.. | ||
.cargo | ||
src | ||
trampolines | ||
build.rs | ||
Cargo.lock | ||
Cargo.toml | ||
README.md | ||
rust-toolchain.toml |
Windows trampolines
This is a fork of posy trampolines.
Building
Cross-compiling from Linux
Install cargo xwin. Use your
package manager to install LLD and add the rustup
targets:
sudo apt install llvm clang lld
rustup target add i686-pc-windows-msvc
rustup target add x86_64-pc-windows-msvc
rustup target add aarch64-pc-windows-msvc
Then, build the trampolines for both supported architectures:
cargo +nightly-2024-06-08 xwin build --xwin-arch x86 --release --target i686-pc-windows-msvc
cargo +nightly-2024-06-08 xwin build --release --target x86_64-pc-windows-msvc
cargo +nightly-2024-06-08 xwin build --release --target aarch64-pc-windows-msvc
Cross-compiling from macOS
Install cargo xwin. Use your
package manager to install LLVM and add the rustup
targets:
brew install llvm
rustup target add i686-pc-windows-msvc
rustup target add x86_64-pc-windows-msvc
rustup target add aarch64-pc-windows-msvc
Then, build the trampolines for both supported architectures:
cargo +nightly-2024-06-08 xwin build --release --target i686-pc-windows-msvc
cargo +nightly-2024-06-08 xwin build --release --target x86_64-pc-windows-msvc
cargo +nightly-2024-06-08 xwin build --release --target aarch64-pc-windows-msvc
Updating the prebuilt executables
After building the trampolines for both supported architectures:
cp target/aarch64-pc-windows-msvc/release/uv-trampoline-console.exe trampolines/uv-trampoline-aarch64-console.exe
cp target/aarch64-pc-windows-msvc/release/uv-trampoline-gui.exe trampolines/uv-trampoline-aarch64-gui.exe
cp target/x86_64-pc-windows-msvc/release/uv-trampoline-console.exe trampolines/uv-trampoline-x86_64-console.exe
cp target/x86_64-pc-windows-msvc/release/uv-trampoline-gui.exe trampolines/uv-trampoline-x86_64-gui.exe
cp target/i686-pc-windows-msvc/release/uv-trampoline-console.exe trampolines/uv-trampoline-i686-console.exe
cp target/i686-pc-windows-msvc/release/uv-trampoline-gui.exe trampolines/uv-trampoline-i686-gui.exe
Testing the trampolines
To perform a basic smoke test of the trampolines, run the following commands on a Windows machine, from the root of the repository:
cargo clean
cargo run venv
cargo run pip install black
.venv\Scripts\black --version
Background
What is this?
Sometimes you want to run a tool on Windows that's written in Python, like
black
or mypy
or jupyter
or whatever. But, Windows does not know how to
run Python files! It knows how to run .exe
files. So we need to somehow
convert our Python file a .exe
file.
That's what this does: it's a generic "trampoline" that lets us generate custom
.exe
s for arbitrary Python scripts, and when invoked it bounces to invoking
python <the script>
instead.
How do you use it?
Basically, this looks up python.exe
(for console programs)
and invokes python.exe path\to\the\<the .exe>
.
The intended use is:
- take your Python script, name it
__main__.py
, and pack it into a.zip
file. Then concatenate that.zip
file onto the end of one of our prebuilt.exe
s. - After the zip file content, write the path to the Python executable that the script uses to run the Python script as UTF-8 encoded string, followed by the path's length as a 32-bit little-endian integer.
- At the very end, write the magic number
UVUV
in bytes.
launcher.exe |
---|
<zipped python script> |
<path to python.exe> |
<len(path to python.exe)> |
<b'U', b'V', b'U', b'V'> |
Then when you run python
on the .exe
, it will see the .zip
trailer at the
end of the .exe
, and automagically look inside to find and execute
__main__.py
. Easy-peasy.
Why does this exist?
I probably could have used Vinay's C++ implementation from distlib
, but what's
the fun in that? In particular, optimizing for binary size was entertaining
(these are ~7x smaller than the distlib, which doesn't matter much, but does a
little bit, considering that it gets added to every Python script). There are
also some minor advantages, like I think the Rust code is easier to understand
(multiple files!) and it's convenient to be able to straightforwardly code the
Python-finding logic we want. But mostly it was just an interesting challenge.
This does owe a lot to the distlib
implementation though. The overall logic
is copied more-or-less directly.
Anything I should know for hacking on this?
In order to minimize binary size, this uses, panic="abort"
, and carefully
avoids using core::fmt
. This removes a bunch of runtime overhead: by
default, Rust "hello world" on Windows is ~150 KB! So these binaries are ~10x
smaller.
Of course the tradeoff is that this is an awkward super-limited environment. No C runtime and limited platform APIs... you don't even panicking support by default. To work around this:
-
We use
windows
to access Win32 APIs directly. Who needs a C runtime? Though uh, this does mean that literally all of our code isunsafe
. Sorry! -
diagnostics.rs
usesufmt
and some cute Windows tricks to get a convenient version ofeprintln!
that works withoutcore::fmt
, and automatically prints to either the console if available or pops up a message box if not. -
All the meat is in
bounce.rs
.
Miscellaneous tips:
-
cargo-bloat
is a useful tool for checking what code is ending up in the final binary and how much space it's taking. (It makes it very obvious whether you've pulled incore::fmt
!) -
Lots of Rust built-in panicking checks will pull in
core::fmt
, e.g., if you ever use.unwrap()
then suddenly our binaries double in size, because theif foo.is_none() { panic!(...) }
that's hidden inside.unwrap()
will invokecore::fmt
, even if the unwrap will actually never fail..unwrap_unchecked()
avoids this. Similar forslice[idx]
vsslice.get_unchecked(idx)
.
How do you build this stupid thing?
Building this can be frustrating, because the low-level compiler/runtime
machinery have a bunch of implicit assumptions about the environment they'll run
in, and the facilities it provides for things like memcpy
, unwinding, etc.
So we need to replace the bits that we actually need, and which bits we need
can change depending on stuff like optimization options.
For example: we use panic="abort"
, so we don't actually need unwinding support,
but at lower optimization levels the compiler might not realize that, and still
emit references to the unwinding helper__CxxFrameHandler3
. And then the linker
blows up because that symbol doesn't exist.
cargo build --release --target i686-pc-windows-msvc
cargo build --release --target x86_64-pc-windows-msvc
cargo build --release --target aarch64-pc-windows-msvc