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Single profile for build dependencies #1774
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Yeah I've often wondered this in the past as well. I feel like choosing debug is the right default (most build scripts are not cpu bound) with the ability to tweak it (e.g. |
I discovered an inter-related problem. It could be regarded as a different bug. Let me know. I'm pretty sure that build dependencies should disregard both the profile (as above) and the target. An example failure follows. As you can see, This kind of surprises me, and makes me wonder if I'm doing something wrong. Have people simply not been using cargo for cross-compiles with build dependencies? In this case, it's just x86 on x86_64, but how would an ARM build work on x86_64 with build dependencies built for ARM? Oh, by the way, in this case
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I think this problem is orthogonal to build dependencies, but the problem you're seeing is that your compiler cannot target 32-bit windows because you're missing the standard library. Each Rust installation comes with a set of folders for the targets it has libraries for, and if these aren't present then there truly is no standard library to link against. For any cross compilation scenario the first step is to ensure that you have those dependencies (e.g. std and everything under the facade). We plan on making this much easier to do in the future, so stay tuned! |
That makes total sense for dependencies, but shouldn't build dependencies be built for the current machine (i.e. without Aha! Now that I look more closely, I notice that immediate build dependencies are built without But in the previous log, 🥚 👉 😵 Damn it. I didn't disable the non-build dependency. Sorry.
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Profile Overrides (RFC #2282 Part 1) Profile Overrides (RFC #2282 Part 1) WIP: Putting this up before I dig into writing tests, but should be mostly complete. I also have a variety of questions below. This implements the ability to override profiles for dependencies and build scripts. This includes a general rework of how profiles work internally. Closes #5298. Profile overrides are available with `profile-overrides` set in `cargo-features` in the manifest. Part 2 is to implement profiles in config files (to be in a separate PR). General overview of changes: - `Profiles` moved to `core/profiles.rs`. All profile selection is centralized there. - Removed Profile flags `test`, `doc`, `run_custom_build`, and `check`. - Removed `Profile` from `Unit` and replaced it with two enums: `CompileMode` and `ProfileFor`. This is the minimum information needed to compute profiles at a later stage. - Also removed `rustc_args`/`rustdoc_args` from `Profile` and place them in `Context`. This is currently not very elegant because it is a special case, but it works. An alternate solution I considered was to leave them in the `Profile` and add a special uber-override layer. Let me know if you think it should change. - Did some general cleanup in `generate_targets`. ## Misc Fixes - `cargo check` now honors the `--release` flag. Fixes #5218. - `cargo build --test` will set `panic` correctly for dependences. Fixes #5369. - `cargo check --tests` will no longer include bins twice (once as a normal check, once as a `--test` check). It only does `--test` check now. - Similarly, `cargo check --test name` no longer implicitly checks bins. - Examples are no longer considered a "test". (See #5397). Consequences: - `cargo test` will continue to build examples as a regular build (no change). - `cargo test --tests` will no longer build examples at all. - `cargo test --all-targets` will no longer build examples as tests, but instead build them as a regular build (now matches `cargo test` behavior). - `cargo check --all-targets` will no longer check examples twice (once as normal, once as `--test`). It now only checks it once as a normal target. ## Questions - Thumbs up/down on the general approach? - The method to detect if a package is a member of a workspace should probably be redone. I'm uncertain of the best approach. Maybe `Workspace.members` could be a set? - `Hash` and `PartialEq` are implemented manually for `Profile` only to avoid matching on the `name` field. The `name` field is only there for debug purposes. Is it worth it to keep `name`? Maybe useful for future use (like #4140)? - I'm unhappy with the `Finished` line summary that displays `[unoptimized + debuginfo]`. It doesn't actually show what was compiled. Currently it just picks the base "dev" or "release" profile. I'm not sure what a good solution is (to be accurate it would need to potentially display a list of different options). Is it ok? (See also #4140 for the wrong profile name being printed.) - Build-dependencies use different profiles based on whether or not `--release` flag is given. This means that if you want build-dependencies to always use a specific set of settings, you have to specify both `[profile.dev.build_override]` and `[profile.release.build_override]`. Is that reasonable (for now)? I've noticed some issues (like #1774, #2234, #2424) discussing having more control over how build-dependencies are handled. - `build --bench xxx` or `--benches` builds dependencies with dev profile, which may be surprising. `--release` does the correct thing. Perhaps print a warning when using `cargo build` that builds benchmark deps in dev mode? - Should it warn/error if you have an override for a package that does not exist? - Should it warn/error if you attempt to set `panic` on the `test` or `bench` profile? ## TODO - I have a long list of tests to add. - Address a few "TODO" comments left behind.
I've just noticed that build dependencies are currently rebuilt for each profile (or at least
debug
andrelease
, I haven't noticed what happens for the others).That's fine for a little build helper like gcc, but painful for bindgen (mainly due to syntex_syntax build time).
Are there circumstances in which the build dependency build profile is relevant to the main project build? I could very well be missing something here.
If it's never relevant, then having to rebuild all your build dependencies for each profile is a (minor) pain.
Potential solutions:
Only build the build dependencies once…
release
profile.debug
profile.build
profile, configured in the project'sCargo.toml
like the others (and choose defaults from the above, I guess).Thoughts?
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