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Really fix OSX nightlies #3315
Really fix OSX nightlies #3315
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After rust-lang#3311 we're now correctly trying to link OpenSSL statically on OSX. Unfortunately though this is failing to complete on the builders. Turns out the way we install OpenSSL through Homebrew create "universal archives" which is essentially an archive with both i686 and x86_64 object files, but separated. The linker takes care of this just fine but rustc currently chokes on it, unable to include the library statically into the compiler. To work around this we prepare our own mini install of OpenSSL by copying relevant bits into a local directory (like we do on Linux). As part of this we use the `lipo` tool, which is used to manage these fat archives, to disassemble the archive and only extract the relevant architecture. This should make a pre-installation step which both extracts the information and configures Cargo to use it. This should also fix the errors we're seeing on Travis I believe.
@bors: r+ |
📌 Commit 1fddd18 has been approved by |
r? @brson (rust_highfive has picked a reviewer for you, use r? to override) |
Really fix OSX nightlies After #3311 we're now correctly trying to link OpenSSL statically on OSX. Unfortunately though this is failing to complete on the builders. Turns out the way we install OpenSSL through Homebrew create "universal archives" which is essentially an archive with both i686 and x86_64 object files, but separated. The linker takes care of this just fine but rustc currently chokes on it, unable to include the library statically into the compiler. To work around this we prepare our own mini install of OpenSSL by copying relevant bits into a local directory (like we do on Linux). As part of this we use the `lipo` tool, which is used to manage these fat archives, to disassemble the archive and only extract the relevant architecture. This should make a pre-installation step which both extracts the information and configures Cargo to use it. This should also fix the errors we're seeing on Travis I believe.
Might be easier to just build from source? |
True yeah, I'd be down for that. I just haven't ever actually tried that. |
☀️ Test successful - cargo-cross-linux, cargo-linux-32, cargo-linux-64, cargo-mac-32, cargo-mac-64, cargo-win-gnu-32, cargo-win-gnu-64, cargo-win-msvc-32, cargo-win-msvc-64 |
Backporting fixes to 1.14.0 This is a backport of the following PRs to fix the actual issue, rust-lang/rust#37969. * #3311 - first attempt to fix OpenSSL linkage on OSX * #3315 - second attempt to fix linkage * #3325 - fix a flaky test causing lots of CI problems * #3332 - actual fix for OpenSSL linkage on OSX * #3345 - first PR for automation changes * #3350 - second PR for automation changes * #3326 - update git2 to support netbsd * #3331 - update git2 to fix segfaults in tests * #3342 - update git2 to fix cert paths
After #3311 we're now correctly trying to link OpenSSL statically on
OSX. Unfortunately though this is failing to complete on the builders.
Turns out the way we install OpenSSL through Homebrew create "universal
archives" which is essentially an archive with both i686 and x86_64
object files, but separated. The linker takes care of this just fine but
rustc currently chokes on it, unable to include the library statically
into the compiler.
To work around this we prepare our own mini install of OpenSSL by
copying relevant bits into a local directory (like we do on Linux). As
part of this we use the
lipo
tool, which is used to manage these fatarchives, to disassemble the archive and only extract the relevant
architecture. This should make a pre-installation step which both
extracts the information and configures Cargo to use it.
This should also fix the errors we're seeing on Travis I believe.