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58 KiB

6 years ago
package main
import (
"bufio"
"bytes"
"context"
"encoding/json"
"errors"
6 years ago
"flag"
"fmt"
"go/scanner"
"go/types"
"io"
"io/ioutil"
6 years ago
"os"
"os/exec"
"os/signal"
"path/filepath"
"regexp"
"runtime"
"runtime/pprof"
"strconv"
"strings"
"sync"
"sync/atomic"
"time"
6 years ago
"github.com/google/shlex"
"github.com/inhies/go-bytesize"
"github.com/mattn/go-colorable"
main: refactor compile/link part to a builder package This is a large commit that moves all code directly related to compiling/linking into a new builder package. This has a number of advantages: * It cleanly separates the API between the command line and the full compilation (with a very small API surface). * When the compiler finally compiles one package at a time (instead of everything at once as it does now), something will have to invoke it once per package. This builder package will be the natural place to do that, and also be the place where the whole process can be parallelized. * It allows the TinyGo compiler to be used as a package. A client can simply import the builder package and compile code using it. As part of this refactor, the following additional things changed: * Exported symbols have been made unexported when they weren't needed. * The compilation target has been moved into the compileopts.Options struct. This is done because the target really is just another compiler option, and the API is simplified by moving it in there. * The moveFile function has been duplicated. It does not really belong in the builder API but is used both by the builder and the command line. Moving it into a separate package didn't seem useful either for what is essentially an utility function. * Some doc strings have been improved. Some future changes/refactors I'd like to make after this commit: * Clean up the API between the builder and the compiler package. * Perhaps move the test files (in testdata/) into the builder package. * Perhaps move the loader package into the builder package.
5 years ago
"github.com/tinygo-org/tinygo/builder"
"github.com/tinygo-org/tinygo/compileopts"
"github.com/tinygo-org/tinygo/goenv"
"github.com/tinygo-org/tinygo/interp"
"github.com/tinygo-org/tinygo/loader"
"golang.org/x/tools/go/buildutil"
"tinygo.org/x/go-llvm"
"go.bug.st/serial"
"go.bug.st/serial/enumerator"
6 years ago
)
// commandError is an error type to wrap os/exec.Command errors. This provides
// some more information regarding what went wrong while running a command.
type commandError struct {
Msg string
File string
Err error
}
func (e *commandError) Error() string {
return e.Msg + " " + e.File + ": " + e.Err.Error()
}
main: refactor compile/link part to a builder package This is a large commit that moves all code directly related to compiling/linking into a new builder package. This has a number of advantages: * It cleanly separates the API between the command line and the full compilation (with a very small API surface). * When the compiler finally compiles one package at a time (instead of everything at once as it does now), something will have to invoke it once per package. This builder package will be the natural place to do that, and also be the place where the whole process can be parallelized. * It allows the TinyGo compiler to be used as a package. A client can simply import the builder package and compile code using it. As part of this refactor, the following additional things changed: * Exported symbols have been made unexported when they weren't needed. * The compilation target has been moved into the compileopts.Options struct. This is done because the target really is just another compiler option, and the API is simplified by moving it in there. * The moveFile function has been duplicated. It does not really belong in the builder API but is used both by the builder and the command line. Moving it into a separate package didn't seem useful either for what is essentially an utility function. * Some doc strings have been improved. Some future changes/refactors I'd like to make after this commit: * Clean up the API between the builder and the compiler package. * Perhaps move the test files (in testdata/) into the builder package. * Perhaps move the loader package into the builder package.
5 years ago
// moveFile renames the file from src to dst. If renaming doesn't work (for
// example, the rename crosses a filesystem boundary), the file is copied and
// the old file is removed.
func moveFile(src, dst string) error {
err := os.Rename(src, dst)
if err == nil {
// Success!
return nil
}
main: refactor compile/link part to a builder package This is a large commit that moves all code directly related to compiling/linking into a new builder package. This has a number of advantages: * It cleanly separates the API between the command line and the full compilation (with a very small API surface). * When the compiler finally compiles one package at a time (instead of everything at once as it does now), something will have to invoke it once per package. This builder package will be the natural place to do that, and also be the place where the whole process can be parallelized. * It allows the TinyGo compiler to be used as a package. A client can simply import the builder package and compile code using it. As part of this refactor, the following additional things changed: * Exported symbols have been made unexported when they weren't needed. * The compilation target has been moved into the compileopts.Options struct. This is done because the target really is just another compiler option, and the API is simplified by moving it in there. * The moveFile function has been duplicated. It does not really belong in the builder API but is used both by the builder and the command line. Moving it into a separate package didn't seem useful either for what is essentially an utility function. * Some doc strings have been improved. Some future changes/refactors I'd like to make after this commit: * Clean up the API between the builder and the compiler package. * Perhaps move the test files (in testdata/) into the builder package. * Perhaps move the loader package into the builder package.
5 years ago
// Failed to move, probably a different filesystem.
// Do a copy + remove.
err = copyFile(src, dst)
if err != nil {
return err
}
return os.Remove(src)
}
// copyFile copies the given file or directory from src to dst. It can copy over
// a possibly already existing file (but not directory) at the destination.
func copyFile(src, dst string) error {
source, err := os.Open(src)
if err != nil {
main: refactor compile/link part to a builder package This is a large commit that moves all code directly related to compiling/linking into a new builder package. This has a number of advantages: * It cleanly separates the API between the command line and the full compilation (with a very small API surface). * When the compiler finally compiles one package at a time (instead of everything at once as it does now), something will have to invoke it once per package. This builder package will be the natural place to do that, and also be the place where the whole process can be parallelized. * It allows the TinyGo compiler to be used as a package. A client can simply import the builder package and compile code using it. As part of this refactor, the following additional things changed: * Exported symbols have been made unexported when they weren't needed. * The compilation target has been moved into the compileopts.Options struct. This is done because the target really is just another compiler option, and the API is simplified by moving it in there. * The moveFile function has been duplicated. It does not really belong in the builder API but is used both by the builder and the command line. Moving it into a separate package didn't seem useful either for what is essentially an utility function. * Some doc strings have been improved. Some future changes/refactors I'd like to make after this commit: * Clean up the API between the builder and the compiler package. * Perhaps move the test files (in testdata/) into the builder package. * Perhaps move the loader package into the builder package.
5 years ago
return err
}
defer source.Close()
st, err := source.Stat()
if err != nil {
return err
}
if st.IsDir() {
err := os.Mkdir(dst, st.Mode().Perm())
if err != nil {
return err
}
names, err := source.Readdirnames(0)
if err != nil {
return err
}
for _, name := range names {
err := copyFile(filepath.Join(src, name), filepath.Join(dst, name))
if err != nil {
return err
}
}
return nil
} else {
destination, err := os.OpenFile(dst, os.O_RDWR|os.O_CREATE|os.O_TRUNC, st.Mode())
if err != nil {
return err
}
defer destination.Close()
_, err = io.Copy(destination, source)
6 years ago
return err
}
}
// executeCommand is a simple wrapper to exec.Cmd
func executeCommand(options *compileopts.Options, name string, arg ...string) *exec.Cmd {
if options.PrintCommands != nil {
options.PrintCommands(name, arg...)
}
return exec.Command(name, arg...)
}
// printCommand prints a command to stdout while formatting it like a real
// command (escaping characters etc). The resulting command should be easy to
// run directly in a shell, although it is not guaranteed to be a safe shell
// escape. That's not a problem as the primary use case is printing the command,
// not running it.
func printCommand(cmd string, args ...string) {
command := append([]string{cmd}, args...)
for i, arg := range command {
// Source: https://www.oreilly.com/library/view/learning-the-bash/1565923472/ch01s09.html
const specialChars = "~`#$&*()\\|[]{};'\"<>?! "
if strings.ContainsAny(arg, specialChars) {
// See: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/15783701/which-characters-need-to-be-escaped-when-using-bash
arg = "'" + strings.ReplaceAll(arg, `'`, `'\''`) + "'"
command[i] = arg
}
}
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, strings.Join(command, " "))
}
main: refactor compile/link part to a builder package This is a large commit that moves all code directly related to compiling/linking into a new builder package. This has a number of advantages: * It cleanly separates the API between the command line and the full compilation (with a very small API surface). * When the compiler finally compiles one package at a time (instead of everything at once as it does now), something will have to invoke it once per package. This builder package will be the natural place to do that, and also be the place where the whole process can be parallelized. * It allows the TinyGo compiler to be used as a package. A client can simply import the builder package and compile code using it. As part of this refactor, the following additional things changed: * Exported symbols have been made unexported when they weren&#39;t needed. * The compilation target has been moved into the compileopts.Options struct. This is done because the target really is just another compiler option, and the API is simplified by moving it in there. * The moveFile function has been duplicated. It does not really belong in the builder API but is used both by the builder and the command line. Moving it into a separate package didn&#39;t seem useful either for what is essentially an utility function. * Some doc strings have been improved. Some future changes/refactors I&#39;d like to make after this commit: * Clean up the API between the builder and the compiler package. * Perhaps move the test files (in testdata/) into the builder package. * Perhaps move the loader package into the builder package.
5 years ago
// Build compiles and links the given package and writes it to outpath.
func Build(pkgName, outpath string, options *compileopts.Options) error {
config, err := builder.NewConfig(options)
if err != nil {
return err
}
if options.PrintJSON {
b, err := json.MarshalIndent(config, "", " ")
if err != nil {
handleCompilerError(err)
}
fmt.Printf("%s\n", string(b))
return nil
}
// Create a temporary directory for intermediary files.
tmpdir, err := os.MkdirTemp("", "tinygo")
if err != nil {
return err
}
if !options.Work {
defer os.RemoveAll(tmpdir)
}
// Do the build.
result, err := builder.Build(pkgName, outpath, tmpdir, config)
if err != nil {
return err
}
if result.Binary != "" {
// If result.Binary is set, it means there is a build output (elf, hex,
// etc) that we need to move to the outpath. If it isn't set, it means
// the build output was a .ll, .bc or .o file that has already been
// written to outpath and so we don't need to do anything.
if outpath == "" {
if strings.HasSuffix(pkgName, ".go") {
// A Go file was specified directly on the command line.
// Base the binary name off of it.
outpath = filepath.Base(pkgName[:len(pkgName)-3]) + config.DefaultBinaryExtension()
} else {
// Pick a default output path based on the main directory.
outpath = filepath.Base(result.MainDir) + config.DefaultBinaryExtension()
}
}
if err := os.Rename(result.Binary, outpath); err != nil {
// Moving failed. Do a file copy.
inf, err := os.Open(result.Binary)
if err != nil {
return err
}
defer inf.Close()
outf, err := os.OpenFile(outpath, os.O_RDWR|os.O_CREATE|os.O_TRUNC, 0777)
if err != nil {
return err
}
// Copy data to output file.
_, err = io.Copy(outf, inf)
if err != nil {
return err
}
// Check whether file writing was successful.
return outf.Close()
}
}
// Move was successful.
return nil
}
// Test runs the tests in the given package. Returns whether the test passed and
// possibly an error if the test failed to run.
func Test(pkgName string, stdout, stderr io.Writer, options *compileopts.Options, outpath string) (bool, error) {
options.TestConfig.CompileTestBinary = true
main: refactor compile/link part to a builder package This is a large commit that moves all code directly related to compiling/linking into a new builder package. This has a number of advantages: * It cleanly separates the API between the command line and the full compilation (with a very small API surface). * When the compiler finally compiles one package at a time (instead of everything at once as it does now), something will have to invoke it once per package. This builder package will be the natural place to do that, and also be the place where the whole process can be parallelized. * It allows the TinyGo compiler to be used as a package. A client can simply import the builder package and compile code using it. As part of this refactor, the following additional things changed: * Exported symbols have been made unexported when they weren&#39;t needed. * The compilation target has been moved into the compileopts.Options struct. This is done because the target really is just another compiler option, and the API is simplified by moving it in there. * The moveFile function has been duplicated. It does not really belong in the builder API but is used both by the builder and the command line. Moving it into a separate package didn&#39;t seem useful either for what is essentially an utility function. * Some doc strings have been improved. Some future changes/refactors I&#39;d like to make after this commit: * Clean up the API between the builder and the compiler package. * Perhaps move the test files (in testdata/) into the builder package. * Perhaps move the loader package into the builder package.
5 years ago
config, err := builder.NewConfig(options)
if err != nil {
return false, err
}
testConfig := &options.TestConfig
// Pass test flags to the test binary.
var flags []string
if testConfig.Verbose {
flags = append(flags, "-test.v")
}
if testConfig.Short {
flags = append(flags, "-test.short")
}
if testConfig.RunRegexp != "" {
flags = append(flags, "-test.run="+testConfig.RunRegexp)
}
if testConfig.SkipRegexp != "" {
flags = append(flags, "-test.skip="+testConfig.SkipRegexp)
}
if testConfig.BenchRegexp != "" {
flags = append(flags, "-test.bench="+testConfig.BenchRegexp)
}
if testConfig.BenchTime != "" {
flags = append(flags, "-test.benchtime="+testConfig.BenchTime)
}
if testConfig.BenchMem {
flags = append(flags, "-test.benchmem")
}
if testConfig.Count != nil && *testConfig.Count != 1 {
flags = append(flags, "-test.count="+strconv.Itoa(*testConfig.Count))
}
if testConfig.Shuffle != "" {
flags = append(flags, "-test.shuffle="+testConfig.Shuffle)
}
logToStdout := testConfig.Verbose || testConfig.BenchRegexp != ""
var buf bytes.Buffer
var output io.Writer = &buf
// Send the test output to stdout if -v or -bench
if logToStdout {
output = os.Stdout
}
passed := false
var duration time.Duration
result, err := buildAndRun(pkgName, config, output, flags, nil, 0, func(cmd *exec.Cmd, result builder.BuildResult) error {
if testConfig.CompileOnly || outpath != "" {
// Write test binary to the specified file name.
if outpath == "" {
// No -o path was given, so create one now.
// This matches the behavior of go test.
outpath = filepath.Base(result.MainDir) + ".test"
}
copyFile(result.Binary, outpath)
}
if testConfig.CompileOnly {
// Do not run the test.
passed = true
return nil
}
// Tests are always run in the package directory.
cmd.Dir = result.MainDir
// wasmtime is the default emulator used for `-target=wasi`. wasmtime
// is a WebAssembly runtime CLI with WASI enabled by default. However,
// only stdio are allowed by default. For example, while STDOUT routes
// to the host, other files don't. It also does not inherit environment
// variables from the host. Some tests read testdata files, often from
// outside the package directory. Other tests require temporary
// writeable directories. We allow this by adding wasmtime flags below.
if config.EmulatorName() == "wasmtime" {
// At this point, The current working directory is at the package
// directory. Ex. $GOROOT/src/compress/flate for compress/flate.
// buildAndRun has already added arguments for wasmtime, that allow
// read-access to files such as "testdata/huffman-zero.in".
//
// Ex. main(.wasm) --dir=. -- -test.v
// Below adds additional wasmtime flags in case a test reads files
// outside its directory, like "../testdata/e.txt". This allows any
// relative directory up to the module root, even if the test never
// reads any files.
//
// Ex. run --dir=.. --dir=../.. --dir=../../..
dirs := dirsToModuleRoot(result.MainDir, result.ModuleRoot)
args := []string{"run"}
for _, d := range dirs[1:] {
args = append(args, "--dir="+d)
}
// The below re-organizes the arguments so that the current
// directory is added last.
args = append(args, cmd.Args[1:]...)
cmd.Args = append(cmd.Args[:1:1], args...)
}
// Run the test.
start := time.Now()
err = cmd.Run()
duration = time.Since(start)
passed = err == nil
// if verbose or benchmarks, then output is already going to stdout
// However, if we failed and weren't printing to stdout, print the output we accumulated.
if !passed && !logToStdout {
buf.WriteTo(stdout)
}
if _, ok := err.(*exec.ExitError); ok {
// Binary exited with a non-zero exit code, which means the test
// failed. Return nil to avoid printing a useless "exited with
// error" error message.
return nil
}
return err
})
importPath := strings.TrimSuffix(result.ImportPath, ".test")
var w io.Writer = stdout
if logToStdout {
w = os.Stdout
}
if err, ok := err.(loader.NoTestFilesError); ok {
fmt.Fprintf(w, "? \t%s\t[no test files]\n", err.ImportPath)
// Pretend the test passed - it at least didn't fail.
return true, nil
} else if passed && !testConfig.CompileOnly {
fmt.Fprintf(w, "ok \t%s\t%.3fs\n", importPath, duration.Seconds())
} else {
fmt.Fprintf(w, "FAIL\t%s\t%.3fs\n", importPath, duration.Seconds())
}
return passed, err
}
func dirsToModuleRoot(maindir, modroot string) []string {
var dirs = []string{"."}
last := ".."
// strip off path elements until we hit the module root
// adding `..`, `../..`, `../../..` until we're done
for maindir != modroot {
dirs = append(dirs, last)
last = filepath.Join(last, "..")
maindir = filepath.Dir(maindir)
}
return dirs
}
main: refactor compile/link part to a builder package This is a large commit that moves all code directly related to compiling/linking into a new builder package. This has a number of advantages: * It cleanly separates the API between the command line and the full compilation (with a very small API surface). * When the compiler finally compiles one package at a time (instead of everything at once as it does now), something will have to invoke it once per package. This builder package will be the natural place to do that, and also be the place where the whole process can be parallelized. * It allows the TinyGo compiler to be used as a package. A client can simply import the builder package and compile code using it. As part of this refactor, the following additional things changed: * Exported symbols have been made unexported when they weren&#39;t needed. * The compilation target has been moved into the compileopts.Options struct. This is done because the target really is just another compiler option, and the API is simplified by moving it in there. * The moveFile function has been duplicated. It does not really belong in the builder API but is used both by the builder and the command line. Moving it into a separate package didn&#39;t seem useful either for what is essentially an utility function. * Some doc strings have been improved. Some future changes/refactors I&#39;d like to make after this commit: * Clean up the API between the builder and the compiler package. * Perhaps move the test files (in testdata/) into the builder package. * Perhaps move the loader package into the builder package.
5 years ago
// Flash builds and flashes the built binary to the given serial port.
func Flash(pkgName, port string, options *compileopts.Options) error {
config, err := builder.NewConfig(options)
if err != nil {
return err
6 years ago
}
// determine the type of file to compile
var fileExt string
flashMethod, _ := config.Programmer()
switch flashMethod {
case "command", "":
switch {
main: refactor compile/link part to a builder package This is a large commit that moves all code directly related to compiling/linking into a new builder package. This has a number of advantages: * It cleanly separates the API between the command line and the full compilation (with a very small API surface). * When the compiler finally compiles one package at a time (instead of everything at once as it does now), something will have to invoke it once per package. This builder package will be the natural place to do that, and also be the place where the whole process can be parallelized. * It allows the TinyGo compiler to be used as a package. A client can simply import the builder package and compile code using it. As part of this refactor, the following additional things changed: * Exported symbols have been made unexported when they weren&#39;t needed. * The compilation target has been moved into the compileopts.Options struct. This is done because the target really is just another compiler option, and the API is simplified by moving it in there. * The moveFile function has been duplicated. It does not really belong in the builder API but is used both by the builder and the command line. Moving it into a separate package didn&#39;t seem useful either for what is essentially an utility function. * Some doc strings have been improved. Some future changes/refactors I&#39;d like to make after this commit: * Clean up the API between the builder and the compiler package. * Perhaps move the test files (in testdata/) into the builder package. * Perhaps move the loader package into the builder package.
5 years ago
case strings.Contains(config.Target.FlashCommand, "{hex}"):
fileExt = ".hex"
main: refactor compile/link part to a builder package This is a large commit that moves all code directly related to compiling/linking into a new builder package. This has a number of advantages: * It cleanly separates the API between the command line and the full compilation (with a very small API surface). * When the compiler finally compiles one package at a time (instead of everything at once as it does now), something will have to invoke it once per package. This builder package will be the natural place to do that, and also be the place where the whole process can be parallelized. * It allows the TinyGo compiler to be used as a package. A client can simply import the builder package and compile code using it. As part of this refactor, the following additional things changed: * Exported symbols have been made unexported when they weren&#39;t needed. * The compilation target has been moved into the compileopts.Options struct. This is done because the target really is just another compiler option, and the API is simplified by moving it in there. * The moveFile function has been duplicated. It does not really belong in the builder API but is used both by the builder and the command line. Moving it into a separate package didn&#39;t seem useful either for what is essentially an utility function. * Some doc strings have been improved. Some future changes/refactors I&#39;d like to make after this commit: * Clean up the API between the builder and the compiler package. * Perhaps move the test files (in testdata/) into the builder package. * Perhaps move the loader package into the builder package.
5 years ago
case strings.Contains(config.Target.FlashCommand, "{elf}"):
fileExt = ".elf"
main: refactor compile/link part to a builder package This is a large commit that moves all code directly related to compiling/linking into a new builder package. This has a number of advantages: * It cleanly separates the API between the command line and the full compilation (with a very small API surface). * When the compiler finally compiles one package at a time (instead of everything at once as it does now), something will have to invoke it once per package. This builder package will be the natural place to do that, and also be the place where the whole process can be parallelized. * It allows the TinyGo compiler to be used as a package. A client can simply import the builder package and compile code using it. As part of this refactor, the following additional things changed: * Exported symbols have been made unexported when they weren&#39;t needed. * The compilation target has been moved into the compileopts.Options struct. This is done because the target really is just another compiler option, and the API is simplified by moving it in there. * The moveFile function has been duplicated. It does not really belong in the builder API but is used both by the builder and the command line. Moving it into a separate package didn&#39;t seem useful either for what is essentially an utility function. * Some doc strings have been improved. Some future changes/refactors I&#39;d like to make after this commit: * Clean up the API between the builder and the compiler package. * Perhaps move the test files (in testdata/) into the builder package. * Perhaps move the loader package into the builder package.
5 years ago
case strings.Contains(config.Target.FlashCommand, "{bin}"):
fileExt = ".bin"
main: refactor compile/link part to a builder package This is a large commit that moves all code directly related to compiling/linking into a new builder package. This has a number of advantages: * It cleanly separates the API between the command line and the full compilation (with a very small API surface). * When the compiler finally compiles one package at a time (instead of everything at once as it does now), something will have to invoke it once per package. This builder package will be the natural place to do that, and also be the place where the whole process can be parallelized. * It allows the TinyGo compiler to be used as a package. A client can simply import the builder package and compile code using it. As part of this refactor, the following additional things changed: * Exported symbols have been made unexported when they weren&#39;t needed. * The compilation target has been moved into the compileopts.Options struct. This is done because the target really is just another compiler option, and the API is simplified by moving it in there. * The moveFile function has been duplicated. It does not really belong in the builder API but is used both by the builder and the command line. Moving it into a separate package didn&#39;t seem useful either for what is essentially an utility function. * Some doc strings have been improved. Some future changes/refactors I&#39;d like to make after this commit: * Clean up the API between the builder and the compiler package. * Perhaps move the test files (in testdata/) into the builder package. * Perhaps move the loader package into the builder package.
5 years ago
case strings.Contains(config.Target.FlashCommand, "{uf2}"):
fileExt = ".uf2"
case strings.Contains(config.Target.FlashCommand, "{zip}"):
fileExt = ".zip"
default:
return errors.New("invalid target file - did you forget the {hex} token in the 'flash-command' section?")
}
case "msd":
main: refactor compile/link part to a builder package This is a large commit that moves all code directly related to compiling/linking into a new builder package. This has a number of advantages: * It cleanly separates the API between the command line and the full compilation (with a very small API surface). * When the compiler finally compiles one package at a time (instead of everything at once as it does now), something will have to invoke it once per package. This builder package will be the natural place to do that, and also be the place where the whole process can be parallelized. * It allows the TinyGo compiler to be used as a package. A client can simply import the builder package and compile code using it. As part of this refactor, the following additional things changed: * Exported symbols have been made unexported when they weren&#39;t needed. * The compilation target has been moved into the compileopts.Options struct. This is done because the target really is just another compiler option, and the API is simplified by moving it in there. * The moveFile function has been duplicated. It does not really belong in the builder API but is used both by the builder and the command line. Moving it into a separate package didn&#39;t seem useful either for what is essentially an utility function. * Some doc strings have been improved. Some future changes/refactors I&#39;d like to make after this commit: * Clean up the API between the builder and the compiler package. * Perhaps move the test files (in testdata/) into the builder package. * Perhaps move the loader package into the builder package.
5 years ago
if config.Target.FlashFilename == "" {
return errors.New("invalid target file: flash-method was set to \"msd\" but no msd-firmware-name was set")
}
main: refactor compile/link part to a builder package This is a large commit that moves all code directly related to compiling/linking into a new builder package. This has a number of advantages: * It cleanly separates the API between the command line and the full compilation (with a very small API surface). * When the compiler finally compiles one package at a time (instead of everything at once as it does now), something will have to invoke it once per package. This builder package will be the natural place to do that, and also be the place where the whole process can be parallelized. * It allows the TinyGo compiler to be used as a package. A client can simply import the builder package and compile code using it. As part of this refactor, the following additional things changed: * Exported symbols have been made unexported when they weren&#39;t needed. * The compilation target has been moved into the compileopts.Options struct. This is done because the target really is just another compiler option, and the API is simplified by moving it in there. * The moveFile function has been duplicated. It does not really belong in the builder API but is used both by the builder and the command line. Moving it into a separate package didn&#39;t seem useful either for what is essentially an utility function. * Some doc strings have been improved. Some future changes/refactors I&#39;d like to make after this commit: * Clean up the API between the builder and the compiler package. * Perhaps move the test files (in testdata/) into the builder package. * Perhaps move the loader package into the builder package.
5 years ago
fileExt = filepath.Ext(config.Target.FlashFilename)
case "openocd":
fileExt = ".hex"
case "bmp":
fileExt = ".elf"
case "native":
return errors.New("unknown flash method \"native\" - did you miss a -target flag?")
default:
return errors.New("unknown flash method: " + flashMethod)
}
// Create a temporary directory for intermediary files.
tmpdir, err := os.MkdirTemp("", "tinygo")
if err != nil {
return err
}
if !options.Work {
defer os.RemoveAll(tmpdir)
}
// Build the binary.
result, err := builder.Build(pkgName, fileExt, tmpdir, config)
if err != nil {
return err
}
// do we need port reset to put MCU into bootloader mode?
if config.Target.PortReset == "true" && flashMethod != "openocd" {
port, err := getDefaultPort(port, config.Target.SerialPort)
if err == nil {
err = touchSerialPortAt1200bps(port)
if err != nil {
return &commandError{"failed to reset port", port, err}
}
// give the target MCU a chance to restart into bootloader
time.Sleep(3 * time.Second)
}
}
// Flash the binary to the MCU.
switch flashMethod {
case "", "command":
// Create the command.
flashCmd := config.Target.FlashCommand
flashCmdList, err := shlex.Split(flashCmd)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("could not parse flash command %#v: %w", flashCmd, err)
}
if strings.Contains(flashCmd, "{port}") {
var err error
port, err = getDefaultPort(port, config.Target.SerialPort)
if err != nil {
return err
}
}
// Fill in fields in the command template.
fileToken := "{" + fileExt[1:] + "}"
for i, arg := range flashCmdList {
arg = strings.ReplaceAll(arg, fileToken, result.Binary)
arg = strings.ReplaceAll(arg, "{port}", port)
flashCmdList[i] = arg
}
// Execute the command.
if len(flashCmdList) < 2 {
return fmt.Errorf("invalid flash command: %#v", flashCmd)
}
cmd := executeCommand(config.Options, flashCmdList[0], flashCmdList[1:]...)
cmd.Stdout = os.Stdout
cmd.Stderr = os.Stderr
cmd.Dir = goenv.Get("TINYGOROOT")
err = cmd.Run()
if err != nil {
return &commandError{"failed to flash", result.Binary, err}
}
case "msd":
// this flashing method copies the binary data to a Mass Storage Device (msd)
switch fileExt {
case ".uf2":
err := flashUF2UsingMSD(config.Target.FlashVolume, result.Binary, config.Options)
if err != nil {
return &commandError{"failed to flash", result.Binary, err}
}
case ".hex":
err := flashHexUsingMSD(config.Target.FlashVolume, result.Binary, config.Options)
if err != nil {
return &commandError{"failed to flash", result.Binary, err}
}
default:
return errors.New("mass storage device flashing currently only supports uf2 and hex")
}
case "openocd":
args, err := config.OpenOCDConfiguration()
if err != nil {
return err
}
exit := " reset exit"
if config.Target.OpenOCDVerify != nil && *config.Target.OpenOCDVerify {
exit = " verify" + exit
}
args = append(args, "-c", "program "+filepath.ToSlash(result.Binary)+exit)
cmd := executeCommand(config.Options, "openocd", args...)
cmd.Stdout = os.Stdout
cmd.Stderr = os.Stderr
err = cmd.Run()
if err != nil {
return &commandError{"failed to flash", result.Binary, err}
}
case "bmp":
gdb, err := config.Target.LookupGDB()
if err != nil {
return err
}
var bmpGDBPort string
bmpGDBPort, _, err = getBMPPorts()
if err != nil {
return err
}
args := []string{"-ex", "target extended-remote " + bmpGDBPort, "-ex", "monitor swdp_scan", "-ex", "attach 1", "-ex", "load", filepath.ToSlash(result.Binary)}
cmd := executeCommand(config.Options, gdb, args...)
cmd.Stdout = os.Stdout
cmd.Stderr = os.Stderr
err = cmd.Run()
if err != nil {
return &commandError{"failed to flash", result.Binary, err}
}
default:
return fmt.Errorf("unknown flash method: %s", flashMethod)
}
if options.Monitor {
return Monitor("", options)
}
return nil
6 years ago
}
// Debug compiles and flashes a program to a microcontroller (just like Flash)
// but instead of resetting the target, it will drop into a debug shell like GDB
// or LLDB. You can then set breakpoints, run the `continue` command to start,
// hit Ctrl+C to break the running program, etc.
//
// Note: this command is expected to execute just before exiting, as it
// modifies global state.
func Debug(debugger, pkgName string, ocdOutput bool, options *compileopts.Options) error {
main: refactor compile/link part to a builder package This is a large commit that moves all code directly related to compiling/linking into a new builder package. This has a number of advantages: * It cleanly separates the API between the command line and the full compilation (with a very small API surface). * When the compiler finally compiles one package at a time (instead of everything at once as it does now), something will have to invoke it once per package. This builder package will be the natural place to do that, and also be the place where the whole process can be parallelized. * It allows the TinyGo compiler to be used as a package. A client can simply import the builder package and compile code using it. As part of this refactor, the following additional things changed: * Exported symbols have been made unexported when they weren&#39;t needed. * The compilation target has been moved into the compileopts.Options struct. This is done because the target really is just another compiler option, and the API is simplified by moving it in there. * The moveFile function has been duplicated. It does not really belong in the builder API but is used both by the builder and the command line. Moving it into a separate package didn&#39;t seem useful either for what is essentially an utility function. * Some doc strings have been improved. Some future changes/refactors I&#39;d like to make after this commit: * Clean up the API between the builder and the compiler package. * Perhaps move the test files (in testdata/) into the builder package. * Perhaps move the loader package into the builder package.
5 years ago
config, err := builder.NewConfig(options)
if err != nil {
return err
}
var cmdName string
switch debugger {
case "gdb":
cmdName, err = config.Target.LookupGDB()
case "lldb":
cmdName, err = builder.LookupCommand("lldb")
}
if err != nil {
return err
}
// Create a temporary directory for intermediary files.
tmpdir, err := os.MkdirTemp("", "tinygo")
if err != nil {
return err
}
if !options.Work {
defer os.RemoveAll(tmpdir)
}
// Build the binary to debug.
format, fileExt := config.EmulatorFormat()
result, err := builder.Build(pkgName, fileExt, tmpdir, config)
if err != nil {
return err
}
// Find a good way to run GDB.
gdbInterface, openocdInterface := config.Programmer()
switch gdbInterface {
case "msd", "command", "":
emulator := config.EmulatorName()
if emulator != "" {
if emulator == "mgba" {
gdbInterface = "mgba"
} else if emulator == "simavr" {
gdbInterface = "simavr"
} else if strings.HasPrefix(emulator, "qemu-system-") {
gdbInterface = "qemu"
} else {
// Assume QEMU as an emulator.
gdbInterface = "qemu-user"
}
} else if openocdInterface != "" && config.Target.OpenOCDTarget != "" {
gdbInterface = "openocd"
} else if config.Target.JLinkDevice != "" {
gdbInterface = "jlink"
} else {
gdbInterface = "native"
}
}
// Run the GDB server, if necessary.
port := ""
var gdbCommands []string
var daemon *exec.Cmd
emulator, err := config.Emulator(format, result.Binary)
if err != nil {
return err
}
switch gdbInterface {
case "native":
// Run GDB directly.
case "bmp":
var bmpGDBPort string
bmpGDBPort, _, err = getBMPPorts()
if err != nil {
return err
}
port = bmpGDBPort
gdbCommands = append(gdbCommands, "monitor swdp_scan", "compare-sections", "attach 1", "load")
case "openocd":
port = ":3333"
gdbCommands = append(gdbCommands, "monitor halt", "load", "monitor reset halt")
// We need a separate debugging daemon for on-chip debugging.
args, err := config.OpenOCDConfiguration()
if err != nil {
return err
}
daemon = executeCommand(config.Options, "openocd", args...)
if ocdOutput {
// Make it clear which output is from the daemon.
w := &ColorWriter{
Out: colorable.NewColorableStderr(),
Prefix: "openocd: ",
Color: TermColorYellow,
}
daemon.Stdout = w
daemon.Stderr = w
}
case "jlink":
port = ":2331"
gdbCommands = append(gdbCommands, "load", "monitor reset halt")
// We need a separate debugging daemon for on-chip debugging.
daemon = executeCommand(config.Options, "JLinkGDBServer", "-device", config.Target.JLinkDevice)
if ocdOutput {
// Make it clear which output is from the daemon.
w := &ColorWriter{
Out: colorable.NewColorableStderr(),
Prefix: "jlink: ",
Color: TermColorYellow,
}
daemon.Stdout = w
daemon.Stderr = w
}
case "qemu":
port = ":1234"
// Run in an emulator.
args := append(emulator[1:], "-s", "-S")
daemon = executeCommand(config.Options, emulator[0], args...)
daemon.Stdout = os.Stdout
daemon.Stderr = os.Stderr
case "qemu-user":
port = ":1234"
// Run in an emulator.
args := append([]string{"-g", "1234"}, emulator[1:]...)
daemon = executeCommand(config.Options, emulator[0], args...)
daemon.Stdout = os.Stdout
daemon.Stderr = os.Stderr
case "mgba":
port = ":2345"
// Run in an emulator.
args := append(emulator[1:], "-g")
daemon = executeCommand(config.Options, emulator[0], args...)
daemon.Stdout = os.Stdout
daemon.Stderr = os.Stderr
case "simavr":
port = ":1234"
// Run in an emulator.
args := append(emulator[1:], "-g")
daemon = executeCommand(config.Options, emulator[0], args...)
daemon.Stdout = os.Stdout
daemon.Stderr = os.Stderr
case "msd":
return errors.New("gdb is not supported for drag-and-drop programmable devices")
default:
return fmt.Errorf("gdb is not supported with interface %#v", gdbInterface)
}
if daemon != nil {
// Make sure the daemon doesn't receive Ctrl-C that is intended for
// GDB (to break the currently executing program).
setCommandAsDaemon(daemon)
// Start now, and kill it on exit.
err = daemon.Start()
if err != nil {
return &commandError{"failed to run", daemon.Path, err}
}
defer func() {
daemon.Process.Signal(os.Interrupt)
var stopped uint32
go func() {
time.Sleep(time.Millisecond * 100)
if atomic.LoadUint32(&stopped) == 0 {
daemon.Process.Kill()
}
}()
daemon.Wait()
atomic.StoreUint32(&stopped, 1)
}()
}
// Ignore Ctrl-C, it must be passed on to GDB.
c := make(chan os.Signal, 1)
signal.Notify(c, os.Interrupt)
go func() {
for range c {
}
}()
// Construct and execute a gdb or lldb command.
// By default: gdb -ex run <binary>
// Exit the debugger with Ctrl-D.
params := []string{result.Executable}
switch debugger {
case "gdb":
if port != "" {
params = append(params, "-ex", "target extended-remote "+port)
}
for _, cmd := range gdbCommands {
params = append(params, "-ex", cmd)
}
case "lldb":
params = append(params, "--arch", config.Triple())
if port != "" {
if strings.HasPrefix(port, ":") {
params = append(params, "-o", "gdb-remote "+port[1:])
} else {
return fmt.Errorf("cannot use LLDB over a gdb-remote that isn't a TCP port: %s", port)
}
}
for _, cmd := range gdbCommands {
if strings.HasPrefix(cmd, "monitor ") {
params = append(params, "-o", "process plugin packet "+cmd)
} else if cmd == "load" {
params = append(params, "-o", "target modules load --load --slide 0")
} else {
return fmt.Errorf("don't know how to convert GDB command %#v to LLDB", cmd)
}
}
}
cmd := executeCommand(config.Options, cmdName, params...)
cmd.Stdin = os.Stdin
cmd.Stdout = os.Stdout
cmd.Stderr = os.Stderr
err = cmd.Run()
if err != nil {
return &commandError{"failed to run " + cmdName + " with", result.Executable, err}
}
return nil
}
main: refactor compile/link part to a builder package This is a large commit that moves all code directly related to compiling/linking into a new builder package. This has a number of advantages: * It cleanly separates the API between the command line and the full compilation (with a very small API surface). * When the compiler finally compiles one package at a time (instead of everything at once as it does now), something will have to invoke it once per package. This builder package will be the natural place to do that, and also be the place where the whole process can be parallelized. * It allows the TinyGo compiler to be used as a package. A client can simply import the builder package and compile code using it. As part of this refactor, the following additional things changed: * Exported symbols have been made unexported when they weren&#39;t needed. * The compilation target has been moved into the compileopts.Options struct. This is done because the target really is just another compiler option, and the API is simplified by moving it in there. * The moveFile function has been duplicated. It does not really belong in the builder API but is used both by the builder and the command line. Moving it into a separate package didn&#39;t seem useful either for what is essentially an utility function. * Some doc strings have been improved. Some future changes/refactors I&#39;d like to make after this commit: * Clean up the API between the builder and the compiler package. * Perhaps move the test files (in testdata/) into the builder package. * Perhaps move the loader package into the builder package.
5 years ago
// Run compiles and runs the given program. Depending on the target provided in
// the options, it will run the program directly on the host or will run it in
// an emulator. For example, -target=wasm will cause the binary to be run inside
// of a WebAssembly VM.
func Run(pkgName string, options *compileopts.Options, cmdArgs []string) error {
main: refactor compile/link part to a builder package This is a large commit that moves all code directly related to compiling/linking into a new builder package. This has a number of advantages: * It cleanly separates the API between the command line and the full compilation (with a very small API surface). * When the compiler finally compiles one package at a time (instead of everything at once as it does now), something will have to invoke it once per package. This builder package will be the natural place to do that, and also be the place where the whole process can be parallelized. * It allows the TinyGo compiler to be used as a package. A client can simply import the builder package and compile code using it. As part of this refactor, the following additional things changed: * Exported symbols have been made unexported when they weren&#39;t needed. * The compilation target has been moved into the compileopts.Options struct. This is done because the target really is just another compiler option, and the API is simplified by moving it in there. * The moveFile function has been duplicated. It does not really belong in the builder API but is used both by the builder and the command line. Moving it into a separate package didn&#39;t seem useful either for what is essentially an utility function. * Some doc strings have been improved. Some future changes/refactors I&#39;d like to make after this commit: * Clean up the API between the builder and the compiler package. * Perhaps move the test files (in testdata/) into the builder package. * Perhaps move the loader package into the builder package.
5 years ago
config, err := builder.NewConfig(options)
if err != nil {
return err
}
_, err = buildAndRun(pkgName, config, os.Stdout, cmdArgs, nil, 0, func(cmd *exec.Cmd, result builder.BuildResult) error {
return cmd.Run()
})
return err
}
// buildAndRun builds and runs the given program, writing output to stdout and
// errors to os.Stderr. It takes care of emulators (qemu, wasmtime, etc) and
// passes command line arguments and evironment variables in a way appropriate
// for the given emulator.
func buildAndRun(pkgName string, config *compileopts.Config, stdout io.Writer, cmdArgs, environmentVars []string, timeout time.Duration, run func(cmd *exec.Cmd, result builder.BuildResult) error) (builder.BuildResult, error) {
// Determine whether we're on a system that supports environment variables
// and command line parameters (operating systems, WASI) or not (baremetal,
// WebAssembly in the browser). If we're on a system without an environment,
// we need to pass command line arguments and environment variables through
// global variables (built into the binary directly) instead of the
// conventional way.
needsEnvInVars := config.GOOS() == "js"
for _, tag := range config.BuildTags() {
if tag == "baremetal" {
needsEnvInVars = true
}
}
var args, env []string
var extraCmdEnv []string
if needsEnvInVars {
runtimeGlobals := make(map[string]string)
if len(cmdArgs) != 0 {
runtimeGlobals["osArgs"] = strings.Join(cmdArgs, "\x00")
}
if len(environmentVars) != 0 {
runtimeGlobals["osEnv"] = strings.Join(environmentVars, "\x00")
}
if len(runtimeGlobals) != 0 {
// This sets the global variables like they would be set with
// `-ldflags="-X=runtime.osArgs=first\x00second`.
// The runtime package has two variables (osArgs and osEnv) that are
// both strings, from which the parameters and environment variables
// are read.
config.Options.GlobalValues = map[string]map[string]string{
"runtime": runtimeGlobals,
}
}
} else if config.EmulatorName() == "wasmtime" {
// Wasmtime needs some special flags to pass environment variables
// and allow reading from the current directory.
args = append(args, "--dir=.")
for _, v := range environmentVars {
args = append(args, "--env", v)
}
if len(cmdArgs) != 0 {
// mark end of wasmtime arguments and start of program ones: --
args = append(args, "--")
args = append(args, cmdArgs...)
}
// Set this for nicer backtraces during tests, but don't override the user.
if _, ok := os.LookupEnv("WASMTIME_BACKTRACE_DETAILS"); !ok {
extraCmdEnv = append(extraCmdEnv, "WASMTIME_BACKTRACE_DETAILS=1")
}
} else {
// Pass environment variables and command line parameters as usual.
// This also works on qemu-aarch64 etc.
args = cmdArgs
env = environmentVars
}
// Create a temporary directory for intermediary files.
tmpdir, err := os.MkdirTemp("", "tinygo")
if err != nil {
return builder.BuildResult{}, err
}
if !config.Options.Work {
defer os.RemoveAll(tmpdir)
}
// Build the binary to be run.
format, fileExt := config.EmulatorFormat()
result, err := builder.Build(pkgName, fileExt, tmpdir, config)
if err != nil {
return result, err
}
// If needed, set a timeout on the command. This is done in tests so
// they don't waste resources on a stalled test.
var ctx context.Context
if timeout != 0 {
var cancel context.CancelFunc
ctx, cancel = context.WithTimeout(context.Background(), timeout)
defer cancel()
}
// Set up the command.
var name string
if config.Target.Emulator == "" {
name = result.Binary
} else {
emulator, err := config.Emulator(format, result.Binary)
if err != nil {
return result, err
}
name = emulator[0]
emuArgs := append([]string(nil), emulator[1:]...)
args = append(emuArgs, args...)
}
var cmd *exec.Cmd
if ctx != nil {
cmd = exec.CommandContext(ctx, name, args...)
} else {
cmd = exec.Command(name, args...)
}
cmd.Env = append(cmd.Env, env...)
cmd.Env = append(cmd.Env, extraCmdEnv...)
// Configure stdout/stderr. The stdout may go to a buffer, not a real
// stdout.
cmd.Stdout = stdout
cmd.Stderr = os.Stderr
if config.EmulatorName() == "simavr" {
cmd.Stdout = nil // don't print initial load commands
cmd.Stderr = stdout
}
// If this is a test, reserve CPU time for it so that increased
// parallelism doesn't blow up memory usage. If this isn't a test but
// simply `tinygo run`, then it is practically a no-op.
config.Options.Semaphore <- struct{}{}
defer func() {
<-config.Options.Semaphore
}()
// Run binary.
if config.Options.PrintCommands != nil {
config.Options.PrintCommands(cmd.Path, cmd.Args...)
}
err = run(cmd, result)
if err != nil {
if ctx != nil && ctx.Err() == context.DeadlineExceeded {
stdout.Write([]byte(fmt.Sprintf("--- timeout of %s exceeded, terminating...\n", timeout)))
err = ctx.Err()
}
return result, &commandError{"failed to run compiled binary", result.Binary, err}
}
return result, nil
}
func touchSerialPortAt1200bps(port string) (err error) {
retryCount := 3
for i := 0; i < retryCount; i++ {
// Open port
p, e := serial.Open(port, &serial.Mode{BaudRate: 1200})
if e != nil {
if runtime.GOOS == `windows` {
se, ok := e.(*serial.PortError)
if ok && se.Code() == serial.InvalidSerialPort {
// InvalidSerialPort error occurs when transitioning to boot
return nil
}
}
time.Sleep(1 * time.Second)
err = e
continue
}
defer p.Close()
p.SetDTR(false)
return nil
}
return fmt.Errorf("opening port: %s", err)
}
func flashUF2UsingMSD(volumes []string, tmppath string, options *compileopts.Options) error {
// find standard UF2 info path
infoPaths := make([]string, 0, len(volumes))
for _, volume := range volumes {
switch runtime.GOOS {
case "linux", "freebsd":
fi, err := os.Stat("/run/media")
if err != nil || !fi.IsDir() {
infoPaths = append(infoPaths, "/media/*/"+volume+"/INFO_UF2.TXT")
} else {
infoPaths = append(infoPaths, "/run/media/*/"+volume+"/INFO_UF2.TXT")
}
case "darwin":
infoPaths = append(infoPaths, "/Volumes/"+volume+"/INFO_UF2.TXT")
case "windows":
path, err := windowsFindUSBDrive(volume, options)
if err == nil {
infoPaths = append(infoPaths, path+"/INFO_UF2.TXT")
}
}
}
d, err := locateDevice(volumes, infoPaths, options.Timeout)
if err != nil {
return err
}
return moveFile(tmppath, filepath.Dir(d)+"/flash.uf2")
}
func flashHexUsingMSD(volumes []string, tmppath string, options *compileopts.Options) error {
// find expected volume path
destPaths := make([]string, 0, len(volumes))
for _, volume := range volumes {
switch runtime.GOOS {
case "linux", "freebsd":
fi, err := os.Stat("/run/media")
if err != nil || !fi.IsDir() {
destPaths = append(destPaths, "/media/*/"+volume)
} else {
destPaths = append(destPaths, "/run/media/*/"+volume)
}
case "darwin":
destPaths = append(destPaths, "/Volumes/"+volume)
case "windows":
path, err := windowsFindUSBDrive(volume, options)
if err == nil {
destPaths = append(destPaths, path+"/")
}
}
}
d, err := locateDevice(volumes, destPaths, options.Timeout)
if err != nil {
return err
}
return moveFile(tmppath, d+"/flash.hex")
}
func locateDevice(volumes, paths []string, timeout time.Duration) (string, error) {
var d []string
var err error
for start := time.Now(); time.Since(start) < timeout; {
for _, path := range paths {
d, err = filepath.Glob(path)
if err != nil {
return "", err
}
if d != nil {
break
}
}
if d != nil {
break
}
time.Sleep(500 * time.Millisecond)
}
if d == nil {
return "", errors.New("unable to locate any volume: [" + strings.Join(volumes, ",") + "]")
}
return d[0], nil
}
func windowsFindUSBDrive(volume string, options *compileopts.Options) (string, error) {
cmd := executeCommand(options, "wmic",
"PATH", "Win32_LogicalDisk", "WHERE", "VolumeName = '"+volume+"'",
"get", "DeviceID,VolumeName,FileSystem,DriveType")
var out bytes.Buffer
cmd.Stdout = &out
err := cmd.Run()
if err != nil {
return "", err
}
for _, line := range strings.Split(out.String(), "\n") {
words := strings.Fields(line)
if len(words) >= 3 {
if words[1] == "2" && words[2] == "FAT" {
return words[0], nil
}
}
}
return "", errors.New("unable to locate a USB device to be flashed")
}
// getDefaultPort returns the default serial port depending on the operating system.
func getDefaultPort(portFlag string, usbInterfaces []string) (port string, err error) {
portCandidates := strings.FieldsFunc(portFlag, func(c rune) bool { return c == ',' })
if len(portCandidates) == 1 {
return portCandidates[0], nil
}
var ports []string
switch runtime.GOOS {
case "freebsd":
ports, err = filepath.Glob("/dev/cuaU*")
case "darwin", "linux", "windows":
var portsList []*enumerator.PortDetails
portsList, err = enumerator.GetDetailedPortsList()
if err != nil {
return "", err
}
var preferredPortIDs [][2]uint16
for _, s := range usbInterfaces {
parts := strings.Split(s, ":")
if len(parts) != 2 {
return "", fmt.Errorf("could not parse USB VID/PID pair %q", s)
}
vid, err := strconv.ParseUint(parts[0], 16, 16)
if err != nil {
return "", fmt.Errorf("could not parse USB vendor ID %q: %w", parts[1], err)
}
pid, err := strconv.ParseUint(parts[1], 16, 16)
if err != nil {
return "", fmt.Errorf("could not parse USB product ID %q: %w", parts[1], err)
}
preferredPortIDs = append(preferredPortIDs, [2]uint16{uint16(vid), uint16(pid)})
}
var primaryPorts []string // ports picked from preferred USB VID/PID
var secondaryPorts []string // other ports (as a fallback)
for _, p := range portsList {
if !p.IsUSB {
continue
}
if p.VID != "" && p.PID != "" {
foundPort := false
vid, vidErr := strconv.ParseUint(p.VID, 16, 16)
pid, pidErr := strconv.ParseUint(p.PID, 16, 16)
if vidErr == nil && pidErr == nil {
for _, id := range preferredPortIDs {
if uint16(vid) == id[0] && uint16(pid) == id[1] {
primaryPorts = append(primaryPorts, p.Name)
foundPort = true
continue
}
}
}
if foundPort {
continue
}
}
secondaryPorts = append(secondaryPorts, p.Name)
}
if len(primaryPorts) == 1 {
// There is exactly one match in the set of preferred ports. Use
// this port, even if there may be others available. This allows
// flashing a specific board even if there are multiple available.
return primaryPorts[0], nil
} else if len(primaryPorts) > 1 {
// There are multiple preferred ports, probably because more than
// one device of the same type are connected (e.g. two Arduino
// Unos).
ports = primaryPorts
} else {
// No preferred ports found. Fall back to other serial ports
// available in the system.
ports = secondaryPorts
}
default:
return "", errors.New("unable to search for a default USB device to be flashed on this OS")
}
if err != nil {
return "", err
} else if ports == nil {
return "", errors.New("unable to locate a serial port")
} else if len(ports) == 0 {
return "", errors.New("no serial ports available")
}
if len(portCandidates) == 0 {
if len(ports) == 1 {
return ports[0], nil
} else if len(ports) > 1 {
return "", errors.New("multiple serial ports available - use -port flag, available ports are " + strings.Join(ports, ", "))
} else {
return "", errors.New("unable to search for a default USB device - use -port flag, available ports are " + strings.Join(ports, ", "))
}
}
for _, ps := range portCandidates {
for _, p := range ports {
if p == ps {
return p, nil
}
}
}
return "", errors.New("port you specified '" + strings.Join(portCandidates, ",") + "' does not exist, available ports are " + strings.Join(ports, ", "))
}
// getBMPPorts returns BlackMagicProbe's serial ports if any
func getBMPPorts() (gdbPort, uartPort string, err error) {
var portsList []*enumerator.PortDetails
portsList, err = enumerator.GetDetailedPortsList()
if err != nil {
return "", "", err
}
var ports []string
for _, p := range portsList {
if !p.IsUSB {
continue
}
if p.VID != "" && p.PID != "" {
vid, vidErr := strconv.ParseUint(p.VID, 16, 16)
pid, pidErr := strconv.ParseUint(p.PID, 16, 16)
if vidErr == nil && pidErr == nil && vid == 0x1d50 && pid == 0x6018 {
ports = append(ports, p.Name)
}
}
}
if len(ports) == 2 {
return ports[0], ports[1], nil
} else if len(ports) == 0 {
return "", "", errors.New("no BMP detected")
} else {
return "", "", fmt.Errorf("expected 2 BMP serial ports, found %d - did you perhaps connect more than one BMP?", len(ports))
}
}
func usage(command string) {
version := goenv.Version
if strings.HasSuffix(version, "-dev") && goenv.GitSha1 != "" {
version += "-" + goenv.GitSha1
}
switch command {
default:
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "TinyGo is a Go compiler for small places.")
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "version:", version)
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "usage: %s <command> [arguments]\n", os.Args[0])
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "\ncommands:")
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, " build: compile packages and dependencies")
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, " run: compile and run immediately")
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, " test: test packages")
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, " flash: compile and flash to the device")
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, " gdb: run/flash and immediately enter GDB")
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, " lldb: run/flash and immediately enter LLDB")
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, " monitor: open communication port")
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, " env: list environment variables used during build")
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, " list: run go list using the TinyGo root")
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, " clean: empty cache directory ("+goenv.Get("GOCACHE")+")")
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, " targets: list targets")
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, " info: show info for specified target")
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, " version: show version")
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, " help: print this help text")
if flag.Parsed() {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "\nflags:")
flag.PrintDefaults()
}
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "\nfor more details, see https://tinygo.org/docs/reference/usage/")
}
}
// try to make the path relative to the current working directory. If any error
// occurs, this error is ignored and the absolute path is returned instead.
func tryToMakePathRelative(dir string) string {
wd, err := os.Getwd()
if err != nil {
return dir
}
relpath, err := filepath.Rel(wd, dir)
if err != nil {
return dir
}
return relpath
}
// printCompilerError prints compiler errors using the provided logger function
// (similar to fmt.Println).
//
// There is one exception: interp errors may print to stderr unconditionally due
// to limitations in the LLVM bindings.
func printCompilerError(logln func(...interface{}), err error) {
switch err := err.(type) {
case types.Error:
printCompilerError(logln, scanner.Error{
Pos: err.Fset.Position(err.Pos),
Msg: err.Msg,
})
case scanner.Error:
if !strings.HasPrefix(err.Pos.Filename, filepath.Join(goenv.Get("GOROOT"), "src")) && !strings.HasPrefix(err.Pos.Filename, filepath.Join(goenv.Get("TINYGOROOT"), "src")) {
// This file is not from the standard library (either the GOROOT or
// the TINYGOROOT). Make the path relative, for easier reading.
// Ignore any errors in the process (falling back to the absolute
// path).
err.Pos.Filename = tryToMakePathRelative(err.Pos.Filename)
}
logln(err)
case scanner.ErrorList:
for _, scannerErr := range err {
printCompilerError(logln, *scannerErr)
}
case *interp.Error:
logln("#", err.ImportPath)
logln(err.Error())
if !err.Inst.IsNil() {
err.Inst.Dump()
logln()
}
if len(err.Traceback) > 0 {
logln("\ntraceback:")
for _, line := range err.Traceback {
logln(line.Pos.String() + ":")
line.Inst.Dump()
logln()
}
}
case loader.Errors:
logln("#", err.Pkg.ImportPath)
for _, err := range err.Errs {
printCompilerError(logln, err)
}
case loader.Error:
logln(err.Err.Error())
logln("package", err.ImportStack[0])
for _, pkgPath := range err.ImportStack[1:] {
logln("\timports", pkgPath)
}
case *builder.MultiError:
for _, err := range err.Errs {
printCompilerError(logln, err)
}
default:
logln("error:", err)
}
}
func handleCompilerError(err error) {
if err != nil {
printCompilerError(func(args ...interface{}) {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, args...)
}, err)
os.Exit(1)
}
}
// This is a special type for the -X flag to parse the pkgpath.Var=stringVal
// format. It has to be a special type to allow multiple variables to be defined
// this way.
type globalValuesFlag map[string]map[string]string
func (m globalValuesFlag) String() string {
return "pkgpath.Var=value"
}
func (m globalValuesFlag) Set(value string) error {
equalsIndex := strings.IndexByte(value, '=')
if equalsIndex < 0 {
return errors.New("expected format pkgpath.Var=value")
}
pathAndName := value[:equalsIndex]
pointIndex := strings.LastIndexByte(pathAndName, '.')
if pointIndex < 0 {
return errors.New("expected format pkgpath.Var=value")
}
path := pathAndName[:pointIndex]
name := pathAndName[pointIndex+1:]
stringValue := value[equalsIndex+1:]
if m[path] == nil {
m[path] = make(map[string]string)
}
m[path][name] = stringValue
return nil
}
// parseGoLinkFlag parses the -ldflags parameter. Its primary purpose right now
// is the -X flag, for setting the value of global string variables.
func parseGoLinkFlag(flagsString string) (map[string]map[string]string, error) {
set := flag.NewFlagSet("link", flag.ExitOnError)
globalVarValues := make(globalValuesFlag)
set.Var(globalVarValues, "X", "Set the value of the string variable to the given value.")
flags, err := shlex.Split(flagsString)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
err = set.Parse(flags)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return map[string]map[string]string(globalVarValues), nil
}
// getListOfPackages returns a standard list of packages for a given list that might
// include wildards using `go list`.
// For example [./...] => ["pkg1", "pkg1/pkg12", "pkg2"]
func getListOfPackages(pkgs []string, options *compileopts.Options) ([]string, error) {
config, err := builder.NewConfig(options)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
cmd, err := loader.List(config, nil, pkgs)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("failed to run `go list`: %w", err)
}
outputBuf := bytes.NewBuffer(nil)
cmd.Stdout = outputBuf
cmd.Stderr = os.Stderr
err = cmd.Run()
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
var pkgNames []string
sc := bufio.NewScanner(outputBuf)
for sc.Scan() {
pkgNames = append(pkgNames, sc.Text())
}
return pkgNames, nil
}
6 years ago
func main() {
if len(os.Args) < 2 {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "No command-line arguments supplied.")
usage("")
os.Exit(1)
}
command := os.Args[1]
opt := flag.String("opt", "z", "optimization level: 0, 1, 2, s, z")
gc := flag.String("gc", "", "garbage collector to use (none, leaking, conservative)")
panicStrategy := flag.String("panic", "print", "panic strategy (print, trap)")
scheduler := flag.String("scheduler", "", "which scheduler to use (none, tasks, asyncify)")
serial := flag.String("serial", "", "which serial output to use (none, uart, usb)")
work := flag.Bool("work", false, "print the name of the temporary build directory and do not delete this directory on exit")
interpTimeout := flag.Duration("interp-timeout", 180*time.Second, "interp optimization pass timeout")
6 years ago
printIR := flag.Bool("printir", false, "print LLVM IR")
dumpSSA := flag.Bool("dumpssa", false, "dump internal Go SSA")
verifyIR := flag.Bool("verifyir", false, "run extra verification steps on LLVM IR")
var tags buildutil.TagsFlag
flag.Var(&tags, "tags", "a space-separated list of extra build tags")
target := flag.String("target", "", "chip/board name or JSON target specification file")
var stackSize uint64
flag.Func("stack-size", "goroutine stack size (if unknown at compile time)", func(s string) error {
size, err := bytesize.Parse(s)
stackSize = uint64(size)
return err
})
printSize := flag.String("size", "", "print sizes (none, short, full)")
builder: try to determine stack size information at compile time For now, this is just an extra flag that can be used to print stack frame information, but this is intended to provide a way to determine stack sizes for goroutines at compile time in many cases. Stack sizes are often somewhere around 350 bytes so are in fact not all that big usually. Once this can be determined at compile time in many cases, it is possible to use this information when available and as a result increase the fallback stack size if the size cannot be determined at compile time. This should reduce stack overflows while at the same time reducing RAM consumption in many cases. Interesting output for testdata/channel.go: function stack usage (in bytes) Reset_Handler 332 .Lcommand-line-arguments.fastreceiver 220 .Lcommand-line-arguments.fastsender 192 .Lcommand-line-arguments.iterator 192 .Lcommand-line-arguments.main$1 184 .Lcommand-line-arguments.main$2 200 .Lcommand-line-arguments.main$3 200 .Lcommand-line-arguments.main$4 328 .Lcommand-line-arguments.receive 176 .Lcommand-line-arguments.selectDeadlock 72 .Lcommand-line-arguments.selectNoOp 72 .Lcommand-line-arguments.send 184 .Lcommand-line-arguments.sendComplex 192 .Lcommand-line-arguments.sender 192 .Lruntime.run$1 548 This shows that the stack size (if these numbers are correct) can in fact be determined automatically in many cases, especially for small goroutines. One of the great things about Go is lightweight goroutines, and reducing stack sizes is very important to make goroutines lightweight on microcontrollers.
4 years ago
printStacks := flag.Bool("print-stacks", false, "print stack sizes of goroutines")
printAllocsString := flag.String("print-allocs", "", "regular expression of functions for which heap allocations should be printed")
printCommands := flag.Bool("x", false, "Print commands")
parallelism := flag.Int("p", runtime.GOMAXPROCS(0), "the number of build jobs that can run in parallel")
nodebug := flag.Bool("no-debug", false, "strip debug information")
ocdCommandsString := flag.String("ocd-commands", "", "OpenOCD commands, overriding target spec (can specify multiple separated by commas)")
ocdOutput := flag.Bool("ocd-output", false, "print OCD daemon output during debug")
port := flag.String("port", "", "flash port (can specify multiple candidates separated by commas)")
timeout := flag.Duration("timeout", 20*time.Second, "the length of time to retry locating the MSD volume to be used for flashing")
programmer := flag.String("programmer", "", "which hardware programmer to use")
ldflags := flag.String("ldflags", "", "Go link tool compatible ldflags")
llvmFeatures := flag.String("llvm-features", "", "comma separated LLVM features to enable")
cpuprofile := flag.String("cpuprofile", "", "cpuprofile output")
monitor := flag.Bool("monitor", false, "enable serial monitor")
baudrate := flag.Int("baudrate", 115200, "baudrate of serial monitor")
6 years ago
var flagJSON, flagDeps, flagTest bool
if command == "help" || command == "list" || command == "info" || command == "build" {
flag.BoolVar(&flagJSON, "json", false, "print data in JSON format")
}
if command == "help" || command == "list" {
flag.BoolVar(&flagDeps, "deps", false, "supply -deps flag to go list")
flag.BoolVar(&flagTest, "test", false, "supply -test flag to go list")
}
var outpath string
if command == "help" || command == "build" || command == "build-library" || command == "test" {
flag.StringVar(&outpath, "o", "", "output filename")
}
var testConfig compileopts.TestConfig
if command == "help" || command == "test" {
flag.BoolVar(&testConfig.CompileOnly, "c", false, "compile the test binary but do not run it")
flag.BoolVar(&testConfig.Verbose, "v", false, "verbose: print additional output")
flag.BoolVar(&testConfig.Short, "short", false, "short: run smaller test suite to save time")
flag.StringVar(&testConfig.RunRegexp, "run", "", "run: regexp of tests to run")
flag.StringVar(&testConfig.SkipRegexp, "skip", "", "skip: regexp of tests to skip")
testConfig.Count = flag.Int("count", 1, "count: number of times to run tests/benchmarks `count` times")
flag.StringVar(&testConfig.BenchRegexp, "bench", "", "bench: regexp of benchmarks to run")
flag.StringVar(&testConfig.BenchTime, "benchtime", "", "run each benchmark for duration `d`")
flag.BoolVar(&testConfig.BenchMem, "benchmem", false, "show memory stats for benchmarks")
flag.StringVar(&testConfig.Shuffle, "shuffle", "", "shuffle the order the tests and benchmarks run")
}
// Early command processing, before commands are interpreted by the Go flag
// library.
switch command {
case "clang", "ld.lld", "wasm-ld":
err := builder.RunTool(command, os.Args[2:]...)
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, err)
os.Exit(1)
}
os.Exit(0)
}
flag.CommandLine.Parse(os.Args[2:])
globalVarValues, err := parseGoLinkFlag(*ldflags)
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, err)
os.Exit(1)
}
var printAllocs *regexp.Regexp
if *printAllocsString != "" {
printAllocs, err = regexp.Compile(*printAllocsString)
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, err)
os.Exit(1)
}
}
var ocdCommands []string
if *ocdCommandsString != "" {
ocdCommands = strings.Split(*ocdCommandsString, ",")
}
options := &compileopts.Options{
GOOS: goenv.Get("GOOS"),
GOARCH: goenv.Get("GOARCH"),
GOARM: goenv.Get("GOARM"),
Target: *target,
StackSize: stackSize,
Opt: *opt,
GC: *gc,
PanicStrategy: *panicStrategy,
Scheduler: *scheduler,
Serial: *serial,
Work: *work,
InterpTimeout: *interpTimeout,
PrintIR: *printIR,
DumpSSA: *dumpSSA,
VerifyIR: *verifyIR,
Semaphore: make(chan struct{}, *parallelism),
Debug: !*nodebug,
PrintSizes: *printSize,
PrintStacks: *printStacks,
PrintAllocs: printAllocs,
Tags: []string(tags),
TestConfig: testConfig,
GlobalValues: globalVarValues,
Programmer: *programmer,
OpenOCDCommands: ocdCommands,
LLVMFeatures: *llvmFeatures,
PrintJSON: flagJSON,
Monitor: *monitor,
BaudRate: *baudrate,
Timeout: *timeout,
}
if *printCommands {
options.PrintCommands = printCommand
}
6 years ago
err = options.Verify()
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, err.Error())
usage(command)
os.Exit(1)
}
if *cpuprofile != "" {
f, err := os.Create(*cpuprofile)
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "could not create CPU profile: ", err)
os.Exit(1)
}
defer f.Close()
if err := pprof.StartCPUProfile(f); err != nil {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "could not start CPU profile: ", err)
os.Exit(1)
}
defer pprof.StopCPUProfile()
}
// Limit the number of threads to one.
// This is an attempted workaround for the crashes we're seeing in CI on
// Windows. If this change helps, it indicates there is a concurrency issue.
// If it doesn't, then there is something else going on. Either way, this
// should be removed once the test is done.
if runtime.GOOS == "windows" {
runtime.GOMAXPROCS(1)
}
switch command {
case "build":
pkgName := "."
if flag.NArg() == 1 {
pkgName = filepath.ToSlash(flag.Arg(0))
} else if flag.NArg() > 1 {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "build only accepts a single positional argument: package name, but multiple were specified")
usage(command)
os.Exit(1)
}
if options.Target == "" && filepath.Ext(outpath) == ".wasm" {
main: refactor compile/link part to a builder package This is a large commit that moves all code directly related to compiling/linking into a new builder package. This has a number of advantages: * It cleanly separates the API between the command line and the full compilation (with a very small API surface). * When the compiler finally compiles one package at a time (instead of everything at once as it does now), something will have to invoke it once per package. This builder package will be the natural place to do that, and also be the place where the whole process can be parallelized. * It allows the TinyGo compiler to be used as a package. A client can simply import the builder package and compile code using it. As part of this refactor, the following additional things changed: * Exported symbols have been made unexported when they weren&#39;t needed. * The compilation target has been moved into the compileopts.Options struct. This is done because the target really is just another compiler option, and the API is simplified by moving it in there. * The moveFile function has been duplicated. It does not really belong in the builder API but is used both by the builder and the command line. Moving it into a separate package didn&#39;t seem useful either for what is essentially an utility function. * Some doc strings have been improved. Some future changes/refactors I&#39;d like to make after this commit: * Clean up the API between the builder and the compiler package. * Perhaps move the test files (in testdata/) into the builder package. * Perhaps move the loader package into the builder package.
5 years ago
options.Target = "wasm"
}
err := Build(pkgName, outpath, options)
handleCompilerError(err)
case "build-library":
// Note: this command is only meant to be used while making a release!
if outpath == "" {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "No output filename supplied (-o).")
usage(command)
os.Exit(1)
}
if *target == "" {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "No target (-target).")
}
if flag.NArg() != 1 {
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "Build-library only accepts exactly one library name as argument, %d given\n", flag.NArg())
usage(command)
os.Exit(1)
}
var lib *builder.Library
switch name := flag.Arg(0); name {
case "compiler-rt":
lib = &builder.CompilerRT
case "picolibc":
lib = &builder.Picolibc
default:
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "Unknown library: %s\n", name)
os.Exit(1)
}
tmpdir, err := os.MkdirTemp("", "tinygo*")
if err != nil {
handleCompilerError(err)
}
defer os.RemoveAll(tmpdir)
spec, err := compileopts.LoadTarget(options)
if err != nil {
handleCompilerError(err)
}
config := &compileopts.Config{
Options: options,
Target: spec,
}
path, err := lib.Load(config, tmpdir)
handleCompilerError(err)
err = copyFile(path, outpath)
if err != nil {
handleCompilerError(err)
}
case "flash", "gdb", "lldb":
pkgName := filepath.ToSlash(flag.Arg(0))
if command == "flash" {
err := Flash(pkgName, *port, options)
handleCompilerError(err)
} else {
if !options.Debug {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "Debug disabled while running debugger?")
usage(command)
os.Exit(1)
}
err := Debug(command, pkgName, *ocdOutput, options)
handleCompilerError(err)
}
case "run":
if flag.NArg() < 1 {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "No package specified.")
usage(command)
os.Exit(1)
}
pkgName := filepath.ToSlash(flag.Arg(0))
err := Run(pkgName, options, flag.Args()[1:])
handleCompilerError(err)
case "test":
var pkgNames []string
for i := 0; i < flag.NArg(); i++ {
pkgNames = append(pkgNames, filepath.ToSlash(flag.Arg(i)))
}
if len(pkgNames) == 0 {
pkgNames = []string{"."}
}
explicitPkgNames, err := getListOfPackages(pkgNames, options)
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("cannot resolve packages: %v\n", err)
os.Exit(1)
}
if outpath != "" && len(explicitPkgNames) > 1 {
fmt.Println("cannot use -o flag with multiple packages")
os.Exit(1)
}
fail := make(chan struct{}, 1)
var wg sync.WaitGroup
bufs := make([]testOutputBuf, len(explicitPkgNames))
for i := range bufs {
bufs[i].done = make(chan struct{})
}
wg.Add(1)
go func() {
defer wg.Done()
// Flush the output one test at a time.
// This ensures that outputs from different tests are not mixed together.
for i := range bufs {
err := bufs[i].flush(os.Stdout, os.Stderr)
if err != nil {
// There was an error writing to stdout or stderr, so we probbably cannot print this.
select {
case fail <- struct{}{}:
default:
}
}
}
}()
// Build and run the tests concurrently.
// This uses an additional semaphore to reduce the memory usage.
testSema := make(chan struct{}, cap(options.Semaphore))
for i, pkgName := range explicitPkgNames {
pkgName := pkgName
buf := &bufs[i]
testSema <- struct{}{}
wg.Add(1)
go func() {
defer wg.Done()
defer func() { <-testSema }()
defer close(buf.done)
stdout := (*testStdout)(buf)
stderr := (*testStderr)(buf)
passed, err := Test(pkgName, stdout, stderr, options, outpath)
if err != nil {
printCompilerError(func(args ...interface{}) {
fmt.Fprintln(stderr, args...)
}, err)
}
if !passed {
select {
case fail <- struct{}{}:
default:
}
}
}()
}
// Wait for all tests to finish.
wg.Wait()
close(fail)
if _, fail := <-fail; fail {
os.Exit(1)
}
case "monitor":
err := Monitor(*port, options)
handleCompilerError(err)
case "targets":
dir := filepath.Join(goenv.Get("TINYGOROOT"), "targets")
entries, err := ioutil.ReadDir(dir)
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "could not list targets:", err)
os.Exit(1)
return
}
for _, entry := range entries {
if !entry.Mode().IsRegular() || !strings.HasSuffix(entry.Name(), ".json") {
// Only inspect JSON files.
continue
}
path := filepath.Join(dir, entry.Name())
spec, err := compileopts.LoadTarget(&compileopts.Options{Target: path})
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "could not list target:", err)
os.Exit(1)
return
}
if spec.FlashMethod == "" && spec.FlashCommand == "" && spec.Emulator == "" {
// This doesn't look like a regular target file, but rather like
// a parent target (such as targets/cortex-m.json).
continue
}
name := entry.Name()
name = name[:len(name)-5]
fmt.Println(name)
}
case "info":
if flag.NArg() == 1 {
main: refactor compile/link part to a builder package This is a large commit that moves all code directly related to compiling/linking into a new builder package. This has a number of advantages: * It cleanly separates the API between the command line and the full compilation (with a very small API surface). * When the compiler finally compiles one package at a time (instead of everything at once as it does now), something will have to invoke it once per package. This builder package will be the natural place to do that, and also be the place where the whole process can be parallelized. * It allows the TinyGo compiler to be used as a package. A client can simply import the builder package and compile code using it. As part of this refactor, the following additional things changed: * Exported symbols have been made unexported when they weren&#39;t needed. * The compilation target has been moved into the compileopts.Options struct. This is done because the target really is just another compiler option, and the API is simplified by moving it in there. * The moveFile function has been duplicated. It does not really belong in the builder API but is used both by the builder and the command line. Moving it into a separate package didn&#39;t seem useful either for what is essentially an utility function. * Some doc strings have been improved. Some future changes/refactors I&#39;d like to make after this commit: * Clean up the API between the builder and the compiler package. * Perhaps move the test files (in testdata/) into the builder package. * Perhaps move the loader package into the builder package.
5 years ago
options.Target = flag.Arg(0)
} else if flag.NArg() > 1 {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "only one target name is accepted")
usage(command)
os.Exit(1)
}
main: refactor compile/link part to a builder package This is a large commit that moves all code directly related to compiling/linking into a new builder package. This has a number of advantages: * It cleanly separates the API between the command line and the full compilation (with a very small API surface). * When the compiler finally compiles one package at a time (instead of everything at once as it does now), something will have to invoke it once per package. This builder package will be the natural place to do that, and also be the place where the whole process can be parallelized. * It allows the TinyGo compiler to be used as a package. A client can simply import the builder package and compile code using it. As part of this refactor, the following additional things changed: * Exported symbols have been made unexported when they weren&#39;t needed. * The compilation target has been moved into the compileopts.Options struct. This is done because the target really is just another compiler option, and the API is simplified by moving it in there. * The moveFile function has been duplicated. It does not really belong in the builder API but is used both by the builder and the command line. Moving it into a separate package didn&#39;t seem useful either for what is essentially an utility function. * Some doc strings have been improved. Some future changes/refactors I&#39;d like to make after this commit: * Clean up the API between the builder and the compiler package. * Perhaps move the test files (in testdata/) into the builder package. * Perhaps move the loader package into the builder package.
5 years ago
config, err := builder.NewConfig(options)
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, err)
usage(command)
main: refactor compile/link part to a builder package This is a large commit that moves all code directly related to compiling/linking into a new builder package. This has a number of advantages: * It cleanly separates the API between the command line and the full compilation (with a very small API surface). * When the compiler finally compiles one package at a time (instead of everything at once as it does now), something will have to invoke it once per package. This builder package will be the natural place to do that, and also be the place where the whole process can be parallelized. * It allows the TinyGo compiler to be used as a package. A client can simply import the builder package and compile code using it. As part of this refactor, the following additional things changed: * Exported symbols have been made unexported when they weren&#39;t needed. * The compilation target has been moved into the compileopts.Options struct. This is done because the target really is just another compiler option, and the API is simplified by moving it in there. * The moveFile function has been duplicated. It does not really belong in the builder API but is used both by the builder and the command line. Moving it into a separate package didn&#39;t seem useful either for what is essentially an utility function. * Some doc strings have been improved. Some future changes/refactors I&#39;d like to make after this commit: * Clean up the API between the builder and the compiler package. * Perhaps move the test files (in testdata/) into the builder package. * Perhaps move the loader package into the builder package.
5 years ago
os.Exit(1)
}
main: refactor compile/link part to a builder package This is a large commit that moves all code directly related to compiling/linking into a new builder package. This has a number of advantages: * It cleanly separates the API between the command line and the full compilation (with a very small API surface). * When the compiler finally compiles one package at a time (instead of everything at once as it does now), something will have to invoke it once per package. This builder package will be the natural place to do that, and also be the place where the whole process can be parallelized. * It allows the TinyGo compiler to be used as a package. A client can simply import the builder package and compile code using it. As part of this refactor, the following additional things changed: * Exported symbols have been made unexported when they weren&#39;t needed. * The compilation target has been moved into the compileopts.Options struct. This is done because the target really is just another compiler option, and the API is simplified by moving it in there. * The moveFile function has been duplicated. It does not really belong in the builder API but is used both by the builder and the command line. Moving it into a separate package didn&#39;t seem useful either for what is essentially an utility function. * Some doc strings have been improved. Some future changes/refactors I&#39;d like to make after this commit: * Clean up the API between the builder and the compiler package. * Perhaps move the test files (in testdata/) into the builder package. * Perhaps move the loader package into the builder package.
5 years ago
config.GoMinorVersion = 0 // this avoids creating the list of Go1.x build tags.
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, err)
os.Exit(1)
}
cachedGOROOT, err := loader.GetCachedGoroot(config)
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, err)
os.Exit(1)
}
if flagJSON {
json, _ := json.MarshalIndent(struct {
GOROOT string `json:"goroot"`
GOOS string `json:"goos"`
GOARCH string `json:"goarch"`
GOARM string `json:"goarm"`
BuildTags []string `json:"build_tags"`
GC string `json:"garbage_collector"`
Scheduler string `json:"scheduler"`
LLVMTriple string `json:"llvm_triple"`
}{
GOROOT: cachedGOROOT,
GOOS: config.GOOS(),
GOARCH: config.GOARCH(),
GOARM: config.GOARM(),
BuildTags: config.BuildTags(),
GC: config.GC(),
Scheduler: config.Scheduler(),
LLVMTriple: config.Triple(),
}, "", " ")
fmt.Println(string(json))
} else {
fmt.Printf("LLVM triple: %s\n", config.Triple())
fmt.Printf("GOOS: %s\n", config.GOOS())
fmt.Printf("GOARCH: %s\n", config.GOARCH())
fmt.Printf("build tags: %s\n", strings.Join(config.BuildTags(), " "))
fmt.Printf("garbage collector: %s\n", config.GC())
fmt.Printf("scheduler: %s\n", config.Scheduler())
fmt.Printf("cached GOROOT: %s\n", cachedGOROOT)
}
case "list":
config, err := builder.NewConfig(options)
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, err)
usage(command)
os.Exit(1)
}
var extraArgs []string
if flagJSON {
extraArgs = append(extraArgs, "-json")
}
if flagDeps {
extraArgs = append(extraArgs, "-deps")
}
if flagTest {
extraArgs = append(extraArgs, "-test")
}
cmd, err := loader.List(config, extraArgs, flag.Args())
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "failed to run `go list`:", err)
os.Exit(1)
}
cmd.Stdout = os.Stdout
cmd.Stderr = os.Stderr
err = cmd.Run()
if err != nil {
if exitErr, ok := err.(*exec.ExitError); ok {
os.Exit(exitErr.ExitCode())
}
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "failed to run `go list`:", err)
os.Exit(1)
}
case "clean":
// remove cache directory
err := os.RemoveAll(goenv.Get("GOCACHE"))
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "cannot clean cache:", err)
os.Exit(1)
}
case "help":
command := ""
if flag.NArg() >= 1 {
command = flag.Arg(0)
}
usage(command)
case "version":
goversion := "<unknown>"
if s, err := goenv.GorootVersionString(goenv.Get("GOROOT")); err == nil {
goversion = s
}
version := goenv.Version
if strings.HasSuffix(goenv.Version, "-dev") && goenv.GitSha1 != "" {
version += "-" + goenv.GitSha1
}
fmt.Printf("tinygo version %s %s/%s (using go version %s and LLVM version %s)\n", version, runtime.GOOS, runtime.GOARCH, goversion, llvm.Version)
case "env":
if flag.NArg() == 0 {
// Show all environment variables.
for _, key := range goenv.Keys {
fmt.Printf("%s=%#v\n", key, goenv.Get(key))
}
} else {
// Show only one (or a few) environment variables.
for i := 0; i < flag.NArg(); i++ {
fmt.Println(goenv.Get(flag.Arg(i)))
}
}
default:
fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "Unknown command:", command)
usage("")
6 years ago
os.Exit(1)
}
}
// testOutputBuf is used to buffer the output of concurrent tests.
type testOutputBuf struct {
mu sync.Mutex
output []outputEntry
stdout, stderr io.Writer
outerr, errerr error
done chan struct{}
}
// flush the output to stdout and stderr.
// This waits until done is closed.
func (b *testOutputBuf) flush(stdout, stderr io.Writer) error {
b.mu.Lock()
var err error
b.stdout = stdout
b.stderr = stderr
for _, e := range b.output {
var w io.Writer
var errDst *error
if e.stderr {
w = stderr
errDst = &b.errerr
} else {
w = stdout
errDst = &b.outerr
}
if *errDst != nil {
continue
}
_, werr := w.Write(e.data)
if werr != nil {
if err == nil {
err = werr
}
*errDst = err
}
}
b.mu.Unlock()
<-b.done
return err
}
// testStdout writes stdout from a test to the output buffer.
type testStdout testOutputBuf
func (out *testStdout) Write(data []byte) (int, error) {
buf := (*testOutputBuf)(out)
buf.mu.Lock()
if buf.stdout != nil {
// Write the output directly.
err := out.outerr
buf.mu.Unlock()
if err != nil {
return 0, err
}
return buf.stdout.Write(data)
}
defer buf.mu.Unlock()
// Append the output.
if len(buf.output) == 0 || buf.output[len(buf.output)-1].stderr {
buf.output = append(buf.output, outputEntry{
stderr: false,
})
}
last := &buf.output[len(buf.output)-1]
last.data = append(last.data, data...)
return len(data), nil
}
// testStderr writes stderr from a test to the output buffer.
type testStderr testOutputBuf
func (out *testStderr) Write(data []byte) (int, error) {
buf := (*testOutputBuf)(out)
buf.mu.Lock()
if buf.stderr != nil {
// Write the output directly.
err := out.errerr
buf.mu.Unlock()
if err != nil {
return 0, err
}
return buf.stderr.Write(data)
}
defer buf.mu.Unlock()
// Append the output.
if len(buf.output) == 0 || !buf.output[len(buf.output)-1].stderr {
buf.output = append(buf.output, outputEntry{
stderr: true,
})
}
last := &buf.output[len(buf.output)-1]
last.data = append(last.data, data...)
return len(data), nil
}
type outputEntry struct {
stderr bool
data []byte
}