bevy/tools/ci/src/ci.rs
Zachary Harrold cc69fdd0c6
Add no_std support to bevy (#17955)
# Objective

- Fixes #15460 (will open new issues for further `no_std` efforts)
- Supersedes #17715

## Solution

- Threaded in new features as required
- Made certain crates optional but default enabled
- Removed `compile-check-no-std` from internal `ci` tool since GitHub CI
can now simply check `bevy` itself now
- Added CI task to check `bevy` on `thumbv6m-none-eabi` to ensure
`portable-atomic` support is still valid [^1]

[^1]: This may be controversial, since it could be interpreted as
implying Bevy will maintain support for `thumbv6m-none-eabi` going
forward. In reality, just like `x86_64-unknown-none`, this is a
[canary](https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/canary_in_a_coal_mine) target to
make it clear when `portable-atomic` no longer works as intended (fixing
atomic support on atomically challenged platforms). If a PR comes
through and makes supporting this class of platforms impossible, then
this CI task can be removed. I however wager this won't be a problem.

## Testing

- CI

---

## Release Notes

Bevy now has support for `no_std` directly from the `bevy` crate.

Users can disable default features and enable a new `default_no_std`
feature instead, allowing `bevy` to be used in `no_std` applications and
libraries.

```toml
# Bevy for `no_std` platforms
bevy = { version = "0.16", default-features = false, features = ["default_no_std"] }
```

`default_no_std` enables certain required features, such as `libm` and
`critical-section`, and as many optional crates as possible (currently
just `bevy_state`). For atomically-challenged platforms such as the
Raspberry Pi Pico, `portable-atomic` will be used automatically.

For library authors, we recommend depending on `bevy` with
`default-features = false` to allow `std` and `no_std` users to both
depend on your crate. Here are some recommended features a library crate
may want to expose:

```toml
[features]
# Most users will be on a platform which has `std` and can use the more-powerful `async_executor`.
default = ["std", "async_executor"]

# Features for typical platforms.
std = ["bevy/std"]
async_executor = ["bevy/async_executor"]

# Features for `no_std` platforms.
libm = ["bevy/libm"]
critical-section = ["bevy/critical-section"]

[dependencies]
# We disable default features to ensure we don't accidentally enable `std` on `no_std` targets, for example. 
bevy = { version = "0.16", default-features = false }
```

While this is verbose, it gives the maximum control to end-users to
decide how they wish to use Bevy on their platform.

We encourage library authors to experiment with `no_std` support. For
libraries relying exclusively on `bevy` and no other dependencies, it
may be as simple as adding `#![no_std]` to your `lib.rs` and exposing
features as above! Bevy can also provide many `std` types, such as
`HashMap`, `Mutex`, and `Instant` on all platforms. See
`bevy::platform_support` for details on what's available out of the box!

## Migration Guide

- If you were previously relying on `bevy` with default features
disabled, you may need to enable the `std` and `async_executor`
features.
- `bevy_reflect` has had its `bevy` feature removed. If you were relying
on this feature, simply enable `smallvec` and `smol_str` instead.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2025-03-07 03:39:46 +00:00

143 lines
5.9 KiB
Rust

use crate::{
commands,
prepare::{Flag, Prepare, PreparedCommand},
};
use argh::FromArgs;
/// The CI command line tool for Bevy.
#[derive(FromArgs)]
pub struct CI {
#[argh(subcommand)]
command: Option<Commands>,
/// continue running commands even if one fails
#[argh(switch)]
keep_going: bool,
}
impl CI {
/// Runs the specified commands or all commands if none are specified.
///
/// When run locally, results may differ from actual CI runs triggered by `.github/workflows/ci.yml`.
/// This is usually related to differing toolchains and configuration.
pub fn run(self) {
let sh = xshell::Shell::new().unwrap();
let prepared_commands = self.prepare(&sh);
let mut failures = vec![];
for command in prepared_commands {
// If the CI test is to be executed in a subdirectory, we move there before running the command.
// This will automatically move back to the original directory once dropped.
let _subdir_hook = command.subdir.map(|path| sh.push_dir(path));
// Execute each command, checking if it returned an error.
if command.command.envs(command.env_vars).run().is_err() {
let name = command.name;
let message = command.failure_message;
if self.keep_going {
// We use bullet points here because there can be more than one error.
failures.push(format!("- {name}: {message}"));
} else {
failures.push(format!("{name}: {message}"));
break;
}
}
}
// Log errors at the very end.
if !failures.is_empty() {
let failures = failures.join("\n");
panic!(
"One or more CI commands failed:\n\
{failures}"
);
}
}
fn prepare<'a>(&self, sh: &'a xshell::Shell) -> Vec<PreparedCommand<'a>> {
let mut flags = Flag::empty();
if self.keep_going {
flags |= Flag::KEEP_GOING;
}
match &self.command {
Some(command) => command.prepare(sh, flags),
None => {
// Note that we are running the subcommands directly rather than using any aliases
let mut cmds = vec![];
cmds.append(&mut commands::FormatCommand::default().prepare(sh, flags));
cmds.append(&mut commands::ClippyCommand::default().prepare(sh, flags));
cmds.append(&mut commands::TestCommand::default().prepare(sh, flags));
cmds.append(&mut commands::TestCheckCommand::default().prepare(sh, flags));
cmds.append(&mut commands::IntegrationTestCommand::default().prepare(sh, flags));
cmds.append(
&mut commands::IntegrationTestCheckCommand::default().prepare(sh, flags),
);
cmds.append(
&mut commands::IntegrationTestCleanCommand::default().prepare(sh, flags),
);
cmds.append(&mut commands::DocCheckCommand::default().prepare(sh, flags));
cmds.append(&mut commands::DocTestCommand::default().prepare(sh, flags));
cmds.append(&mut commands::CompileCheckCommand::default().prepare(sh, flags));
cmds.append(&mut commands::CompileFailCommand::default().prepare(sh, flags));
cmds.append(&mut commands::BenchCheckCommand::default().prepare(sh, flags));
cmds.append(&mut commands::ExampleCheckCommand::default().prepare(sh, flags));
cmds
}
}
}
}
/// The subcommands that can be run by the CI script.
#[derive(FromArgs)]
#[argh(subcommand)]
enum Commands {
// Aliases (subcommands that run other subcommands)
Lints(commands::LintsCommand),
Doc(commands::DocCommand),
Compile(commands::CompileCommand),
// Actual subcommands
Format(commands::FormatCommand),
Clippy(commands::ClippyCommand),
Test(commands::TestCommand),
TestCheck(commands::TestCheckCommand),
IntegrationTest(commands::IntegrationTestCommand),
IntegrationTestCheck(commands::IntegrationTestCheckCommand),
IntegrationTestClean(commands::IntegrationTestCleanCommand),
DocCheck(commands::DocCheckCommand),
DocTest(commands::DocTestCommand),
CompileCheck(commands::CompileCheckCommand),
CompileFail(commands::CompileFailCommand),
BenchCheck(commands::BenchCheckCommand),
ExampleCheck(commands::ExampleCheckCommand),
}
impl Prepare for Commands {
fn prepare<'a>(&self, sh: &'a xshell::Shell, flags: Flag) -> Vec<PreparedCommand<'a>> {
match self {
Commands::Lints(subcommand) => subcommand.prepare(sh, flags),
Commands::Doc(subcommand) => subcommand.prepare(sh, flags),
Commands::Compile(subcommand) => subcommand.prepare(sh, flags),
Commands::Format(subcommand) => subcommand.prepare(sh, flags),
Commands::Clippy(subcommand) => subcommand.prepare(sh, flags),
Commands::Test(subcommand) => subcommand.prepare(sh, flags),
Commands::TestCheck(subcommand) => subcommand.prepare(sh, flags),
Commands::IntegrationTest(subcommand) => subcommand.prepare(sh, flags),
Commands::IntegrationTestCheck(subcommand) => subcommand.prepare(sh, flags),
Commands::IntegrationTestClean(subcommand) => subcommand.prepare(sh, flags),
Commands::DocCheck(subcommand) => subcommand.prepare(sh, flags),
Commands::DocTest(subcommand) => subcommand.prepare(sh, flags),
Commands::CompileCheck(subcommand) => subcommand.prepare(sh, flags),
Commands::CompileFail(subcommand) => subcommand.prepare(sh, flags),
Commands::BenchCheck(subcommand) => subcommand.prepare(sh, flags),
Commands::ExampleCheck(subcommand) => subcommand.prepare(sh, flags),
}
}
}