Jisi Liu
6a59ac94e1
|
8 years ago | |
---|---|---|
.. | ||
Dockerfile | 9 years ago | |
README.md | 9 years ago | |
build-protoc.sh | 8 years ago | |
build-zip.sh | 8 years ago | |
pom.xml | 9 years ago |
README.md
Build scripts that publish pre-compiled protoc artifacts
protoc
is the compiler for .proto
files. It generates language bindings
for the messages and/or RPC services from .proto
files.
Because protoc
is a native executable, the scripts under this directory
build and publish a protoc
executable (a.k.a. artifact) to Maven
repositories. The artifact can be used by build automation tools so that users
would not need to compile and install protoc
for their systems.
Versioning
The version of the protoc
artifact must be the same as the version of the
Protobuf project.
Artifact name
The name of a published protoc
artifact is in the following format:
protoc-<version>-<os>-<arch>.exe
, e.g., protoc-3.0.0-alpha-3-windows-x86_64.exe
.
System requirement
Install Apache Maven if you don't have it.
The scripts only work under Unix-like environments, e.g., Linux, MacOSX, and
Cygwin or MinGW for Windows. Please see README.md
of the Protobuf project
for how to set up the build environment.
Building from a freshly checked-out source
If you just checked out the Protobuf source from github, you need to generate the configure script.
Under the protobuf project directory:
$ ./autogen.sh && ./configure && make
To install artifacts locally
The following command will install the protoc
artifact to your local Maven repository.
$ mvn install
Cross-compilation
The Maven script will try to detect the OS and the architecture from Java system properties. It's possible to build a protoc binary for an architecture that is different from what Java has detected, as long as you have the proper compilers installed.
You can override the Maven properties os.detected.name
and
os.detected.arch
to force the script to generate binaries for a specific OS
and/or architecture. Valid values are defined as the return values of
normalizeOs()
and normalizeArch()
of Detector
from
os-maven-plugin.
Frequently used values are:
os.detected.name
:linux
,osx
,windows
.os.detected.arch
:x86_32
,x86_64
For example, MinGW32 only ships with 32-bit compilers, but you can still build 32-bit protoc under 64-bit Windows, with the following command:
$ mvn install -Dos.detected.arch=x86_32
To push artifacts to Maven Central
Before you can upload artifacts to Maven Central repository, make sure you have read this page on how to configure GPG and Sonatype account.
You need to perform the deployment for every platform that you want to support. DO NOT close the staging repository until you have done the deployment for all platforms. Currently the following platforms are supported:
- Linux (x86_32 and x86_64)
- Windows (x86_32 and x86_64) with
- Cygwin64 with MinGW compilers (x86_64)
- MSYS with MinGW32 (x86_32)
- MacOSX (x86_32 and x86_64)
As for MSYS2/MinGW64 for Windows: protoc will build, but it insists on
adding a dependency of libwinpthread-1.dll
, which isn't shipped with
Windows.
Use the following command to deploy artifacts for the host platform to a staging repository.
$ mvn clean deploy -P release
It creates a new staging repository. Go to
https://oss.sonatype.org/#stagingRepositories and find the repository, usually
in the name like comgoogle-123
.
You will want to run this command on a different platform. Remember, in subsequent deployments you will need to provide the repository name that you have found in the first deployment so that all artifacts go to the same repository:
$ mvn clean deploy -P release -Dstaging.repository=comgoogle-123
A 32-bit artifact can be deployed from a 64-bit host with
-Dos.detected.arch=x86_32
When you have done deployment for all platforms, go to https://oss.sonatype.org/#stagingRepositories, verify that the staging repository has all the binaries, close and release this repository.
Upload zip packages to github release page.
After uploading protoc artifacts to Maven Central repository, run the build-zip.sh script to bulid zip packages for these protoc binaries and upload these zip packages to the download section of the github release. For example:
$ ./build-zip.sh 3.0.0-beta-4
The above command will create 5 zip files:
dist/protoc-3.0.0-beta-4-win32.zip
dist/protoc-3.0.0-beta-4-osx-x86_32.zip
dist/protoc-3.0.0-beta-4-osx-x86_64.zip
dist/protoc-3.0.0-beta-4-linux-x86_32.zip
dist/protoc-3.0.0-beta-4-linux-x86_64.zip
Before running the script, make sure the artifacts are accessible from: http://repo1.maven.org/maven2/com/google/protobuf/protoc/
Tips for deploying on Linux
We build on Centos 6.6 to provide a good compatibility for not very new
systems. We have provided a Dockerfile
under this directory to build the
environment. It has been tested with Docker 1.6.1.
To build a image:
$ docker build -t protoc-artifacts .
To run the image:
$ docker run -it --rm=true protoc-artifacts
The Protobuf repository has been cloned into /protobuf
.
Tips for deploying on Windows
Under Windows the following error may occur: gpg: cannot open tty `no tty': No such file or directory
. This can be fixed by configuring gpg through an
active profile in .m2\settings.xml
where also the Sonatype password is
stored:
<settings>
<servers>
<server>
<id>sonatype-nexus-staging</id>
<username>[username]</username>
<password>[password]</password>
</server>
</servers>
<profiles>
<profile>
<id>gpg</id>
<properties>
<gpg.executable>gpg</gpg.executable>
<gpg.passphrase>[password]</gpg.passphrase>
</properties>
</profile>
</profiles>
<activeProfiles>
<activeProfile>gpg</activeProfile>
</activeProfiles>
</settings>
Tested build environments
We have successfully built artifacts on the following environments:
- Linux x86_32 and x86_64:
- Centos 6.6 (within Docker 1.6.1)
- Ubuntu 14.04.2 64-bit
- Windows x86_32: MSYS with
mingw32-gcc-g++ 4.8.1-4
on Windows 7 64-bit - Windows x86_64: Cygwin64 with
mingw64-x86_64-gcc-g++ 4.8.3-1
on Windows 7 64-bit - Mac OS X x86_32 and x86_64: Mac OS X 10.9.5