General-purpose rule to create tar archives.
Unlike pkg_tar from rules_pkg this:
We also provide full control for tar'ring binaries including their runfiles.
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:
mtree_spec( name = "mtree", srcs = ["//some:files"], ) mtree_mutate( name = "change_owner", mtree = ":mtree", owner = "1000", ) tar( name = "tar", srcs = ["//some:files"], mtree = "change_owner", )
TODO:
Create an mtree specification to map a directory hierarchy. See https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?mtree(8)
ATTRIBUTES
Name | Description | Type | Mandatory | Default |
---|---|---|---|---|
name | A unique name for this target. | Name | required | |
out | Resulting specification file to write | Label | optional | |
srcs | Files that are placed into the tar | List of labels | optional | [] |
Rule that executes BSD tar
. Most users should use the tar
macro, rather than load this directly.
ATTRIBUTES
Name | Description | Type | Mandatory | Default |
---|---|---|---|---|
name | A unique name for this target. | Name | required | |
args | Additional flags permitted by BSD tar; see the man page. | List of strings | optional | [] |
compress | Compress the archive file with a supported algorithm. | String | optional | "" |
mode | A mode indicator from the following list, copied from the tar manpage: - create: Create a new archive containing the specified items. - append: Like create, but new entries are appended to the archive. Note that this only works on uncompressed archives stored in regular files. The -f option is required. - list: List archive contents to stdout. - update: Like append, but new entries are added only if they have a modification date newer than the corresponding entry in the archive. Note that this only works on uncompressed archives stored in regular files. The -f option is required. - extract: Extract to disk from the archive. If a file with the same name appears more than once in the archive, each copy will be extracted, with later copies overwriting (replacing) earlier copies. | String | optional | “create” |
mtree | An mtree specification file | Label | required | |
out | Resulting tar file to write. If absent, [name].tar is written. | Label | optional | |
srcs | 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. | List of labels | optional | [] |
Modify metadata in an mtree file.
PARAMETERS
Name | Description | Default Value |
---|---|---|
name | name of the target, output will be [name].mtree. | none |
mtree | input mtree file, typically created by mtree_spec. | none |
strip_prefix | prefix to remove from all paths in the tar. Files and directories not under this prefix are dropped. | None |
package_dir | directory prefix to add to all paths in the tar. | None |
mtime | new modification time for all entries. | None |
owner | new uid for all entries. | None |
ownername | new uname for all entries. | None |
awk_script | may be overridden to change the script containing the modification logic. | “@aspect_bazel_lib//lib/private:modify_mtree.awk” |
kwargs | additional named parameters to genrule | none |
Wrapper macro around tar_rule
.
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_spec
rule.
mtree
may 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)
mtree
may be a label of a file containing the specification lines.PARAMETERS
Name | Description | Default Value |
---|---|---|
name | name of resulting tar_rule | none |
mtree | “auto”, or an array of specification lines, or a label of a file that contains the lines. Subject to $(location) and “Make variable” substitution. | “auto” |
stamp | should mtree attribute be stamped | 0 |
kwargs | additional named parameters to pass to tar_rule | none |
PARAMETERS
Name | Description | Default Value |
---|---|---|
ctx | - | none |
PARAMETERS
Name | Description | Default Value |
---|---|---|
ctx | - | none |
PARAMETERS
Name | Description | Default Value |
---|---|---|
compress | - | none |
args | - | none |