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bazel-lib/lib/private/copy_file.bzl

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# Copyright 2019 The Bazel Authors. All rights reserved.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
# LOCAL MODIFICATIONS
# this has two PRs patched in on top of the original
# https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel-skylib/blob/7b859037a673db6f606661323e74c5d4751595e6/rules/private/copy_file_private.bzl
# 1) https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel-skylib/pull/323
# 2) https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel-skylib/pull/324
"""Implementation of copy_file macro and underlying rules.
These rules copy a file or directory to another location using Bash (on Linux/macOS) or
cmd.exe (on Windows). `_copy_xfile` marks the resulting file executable,
`_copy_file` does not.
"""
# Hints for Bazel spawn strategy
_execution_requirements = {
# Copying files is entirely IO-bound and there is no point doing this work remotely.
# Also, remote-execution does not allow source directory inputs, see
# https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel/commit/c64421bc35214f0414e4f4226cc953e8c55fa0d2
# So we must not attempt to execute remotely in that case.
"no-remote-exec": "1",
}
def _hash_file(file):
return str(hash(file.path))
# buildifier: disable=function-docstring
def copy_cmd(ctx, src, dst):
# Most Windows binaries built with MSVC use a certain argument quoting
# scheme. Bazel uses that scheme too to quote arguments. However,
# cmd.exe uses different semantics, so Bazel's quoting is wrong here.
# To fix that we write the command to a .bat file so no command line
# quoting or escaping is required.
# Put a hash of the file name into the name of the generated batch file to
# make it unique within the package, so that users can define multiple copy_file's.
bat = ctx.actions.declare_file("%s-%s-cmd.bat" % (ctx.label.name, _hash_file(src)))
# Flags are documented at
# https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-server/administration/windows-commands/copy
# https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-server/administration/windows-commands/robocopy
# NB: robocopy return non-zero exit codes on success so we must exit 0 after calling it
if dst.is_directory:
cmd_tmpl = "@robocopy \"{src}\" \"{dst}\" /E >NUL & @exit 0"
mnemonic = "CopyDirectory"
progress_message = "Copying directory %s" % src.path
else:
cmd_tmpl = "@copy /Y \"{src}\" \"{dst}\" >NUL"
mnemonic = "CopyFile"
progress_message = "Copying file %s" % src.path
ctx.actions.write(
output = bat,
# Do not use lib/shell.bzl's shell.quote() method, because that uses
# Bash quoting syntax, which is different from cmd.exe's syntax.
content = cmd_tmpl.format(
src = src.path.replace("/", "\\"),
dst = dst.path.replace("/", "\\"),
),
is_executable = True,
)
ctx.actions.run(
inputs = [src],
tools = [bat],
outputs = [dst],
executable = "cmd.exe",
arguments = ["/C", bat.path.replace("/", "\\")],
mnemonic = mnemonic,
progress_message = progress_message,
use_default_shell_env = True,
execution_requirements = _execution_requirements,
)
# buildifier: disable=function-docstring
def copy_bash(ctx, src, dst):
if dst.is_directory:
cmd_tmpl = "rm -rf \"$2\" && cp -rf \"$1/\" \"$2\""
mnemonic = "CopyDirectory"
progress_message = "Copying directory"
else:
cmd_tmpl = "cp -f \"$1\" \"$2\""
mnemonic = "CopyFile"
progress_message = "Copying file"
ctx.actions.run_shell(
tools = [src],
outputs = [dst],
command = cmd_tmpl,
arguments = [src.path, dst.path],
mnemonic = mnemonic,
progress_message = progress_message,
use_default_shell_env = True,
execution_requirements = _execution_requirements,
)
def _copy_file_impl(ctx):
# When creating a directory, declare that to Bazel so downstream rules
# see it as a TreeArtifact and handle correctly, e.g. for remote execution
if getattr(ctx.attr, "is_directory", False):
output = ctx.actions.declare_directory(ctx.attr.out)
else:
output = ctx.outputs.out
if ctx.attr.allow_symlink:
if output.is_directory:
fail("Cannot use both is_directory and allow_symlink")
ctx.actions.symlink(
output = output,
target_file = ctx.file.src,
is_executable = ctx.attr.is_executable,
)
elif ctx.attr.is_windows:
copy_cmd(ctx, ctx.file.src, output)
else:
copy_bash(ctx, ctx.file.src, output)
files = depset(direct = [output])
runfiles = ctx.runfiles(files = [output])
if ctx.attr.is_executable:
return [DefaultInfo(files = files, runfiles = runfiles, executable = output)]
else:
return [DefaultInfo(files = files, runfiles = runfiles)]
_ATTRS = {
"src": attr.label(mandatory = True, allow_single_file = True),
"is_windows": attr.bool(mandatory = True),
"is_executable": attr.bool(mandatory = True),
"allow_symlink": attr.bool(mandatory = True),
}
_copy_directory = rule(
implementation = _copy_file_impl,
provides = [DefaultInfo],
attrs = dict(_ATTRS, **{
"is_directory": attr.bool(default = True),
# Cannot declare out as an output here, because there's no API for declaring
# TreeArtifact outputs.
"out": attr.string(mandatory = True),
}),
)
_copy_file = rule(
implementation = _copy_file_impl,
provides = [DefaultInfo],
attrs = dict(_ATTRS, **{
"out": attr.output(mandatory = True),
}),
)
_copy_xfile = rule(
implementation = _copy_file_impl,
executable = True,
provides = [DefaultInfo],
attrs = dict(_ATTRS, **{
"out": attr.output(mandatory = True),
}),
)
def copy_file(name, src, out, is_directory = False, is_executable = False, allow_symlink = False, **kwargs):
"""Copies a file or directory to another location.
`native.genrule()` is sometimes used to copy files (often wishing to rename them). The 'copy_file' rule does this with a simpler interface than genrule.
This rule uses a Bash command on Linux/macOS/non-Windows, and a cmd.exe command on Windows (no Bash is required).
If using this rule with source directories, it is recommended that you use the
`--host_jvm_args=-DBAZEL_TRACK_SOURCE_DIRECTORIES=1` startup option so that changes
to files within source directories are detected. See
https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel/commit/c64421bc35214f0414e4f4226cc953e8c55fa0d2
for more context.
Args:
name: Name of the rule.
src: A Label. The file or directory to make a copy of.
(Can also be the label of a rule that generates a file or directory.)
out: Path of the output file, relative to this package.
is_directory: treat the source file as a directory
Workaround for https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel/issues/12954
is_executable: A boolean. Whether to make the output file executable. When
True, the rule's output can be executed using `bazel run` and can be
in the srcs of binary and test rules that require executable sources.
WARNING: If `allow_symlink` is True, `src` must also be executable.
allow_symlink: A boolean. Whether to allow symlinking instead of copying.
When False, the output is always a hard copy. When True, the output
*can* be a symlink, but there is no guarantee that a symlink is
created (i.e., at the time of writing, we don't create symlinks on
Windows). Set this to True if you need fast copying and your tools can
handle symlinks (which most UNIX tools can).
**kwargs: further keyword arguments, e.g. `visibility`
"""
copy_file_impl = _copy_file
if is_executable:
copy_file_impl = _copy_xfile
elif is_directory:
copy_file_impl = _copy_directory
copy_file_impl(
name = name,
src = src,
out = out,
is_windows = select({
"@bazel_tools//src/conditions:host_windows": True,
"//conditions:default": False,
}),
is_executable = is_executable,
allow_symlink = allow_symlink,
**kwargs
)