Abseil Common Libraries (C++) (grcp 依赖)
https://abseil.io/
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167 lines
8.8 KiB
167 lines
8.8 KiB
# Abseil FAQ |
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## Is Abseil the right home for my utility library? |
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Most often the answer to the question is "no." As both the [About |
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Abseil](https://abseil.io/about/) page and our [contributing |
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guidelines](https://github.com/abseil/abseil-cpp/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md#contribution-guidelines) |
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explain, Abseil contains a variety of core C++ library code that is widely used |
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at [Google](https://www.google.com/). As such, Abseil's primary purpose is to be |
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used as a dependency by Google's open source C++ projects. While we do hope that |
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Abseil is also useful to the C++ community at large, this added constraint also |
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means that we are unlikely to accept a contribution of utility code that isn't |
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already widely used by Google. |
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## How to I set the C++ dialect used to build Abseil? |
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The short answer is that whatever mechanism you choose, you need to make sure |
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that you set this option consistently at the global level for your entire |
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project. If, for example, you want to set the C++ dialect to C++17, with |
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[Bazel](https://bazel/build/) as the build system and `gcc` or `clang` as the |
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compiler, there several ways to do this: |
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* Pass `--cxxopt=-std=c++17` on the command line (for example, `bazel build |
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--cxxopt=-std=c++17 ...`) |
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* Set the environment variable `BAZEL_CXXOPTS` (for example, |
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`BAZEL_CXXOPTS=-std=c++17`) |
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* Add `build --cxxopt=-std=c++17` to your [`.bazelrc` |
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file](https://docs.bazel.build/versions/master/guide.html#bazelrc) |
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If you are using CMake as the build system, you'll need to add a line like |
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`set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 17)` to your top level `CMakeLists.txt` file. If you |
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are developing a library designed to be used by other clients, you should |
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instead leave `CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD` unset and configure the minimum C++ standard |
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required by each of your library targets via `target_compile_features`. See the |
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[CMake build |
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instructions](https://github.com/abseil/abseil-cpp/blob/master/CMake/README.md) |
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for more information. |
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For a longer answer to this question and to understand why some other approaches |
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don't work, see the answer to ["What is ABI and why don't you recommend using a |
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pre-compiled version of |
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Abseil?"](#what-is-abi-and-why-dont-you-recommend-using-a-pre-compiled-version-of-abseil) |
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## What is ABI and why don't you recommend using a pre-compiled version of Abseil? |
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For the purposes of this discussion, you can think of |
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[ABI](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Application_binary_interface) as the |
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compiled representation of the interfaces in code. This is in contrast to |
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[API](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Application_programming_interface), which |
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you can think of as the interfaces as defined by the code itself. [Abseil has a |
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strong promise of API compatibility, but does not make any promise of ABI |
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compatibility](https://abseil.io/about/compatibility). Let's take a look at what |
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this means in practice. |
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You might be tempted to do something like this in a |
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[Bazel](https://bazel.build/) `BUILD` file: |
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``` |
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# DON'T DO THIS!!! |
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cc_library( |
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name = "my_library", |
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srcs = ["my_library.cc"], |
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copts = ["-std=c++17"], # May create a mixed-mode compile! |
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deps = ["@com_google_absl//absl/strings"], |
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) |
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``` |
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Applying `-std=c++17` to an individual target in your `BUILD` file is going to |
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compile that specific target in C++17 mode, but it isn't going to ensure the |
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Abseil library is built in C++17 mode, since the Abseil library itself is a |
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different build target. If your code includes an Abseil header, then your |
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program may contain conflicting definitions of the same |
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class/function/variable/enum, etc. As a rule, all compile options that affect |
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the ABI of a program need to be applied to the entire build on a global basis. |
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C++ has something called the [One Definition |
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Rule](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One_Definition_Rule) (ODR). C++ doesn't |
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allow multiple definitions of the same class/function/variable/enum, etc. ODR |
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violations sometimes result in linker errors, but linkers do not always catch |
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violations. Uncaught ODR violations can result in strange runtime behaviors or |
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crashes that can be hard to debug. |
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If you build the Abseil library and your code using different compile options |
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that affect ABI, there is a good chance you will run afoul of the One Definition |
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Rule. Examples of GCC compile options that affect ABI include (but aren't |
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limited to) language dialect (e.g. `-std=`), optimization level (e.g. `-O2`), |
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code generation flags (e.g. `-fexceptions`), and preprocessor defines |
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(e.g. `-DNDEBUG`). |
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If you use a pre-compiled version of Abseil, (for example, from your Linux |
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distribution package manager or from something like |
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[vcpkg](https://github.com/microsoft/vcpkg)) you have to be very careful to |
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ensure ABI compatibility across the components of your program. The only way you |
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can be sure your program is going to be correct regarding ABI is to ensure |
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you've used the exact same compile options as were used to build the |
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pre-compiled library. This does not mean that Abseil cannot work as part of a |
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Linux distribution since a knowledgeable binary packager will have ensured that |
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all packages have been built with consistent compile options. This is one of the |
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reasons we warn against - though do not outright reject - using Abseil as a |
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pre-compiled library. |
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Another possible way that you might afoul of ABI issues is if you accidentally |
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include two versions of Abseil in your program. Multiple versions of Abseil can |
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end up within the same binary if your program uses the Abseil library and |
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another library also transitively depends on Abseil (resulting in what is |
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sometimes called the diamond dependency problem). In cases such as this you must |
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structure your build so that all libraries use the same version of Abseil. |
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[Abseil's strong promise of API compatibility between |
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releases](https://abseil.io/about/compatibility) means the latest "HEAD" release |
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of Abseil is almost certainly the right choice if you are doing as we recommend |
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and building all of your code from source. |
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For these reasons we recommend you avoid pre-compiled code and build the Abseil |
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library yourself in a consistent manner with the rest of your code. |
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## What is "live at head" and how do I do it? |
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From Abseil's point-of-view, "live at head" means that every Abseil source |
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release (which happens on an almost daily basis) is either API compatible with |
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the previous release, or comes with an automated tool that you can run over code |
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to make it compatible. In practice, the need to use an automated tool is |
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extremely rare. This means that upgrading from one source release to another |
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should be a routine practice that can and should be performed often. |
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We recommend you update to the [latest commit in the `master` branch of |
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Abseil](https://github.com/abseil/abseil-cpp/commits/master) as often as |
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possible. Not only will you pick up bug fixes more quickly, but if you have good |
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automated testing, you will catch and be able to fix any [Hyrum's |
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Law](https://www.hyrumslaw.com/) dependency problems on an incremental basis |
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instead of being overwhelmed by them and having difficulty isolating them if you |
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wait longer between updates. |
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If you are using the [Bazel](https://bazel.build/) build system and its |
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[external dependencies](https://docs.bazel.build/versions/master/external.html) |
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feature, updating the |
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[`http_archive`](https://docs.bazel.build/versions/master/repo/http.html#http_archive) |
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rule in your |
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[`WORKSPACE`](https://docs.bazel.build/versions/master/be/workspace.html) for |
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`com_google_abseil` to point to the [latest commit in the `master` branch of |
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Abseil](https://github.com/abseil/abseil-cpp/commits/master) is all you need to |
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do. For example, on February 11, 2020, the latest commit to the master branch |
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was `98eb410c93ad059f9bba1bf43f5bb916fc92a5ea`. To update to this commit, you |
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would add the following snippet to your `WORKSPACE` file: |
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``` |
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http_archive( |
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name = "com_google_absl", |
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urls = ["https://github.com/abseil/abseil-cpp/archive/98eb410c93ad059f9bba1bf43f5bb916fc92a5ea.zip"], # 2020-02-11T18:50:53Z |
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strip_prefix = "abseil-cpp-98eb410c93ad059f9bba1bf43f5bb916fc92a5ea", |
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sha256 = "aabf6c57e3834f8dc3873a927f37eaf69975d4b28117fc7427dfb1c661542a87", |
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) |
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``` |
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To get the `sha256` of this URL, run `curl -sL --output - |
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https://github.com/abseil/abseil-cpp/archive/98eb410c93ad059f9bba1bf43f5bb916fc92a5ea.zip |
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| sha256sum -`. |
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You can commit the updated `WORKSPACE` file to your source control every time |
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you update, and if you have good automated testing, you might even consider |
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automating this. |
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One thing we don't recommend is using GitHub's `master.zip` files (for example |
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[https://github.com/abseil/abseil-cpp/archive/master.zip](https://github.com/abseil/abseil-cpp/archive/master.zip)), |
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which are always the latest commit in the `master` branch, to implement live at |
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head. Since these `master.zip` URLs are not versioned, you will lose build |
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reproducibility. In addition, some build systems, including Bazel, will simply |
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cache this file, which means you won't actually be updating to the latest |
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release until your cache is cleared or invalidated.
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