mirror of
https://github.com/Llewellynvdm/exa.git
synced 2024-11-22 12:05:11 +00:00
76 lines
3.0 KiB
Bash
76 lines
3.0 KiB
Bash
set -e
|
||
|
||
# This script builds a publishable release-worthy version of exa.
|
||
# It gets the version number, builds exa using cargo, tests it, strips the
|
||
# binary, compresses it into a zip, then puts it in /vagrant so it’s
|
||
# accessible from the host machine.
|
||
#
|
||
# If you’re in the VM, you can run it using the ‘package-exa’ command.
|
||
|
||
|
||
# Linux check!
|
||
uname=`uname -s`
|
||
if [[ "$uname" != "Linux" ]]; then
|
||
echo "Gotta be on Linux to run this (detected '$uname')!"
|
||
exit 1
|
||
fi
|
||
|
||
# First, we need to get the version number to figure out what to call the zip.
|
||
# We do this by getting the first line from the Cargo.toml that matches
|
||
# /version/, removing its whitespace, and building a command out of it, so the
|
||
# shell executes something like `exa_version="0.8.0"`, which it understands as
|
||
# a variable definition. Hey, it’s not a hack if it works.
|
||
toml_file="/vagrant/Cargo.toml"
|
||
eval exa_$(grep version $toml_file | head -n 1 | sed "s/ //g")
|
||
if [ -z "$exa_version" ]; then
|
||
echo "Failed to parse version number! Can't build exa!"
|
||
exit 1
|
||
fi
|
||
|
||
# Weekly builds have a bit more information in their version number (see build.rs).
|
||
if [[ "$1" == "--weekly" ]]; then
|
||
git_hash=`GIT_DIR=/vagrant/.git git rev-parse --short --verify HEAD`
|
||
date=`date +"%Y-%m-%d"`
|
||
echo "Building exa weekly v$exa_version, date $date, Git hash $git_hash"
|
||
else
|
||
echo "Building exa v$exa_version"
|
||
fi
|
||
|
||
# Compilation is done in --release mode, which takes longer but produces a
|
||
# faster binary. This binary gets built to a different place, so the extended
|
||
# tests script needs to be told which one to use.
|
||
echo -e "\n\033[4mCompiling release version of exa...\033[0m"
|
||
exa_linux_binary="/vagrant/exa-linux-x86_64"
|
||
rm -vf "$exa_linux_binary"
|
||
cargo build --release --manifest-path "$toml_file"
|
||
cargo test --release --manifest-path "$toml_file" --lib -- --quiet
|
||
/vagrant/xtests/run.sh --release
|
||
cp /home/vagrant/target/release/exa "$exa_linux_binary"
|
||
|
||
# Stripping the binary before distributing it removes a bunch of debugging
|
||
# symbols, saving some space.
|
||
echo -e "\n\033[4mStripping binary...\033[0m"
|
||
strip -v "$exa_linux_binary"
|
||
|
||
# Compress the binary for upload. The ‘-j’ flag is necessary to avoid the
|
||
# /vagrant path being in the zip too. Only the zip gets the version number, so
|
||
# the binaries can have consistent names, and it’s still possible to tell
|
||
# different *downloads* apart.
|
||
echo -e "\n\033[4mZipping binary...\033[0m"
|
||
if [[ "$1" == "--weekly" ]]
|
||
then exa_linux_zip="/vagrant/exa-linux-x86_64-${exa_version}-${date}-${git_hash}.zip"
|
||
else exa_linux_zip="/vagrant/exa-linux-x86_64.zip"
|
||
fi
|
||
rm -vf "$exa_linux_zip"
|
||
zip -j "$exa_linux_zip" "$exa_linux_binary"
|
||
|
||
# There was a problem a while back where a library was getting unknowingly
|
||
# *dynamically* linked, which broke the whole ‘self-contained binary’ concept.
|
||
# So dump the linker table, in case anything unscrupulous shows up.
|
||
echo -e "\n\033[4mLibraries linked:\033[0m"
|
||
ldd "$exa_linux_binary" | sed "s/\t//"
|
||
|
||
# Might as well use it to test itself, right?
|
||
echo -e "\n\033[4mAll done! Files produced:\033[0m"
|
||
"$exa_linux_binary" "$exa_linux_binary" "$exa_linux_zip" -lB
|