From 4dc3c0a2b132429d0804e5c1187729fdd3962a5a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Arkitu <85173315+Arkitu@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Sat, 22 Feb 2025 19:29:51 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] add zig --- .gitignore | 1 + build.zig | 66 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ build.zig.zon | 73 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ src/main.zig | 46 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ src/root.zig | 13 +++++++++ 5 files changed, 199 insertions(+) create mode 100644 build.zig create mode 100644 build.zig.zon create mode 100644 src/main.zig create mode 100644 src/root.zig diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore index 378eac2..9cd6f35 100644 --- a/.gitignore +++ b/.gitignore @@ -1 +1,2 @@ build +.zig-cache \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/build.zig b/build.zig new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f8530cb --- /dev/null +++ b/build.zig @@ -0,0 +1,66 @@ +const std = @import("std"); + +// Although this function looks imperative, note that its job is to +// declaratively construct a build graph that will be executed by an external +// runner. +pub fn build(b: *std.Build) void { + // Standard target options allows the person running `zig build` to choose + // what target to build for. Here we do not override the defaults, which + // means any target is allowed, and the default is native. Other options + // for restricting supported target set are available. + const target = b.standardTargetOptions(.{ + .default_target = .{ + .abi = .eabi, + .cpu_arch = .thumb, + .cpu_model = .{ .explicit = &std.Target.arm.cpu.cortex_m0plus }, + .os_tag = .freestanding, + } + }); + + // Standard optimization options allow the person running `zig build` to select + // between Debug, ReleaseSafe, ReleaseFast, and ReleaseSmall. Here we do not + // set a preferred release mode, allowing the user to decide how to optimize. + const optimize = b.standardOptimizeOption(.{}); + + // This creates a "module", which represents a collection of source files alongside + // some compilation options, such as optimization mode and linked system libraries. + // Every executable or library we compile will be based on one or more modules. + const lib_mod = b.createModule(.{ + // `root_source_file` is the Zig "entry point" of the module. If a module + // only contains e.g. external object files, you can make this `null`. + // In this case the main source file is merely a path, however, in more + // complicated build scripts, this could be a generated file. + .root_source_file = b.path("src/root.zig"), + .target = target, + .optimize = optimize, + }); + + // Now, we will create a static library based on the module we created above. + // This creates a `std.Build.Step.Compile`, which is the build step responsible + // for actually invoking the compiler. + const lib = b.addLibrary(.{ + .linkage = .static, + .name = "blink", + .root_module = lib_mod, + }); + + // This declares intent for the library to be installed into the standard + // location when the user invokes the "install" step (the default step when + // running `zig build`). + b.installArtifact(lib); + + + // Creates a step for unit testing. This only builds the test executable + // but does not run it. + const lib_unit_tests = b.addTest(.{ + .root_module = lib_mod, + }); + + const run_lib_unit_tests = b.addRunArtifact(lib_unit_tests); + + // Similar to creating the run step earlier, this exposes a `test` step to + // the `zig build --help` menu, providing a way for the user to request + // running the unit tests. + const test_step = b.step("test", "Run unit tests"); + test_step.dependOn(&run_lib_unit_tests.step); +} diff --git a/build.zig.zon b/build.zig.zon new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7113ed9 --- /dev/null +++ b/build.zig.zon @@ -0,0 +1,73 @@ +.{ + // This is the default name used by packages depending on this one. For + // example, when a user runs `zig fetch --save `, this field is used + // as the key in the `dependencies` table. Although the user can choose a + // different name, most users will stick with this provided value. + // + // It is redundant to include "zig" in this name because it is already + // within the Zig package namespace. + .name = "blink", + + // This is a [Semantic Version](https://semver.org/). + // In a future version of Zig it will be used for package deduplication. + .version = "0.0.0", + + // This field is optional. + // This is currently advisory only; Zig does not yet do anything + // with this value. + //.minimum_zig_version = "0.11.0", + + // This field is optional. + // Each dependency must either provide a `url` and `hash`, or a `path`. + // `zig build --fetch` can be used to fetch all dependencies of a package, recursively. + // Once all dependencies are fetched, `zig build` no longer requires + // internet connectivity. + .dependencies = .{ + // See `zig fetch --save ` for a command-line interface for adding dependencies. + //.example = .{ + // // When updating this field to a new URL, be sure to delete the corresponding + // // `hash`, otherwise you are communicating that you expect to find the old hash at + // // the new URL. If the contents of a URL change this will result in a hash mismatch + // // which will prevent zig from using it. + // .url = "https://example.com/foo.tar.gz", + // + // // This is computed from the file contents of the directory of files that is + // // obtained after fetching `url` and applying the inclusion rules given by + // // `paths`. + // // + // // This field is the source of truth; packages do not come from a `url`; they + // // come from a `hash`. `url` is just one of many possible mirrors for how to + // // obtain a package matching this `hash`. + // // + // // Uses the [multihash](https://multiformats.io/multihash/) format. + // .hash = "...", + // + // // When this is provided, the package is found in a directory relative to the + // // build root. In this case the package's hash is irrelevant and therefore not + // // computed. This field and `url` are mutually exclusive. + // .path = "foo", + // + // // When this is set to `true`, a package is declared to be lazily + // // fetched. This makes the dependency only get fetched if it is + // // actually used. + // .lazy = false, + //}, + }, + + // Specifies the set of files and directories that are included in this package. + // Only files and directories listed here are included in the `hash` that + // is computed for this package. Only files listed here will remain on disk + // when using the zig package manager. As a rule of thumb, one should list + // files required for compilation plus any license(s). + // Paths are relative to the build root. Use the empty string (`""`) to refer to + // the build root itself. + // A directory listed here means that all files within, recursively, are included. + .paths = .{ + "build.zig", + "build.zig.zon", + "src", + // For example... + //"LICENSE", + //"README.md", + }, +} diff --git a/src/main.zig b/src/main.zig new file mode 100644 index 0000000..dd337cf --- /dev/null +++ b/src/main.zig @@ -0,0 +1,46 @@ +//! By convention, main.zig is where your main function lives in the case that +//! you are building an executable. If you are making a library, the convention +//! is to delete this file and start with root.zig instead. + +pub fn main() !void { + // Prints to stderr (it's a shortcut based on `std.io.getStdErr()`) + std.debug.print("All your {s} are belong to us.\n", .{"codebase"}); + + // stdout is for the actual output of your application, for example if you + // are implementing gzip, then only the compressed bytes should be sent to + // stdout, not any debugging messages. + const stdout_file = std.io.getStdOut().writer(); + var bw = std.io.bufferedWriter(stdout_file); + const stdout = bw.writer(); + + try stdout.print("Run `zig build test` to run the tests.\n", .{}); + + try bw.flush(); // Don't forget to flush! +} + +test "simple test" { + var list = std.ArrayList(i32).init(std.testing.allocator); + defer list.deinit(); // Try commenting this out and see if zig detects the memory leak! + try list.append(42); + try std.testing.expectEqual(@as(i32, 42), list.pop()); +} + +test "use other module" { + try std.testing.expectEqual(@as(i32, 150), lib.add(100, 50)); +} + +test "fuzz example" { + const Context = struct { + fn testOne(context: @This(), input: []const u8) anyerror!void { + _ = context; + // Try passing `--fuzz` to `zig build test` and see if it manages to fail this test case! + try std.testing.expect(!std.mem.eql(u8, "canyoufindme", input)); + } + }; + try std.testing.fuzz(Context{}, Context.testOne, .{}); +} + +const std = @import("std"); + +/// This imports the separate module containing `root.zig`. Take a look in `build.zig` for details. +const lib = @import("blink_lib"); diff --git a/src/root.zig b/src/root.zig new file mode 100644 index 0000000..27d2be8 --- /dev/null +++ b/src/root.zig @@ -0,0 +1,13 @@ +//! By convention, root.zig is the root source file when making a library. If +//! you are making an executable, the convention is to delete this file and +//! start with main.zig instead. +const std = @import("std"); +const testing = std.testing; + +pub export fn add(a: i32, b: i32) i32 { + return a + b; +} + +test "basic add functionality" { + try testing.expect(add(3, 7) == 10); +}