It seems to me this was simply forgotten.
Or there is some reason I don't know why this code doesn't work for `comptime_float`.
For a more comprehensive fix, https://github.com/ziglang/zig/pull/24057 is the place to look.
Like ELF, we now have `std.debug.MachOFile` for the host-independent
parts, and `std.debug.SelfInfo.MachO` for logic requiring the file to
correspond to the running program.
The build runner was previously forcing child processes to have their
stderr colorization match the build runner by setting `CLICOLOR_FORCE`
or `NO_COLOR`. This is a nice idea in some cases---for instance a simple
`Run` step which we just expect to exit with code 0 and whose stderr is
not being programmatically inspected---but is a bad idea in others, for
instance if there is a check on stderr or if stderr is captured, in
which case forcing color on the child could cause checks to fail.
Instead, this commit adds a field to `std.Build.Step.Run` which
specifies a behavior for the build runner to employ in terms of
assigning the `CLICOLOR_FORCE` and `NO_COLOR` environment variables. The
default behavior is to set `CLICOLOR_FORCE` if the build runner's output
is colorized and the step's stderr is not captured, and to set
`NO_COLOR` otherwise. Alternatively, colors can be always enabled,
always disabled, always match the build runner, or the environment
variables can be left untouched so they can be manually controlled
through `env_map`.
Notably, this fixes a failure when running `zig build test-cli` in a
TTY (or with colors explicitly enabled). GitHub CI hadn't caught this
because it does not request color, but Codeberg CI now does, and we were
seeing a failure in the `zig init` test because the actual output had
color escape codes in it due to 6d280dc.
`std.Io.tty.Config.detect` may be an expensive check (e.g. involving
syscalls), and doing it every time we need to print isn't really
necessary; under normal usage, we can compute the value once and cache
it for the whole program's execution. Since anyone outputting to stderr
may reasonably want this information (in fact they are very likely to),
it makes sense to cache it and return it from `lockStderrWriter`. Call
sites who do not need it will experience no significant overhead, and
can just ignore the TTY config with a `const w, _` destructure.
This is a major refactor to `Step.Run` which adds new functionality,
primarily to the execution of Zig tests.
* All tests are run, even if a test crashes. This happens through the
same mechanism as timeouts where the test processes is repeatedly
respawned as needed.
* The build status output is more precise. For each unit test, it
differentiates pass, skip, fail, crash, and timeout. Memory leaks are
reported separately, as they do not indicate a test's "status", but
are rather an additional property (a test with leaks may still pass!).
* The number of memory leaks is tracked and reported, both per-test and
for a whole `Run` step.
* Reporting is made clearer when a step is failed solely due to error
logs (`std.log.err`) where every unit test passed.
For now, there is a flag to `zig build` called `--test-timeout-ms` which
accepts a value in milliseconds. If the execution time of any individual
unit test exceeds that number of milliseconds, the test is terminated
and marked as timed out.
In the future, we may want to increase the granularity of this feature
by allowing timeouts to be specified per-step or even per-test. However,
a global option is actually very useful. In particular, it can be used
in CI scripts to ensure that no individual unit test exceeds some
reasonable limit (e.g. 60 seconds) without having to assign limits to
every individual test step in the build script.
Also, individual unit test durations are now shown in the time report
web interface -- this was fairly trivial to add since we're timing tests
(to check for timeouts) anyway.
This commit makes progress on #19821, but does not close it, because
that proposal includes a more sophisticated mechanism for setting
timeouts.
Co-Authored-By: David Rubin <david@vortan.dev>
Adds the limit option to `--fuzz=[limit]`. the limit expresses a number
of iterations that *each fuzz test* will perform at maximum before
exiting. The limit argument supports also 'K', 'M', and 'G' suffixeds
(e.g. '10K').
Does not imply `--web-ui` (like unlimited fuzzing does) and prints a
fuzzing report at the end.
Closes#22900 but does not implement the time based limit, as after
internal discussions we concluded to be problematic to both implement
and use correctly.
Adds `addFileContentArg` and `addPrefixedFileContentArg` to pass the content
of a file with a lazy path as an argument to a `std.Build.Step.Run`.
This enables replicating shell `$()` / cmake `execute_process` with `OUTPUT_VARIABLE`
as an input to another `execute_process` in conjuction with `captureStdOut`/`captureStdErr`.
To also be able to replicate `$()` automatically trimming trailing newlines and cmake
`OUTPUT_STRIP_TRAILING_WHITESPACE`, this patch adds an `options` arg to those functions
which allows specifying the desired handling of surrounding whitespace.
The `options` arg also allows to specify a custom `basename` for the output. e.g.
to add a file extension (concrete use case: Zig `@import()` requires files to have a
`.zig`/`.zon` extension to recognize them as valid source files).
Fixes#23993
Previously, if multiple build processes tried to create the same args file, there was a race condition with the use of the non-atomic `writeFile` function which could cause a spawned compiler to read an empty or incomplete args file. This commit avoids the race condition by first writing to a temporary file with a random path and renaming it to the desired path.
Writer.sendFileAll() asserts non-zero buffer capacity in the case that
the fallback is hit. It also requires the caller to flush. The buffer
may be bypassed as an optimization but this is not a guarantee.
Also improve the Writer documentation and add an earlier assert on
buffer capacity in sendFileAll().
This "get" is useless noise and was copied from FixedBufferWriter.
Since this API has not yet landed in a release, now is a good time
to make the breaking change to fix this.