Easy to use and reliable cross compiler environment for building Windows, Linux, Mac and JRuby binary gems.
It provides cross compilers and Ruby environments for 2.4 and newer versions of the RubyInstaller and Linux runtime environments. They are prepared for use with rake-compiler. It is used by many gems with C or JRuby extentions.
This is kind of successor of rake-compiler-dev-box. It is wrapped as a gem for easier setup, usage and integration and is based on lightweight Docker containers. It is also more reliable, since the underlying docker images are versioned and immutable.
Install docker following the instructions on the docker website ... or install docker-toolbox for Windows and OSX or boot2docker on Windows or OS X .
Install rake-compiler-dock as a gem. The docker image is downloaded later on demand:
$ gem install rake-compiler-dock
... or build your own gem and docker image:
$ git clone https://github.com/rake-compiler/rake-compiler-dock
$ rake install
Rake-compiler-dock provides the necessary tools to build Ruby extensions for Windows and Linux written in C and C++ and JRuby written in Java. It is intended to be used in conjunction with rake-compiler's cross build capability. Your Rakefile should enable cross compilation like so:
exttask = Rake::ExtensionTask.new('my_extension', my_gem_spec) do |ext|
ext.cross_compile = true
ext.cross_platform = %w[x86-mingw32 x64-mingw-ucrt x64-mingw32 x86-linux x86_64-linux x86_64-darwin arm64-darwin]
end
See below, how to invoke cross builds in your Rakefile.
Additionally it may also be used to build ffi based binary gems like libusb, but currently doesn't provide any additional build helpers for this use case, beyond docker invocation and cross compilers.
Rake-compiler-dock offers the shell command rake-compiler-dock
and a ruby API for issuing commands within the docker image, described below.
There are dedicated images for x86-mingw32
, x64-mingw-ucrt
, x64-mingw32
, x86-linux
, x86_64-linux
, x86_64-darwin
, arm64-darwin
and jruby
targets.
The images contain all supported cross ruby versions, with the exception of x64-mingw32
, which has versions before 3.1 only, and x64-mingw-ucrt
, which has only ruby-3.1+.
This is to match the changed platform of RubyInstaller-3.1.
rake-compiler-dock
without arguments starts an interactive shell session.
This is best suited to try out and debug a build.
It mounts the current working directory into the docker environment.
All changes below the current working directory are shared with the host.
But note, that all other changes to the file system of the container are dropped at the end of the session - the docker image is static for a given version.
rake-compiler-dock
can also take the build command(s) from STDIN or as command arguments.
All commands are executed with the same user and group of the host. This is done by copying user account data into the container and sudo to it.
To build x86 Windows and x86_64 Linux binary gems interactively, it can be called like this:
user@host:$ cd your-gem-dir/
user@host:$ rake-compiler-dock # this enters a container with an interactive shell for x86 Windows (default)
user@5b53794ada92:$ bundle
user@5b53794ada92:$ rake cross native gem
user@5b53794ada92:$ exit
user@host:$ ls pkg/*.gem
your-gem-1.0.0.gem your-gem-1.0.0-x86-mingw32.gem
user@host:$ RCD_PLATFORM=x86_64-linux rake-compiler-dock # this enters a container for amd64 Linux target
user@adc55b2b92a9:$ bundle
user@adc55b2b92a9:$ rake cross native gem
user@adc55b2b92a9:$ exit
user@host:$ ls pkg/*.gem
your-gem-1.0.0.gem your-gem-1.0.0-x86_64-linux.gem
Or non-interactive:
user@host:$ rake-compiler-dock bash -c "bundle && rake cross native gem"
The environment variable RUBY_CC_VERSION
is predefined as described below.
If necessary, additional software can be installed, prior to the build command. This is local to the running session, only.
For Windows and Mac:
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install your-package
For Linux:
sudo yum install your-package
You can also choose between different executable ruby versions by rvm use <version>
.
The current default is 3.1.
Rake-compiler-dock offers a dedicated docker image for JRuby. JRuby doesn't need a complicated cross build environment like C-ruby, but using Rake-compiler-dock for JRuby makes building binary gems more consistent.
To build java binary gems interactively, it can be called like this:
user@host:$ cd your-gem-dir/
user@host:$ RCD_RUBYVM=jruby rake-compiler-dock # this enters a container with an interactive shell
user@5b53794ada92:$ ruby -v
jruby 9.2.5.0 (2.5.0) 2018-12-06 6d5a228 OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM 10.0.2+13-Ubuntu-1ubuntu0.18.04.4 on 10.0.2+13-Ubuntu-1ubuntu0.18.04.4 +jit [linux-x86_64]
user@5b53794ada92:$ bundle
user@5b53794ada92:$ rake java gem
user@5b53794ada92:$ exit
user@host:$ ls pkg/*.gem
your-gem-1.0.0.gem your-gem-1.0.0-java.gem
To make the build process reproducible for other parties, it is recommended to add rake-compiler-dock to your Rakefile. This can be done like this:
task 'gem:native' do
require 'rake_compiler_dock'
sh "bundle package --all" # Avoid repeated downloads of gems by using gem files from the host.
%w[ x86-mingw32 x64-mingw-ucrt x64-mingw32 x86-linux x86_64-linux arm-linux aarch64-linux x86_64-darwin arm64-darwin ].each do |plat|
RakeCompilerDock.sh "bundle --local && rake native:#{plat} gem", platform: plat
end
RakeCompilerDock.sh "bundle --local && rake java gem", rubyvm: :jruby
end
This runs the bundle
and rake
commands once for each platform.
That is once for the jruby gems and 6 times for the specified MRI platforms.
rake-compiler-dock uses dedicated docker images per build target (since rake-compiler-dock-1.0).
Because each target runs in a separate docker container, it is simple to run all targets in parallel.
The following example defines rake gem:native
as a multitask and separates the preparation which should run only once.
It also shows how gem signing can be done with parallel builds.
Please note, that parallel builds only work reliable, if the specific platform gem is requested (instead of just "rake gem").
namespace "gem" do
task 'prepare' do
require 'rake_compiler_dock'
require 'io/console'
sh "bundle package --all"
sh "cp ~/.gem/gem-*.pem build/gem/ || true"
ENV["GEM_PRIVATE_KEY_PASSPHRASE"] = STDIN.getpass("Enter passphrase of gem signature key: ")
end
exttask.cross_platform.each do |plat|
desc "Build all native binary gems in parallel"
multitask 'native' => plat
desc "Build the native gem for #{plat}"
task plat => 'prepare' do
RakeCompilerDock.sh <<-EOT, platform: plat
(cp build/gem/gem-*.pem ~/.gem/ || true) &&
bundle --local &&
rake native:#{plat} pkg/#{exttask.gem_spec.full_name}-#{plat}.gem
EOT
end
end
end
Rake-compiler-dock uses semantic versioning, so you should add it into your Gemfile, to make sure, that future changes will not break your build.
gem 'rake-compiler-dock', '~> 1.2'
See the wiki for projects which make use of rake-compiler-dock.
The OCI images provided by rake-compiler-dock can be used without the rake-compiler-dock
gem or wrapper. This may be useful if your CI pipeline is building native gems.
For example, a Github Actions job might look like this:
jobs:
native-gem:
name: "native-gem"
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
container:
image: "larskanis/rake-compiler-dock-mri-x86_64-linux:1.2.1"
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- run: bundle install && bundle exec rake gem:x86_64-linux:rcd
- uses: actions/upload-artifact@v2
with:
name: native-gem
path: gems
retention-days: 1
Where the referenced rake task might be defined by:
cross_platforms = ["x64-mingw32", "x86_64-linux", "x86_64-darwin", "arm64-darwin"]
namespace "gem" do
cross_platforms.each do |platform|
namespace platform do
task "rcd" do
Rake::Task["native:#{platform}"].invoke
Rake::Task["pkg/#{rcee_precompiled_spec.full_name}-#{Gem::Platform.new(platform)}.gem"].invoke
end
end
end
end
For an example of rake tasks that support this style of invocation, visit https://github.com/flavorjones/ruby-c-extensions-explained/tree/main/precompiled
Rake-compiler-dock makes use of several environment variables.
The following variables are recognized by rake-compiler-dock:
RCD_RUBYVM
- The ruby VM and toolchain to be used. Must be one ofmri
,jruby
.RCD_PLATFORM
- The target rubygems platform. Must be a space separated list out ofx86-mingw32
,x64-mingw-ucrt
,x64-mingw32
,x86-linux
,x86_64-linux
,arm-linux
,aarch64-linux
,x86_64-darwin
andarm64-darwin
. It is ignored whenrubyvm
is set to:jruby
.RCD_IMAGE
- The docker image that is downloaded and started. Defaults to "larskanis/rake-compiler-dock:IMAGE_VERSION" with an image version that is determined by the gem version.
The following variables are passed through to the docker container without modification:
http_proxy
,https_proxy
,ftp_proxy
- See Frequently asked questions for more details.GEM_PRIVATE_KEY_PASSPHRASE
- To avoid interactive password prompts in the container.
The following variables are provided to the running docker container:
RCD_IMAGE
- The full docker image name the container is running on.RCD_HOST_RUBY_PLATFORM
- TheRUBY_PLATFORM
of the host ruby.RCD_HOST_RUBY_VERSION
- TheRUBY_VERSION
of the host ruby.RUBY_CC_VERSION
- The target ruby versions for rake-compiler. The default is defined in the Dockerfile, but can be changed as a parameter to rake.RCD_MOUNTDIR
- The directory which is mounted into the docker container. Defaults to pwd.RCD_WORKDIR
- The working directory within the docker container. Defaults to pwd.
Other environment variables can be set or passed through to the container like this:
RakeCompilerDock.sh "rake cross native gem OPENSSL_VERSION=#{ENV['OPENSSL_VERSION']}"
See Frequently asked questions and
- Fork it ( https://github.com/rake-compiler/rake-compiler-dock/fork )
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create a new Pull Request