This is a C/C++ toolchain that can (cross-)compile C/C++ programs on top of
zig cc
. It contains clang-17, musl, glibc 2.17-2.38, all in a ~40MB package.
Read
here
about zig-cc; the rest of the README will present how to use this toolchain
from Bazel.
Configuring toolchains in Bazel is complex and fraught with peril. We, the team
behind hermetic_cc_toolchain
, are still confused on how this all works, and
often wonder why it works at all. That aside, we made our best effort to make
hermetic_cc_toolchain
usable for your C/C++/CGo projects, with as many
guardrails can be installed.
While copy-pasting the code in your project, attempt to read and understand the text surrounding the code snippets. This will save you hours of head scratching.
This repository is cloned from and is based on Adam Bouhenguel's
bazel-zig-cc, and was later developed at
sr.ht/~motiejus/bazel-zig-cc
. After a while this repository was moved to the
Uber GitHub repository and renamed to
hermetic_cc_toolchain
.
Our special thanks to Adam for coming up with the idea - and creating the original version – of
bazel-zig-cc
and publishing it. His idea and work helped make the concept of using Zig with Bazel a reality; now we all can benefit from it.
Add this to your WORKSPACE
:
load("@bazel_tools//tools/build_defs/repo:http.bzl", "http_archive")
HERMETIC_CC_TOOLCHAIN_VERSION = "v3.0.1"
http_archive(
name = "hermetic_cc_toolchain",
sha256 = "3bc6ec127622fdceb4129cb06b6f7ab098c4d539124dde96a6318e7c32a53f7a",
urls = [
"https://mirror.bazel.build/github.com/uber/hermetic_cc_toolchain/releases/download/{0}/hermetic_cc_toolchain-{0}.tar.gz".format(HERMETIC_CC_TOOLCHAIN_VERSION),
"https://github.com/uber/hermetic_cc_toolchain/releases/download/{0}/hermetic_cc_toolchain-{0}.tar.gz".format(HERMETIC_CC_TOOLCHAIN_VERSION),
],
)
load("@hermetic_cc_toolchain//toolchain:defs.bzl", zig_toolchains = "toolchains")
# Plain zig_toolchains() will pick reasonable defaults. See
# toolchain/defs.bzl:toolchains on how to change the Zig SDK version and
# download URL.
zig_toolchains()
And this to .bazelrc
on a Unix-y systems:
common --enable_platform_specific_config
build:linux --sandbox_add_mount_pair=/tmp
build:macos --sandbox_add_mount_pair=/var/tmp
build:windows --sandbox_add_mount_pair=C:\Temp
The directories can be narrowed down to /tmp/zig-cache
(Linux),
/var/tmp/zig-cache
(MacOS) and C:\Temp\zig-cache
respectively
if it can be ensured they will be created before the invocation of bazel build
. See #83 for more context. If a different place is preferred
for zig cache, set:
build --repo_env=HERMETIC_CC_TOOLCHAIN_CACHE_PREFIX=/path/to/cache
build --sandbox_add_mount_pair=/path/to/cache
The snippets above will download the zig toolchain and make the bazel
toolchains available for registration and usage. If nothing else is done, this
will work for some minimal use cases. The .bazelrc
snippet instructs Bazel to
use the registered "new kinds of toolchains". The next steps depend on how one
wants to use hermetic_cc_toolchain
. The descriptions below is a gentle
introduction to C++ toolchains from "user's perspective" too.
See examples for some other recommended .bazelrc
flags, as well
as how to use hermetic_cc_toolchain
with bzlmod.
This option is least disruptive to the workflow compared to no hermetic C++
toolchain, and works best when trying out or getting started with
hermetic_cc_toolchain
for a subset of targets.
To request Bazel to use a specific toolchain (compatible with the specified platform) for build/tests/whatever on linux-amd64-musl, do:
bazel build \
--platforms @zig_sdk//platform:linux_arm64 \
--extra_toolchains @zig_sdk//toolchain:linux_arm64_musl \
//test/go:go
There are a few things going on here, let's try to dissect them.
Specifies that the our target platform is linux_arm64
, which resolves into:
$ bazel query --output=build @zig_sdk//platform:linux_arm64
platform(
name = "linux_arm64",
generator_name = "linux_arm64",
generator_function = "declare_platforms",
generator_location = "platform/BUILD:7:18",
constraint_values = ["@platforms//os:linux", "@platforms//cpu:aarch64"],
)
constraint_values
instructs Bazel to be looking for a toolchain that is
compatible with (in Bazelspeak, target_compatible_with
) all of the
["@platforms//os:linux", "@platforms//cpu:aarch64"]
.
Inspect first (@platforms//cpu:aarch64
is an alias to
@platforms//cpu:arm64
):
$ bazel query --output=build @zig_sdk//toolchain:linux_arm64_musl
toolchain(
name = "linux_arm64_musl",
generator_name = "linux_arm64_musl",
generator_function = "declare_toolchains",
generator_location = "toolchain/BUILD:7:19",
toolchain_type = "@bazel_tools//tools/cpp:toolchain_type",
target_compatible_with = ["@platforms//os:linux", "@platforms//cpu:aarch64", "@zig_sdk//libc:unconstrained"],
toolchain = "@zig_sdk//:aarch64-linux-musl_cc",
)
For a platform to pick up the right toolchain, the platform's
constraint_values
must be a subset1 of the toolchain's
target_compatible_with
. Since the platform is a subset (therefore,
toolchain's @zig_sdk//libc:unconstrained
does not matter), this toolchain is
selected for this platform. As a result, --platforms @zig_sdk//platform:linux_amd64
causes Bazel to select a toolchain
@zig_sdk//platform:linux_arm64_musl
(because it satisfies all constraints),
which will compile and link the C/C++ code with musl.
@zig_sdk//libc:unconstrained
will become important later.
Specifying the platform and toolchain for every target may become burdensome,
so they can be put used via --config
. For example, append this to .bazelrc
:
build:linux_arm64 --platforms @zig_sdk//platform:linux_arm64
build:linux_arm64 --extra_toolchains @zig_sdk//toolchain:linux_arm64_musl
And then building to linux-arm64-musl boils down to:
bazel build --config=linux_arm64_musl //test/go:go
Instead of adding the toolchains to .bazelrc
, they can be added
unconditionally. Append this to WORKSPACE
after zig_toolchains(...)
:
register_toolchains(
"@zig_sdk//toolchain:linux_amd64_gnu.2.28",
"@zig_sdk//toolchain:linux_arm64_gnu.2.28",
"@zig_sdk//toolchain:darwin_amd64",
"@zig_sdk//toolchain:darwin_arm64",
"@zig_sdk//toolchain:windows_amd64",
"@zig_sdk//toolchain:windows_arm64",
"@zig_sdk//toolchain:wasip1_wasm",
)
Append this to .bazelrc
:
build --action_env BAZEL_DO_NOT_DETECT_CPP_TOOLCHAIN=1
From Bazel's perspective, this is almost equivalent to always specifying
--extra_toolchains
on every bazel <...>
command-line invocation. It also
means there is no way to disable the toolchain with the command line. This is
useful if you find hermetic_cc_toolchain
useful enough to compile for all of
your targets and tools.
With BAZEL_DO_NOT_DETECT_CPP_TOOLCHAIN=1
Bazel stops detecting the default
host toolchain. Configuring toolchains is complicated enough, and the
auto-detection (read: fallback to non-hermetic toolchain) is a footgun best
avoided. This option is not documented in bazel, so may break. If you intend to
use the hermetic toolchain exclusively, it won't hurt.
When some targets need to be build with different libcs (either different
versions of glibc or musl), use a linux toolchain from
@zig_sdk//libc_aware/toolchains:<...>
. The toolchain will only be selected
when building for a specific libc. For example, in WORKSPACE
:
register_toolchains(
"@zig_sdk//libc_aware/toolchain:linux_amd64_gnu.2.19",
"@zig_sdk//libc_aware/toolchain:linux_arm64_gnu.2.28",
"@zig_sdk//libc_aware/toolchain:x86_64-linux-musl",
)
What does @zig_sdk//libc_aware/toolchain:linux_amd64_gnu.2.19
mean?
$ bazel query --output=build @zig_sdk//libc_aware/toolchain:linux_amd64_gnu.2.19 |& grep target
target_compatible_with = ["@platforms//os:linux", "@platforms//cpu:x86_64", "@zig_sdk//libc:gnu.2.19"],
To see how this relates to the platform:
$ bazel query --output=build @zig_sdk//libc_aware/platform:linux_amd64_gnu.2.19 |& grep constraint
constraint_values = ["@platforms//os:linux", "@platforms//cpu:x86_64", "@zig_sdk//libc:gnu.2.19"],
In this case, the platform's constraint_values
and toolchain's
target_compatible_with
are identical, causing Bazel to select the right
toolchain for the requested platform. With these toolchains registered, one can
build a project for a specific libc-aware platform; it will select the
appropriate toolchain:
$ bazel run --platforms @zig_sdk//libc_aware/platform:linux_amd64_gnu.2.19 //test/c:which_libc
glibc_2.19
$ bazel run --platforms @zig_sdk//libc_aware/platform:linux_amd64_gnu.2.28 //test/c:which_libc
glibc_2.28
$ bazel run --platforms @zig_sdk//libc_aware/platform:linux_amd64_musl //test/c:which_libc
non_glibc
$ bazel run --run_under=file --platforms @zig_sdk//libc_aware/platform:linux_arm64_gnu.2.28 //test/c:which_libc
which_libc: ELF 64-bit LSB executable, ARM aarch64, version 1 (SYSV), dynamically linked, interpreter /lib/ld-linux-aarch64.so.1, for GNU/Linux 2.0.0, stripped
To the list of libc aware toolchains and platforms:
$ bazel query @zig_sdk//libc_aware/toolchain/...
$ bazel query @zig_sdk//libc_aware/platform/...
Libc-aware toolchains are especially useful when relying on
transitions, as transitioning extra_platforms
will cause the
host tools to be rebuilt with the specific libc version, which takes time; also
the build host may not be able to run them if, say, target glibc version is
newer than on the host. Some tests in this repository (under test/
) are using
transitions; you may check out how it's done.
The @zig_sdk//libc:variant
constraint is necessary to select a matching
toolchain. Remember: the toolchain's target_compatible_with
must be
equivalent or a superset of the platform's constraint_values
. This is why
both libc-aware platforms and libc-aware toolchains reside in their own
namespace; if we try to mix non-libc-aware to libc-aware, confusion ensues.
To use the libc constraints in the project's platform definitions, add a
@zig_sdk//libc:variant
constraint to them. See the list of available values:
$ bazel query "attr(constraint_setting, @zig_sdk//libc:variant, @zig_sdk//...)"
@zig_sdk//libc:unconstrained
is a special value that indicates that no value
for the constraint is specified. The non libc aware linux toolchains are only
compatible with this value to prevent accidental silent fallthrough to them.
This is a guardrail.
Both Go and Bazel naming schemes are accepted. For convenience with Go, the following Go-style toolchain aliases are created:
Bazel (zig) name | Go name |
---|---|
x86_64 |
amd64 |
aarch64 |
arm64 |
wasm32 |
wasm |
macos |
darwin |
wasi |
wasip1 |
For example, the toolchain linux_amd64_gnu.2.28
is aliased to
x86_64-linux-gnu.2.28
. To find out which toolchains can be registered or
used, run:
$ bazel query @zig_sdk//toolchain/...
zig cc
is almost a drop-in replacement for clang/gcc. This section lists
some of the discovered differences and ways to live with them.
zig cc
differs from "mainstream" compilers by enabling UBSAN by
default. Which means your program may compile successfully and crash
with:
SIGILL: illegal instruction
This flag encourages program authors to fix the undefined behavior. There are many ways to find the undefined behavior.
These are the things you may stumble into when using hermetic_cc_toolchain
.
We are unlikely to implement them any time soon, but patches implementing those
will be accepted.
Currently zig cache is stored in /var/tmp/zig-cache
, so bazel clean --expunge
will not clear the zig cache. Zig's cache should be stored somewhere
in the project's path. It is not clear how to do it.
See #83 for more context.
For non-trivial programs (and for all darwin/arm64 cgo programs) MacOS SDK may
be necessary. Read Jakub's comment about it. Support for OSX sysroot
is currently not implemented, but patches implementing it will be accepted, as
long as the OSX sysroot must come through an http_archive
.
In essence, OSX target support is not well tested with hermetic_cc_toolchain
.
Also see #10.
Add to .bazelrc
:
build --incompatible_enable_cc_toolchain_resolution
This repository is used on the following (host) platforms:
linux_amd64
, a.k.a.x86_64
.linux_arm64
, a.k.a.AArch64
.darwin_amd64
, the 64-bit post-PowerPC models.darwin_arm64
, the M1.windows_amd64
, a.k.a.x64
.
The tests are running (CId) on linux-amd64.
A standalone Docker environment to play with hermetic_cc_toolchain
:
$ docker run -e CC=/usr/bin/false -ti --rm -v "$PWD:/x" -w /x debian:bookworm-slim
# apt update && apt install --no-install-recommends -y shellcheck ca-certificates python3 git
# git config --global --add safe.directory /x
# tools/bazel test //...
# ./ci/lint
# ./ci/release
# ./ci/zig-wrapper
We maintain two channels for comms:
- Github issues and pull requests.
- Slack:
#zig
in bazelbuild.slack.com.
Previous communications were done in a mailing list; the past archive can be accessed like this:
git checkout v2.0.0-rc2 mailing-list-archive.mbox
mutt -R -f mailing-list-archive.mbox
Guidelines for maintainers2:
- Communicate intent precisely.
- Edge cases matter.
- Favor reading code over writing code.
- Only one obvious way to do things.
- Runtime crashes are better than bugs.
- Compile errors are better than runtime crashes.
- Incremental improvements.
- Avoid local maximums.
- Reduce the amount one must remember.
- Focus on code rather than style.
- Resource allocation may fail; resource deallocation must succeed.
- Memory is a resource.
- Together we serve the users.
On a more practical note:
- Maintainers can merge others' pull requests following their best judgement. They may or may not ask for feedback from other maintainers. Follow the Zen of Zig.
- Currently releases are coordinated with Uber employees, because they can test
the version-to-be-released their big repository. If you use
hermetic_cc_toolchain
in production and, more importantly, have a heterogeneous environment (different languages, RBE, different platforms), we encourage you to make yourself known. That way we can work together to validate it before cutting the release.
Footnotes
-
a mathematical subset: both can be equal. ↩
-
Credit:
zig zen
↩