commit | 28af41076fe979816b5da4feb58605530b9d3c24 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Wyatt Hepler <hepler@pigweed.infra.roller.google.com> | Tue Oct 01 04:41:49 2024 +0000 |
committer | CQ Bot Account <pigweed-scoped@luci-project-accounts.iam.gserviceaccount.com> | Tue Oct 01 04:41:49 2024 +0000 |
tree | 6833a8ad9bacb73453df50e11393f44b3b011b4e | |
parent | e787e7cfaff55f7ef2a74b35ae9fc0f070e2fa14 [diff] |
roll: third_party/pigweed pw_thread: Make the deprecated Thread constructor private pw::Thread has been updated to take a pw::Function<void()> instead of a void(void*) function and void* argument. This change makes the deprecated constructor private. This removes it from the public API without requiring changes to pw_thread backends. A subsequent change will delete the deprecated constructor and associated classes. This is a breaking chnage. Migrate uses of the deprecated pw::Thread constructor to the pw::Function<void()> constructor. Original-Bug: b/367786892 Original-Reviewed-on: https://pigweed-review.googlesource.com/c/pigweed/pigweed/+/236435 Original-Revision: 30bdace4866039e26a05f8baa379630e066ad660 Rolled-Repo: https://pigweed.googlesource.com/pigweed/pigweed Rolled-Commits: 4f8b0a26fdc1f7..30bdace4866039 Roller-URL: https://ci.chromium.org/b/8735309244247068721 GitWatcher: ignore CQ-Do-Not-Cancel-Tryjobs: true Change-Id: If77b6f967412081b1bb5fc9fa87fe4da558543f6 Reviewed-on: https://pigweed-review.googlesource.com/c/pigweed/examples/+/238863 Commit-Queue: Pigweed Roller <pigweed-roller@pigweed-service-accounts.iam.gserviceaccount.com> Bot-Commit: Pigweed Roller <pigweed-roller@pigweed-service-accounts.iam.gserviceaccount.com> Lint: Lint 🤖 <android-build-ayeaye@system.gserviceaccount.com>
This repository outlines the recommended way of using Pigweed in a new or existing project. Feel free to fork this repository, or read it as a reference.
For more information see the Pigweed Getting started guide.
Check back for more complex examples and features coming soon!
Make sure you've set up Pigweed's prerequisites.
If you're on Windows, you can automate the initial setup by downloading the first-time setup script from cmd.exe:
curl https://pigweed.googlesource.com/pigweed/sample_project/+/main/tools/setup_windows_prerequisites.bat?format=TEXT > setup_pigweed_prerequisites.b64 && certutil -decode -f setup_pigweed_prerequisites.b64 setup_pigweed_prerequisites.bat && del setup_pigweed_prerequisites.b64
Then you can run the script with the following command in cmd.exe:
setup_pigweed_prerequisites.bat
Note: You may see a few UAC prompts as the script installs Git, Python, and enables developer mode.
Once that is done, you can clone this project with the following command:
git clone https://pigweed.googlesource.com/pigweed/sample_project
Pigweed uses a local development environment for most of its tools. This means tools are not installed to your machine, and are instead stored in a directory inside your project (Note: git ignores this directory). The tools are temporarily added to the PATH of the current shell session.
To make sure the latest tooling has been fetched and set up, run the bootstrap command for your operating system:
Windows
bootstrap.bat
Linux & Mac
source ./bootstrap.sh
After tooling updates, you might need to run bootstrap again to ensure the latest tools.
After the initial bootstrap, you can use use the activate
scripts to configure the current shell for development without doing a full update.
Windows
activate.bat
Linux & Mac
source ./activate.sh
All of these commands must be run from inside an activated developer environment. See Environment setup
To build the project, documentation, and tests, run the following command in an activated environment:
pw build
Alternatively, if you'd like an automatic rebuild to trigger whenever you save changes to files, use pw watch
:
pw watch
When you pull latest repository changes, run bootstrap:
source ./bootstrap.sh
If you're just launching a new shell session, you can activate instead:
source ./activate.sh
and rebuild with:
pw build
Extended documentation and examples are built along code changes. You can view them at out/gn/docs/gen/docs/html/index.html
.