commit | ed8b6950da406c95e25611aacb4968e96f6de65d | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Armando Montanez <amontanez@google.com> | Thu Oct 09 13:57:55 2025 -0700 |
committer | CQ Bot Account <pigweed-scoped@luci-project-accounts.iam.gserviceaccount.com> | Thu Oct 09 13:57:55 2025 -0700 |
tree | 603639a6292e3bbebd9fbea90656f60e5a69875a | |
parent | f72789a2578c0f99fa19fe7b61618564a025b4fd [diff] |
Switch to Pigweed mirrors of Zephyr This has a performance benefit for CI, and is in line with Pigweed's preference for using pigweed-hosted mirrors. Change-Id: I76ccce1c685da4a65bfd5ca98a83e5491cb7822f Reviewed-on: https://pigweed-review.googlesource.com/c/zephyr/zephyr-bazel/+/331117 Reviewed-by: Yicheng Li <yichengli@google.com> Presubmit-Verified: CQ Bot Account <pigweed-scoped@luci-project-accounts.iam.gserviceaccount.com> Commit-Queue: Armando Montanez <amontanez@google.com> Lint: Lint 🤖 <android-build-ayeaye@system.gserviceaccount.com> Pigweed-Auto-Submit: Armando Montanez <amontanez@google.com>
The way this repository works is by overlaying itself on top of Zephyr. To get started, first make sure you have Bazel‘s skylib version 1.7.1 or greater. If you don’t have it, you can use:
http_archive( name = "bazel_skylib", sha256 = "bc283cdfcd526a52c3201279cda4bc298652efa898b10b4db0837dc51652756f", urls = [ "https://mirror.bazel.build/github.com/bazelbuild/bazel-skylib/releases/download/1.7.1/bazel-skylib-1.7.1.tar.gz", "https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel-skylib/releases/download/1.7.1/bazel-skylib-1.7.1.tar.gz", ], ) load("@bazel_skylib//:workspace.bzl", "bazel_skylib_workspace") bazel_skylib_workspace()
To grab the zephyr-bazel repo, use a git_repository rule in your WORKSPACE, such as:
git_repository( name = "zephyr-bazel", remote = "https://pigweed.googlesource.com/zephyr/zephyr-bazel", branch = "main", )
Once you have @zephyr-bazel
, we can load the patch rule to generate the Zephyr diff that will augment Zephyr to include the BUILD.zephyr rules.
load("@zephyr-bazel//:setup.bzl", "create_zephyr_patch_file") create_zephyr_patch_file( name = "zephyr-patch", filename = "patch.diff", # This is optional, use it to see what's going on under the hood debug = True, )
We now have a diff file at @zephyr-patch//:patch.diff
. We're ready to load Zephyr.
git_repository( name = "zephyr", remote = "https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/zephyr.git", branch = "main", patches = [ "@zephyr-patch//:patch.diff", ], )
The final step will be to load Zephyr's python dependencies:
load("@rules_python//python:pip.bzl", "pip_parse") pip_parse( name = "py_deps", python_interpreter_target = interpreter, requirements_lock = "@@zephyr//:scripts/requirements-base.txt", ) load("@py_deps//:requirements.bzl", zephyr_install_deps = "install_deps") zephyr_install_deps()
To use zephyr-bazel in bzlmod, first add it as a dependency in your project's MODULE.bazel:
bazel_dep(name = "zephyr-bazel") git_override( module_name = "zephyr-bazel", remote = "https://pigweed.googlesource.com/zephyr/zephyr-bazel", branch = "main", )
Then use the zephyr_patch_file module extension to generate a patch file and a Bazel repo with the patch file applied:
zephyr_patch_file = use_extension("@zephyr-bazel//:setup.bzl", "zephyr_patch_file") use_repo(zephyr_patch_file, "zephyr")
pip
is required by the patched zephyr repo, so your project needs to inject it:
pip = use_extension("@rules_python//python/extensions:pip.bzl", "pip") # Load the Zephyr pip requirements pip.parse( hub_name = "pip", python_version = "3.11", requirements_lock = "@zephyr//:scripts/requirements-base.txt", ) use_repo(pip, "pip") inject_repo(zephyr_patch_file, "pip")
In your main application, you can now use the Zephyr utilities for building your app.
load("@zephyr//:defs.bzl", "dts_cc_library") dts_cc_library( name = "app_native_sim_dts", dts_lib = "@zephyr//boards/native/native_sim:native_sim", ) cc_binary( ... deps = [ ... "@zephyr//:zephyr", ] + select({ "@platform//cpu:x86_64": [ ":app_native_sim_dts", "@zephyr//include:posix", ], }), copts = select({ "@platform//cpu:x86_64": [ "-DCONFIG_ARCH_POSIX=1", ], }), )
There is currently just 1 example, you can run it via:
$ cd examples/hello_dts $ bazel run :app
Or, you can run the tests via:
$ cd examples/hello_dts $ bazel test //...