cache directory are not all on the same filesystem.
If this is a problem, it is still possible to improve the code by using
file copies instead.
As a side effect, this also makes diagnostics use a relative file path
only when the file is not in GOROOT or in TINYGOROOT.
5 years ago
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// Symlink all directories from $GOROOT that are not part of the TinyGo
|
|
|
|
// overrides.
|
|
|
|
gorootEntries, err := ioutil.ReadDir(filepath.Join(goroot, "src", importPath))
|
|
|
|
if err != nil {
|
|
|
|
return err
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
for _, e := range gorootEntries {
|
|
|
|
if e.IsDir() {
|
|
|
|
if _, ok := overrides[path.Join(importPath, e.Name())+"/"]; ok {
|
|
|
|
// Already included above, so don't bother trying to create this
|
|
|
|
// symlink.
|
|
|
|
continue
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
newname := filepath.Join(tmpgoroot, "src", importPath, e.Name())
|
|
|
|
oldname := filepath.Join(goroot, "src", importPath, e.Name())
|
|
|
|
err := symlink(oldname, newname)
|
|
|
|
if err != nil {
|
|
|
|
return err
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
// Only merge files from Go if TinyGo does not have any files.
|
|
|
|
// Otherwise we'd end up with a weird mix from both Go
|
|
|
|
// implementations.
|
|
|
|
if !hasTinyGoFiles {
|
|
|
|
newname := filepath.Join(tmpgoroot, "src", importPath, e.Name())
|
|
|
|
oldname := filepath.Join(goroot, "src", importPath, e.Name())
|
|
|
|
err := symlink(oldname, newname)
|
|
|
|
if err != nil {
|
|
|
|
return err
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
loader: merge roots from both Go and TinyGo in a cached directory
This commit changes the way that packages are looked up. Instead of
working around the loader package by modifying the GOROOT variable for
specific packages, create a new GOROOT using symlinks. This GOROOT is
cached for the specified configuration (Go version, underlying GOROOT
path, TinyGo path, whether to override the syscall package).
This will also enable go module support in the future.
Windows is a bit harder to support, because it only allows the creation
of symlinks when developer mode is enabled. This is worked around by
using symlinks and if that fails, using directory junctions or hardlinks
instead. This should work in the vast majority of cases. The only case
it doesn't work, is if developer mode is disabled and TinyGo, the Go
toolchain, and the cache directory are not all on the same filesystem.
If this is a problem, it is still possible to improve the code by using
file copies instead.
As a side effect, this also makes diagnostics use a relative file path
only when the file is not in GOROOT or in TINYGOROOT.
5 years ago
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
return nil
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// needsSyscallPackage returns whether the syscall package should be overriden
|
|
|
|
// with the TinyGo version. This is the case on some targets.
|
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func needsSyscallPackage(buildTags []string) bool {
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for _, tag := range buildTags {
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if tag == "baremetal" || tag == "darwin" || tag == "nintendoswitch" || tag == "tinygo.wasm" {
|
loader: merge roots from both Go and TinyGo in a cached directory
This commit changes the way that packages are looked up. Instead of
working around the loader package by modifying the GOROOT variable for
specific packages, create a new GOROOT using symlinks. This GOROOT is
cached for the specified configuration (Go version, underlying GOROOT
path, TinyGo path, whether to override the syscall package).
This will also enable go module support in the future.
Windows is a bit harder to support, because it only allows the creation
of symlinks when developer mode is enabled. This is worked around by
using symlinks and if that fails, using directory junctions or hardlinks
instead. This should work in the vast majority of cases. The only case
it doesn't work, is if developer mode is disabled and TinyGo, the Go
toolchain, and the cache directory are not all on the same filesystem.
If this is a problem, it is still possible to improve the code by using
file copies instead.
As a side effect, this also makes diagnostics use a relative file path
only when the file is not in GOROOT or in TINYGOROOT.
5 years ago
|
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return true
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}
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}
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return false
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}
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// The boolean indicates whether to merge the subdirs. True means merge, false
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// means use the TinyGo version.
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func pathsToOverride(needsSyscallPackage bool) map[string]bool {
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paths := map[string]bool{
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"/": true,
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"crypto/": true,
|
|
|
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"crypto/rand/": false,
|
loader: merge roots from both Go and TinyGo in a cached directory
This commit changes the way that packages are looked up. Instead of
working around the loader package by modifying the GOROOT variable for
specific packages, create a new GOROOT using symlinks. This GOROOT is
cached for the specified configuration (Go version, underlying GOROOT
path, TinyGo path, whether to override the syscall package).
This will also enable go module support in the future.
Windows is a bit harder to support, because it only allows the creation
of symlinks when developer mode is enabled. This is worked around by
using symlinks and if that fails, using directory junctions or hardlinks
instead. This should work in the vast majority of cases. The only case
it doesn't work, is if developer mode is disabled and TinyGo, the Go
toolchain, and the cache directory are not all on the same filesystem.
If this is a problem, it is still possible to improve the code by using
file copies instead.
As a side effect, this also makes diagnostics use a relative file path
only when the file is not in GOROOT or in TINYGOROOT.
5 years ago
|
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"device/": false,
|
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"examples/": false,
|
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"internal/": true,
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"internal/bytealg/": false,
|
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|
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"internal/reflectlite/": false,
|
|
|
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"internal/task/": false,
|
|
|
|
"machine/": false,
|
|
|
|
"net/": true,
|
loader: merge roots from both Go and TinyGo in a cached directory
This commit changes the way that packages are looked up. Instead of
working around the loader package by modifying the GOROOT variable for
specific packages, create a new GOROOT using symlinks. This GOROOT is
cached for the specified configuration (Go version, underlying GOROOT
path, TinyGo path, whether to override the syscall package).
This will also enable go module support in the future.
Windows is a bit harder to support, because it only allows the creation
of symlinks when developer mode is enabled. This is worked around by
using symlinks and if that fails, using directory junctions or hardlinks
instead. This should work in the vast majority of cases. The only case
it doesn't work, is if developer mode is disabled and TinyGo, the Go
toolchain, and the cache directory are not all on the same filesystem.
If this is a problem, it is still possible to improve the code by using
file copies instead.
As a side effect, this also makes diagnostics use a relative file path
only when the file is not in GOROOT or in TINYGOROOT.
5 years ago
|
|
|
"os/": true,
|
|
|
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"reflect/": false,
|
|
|
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"runtime/": false,
|
|
|
|
"sync/": true,
|
|
|
|
"testing/": true,
|
loader: merge roots from both Go and TinyGo in a cached directory
This commit changes the way that packages are looked up. Instead of
working around the loader package by modifying the GOROOT variable for
specific packages, create a new GOROOT using symlinks. This GOROOT is
cached for the specified configuration (Go version, underlying GOROOT
path, TinyGo path, whether to override the syscall package).
This will also enable go module support in the future.
Windows is a bit harder to support, because it only allows the creation
of symlinks when developer mode is enabled. This is worked around by
using symlinks and if that fails, using directory junctions or hardlinks
instead. This should work in the vast majority of cases. The only case
it doesn't work, is if developer mode is disabled and TinyGo, the Go
toolchain, and the cache directory are not all on the same filesystem.
If this is a problem, it is still possible to improve the code by using
file copies instead.
As a side effect, this also makes diagnostics use a relative file path
only when the file is not in GOROOT or in TINYGOROOT.
5 years ago
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if needsSyscallPackage {
|
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paths["syscall/"] = true // include syscall/js
|
|
|
|
}
|
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return paths
|
|
|
|
}
|
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|
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|
|
// symlink creates a symlink or something similar. On Unix-like systems, it
|
|
|
|
// always creates a symlink. On Windows, it tries to create a symlink and if
|
|
|
|
// that fails, creates a hardlink or directory junction instead.
|
|
|
|
//
|
|
|
|
// Note that while Windows 10 does support symlinks and allows them to be
|
|
|
|
// created using os.Symlink, it requires developer mode to be enabled.
|
|
|
|
// Therefore provide a fallback for when symlinking is not possible.
|
|
|
|
// Unfortunately this fallback only works when TinyGo is installed on the same
|
|
|
|
// filesystem as the TinyGo cache and the Go installation (which is usually the
|
|
|
|
// C drive).
|
|
|
|
func symlink(oldname, newname string) error {
|
|
|
|
symlinkErr := os.Symlink(oldname, newname)
|
|
|
|
if runtime.GOOS == "windows" && symlinkErr != nil {
|
|
|
|
// Fallback for when developer mode is disabled.
|
|
|
|
// Note that we return the symlink error even if something else fails
|
|
|
|
// later on. This is because symlinks are the easiest to support
|
|
|
|
// (they're also used on Linux and MacOS) and enabling them is easy:
|
|
|
|
// just enable developer mode.
|
|
|
|
st, err := os.Stat(oldname)
|
|
|
|
if err != nil {
|
|
|
|
return symlinkErr
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if st.IsDir() {
|
|
|
|
// Make a directory junction. There may be a way to do this
|
|
|
|
// programmatically, but it involves a lot of magic. Use the mklink
|
|
|
|
// command built into cmd instead (mklink is a builtin, not an
|
|
|
|
// external command).
|
|
|
|
err := exec.Command("cmd", "/k", "mklink", "/J", newname, oldname).Run()
|
|
|
|
if err != nil {
|
|
|
|
return symlinkErr
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
// Try making a hard link.
|
loader: merge roots from both Go and TinyGo in a cached directory
This commit changes the way that packages are looked up. Instead of
working around the loader package by modifying the GOROOT variable for
specific packages, create a new GOROOT using symlinks. This GOROOT is
cached for the specified configuration (Go version, underlying GOROOT
path, TinyGo path, whether to override the syscall package).
This will also enable go module support in the future.
Windows is a bit harder to support, because it only allows the creation
of symlinks when developer mode is enabled. This is worked around by
using symlinks and if that fails, using directory junctions or hardlinks
instead. This should work in the vast majority of cases. The only case
it doesn't work, is if developer mode is disabled and TinyGo, the Go
toolchain, and the cache directory are not all on the same filesystem.
If this is a problem, it is still possible to improve the code by using
file copies instead.
As a side effect, this also makes diagnostics use a relative file path
only when the file is not in GOROOT or in TINYGOROOT.
5 years ago
|
|
|
err := os.Link(oldname, newname)
|
|
|
|
if err != nil {
|
|
|
|
// Making a hardlink failed. Try copying the file as a last
|
|
|
|
// fallback.
|
|
|
|
inf, err := os.Open(oldname)
|
|
|
|
if err != nil {
|
|
|
|
return err
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
defer inf.Close()
|
|
|
|
outf, err := os.Create(newname)
|
|
|
|
if err != nil {
|
|
|
|
return err
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
defer outf.Close()
|
|
|
|
_, err = io.Copy(outf, inf)
|
|
|
|
if err != nil {
|
|
|
|
os.Remove(newname)
|
|
|
|
return err
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// File was copied.
|
loader: merge roots from both Go and TinyGo in a cached directory
This commit changes the way that packages are looked up. Instead of
working around the loader package by modifying the GOROOT variable for
specific packages, create a new GOROOT using symlinks. This GOROOT is
cached for the specified configuration (Go version, underlying GOROOT
path, TinyGo path, whether to override the syscall package).
This will also enable go module support in the future.
Windows is a bit harder to support, because it only allows the creation
of symlinks when developer mode is enabled. This is worked around by
using symlinks and if that fails, using directory junctions or hardlinks
instead. This should work in the vast majority of cases. The only case
it doesn't work, is if developer mode is disabled and TinyGo, the Go
toolchain, and the cache directory are not all on the same filesystem.
If this is a problem, it is still possible to improve the code by using
file copies instead.
As a side effect, this also makes diagnostics use a relative file path
only when the file is not in GOROOT or in TINYGOROOT.
5 years ago
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
return nil // success
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
return symlinkErr
|
|
|
|
}
|