tree: 161e564f3fe350ce119207559cf07f659823b7e3 [path history] [tgz]
  1. rustup/
  2. build-in-container.py
  3. container-build-image.py
  4. Dockerfile
  5. llvm-rename.sh
  6. README.md
floss/build/README.md

Container build for Floss

This repo contains the Container-image build rule, used to generate the (docker/podman) container image necessary to build Floss. If building a new docker/podman image, run container-build-image.py with the tag floss:latest.

Container binary: setting up podman (default)

On most Debian based machines, you should be able to simply use apt-get and install these requisite packages.

sudo apt-get install \
  podman \
  uidmap

Then, we need to set up podman for rootless mode:

sudo usermod --add-subuids 10000-75535 USERNAME
sudo usermod --add-subgids 10000-75535 USERNAME

Container binary: setting up docker (alternative)

Follow the installation instructions at: https://docs.docker.com/engine/install/, such as https://docs.docker.com/engine/install/debian/.

Also consider configuring Docker to run in rootless mode: https://docs.docker.com/engine/security/rootless/

Generating the floss-build image

Run the following to generate the required image:

container-build-image.py --tag floss:latest

If you use the docker binary, add the flag: --use-docker when running container-build-image.py.

This uses the default tag of floss:latest so you don't have to provide it specifically when invoking build-in-container.py.

Using the container image to build

Once the container image is built (and assuming it's tagged as floss:latest), you should use the build-in-container.py script to build the current repo.

Basic build:

build-in-container.py

This script will use the local floss:latest (or pull it from the registry), mount (or create) the floss-out volume to /root/.floss and the current source to /root/src before running these commands in the container:

  • cd /root/src
  • ./build.py --run-bootstrap
  • ./build.py --libdir=/usr/lib/x86-64_linux_gnu/

If you want to run the build more quickly (or pass other commands), run build-in-container.py --only-start. This will only start the container for you (doing the correct mounts) and will print the commands it would have run via <container_binary> exec normally.