| # Copyright 2019 The Bazel Authors. All rights reserved. |
| # |
| # Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); |
| # you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. |
| # You may obtain a copy of the License at |
| # |
| # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 |
| # |
| # Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software |
| # distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, |
| # WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. |
| # See the License for the specific language governing permissions and |
| # limitations under the License. |
| |
| """Implementation of copy_file macro and underlying rules. |
| |
| These rules copy a file to another location using Bash (on Linux/macOS) or |
| cmd.exe (on Windows). '_copy_xfile' marks the resulting file executable, |
| '_copy_file' does not. |
| """ |
| |
| load(":copy_common.bzl", "COPY_EXECUTION_REQUIREMENTS") |
| |
| def copy_cmd(ctx, src, dst): |
| # Most Windows binaries built with MSVC use a certain argument quoting |
| # scheme. Bazel uses that scheme too to quote arguments. However, |
| # cmd.exe uses different semantics, so Bazel's quoting is wrong here. |
| # To fix that we write the command to a .bat file so no command line |
| # quoting or escaping is required. |
| bat = ctx.actions.declare_file(ctx.label.name + "-cmd.bat") |
| ctx.actions.write( |
| output = bat, |
| # Do not use lib/shell.bzl's shell.quote() method, because that uses |
| # Bash quoting syntax, which is different from cmd.exe's syntax. |
| content = "@copy /Y \"%s\" \"%s\" >NUL" % ( |
| src.path.replace("/", "\\"), |
| dst.path.replace("/", "\\"), |
| ), |
| is_executable = True, |
| ) |
| ctx.actions.run( |
| inputs = [src, bat], |
| outputs = [dst], |
| executable = "cmd.exe", |
| arguments = ["/C", bat.path.replace("/", "\\")], |
| mnemonic = "CopyFile", |
| progress_message = "Copying files", |
| use_default_shell_env = True, |
| execution_requirements = COPY_EXECUTION_REQUIREMENTS, |
| ) |
| |
| def copy_bash(ctx, src, dst): |
| ctx.actions.run_shell( |
| inputs = [src], |
| outputs = [dst], |
| command = "cp -f \"$1\" \"$2\"", |
| arguments = [src.path, dst.path], |
| mnemonic = "CopyFile", |
| progress_message = "Copying files", |
| use_default_shell_env = True, |
| execution_requirements = COPY_EXECUTION_REQUIREMENTS, |
| ) |
| |
| def _copy_file_impl(ctx): |
| if ctx.attr.allow_symlink: |
| ctx.actions.symlink( |
| output = ctx.outputs.out, |
| target_file = ctx.file.src, |
| is_executable = ctx.attr.is_executable, |
| ) |
| elif ctx.attr.is_windows: |
| copy_cmd(ctx, ctx.file.src, ctx.outputs.out) |
| else: |
| copy_bash(ctx, ctx.file.src, ctx.outputs.out) |
| |
| files = depset(direct = [ctx.outputs.out]) |
| runfiles = ctx.runfiles(files = [ctx.outputs.out]) |
| if ctx.attr.is_executable: |
| return [DefaultInfo(files = files, runfiles = runfiles, executable = ctx.outputs.out)] |
| else: |
| # Do not include the copied file into the default runfiles of the |
| # target, but ensure that it is picked up by native rule's data |
| # attribute despite https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel/issues/15043. |
| return [DefaultInfo(files = files, data_runfiles = runfiles)] |
| |
| _ATTRS = { |
| "src": attr.label(mandatory = True, allow_single_file = True), |
| "out": attr.output(mandatory = True), |
| "is_windows": attr.bool(mandatory = True), |
| "is_executable": attr.bool(mandatory = True), |
| "allow_symlink": attr.bool(mandatory = True), |
| } |
| |
| _copy_file = rule( |
| implementation = _copy_file_impl, |
| provides = [DefaultInfo], |
| attrs = _ATTRS, |
| ) |
| |
| _copy_xfile = rule( |
| implementation = _copy_file_impl, |
| executable = True, |
| provides = [DefaultInfo], |
| attrs = _ATTRS, |
| ) |
| |
| def copy_file(name, src, out, is_executable = False, allow_symlink = False, **kwargs): |
| """Copies a file to another location. |
| |
| `native.genrule()` is sometimes used to copy files (often wishing to rename them). The 'copy_file' rule does this with a simpler interface than genrule. |
| |
| This rule uses a Bash command on Linux/macOS/non-Windows, and a cmd.exe command on Windows (no Bash is required). |
| |
| Args: |
| name: Name of the rule. |
| src: A Label. The file to make a copy of. (Can also be the label of a rule |
| that generates a file.) |
| out: Path of the output file, relative to this package. |
| is_executable: A boolean. Whether to make the output file executable. When |
| True, the rule's output can be executed using `bazel run` and can be |
| in the srcs of binary and test rules that require executable sources. |
| WARNING: If `allow_symlink` is True, `src` must also be executable. |
| allow_symlink: A boolean. Whether to allow symlinking instead of copying. |
| When False, the output is always a hard copy. When True, the output |
| *can* be a symlink, but there is no guarantee that a symlink is |
| created (i.e., at the time of writing, we don't create symlinks on |
| Windows). Set this to True if you need fast copying and your tools can |
| handle symlinks (which most UNIX tools can). |
| **kwargs: further keyword arguments, e.g. `visibility` |
| """ |
| |
| copy_file_impl = _copy_file |
| if is_executable: |
| copy_file_impl = _copy_xfile |
| |
| copy_file_impl( |
| name = name, |
| src = src, |
| out = out, |
| is_windows = select({ |
| "@bazel_tools//src/conditions:host_windows": True, |
| "//conditions:default": False, |
| }), |
| is_executable = is_executable, |
| allow_symlink = allow_symlink, |
| **kwargs |
| ) |