This reverts commit 6a099257e8.
It is now clear that pinning the toolchain for cross compilation is not
necessary since we only use it for building to aarch64:
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/95926#issue-1199547707
"This problem doesn't currently show up when cross-compiling from x86_64
to aarch64, since aarch64 doesn't use static-pie by default, but
enabling PIE with -C relocation-model=pie triggers the same bug and
makes the resulting binaries segfault."
Fixes: #3962
Signed-off-by: Rob Bradford <robert.bradford@intel.com>
Unfortunately Rust 1.59 produces binaries that segfault when compiled
with musl-gcc wrappers. Which is exactly how we produce out aarch64 and
musl binaries for the release.
See: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/95926
Signed-off-by: Rob Bradford <robert.bradford@intel.com>
Needed since:
commit 0ab4097606
Author: Bo Chen <chen.bo@intel.com>
Date: Thu Feb 10 18:29:53 2022 -0800
test_infra: Enable cross-build for "musl" and "aarch64" targets
With enabling the `vendered-openssl` feature, we can now cross-build the
`test_infra` crate for "musl" and "aarch64" targets. In this way, we
can remove the `test_infra` crate from the "exclude" list, so that this
crate can be checked and processed by "cargo clippy" and "cargo fmt".
More details can be found: https://docs.rs/openssl/latest/openssl/#vendored
As 'musl-gcc' is required, this commit also installs the `musl-tools`
package for our "build" github action on the musl target [1].
[1] https://github.com/actions-rs/toolchain/issues/102
Signed-off-by: Bo Chen <chen.bo@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Rob Bradford <robert.bradford@intel.com>
Create a source archive with vendored sources as part of the release
workflow. This is to enable building the release offline for distros.
Note: The use of realpath and CARGO_HOME are to work around a cargo
vendor bug: https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/issues/8443.
Signed-off-by: William Douglas <william.douglas@intel.com>
In preparation for splitting the binaries into their own crates start
building all the binaries in the workspace when doing a build as part of
the GitHub actions.
Signed-off-by: Rob Bradford <robert.bradford@intel.com>
Stripping the release build for glibc shrinks the size considerably:
$ du -h target/release/cloud-hypervisor
8.5M target/release/cloud-hypervisor
$ strip target/release/cloud-hypervisor
$ du -h target/release/cloud-hypervisor
5.2M target/release/cloud-hypervisor
Signed-off-by: Rob Bradford <robert.bradford@intel.com>