Bug 1568994 moved the URL for the update server to application.ini. Thunderbird
uses a different hostname for the update URL; the URL path is the same.
I've added a set_config('MOZ_APPUPDATE_HOST') to Thunderbird's moz.configure
file which will override the default.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D70964
This commit removes `test_fix_stack_using_bpsyms.py`. That test can't easily be
modified to work with `fix_stacks.py` because it relies on internal
implementation details of `fix_stack_using_bpsym.py`. The unit testing done in
the `fix-stacks` repo provides test coverage that is as good or better.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D66924
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
This is being added to facilitate moving generation of the update URL to Rust (Bug 1567286). Once that has been completed, we should be able to remove the update URL from its current location in firefox.js so that it is not being duplicated in application.ini.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D43300
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
Remove the remainder of automation.py.in and the build support for generating
automation.py.
Some of this functionality was in use, especially for android tests.
Some code was moved or re-implemented in remoteautomation.py or in the affected
harness(es). Some features were removed: There are some minor changes in behavior.
For instance, instead of using a different server startup timeout for debug builds,
one value is used for all builds (due to performance improvements over time,
the longer timeout is no longer needed).
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D66839
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
Dictionary iteration under Python 3 is in an inherently unpredictable order, and while we try to keep DEFINES ordered through the use of OrderedDicts, if at any point we populate DEFINES directly or indirectly while iterating through the contents of a non-ordered dictionary, the order of the DEFINES (and therefore the contents of the output Makefile) will be nondeterministic as well. This patch makes a number of changes to ensure that we only ever populate DEFINES in a deterministic fashion. (Note that in Python 3.7 and later, the built-in dict class actually has deterministic ordering, so these changes are technically only necessary until our minimum Python version becomes 3.7.)
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D66089
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
Dictionary iteration under Python 3 is in an inherently unpredictable order, and while we try to keep DEFINES ordered through the use of OrderedDicts, if at any point we populate DEFINES directly or indirectly while iterating through the contents of a non-ordered dictionary, the order of the DEFINES (and therefore the contents of the output Makefile) will be nondeterministic as well. This patch makes a number of changes to ensure that we only ever populate DEFINES in a deterministic fashion. (Note that in Python 3.7 and later, the built-in dict class actually has deterministic ordering, so these changes are technically only necessary until our minimum Python version becomes 3.7.)
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D66089
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
On Linux and Mac, this makes `dmd.py` *much* faster when it is first run on a
DMD data file.
On Windows, this makes DMD actually usable locally. Previously the stacks
weren't fixed and so were rubbish.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D57271
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
GENERATED_FILES now defaults to python3 unless py2=True is specified as
an argument. All existing GENERATED_FILES scripts and GeneratedFile
templates have the py2=True attribute added, so this patch should
effectively be a no-op.
Going forward, individual scripts can be converted to python3 and their
corresponding py2=True attribute can be deleted. In effect, this patch
will be backed out in pieces until all scripts run in python3, at which
point the py2 attribute itself can be removed.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D60919
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
GENERATED_FILES now defaults to python3 unless py2=True is specified as
an argument. All existing GENERATED_FILES scripts and GeneratedFile
templates have the py2=True attribute added, so this patch should
effectively be a no-op.
Going forward, individual scripts can be converted to python3 and their
corresponding py2=True attribute can be deleted. In effect, this patch
will be backed out in pieces until all scripts run in python3, at which
point the py2 attribute itself can be removed.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D60919
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
GENERATED_FILES now defaults to python3 unless py2=True is specified as
an argument. All existing GENERATED_FILES scripts and GeneratedFile
templates have the py2=True attribute added, so this patch should
effectively be a no-op.
Going forward, individual scripts can be converted to python3 and their
corresponding py2=True attribute can be deleted. In effect, this patch
will be backed out in pieces until all scripts run in python3, at which
point the py2 attribute itself can be removed.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D60919
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
The current setup uses different ways for different platforms, with
different workarounds, even using extra configuration items for Windows.
Now that there can't be a difference between the host per the build
system and the host per rust, we can get rid of those configuration
items, and use a more common infrastructure.
We cannot, however, avoid using wrapper scripts, because per-target rust
link-arg flags don't work up great.
The downside is that multiplies the number of wrappers, as we now have
to have a different one for host and target, and then we have .bat files
and shell scripts for, respectively, Windows hosts, and other hosts.
Depends on D24321
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D24322
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
The current setup uses different ways for different platforms, with
different workarounds, even using extra configuration items for Windows.
Now that there can't be a difference between the host per the build
system and the host per rust, we can get rid of those configuration
items, and use a more common infrastructure.
We cannot, however, avoid using wrapper scripts, because per-target rust
link-arg flags don't work up great.
The downside is that multiplies the number of wrappers, as we now have
to have a different one for host and target, and then we have .bat files
and shell scripts for, respectively, Windows hosts, and other hosts.
Depends on D24321
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D24322
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
We want annotationProcessors to be compiled and archived into a JAR at
build time, ready to generate JNI wrappers. (That is, until we turn
the whole thing into a real annotation processor.) But even if we do
use a real annotation processor, we still need to generate SDK
bindings, which is less clearly expressed as an annotation processor.
(It's more of a build step.)
Gradle provides a huge number of ways to organize build logic to
achieve this: see
https://docs.gradle.org/current/userguide/organizing_build_logic.html.
Unfortunately, the best such way -- putting the code into
$topsrcdir/buildSrc -- has key disadvantages:
1) it pollutes the top-level $topsrcdir, and there's no way to change the
location of buildSrc (https://github.com/gradle/gradle/issues/2472);
2) it's complicated to have a dependent project
(mobile/android/annotations) expose its code via a buildSrc project;
3) using buildSrc at all appears to conflict with the Android-Gradle
plugin version that we are using.
Therefore, this commit does something much simpler: it adds a
Java-only project and uses the resulting Gradle "Jar" task and archive
output as input to the existing Gradle "generate JNI wrappers" task.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 2OyYLPneE1M
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : d99b74a0a1e0bb3e8f4d4540978328388e5c2e42
This commit also removes "DEFAULT_APP", which is unused.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 5YYaC5LJqUn
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 45f0f8f11698890fae0dcca71174f88dbdb412c8
This commit also removes "DEFAULT_APP", which is unused.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 5YYaC5LJqUn
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 11a5264758ab3b2d8faef1e50a666981988457f2
Now that XPT files are not loaded from files at runtime, code for
packaging XPT files can be removed.
This means that a couple of test XPIDL interfaces will get shipped in
builds to users that weren't before, but I don't think that matters
much.
This also puts XPT files into the local objdir for the XPIDL makefile,
instead of dist/bin, because they are no longer part of the
distribution.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 7gWj8KWUun3
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 65bac47c2cd1a20b3c675a01b44a25a1d2d3ab7a
Now that XPT files are not loaded from files at runtime, code for
packaging XPT files can be removed.
This means that a couple of test XPIDL interfaces will get shipped in
builds to users that weren't before, but I don't think that matters
much.
This also puts XPT files into the local objdir for the XPIDL makefile,
instead of dist/bin, because they are no longer part of the
distribution.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 7gWj8KWUun3
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 6f7d4fd1d6cdea2c14866705a2dc972eb5f43382
The MACHTYPE bash variable is an odd thing that returns e.g.
x86_64-redhat-linux-gnu on a CentOS system, but x86_64-pc-linux-gnu
on a Debian system, and possibly something different on other distros.
mach valgrind-test is the only place actually relying on MACHTYPE.
Others rely on information from python modules. Uniformize that, and use
the more generic 'pc' rather than 'redhat'.
--HG--
rename : build/valgrind/i386-redhat-linux-gnu.sup => build/valgrind/i386-pc-linux-gnu.sup
rename : build/valgrind/x86_64-redhat-linux-gnu.sup => build/valgrind/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu.sup
extra : rebase_source : ad94ce69e8094d2b9ddae97a3d261945886c0a61
This marks **/docs/** as exclusively docs, and code that is autodoc'd as
inclusively docs.
That means that a change that purely modifies documentation files will *only*
run `docs` tasks, while a change that modifies autodoc'd source code will
*additionaly* run `docs` tasks. The tasks do not run by default.
MozReview-Commit-ID: G9tOK0AwtrI
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 8dd971e5c9b0eb5f47895664a4ea49442f303ecb
extra : source : 0881de9b2b5e36ec37cc866f1d4af109da57a919
This marks **/docs/** as exclusively docs, and code that is autodoc'd as
inclusively docs.
That means that a change that purely modifies documentation files will *only*
run `docs` tasks, while a change that modifies autodoc'd source code will
*additionaly* run `docs` tasks. The tasks do not run by default.
MozReview-Commit-ID: G9tOK0AwtrI
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 8dd971e5c9b0eb5f47895664a4ea49442f303ecb
extra : source : 0881de9b2b5e36ec37cc866f1d4af109da57a919
This marks **/docs/** as exclusively docs, and code that is autodoc'd as
inclusively docs.
That means that a change that purely modifies documentation files will *only*
run `docs` tasks, while a change that modifies autodoc'd source code will
*additionaly* run `docs` tasks. The tasks do not run by default.
MozReview-Commit-ID: G9tOK0AwtrI
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 8dd971e5c9b0eb5f47895664a4ea49442f303ecb
extra : source : 0881de9b2b5e36ec37cc866f1d4af109da57a919
We currently use a 32-bit Rust toolchain for win32 builds, but this can lead
to OOM situations. This patch makes win32 builds use a 64-bit Rust toolchain,
which requires a little bit of extra configuration because rustc needs to
be able to find a link.exe that produces 64-bit binaries for building
things like build scripts, which are host binaries.
We will now generate a batch file that sets LIB to the paths to 64-bit
libraries and invokes the x64-targeting link.exe, and add a section to the
.cargo/config file to instruct cargo to use that batch file as the linker
when producing 64-bit binaries.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 9vKBbm7Gvra
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 599b3b661c7a8a5db1f32a2a9732fc202fb55e1e
We add a simple cram test that `configure --help` works.
I added the test to build/tests because I'm not sure where else it should go.
This test uncovers a few interesting things:
1) piping `./configure --help` to `head` directly causes a Python
traceback (presumably due to the pipe disappearing once N lines
have been read)
2) "checking for vcs source checkout" is printed for --help
3) It is printed twice (!!)
These will be addressed later. Establishing test coverage is
more important.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 9zQ5X8ulTkc
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : aaf660152cdfe37580f559976bca13ea9bf14c49