@tar.bzl//tar:mtree.bzl
Helpers for mtree(8), see https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?mtree(8)
Mutating the tar contents
The mtree_spec rule can be used to create an mtree manifest for the tar file.
Then you can mutate that spec using mtree_mutate and feed the result
as the mtree attribute of the tar rule.
For example, to set the owner uid of files in the tar, you could:
_TAR_SRCS = ["//some:files"] mtree_spec( name = "mtree", srcs = _TAR_SRCS, ) mtree_mutate( name = "change_owner", mtree = ":mtree", owner = "1000", ) tar( name = "tar", srcs = _TAR_SRCS, mtree = "change_owner", )
Functions & Macros
mtree_mutateModify metadata in an mtree file.
Parameters
*name | name of the target, output will be |
*mtree | input mtree file, typically created by |
srcs | list of files to resolve symlinks for. Default: None |
preserve_symlinks |
Default: False |
strip_prefix | prefix to remove from all paths in the tar. Files and directories not under this prefix are dropped. Default: None |
package_dir | directory prefix to add to all paths in the tar. Default: None |
mtime | new modification time for all entries. Default: None |
owner | new uid for all entries. Default: None |
ownername | new uname for all entries. Default: None |
awk_script | may be overridden to change the script containing the modification logic. Default: Label("//tar/private:modify_mtree.awk") |
kwargs | additional named parameters to genrule |
mutateFactory function to make a partially-applied mtree_mutate rule.
Parameters
kwargs |
Rules
mtree_specCreate an mtree specification to map a directory hierarchy. See https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?mtree(8)
| Attribute | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
*name | name | A unique name for this target. |
srcs | list of labels | Files that are placed into the tar Default: [] |
out | label | Resulting specification file to write Default: None |
include_runfiles | boolean | Include the runfiles tree in the resulting mtree for targets that are executable. The runfiles are in the paths that Bazel uses. For example, for the Default: True |
@tar.bzl//tar:tar.bzl
API for calling tar, see https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?tar(1)
Load from:
load("@tar.bzl", "tar")
Examples
Build this target to produce archive.tar:
tar( name = "archive", srcs = ["my-file.txt"], )
Mutations allow modification of the archive's structure. For example to strip the package name:
load("@tar.bzl", "mutate", "tar") tar( name = "new", srcs = ["my-file.txt"], # See arguments documented at # https://github.com/bazel-contrib/tar.bzl/blob/main/docs/mtree.md#mtree_mutate mutate = mutate(strip_prefix = package_name()), )
Functions & Macros
tar_lib.common.add_compression_argsParameters
*compress | |
*args |
tar_lib.implementationParameters
*ctx |
tar_lib.mtree_implementationParameters
*ctx |
tarWrapper macro around tar_rule.
Options for mtree
mtree provides the "specification" or manifest of a tar file.
See https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?mtree(8)
Because BSD tar doesn't have a flag to set modification times to a constant,
we must always supply an mtree input to get reproducible builds.
See https://reproducible-builds.org/docs/archives/ for more explanation.
-
By default, mtree is "auto" which causes the macro to create an
mtree_specrule. -
mtreemay be supplied as an array literal of lines, e.g.
mtree =[
"usr/bin uid=0 gid=0 mode=0755 type=dir",
"usr/bin/ls uid=0 gid=0 mode=0755 time=0 type=file content={}/a".format(package_name()),
],
For the format of a line, see "There are four types of lines in a specification" on the man page for BSD mtree,
https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?mtree(8)
mtreemay be a label of a file containing the specification lines.
Parameters
*name | name of resulting |
mtree | "auto", or an array of specification lines, or a label of a file that contains the lines. Default: "auto" |
mutate | a partially-applied Default: None |
include_runfiles | When using "auto" mtree, this controls whether to include runfiles. If mtree is supplied as an array literal of lines, you are already hardcoding list of included files. When mtree is a label, you need to set include_runfiles in mtree_specs. Default: None |
stamp | should mtree attribute be stamped Default: 0 |
kwargs | additional named parameters to pass to |
Rules
tar_ruleRule that executes BSD tar. Most users should use the tar macro, rather than load this directly.
| Attribute | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
*name | name | A unique name for this target. |
args | list of strings | Additional flags permitted by BSD tar; see the man page. Default: [] |
srcs | list of labels | Files, directories, or other targets whose default outputs are placed into the tar. If any of the srcs are binaries with runfiles, those are copied into the resulting tar as well. Default: [] |
mode | string | A mode indicator from the following list, copied from the tar manpage:
Other modes may be added in the future. Default: "create" |
*mtree | label | An mtree specification file |
out | label | Resulting tar file to write. If absent, Default: None |
compress | string | Compress the archive file with a supported algorithm. Default: "" |
compressor | label | External tool which can compress the archive. Default: None |
compressor_args | string | Arg list for Default: "" |
compute_unused_inputs | integer | Whether to discover and prune input files that will not contribute to the archive. Unused inputs are discovered by comparing the set of input files in Benefits: pruning unused input files can reduce the amount of work the build system must Risks: pruning an actually-used input file can lead to unexpected, incorrect results. The Possible values: Default: -1 |