1# The MB (Meta-Build wrapper) user guide 2 3[TOC] 4 5## Introduction 6 7`mb` is a simple python wrapper around the GYP and GN meta-build tools to 8be used as part of the GYP->GN migration. 9 10It is intended to be used by bots to make it easier to manage the configuration 11each bot builds (i.e., the configurations can be changed from chromium 12commits), and to consolidate the list of all of the various configurations 13that Chromium is built in. 14 15Ideally this tool will no longer be needed after the migration is complete. 16 17For more discussion of MB, see also [the design spec](design_spec.md). 18 19## MB subcommands 20 21### `mb analyze` 22 23`mb analyze` is reponsible for determining what targets are affected by 24a list of files (e.g., the list of files in a patch on a trybot): 25 26``` 27mb analyze -c chromium_linux_rel //out/Release input.json output.json 28``` 29 30Either the `-c/--config` flag or the `-m/--builder-group` and `-b/--builder` 31flags must be specified so that `mb` can figure out which config to use. 32 33The first positional argument must be a GN-style "source-absolute" path 34to the build directory. 35 36The second positional argument is a (normal) path to a JSON file containing 37a single object with the following fields: 38 39 * `files`: an array of the modified filenames to check (as paths relative to 40 the checkout root). 41 * `test_targets`: an array of (ninja) build targets that needed to run the 42 tests we wish to run. An empty array will be treated as if there are 43 no tests that will be run. 44 * `additional_compile_targets`: an array of (ninja) build targets that 45 reflect the stuff we might want to build *in addition to* the list 46 passed in `test_targets`. Targets in this list will be treated 47 specially, in the following way: if a given target is a "meta" 48 (GN: group, GYP: none) target like 'blink_tests' or 49 'chromium_builder_tests', or even the ninja-specific 'all' target, 50 then only the *dependencies* of the target that are affected by 51 the modified files will be rebuilt (not the target itself, which 52 might also cause unaffected dependencies to be rebuilt). An empty 53 list will be treated as if there are no additional targets to build. 54 Empty lists for both `test_targets` and `additional_compile_targets` 55 would cause no work to be done, so will result in an error. 56 * `targets`: a legacy field that resembled a union of `compile_targets` 57 and `test_targets`. Support for this field will be removed once the 58 bots have been updated to use compile_targets and test_targets instead. 59 60The third positional argument is a (normal) path to where mb will write 61the result, also as a JSON object. This object may contain the following 62fields: 63 64 * `error`: this should only be present if something failed. 65 * `compile_targets`: the list of ninja targets that should be passed 66 directly to the corresponding ninja / compile.py invocation. This 67 list may contain entries that are *not* listed in the input (see 68 the description of `additional_compile_targets` above and 69 [design_spec.md](the design spec) for how this works). 70 * `invalid_targets`: a list of any targets that were passed in 71 either of the input lists that weren't actually found in the graph. 72 * `test_targets`: the subset of the input `test_targets` that are 73 potentially out of date, indicating that the matching test steps 74 should be re-run. 75 * `targets`: a legacy field that indicates the subset of the input `targets` 76 that depend on the input `files`. 77 * `build_targets`: a legacy field that indicates the minimal subset of 78 targets needed to build all of `targets` that were affected. 79 * `status`: a field containing one of three strings: 80 81 * `"Found dependency"` (build the `compile_targets`) 82 * `"No dependency"` (i.e., no build needed) 83 * `"Found dependency (all)"` (`test_targets` is returned as-is; 84 `compile_targets` should contain the union of `test_targets` and 85 `additional_compile_targets`. In this case the targets do not 86 need to be pruned). 87 88See [design_spec.md](the design spec) for more details and examples; the 89differences can be subtle. We won't even go into how the `targets` and 90`build_targets` differ from each other or from `compile_targets` and 91`test_targets`. 92 93The `-b/--builder`, `-c/--config`, `-f/--config-file`, `-m/--builder-group`, 94`-q/--quiet`, and `-v/--verbose` flags work as documented for `mb gen`. 95 96### `mb audit` 97 98`mb audit` is used to track the progress of the GYP->GN migration. You can 99use it to check a single builder group, or all the builder groups we care 100about. 101See `mb help audit` for more details (most people are not expected to care 102about this). 103 104### `mb gen` 105 106`mb gen` is responsible for generating the Ninja files by invoking either GYP 107or GN as appropriate. It takes arguments to specify a build config and 108a directory, then runs GYP or GN as appropriate: 109 110``` 111% mb gen -m tryserver.chromium.linux -b linux_rel //out/Release 112% mb gen -c linux_rel_trybot //out/Release 113``` 114 115Either the `-c/--config` flag or the `-m/--builder-group` and `-b/--builder` 116flags must be specified so that `mb` can figure out which config to use. The 117`--phase` flag must also be used with builders that have multiple 118build/compile steps (and only with those builders). 119 120By default, MB will look for a bot config file under `//ios/build/bots` (see 121[design_spec.md](the design spec) for details of how the bot config files 122work). If no matching one is found, will then look in 123`//tools/mb/mb_config.pyl` to look up the config information, but you can 124specify a custom config file using the `-f/--config-file` flag. 125 126The path must be a GN-style "source-absolute" path (as above). 127 128You can pass the `-n/--dryrun` flag to mb gen to see what will happen without 129actually writing anything. 130 131You can pass the `-q/--quiet` flag to get mb to be silent unless there is an 132error, and pass the `-v/--verbose` flag to get mb to log all of the files 133that are read and written, and all the commands that are run. 134 135If the build config will use the Goma distributed-build system, you can pass 136the path to your Goma client in the `-g/--goma-dir` flag, and it will be 137incorporated into the appropriate flags for GYP or GN as needed. 138 139If gen ends up using GYP, the path must have a valid GYP configuration as the 140last component of the path (i.e., specify `//out/Release_x64`, not `//out`). 141The gyp script defaults to `//build/gyp_chromium`, but can be overridden with 142the `--gyp-script` flag, e.g. `--gyp-script=gypfiles/gyp_v8`. 143 144### `mb help` 145 146Produces help output on the other subcommands 147 148### `mb lookup` 149 150Prints what command will be run by `mb gen` (like `mb gen -n` but does 151not require you to specify a path). 152 153The `-b/--builder`, `-c/--config`, `-f/--config-file`, `-m/--builder-group`, 154`--phase`, `-q/--quiet`, and `-v/--verbose` flags work as documented for 155`mb gen`. 156 157### `mb validate` 158 159Does internal checking to make sure the config file is syntactically 160valid and that all of the entries are used properly. It does not validate 161that the flags make sense, or that the builder names are legal or 162comprehensive, but it does complain about configs and mixins that aren't 163used. 164 165The `-f/--config-file` and `-q/--quiet` flags work as documented for 166`mb gen`. 167 168This is mostly useful as a presubmit check and for verifying changes to 169the config file. 170 171## Isolates and Swarming 172 173`mb gen` is also responsible for generating the `.isolate` and 174`.isolated.gen.json` files needed to run test executables through swarming 175in a GN build (in a GYP build, this is done as part of the compile step). 176 177If you wish to generate the isolate files, pass `mb gen` the 178`--swarming-targets-file` command line argument; that arg should be a path 179to a file containing a list of ninja build targets to compute the runtime 180dependencies for (on Windows, use the ninja target name, not the file, so 181`base_unittests`, not `base_unittests.exe`). 182 183MB will take this file, translate each build target to the matching GN 184label (e.g., `base_unittests` -> `//base:base_unittests`, write that list 185to a file called `runtime_deps` in the build directory, and pass that to 186`gn gen $BUILD ... --runtime-deps-list-file=$BUILD/runtime_deps`. 187 188Once GN has computed the lists of runtime dependencies, MB will then 189look up the command line for each target (currently this is hard-coded 190in [mb.py](https://code.google.com/p/chromium/codesearch?q=mb.py#chromium/src/tools/mb/mb.py&q=mb.py%20GetIsolateCommand&sq=package:chromium&type=cs)), and write out the 191matching `.isolate` and `.isolated.gen.json` files. 192 193## The `mb_config.pyl` config file 194 195The `mb_config.pyl` config file is intended to enumerate all of the 196supported build configurations for Chromium. Generally speaking, you 197should never need to (or want to) build a configuration that isn't 198listed here, and so by using the configs in this file you can avoid 199having to juggle long lists of GYP_DEFINES and gn args by hand. 200 201`mb_config.pyl` is structured as a file containing a single PYthon Literal 202expression: a dictionary with three main keys, `builder_groups`, `configs` and 203`mixins`. 204 205The `builder_groups` key contains a nested series of dicts containing mappings 206of builder group -> builder -> config . This allows us to isolate the buildbot 207recipes from the actual details of the configs. The config should either 208be a single string value representing a key in the `configs` dictionary, 209or a list of strings, each of which is a key in the `configs` dictionary; 210the latter case is for builders that do multiple compiles with different 211arguments in a single build, and must *only* be used for such builders 212(where a --phase argument must be supplied in each lookup or gen call). 213 214The `configs` key points to a dictionary of named build configurations. 215 216There should be an key in this dict for every supported configuration 217of Chromium, meaning every configuration we have a bot for, and every 218configuration commonly used by develpers but that we may not have a bot 219for. 220 221The value of each key is a list of "mixins" that will define what that 222build_config does. Each item in the list must be an entry in the dictionary 223value of the `mixins` key. 224 225Each mixin value is itself a dictionary that contains one or more of the 226following keys: 227 228 * `gyp_crosscompile`: a boolean; if true, GYP_CROSSCOMPILE=1 is set in 229 the environment and passed to GYP. 230 * `gyp_defines`: a string containing a list of GYP_DEFINES. 231 * `gn_args`: a string containing a list of values passed to gn --args. 232 * `mixins`: a list of other mixins that should be included. 233 * `type`: a string with either the value `gyp` or `gn`; 234 setting this indicates which meta-build tool to use. 235 236When `mb gen` or `mb analyze` executes, it takes a config name, looks it 237up in the 'configs' dict, and then does a left-to-right expansion of the 238mixins; gyp_defines and gn_args values are concatenated, and the type values 239override each other. 240 241For example, if you had: 242 243``` 244{ 245 'configs`: { 246 'linux_release_trybot': ['gyp_release', 'trybot'], 247 'gn_shared_debug': None, 248 } 249 'mixins': { 250 'bot': { 251 'gyp_defines': 'use_goma=1 dcheck_always_on=0', 252 'gn_args': 'use_goma=true dcheck_always_on=false', 253 }, 254 'debug': { 255 'gn_args': 'is_debug=true', 256 }, 257 'gn': {'type': 'gn'}, 258 'gyp_release': { 259 'mixins': ['release'], 260 'type': 'gyp', 261 }, 262 'release': { 263 'gn_args': 'is_debug=false', 264 } 265 'shared': { 266 'gn_args': 'is_component_build=true', 267 'gyp_defines': 'component=shared_library', 268 }, 269 'trybot': { 270 'gyp_defines': 'dcheck_always_on=1', 271 'gn_args': 'dcheck_always_on=true', 272 } 273 } 274} 275``` 276 277and you ran `mb gen -c linux_release_trybot //out/Release`, it would 278translate into a call to `gyp_chromium -G Release` with `GYP_DEFINES` set to 279`"use_goma=true dcheck_always_on=false dcheck_always_on=true"`. 280 281(From that you can see that mb is intentionally dumb and does not 282attempt to de-dup the flags, it lets gyp do that). 283 284## Debugging MB 285 286By design, MB should be simple enough that very little can go wrong. 287 288The most obvious issue is that you might see different commands being 289run than you expect; running `'mb -v'` will print what it's doing and 290run the commands; `'mb -n'` will print what it will do but *not* run 291the commands. 292 293If you hit weirder things than that, add some print statements to the 294python script, send a question to [email protected], or 295[file a bug](https://crbug.com/new) with the label 296'mb' and cc: [email protected]. 297 298 299