The C based gRPC (C++, Python, Ruby, Objective-C, PHP, C#) https://grpc.io/
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# Third-party libraries
gRPC depends on several third-party libraries, their source code is available
(usually as a git submodule) in this directory.
## Guidelines on updating submodules
- IMPORTANT: whenever possible, try to only update to a stable release of a library (= not to master / random commit). Depending on unreleased revisions
makes gRPC installation harder for users, as it forces them to always build the dependency from source and prevents them from using more
convenient installation channels (linux packages, package managers etc.)
- bazel BUILD uses a different dependency model - whenever updating a submodule, also update the revision in `grpc_deps.bzl` so that bazel and
non-bazel builds stay in sync (this is actually enforced by a sanity check in some cases)
## Considerations when adding a new third-party dependency
- gRPC C++ needs to stay buildable/installable even if the submodules are not present (e.g. the tar.gz archive with gRPC doesn't contain the submodules),
assuming that the dependencies are already installed. This is a requirement for being able to provide a reasonable install process (e.g. using cmake)
and to support package managers for gRPC C++.
- Adding a new dependency is a lot of work (both for us and for the users).
We currently support multiple build systems (BAZEL, cmake, make, ...) so adding a new dependency usually requires updates in multiple build systems
(often not trivial). The installation process also needs to continue to work (we do have distrib tests to test many of the possible installation scenarios,
but they are not perfect). Adding a new dependency also usually affects the installation instructions that need to be updated.
Also keep in mind that adding a new dependency can be quite disruptive
for the users and community - it means that all users will need to update their projects accordingly (for C++ projects often non-trivial) and
the community-provided C++ packages (e.g. vcpkg) will need to be updated as well.
## Checklist for adding a new third-party dependency
**READ THIS BEFORE YOU ADD A NEW DEPENDENCY**
- [ ] Make sure you understand the hidden costs of adding a dependency (see section above) and that you understand the complexities of updating the build files. Maintenance of the build files isn't for free, so expect to be involved in maintenance tasks, cleanup and support (e.g resolving user bugs) of the build files in the future.
- [ ] Once your change is ready, start an [adhoc run of artifact - packages - distribtests flow](https://fusion.corp.google.com/projectanalysis/summary/KOKORO/prod%3Agrpc%2Fcore%2Fexperimental%2Fgrpc_build_artifacts_multiplatform) and make sure everything passes (for technical reasons, not all the distribtests can run on each PR automatically).
- [ ] Check the impact of the new dependency on the size of our distribution packages (compare BEFORE and AFTER) and post the comparison on your PR (it should not be approved without checking the impact sizes of packages first). The package sizes AFTER can be obtained from the adhoc package build from bullet point above.
## Instructions for updating dependencies
Usually the process is
1. update the submodule to selected commit (see guidance above)
2. update the dependency in `grpc_deps.bzl` to the same commit
3. update `tools/run_tests/sanity/check_submodules.sh` to make the sanity test pass
4. (when needed) run `tools/buildgen/generate_projects.sh` to regenerate the generated files
5. populate the bazel download mirror by running `bazel/update_mirror.sh`
Updating some dependencies requires extra care.
### Updating third_party/abseil-cpp
- Two additional steps should be done before running `generate_projects.sh` above.
- Running `src/abseil-cpp/preprocessed_builds.yaml.gen.py`.
- Updating `abseil_version =` scripts in `templates/gRPC-C++.podspec.template` and
`templates/gRPC-Core.podspec.template`.
- You can see an example of previous [upgrade](https://github.com/grpc/grpc/pull/24270).
### Updating third_party/boringssl-with-bazel
NOTE: updating the boringssl dependency is now part of the internal grpc release tooling (see [go/grpc-release](http://go/grpc-release)).
Prefer using the release tooling when possible. The instructions below are provided as a reference and aren't guaranteed to be up-to-date.
- Update the `third_party/boringssl-with-bazel` submodule to the latest [`master-with-bazel`](https://github.com/google/boringssl/tree/master-with-bazel) branch
```
git submodule update --init # just to start in a clean state
cd third_party/boringssl-with-bazel
git fetch origin # fetch what's new in the boringssl repository
git checkout origin/master-with-bazel # checkout the current state of master-with-bazel branch in the boringssl repo
# Note the latest commit SHA on master-with-bazel branch
cd ../.. # go back to grpc repo root
git status # will show that there are new commits in third_party/boringssl-with-bazel
git add third_party/boringssl-with-bazel # we actually want to update the changes to the submodule
git commit -m "update submodule boringssl-with-bazel with origin/master-with-bazel" # commit
```
- Update boringssl dependency in `bazel/grpc_deps.bzl` to the same commit SHA as master-with-bazel branch
- Update `http_archive(name = "boringssl",` section by updating the sha in `strip_prefix` and `urls` fields.
4 years ago
- Also, set `sha256` field to "" as the existing value is not valid. This will be added later once we know what that value is.
- Update `tools/run_tests/sanity/check_submodules.sh` with the same commit
- Commit these changes `git commit -m "update boringssl dependency to master-with-bazel commit SHA"`
- Run `tools/buildgen/generate_projects.sh` to regenerate the generated files
- Because `sha256` in `bazel/grpc_deps.bzl` was left empty, you will get a DEBUG msg like this one:
```
Rule 'boringssl' indicated that a canonical reproducible form can be obtained by modifying arguments sha256 = "SHA value"
```
- Commit the regenrated files `git commit -m "regenerate files"`
- Update `bazel/grpc_deps.bzl` with the SHA value shown in the above debug msg. Commit again `git commit -m "Updated sha256"`
- Run `tools/distrib/generate_boringssl_prefix_header.sh`
- Commit again `git commit -m "generate boringssl prefix headers"`
- Increment the boringssl podspec version number in
`templates/src/objective-c/BoringSSL-GRPC.podspec.template` and `templates/gRPC-Core.podspec.template`.
[example](https://github.com/grpc/grpc/pull/21527/commits/9d4411842f02f167209887f1f3d2b9ab5d14931a)
- Commit again `git commit -m "Increment podspec version"`
- Run `tools/buildgen/generate_projects.sh` (yes, again)
- Commit again `git commit -m "Second regeneration"`
- Create a PR with all the above commits.
- Run `bazel/update_mirror.sh` to update GCS mirror.
### Updating third_party/protobuf
Updating the protobuf dependency is now part of the internal release process (see [go/grpc-release](http://go/grpc-release)).
### Updating third_party/envoy-api
Apart from the above steps, please run `tools/codegen/core/gen_upb_api.sh` to regenerate upb files.
In addition, please perform the following two steps to generate the Python `xds-protos` package:
1. Bump the version in the `tools/distrib/python/xds_protos/setup.py`;
2. Run `tools/distrib/python/xds_protos/build_validate_upload.sh` to upload the built wheel.
### Updating third_party/upb
Since upb is vendored in the gRPC repo, you cannot use submodule to update it. Please follow the steps below;
1. Update third_party/upb directory by running
- `export GRPC_ROOT=~/git/grpc`
- `wget https://github.com/protocolbuffers/upb/archive/refs/heads/main.zip`
- `rm -rf $GRPC_ROOT/third_party/upb`
- `unzip main.zip -d $GRPC_ROOT/third_party`
- `mv $GRPC_ROOT/third_party/upb-main $GRPC_ROOT/third_party/upb`
2. Update the dependency in `grpc_deps.bzl` to the same commit
3. Populate the bazel download mirror by running `bazel/update_mirror.sh`
[protobuf] Upgrade third_party/protobuf to 22.x (#32606) The very non-trivial upgrade of third_party/protobuf to 22.x This PR strives to be as small as possible and many changes that were compatible with protobuf 21.x and didn't have to be merged atomically with the upgrade were already merged. Due to the complexity of the upgrade, this PR wasn't created automatically by a tool, but manually. Subsequent upgraded of third_party/protobuf with our OSS release script should work again once this change is merged. This is best reviewed commit-by-commit, I tried to group changes in logical areas. Notable changes: - the upgrade of third_party/protobuf submodule, the bazel protobuf dependency itself - upgrade of UPB dependency to 22.x (in the past, we used to always upgrade upb to "main", but upb now has release branch as well). UPB needs to be upgraded atomically with protobuf since there's a de-facto circular dependency (new protobuf depends on new upb, which depends on new protobuf for codegen). - some protobuf and upb bazel rules are now aliases, so ` extract_metadata_from_bazel_xml.py` and `gen_upb_api_from_bazel_xml.py` had to be modified to be able to follow aliases and reach the actual aliased targets. - some protobuf public headers were renamed, so especially `src/compiler` needed to be updated to use the new headers. - protobuf and upb now both depend on utf8_range project, so since we bundle upb with grpc in some languages, we now have to bundle utf8_range as well (hence changes in build for python, PHP, objC, cmake etc). - protoc now depends on absl and utf8_range (previously protobuf had absl dependency, but not for the codegen part), so python's make_grpcio_tools.py required partial rewrite to be able to handle those dependencies in the grpcio_tools build. - many updates and fixes required for C++ distribtests (currently they all pass, but we'll probably need to follow up, make protobuf's and grpc's handling of dependencies more aligned and revisit the distribtests) - bunch of other changes mostly due to overhaul of protobuf's and upb's internal build layout. TODOs: - [DONE] make sure IWYU and clang_tidy_code pass - create a list of followups (e.g. work to reenable the few tests I had to disable and to remove workaround I had to use) - [DONE in cl/523706129] figure out problem(s) with internal import --------- Co-authored-by: Craig Tiller <ctiller@google.com>
2 years ago
4. Inspect `src/upb/gen_build_yaml.py` and update it with added or removed upb files
- Running `cd third_party/upb; bazel query "deps(upb) union deps(json) union deps(textformat)"`
would give some idea on what needs to be included.
5. Run `tools/buildgen/generate_projects.sh` to regenerate the generated files
6. Run `tools/codegen/core/gen_upb_api.sh` to regenerate upb files.
### Updating third_party/utf8_range
```
# set to wherever your grpc repo lives
export GRPC_ROOT=~/git/grpc
wget https://github.com/protocolbuffers/utf8_range/archive/refs/heads/main.zip
rm -rf $GRPC_ROOT/third_party/utf8_range
unzip main.zip -d $GRPC_ROOT/third_party
mv $GRPC_ROOT/third_party/utf8_range-main $GRPC_ROOT/third_party/utf8_range
```
### Updating third_party/xxhash
TODO(https://github.com/Cyan4973/xxHash/issues/548): revisit LICENSE
instructions if upstream splits library and CLI.
The upstream xxhash repository contains a bunch of files that we don't want, so
we employ a rather manual update flow to pick up just the bits we care about:
```
git remote add xxhash https://github.com/Cyan4973/xxHash.git
git fetch xxhash
git show xxhash/dev:xxhash.h > third_party/xxhash/xxhash.h
git show xxhash/dev:LICENSE | sed -nE '/^-+$/q;p' > third_party/xxhash/LICENSE
```