These two dependencies are optional but enabled by default when
available. Disable them in the Makefile so that the tinygo binary is
portable to systems that don't have them or have a different version
(for example, Arch has a newer version of libcurses and thus libtinfo).
Adds another example showing the simple case
of executing main, adds a README explaining how
everything fits together and how to execute the compiled
code in the browser. Include a minimal webserver for
local testing.
This replaces the older way which just does the following:
go install .
and
go test -v .
Instead, `make` and `make test` will now build TinyGo statically linked
against LLVM, so that `go install` and `go test -v` should be used
manually.
The ar file format is pretty simple and can be implemented by using a Go
library. Use that instead of calling out to llvm-ar.
There are a few limitations to the used package, but that doesn't seem
to matter for our use case (linking compiler-rt for use with ld.lld):
* no index is created
* long filenames are truncated
* no support for archives bigger than 4GB
This provides several advantages. Among others:
* Much faster and hopefully more reliable.
* Good caching support to store LLVM builds.
* Building and testing of release-ready artifacts.
LLD version 8 has added support for armv6m:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D55555
This means we can use LLD instead of arm-none-eabi-ld, eliminating our
dependency on GNU binutils.
There are small differences in code size, but never more than a few
bytes.
This commit does a few things:
* remove the -8 suffix on macOS, where it is not necessary
* add smoke tests for compiling wasm files on Linux and macOS
CircleCI is faster and has more features than Travis CI. Additionally,
based on the recent news, the future of Travis CI is rather uncertain.
Keep using Travis CI for macOS testing at the moment, as open source
projects will need to get special permission to use CircleCI for macOS
tests.