This reverts commit 711e644a061cf8e21c35308873fe0f0e698ac490.
Lue suggested reverting #661 because ZLS worked around the issue of @src
being relative in that environment: https://github.com/zigtools/zls/pull/898
This is not a perfect solution (what zls did seems to be a workaround), but
is good enough for us until Zig gets an official package manager.
* all: build: fix sdkPath for relative @src.file
Prior to this commit, the build system heavily assumed that the result
`@src.file` would always be absolute, but this is no longer
guaranteed, likely due to there being no such thing as an "absolute
path" in WASI.
It appears that for normal invocations of `zig build`, it is safe to
assume that `@src.file` is absolute. However, when ZLS uses a custom
`build_runner.zig` to collect build configuration, `@src.file` is
actually relative to the current working directory, at least on my
system. For a while, this led to ZLS completions breaking entirely,
but presently it actually causes ZLS to crash!
The solution is not as simple as using relative `sdkPath` results
as-is, because the build system may attempt to resolve these paths
relative to build root, when the paths are actually relative to the
current working directory.
This leads to a sticky situation: the current working directory is a
runtime concept, but `@src.file` is resolved at compile time. However,
it appears that the build runner does not change current working
directory in between compilation and execution, so it is probably safe
to calculate `sdkPath` using runtime current working directory.
Still, this requires major changes with how `sdkPath` works, since
runtime computation and allocations are required. So pretty much
anything that relied on `sdkPath` being comptime-known has been
refactored in this commit.
The most severe result of this is that, for example, `gpu.pkg` can no
longer be a comptime-known constant: it has to be a runtime function
that takes a `*Builder` and returns a `Pkg`.
This commit deals with usages of `*.pkg` and `sdkPath` within Mach
itself, but projects that depend on Mach such as `mach-examples` will
almost certainly require changes as well.
* all: update README to reflect change in pkg usage
For details on updating your code to use this version, see: 88b1106953
Signed-off-by: Stephen Gutekanst <stephen@hexops.com>
Co-authored-by: Stephen Gutekanst <stephen@hexops.com>
Since users of the library do not have access to the `@cImport` struct (and we
do not want to expose that), the user may pass only an untyped `*anyopaque` pointer
which we'll internally cast to `*c.GLFWwindow`.
Signed-off-by: Stephen Gutekanst <stephen@hexops.com>
With almost all tests/examples working on all platforms now with the new compiler,
https://github.com/hexops/mach/issues/180, it's time to remove stage1 support.
Signed-off-by: Stephen Gutekanst <stephen@hexops.com>
This is an poor approximation for the host OS running Darwin, which
is good enough for now. In practice this means macOS works but can't
cross-compile (until the cImport issue is fixed in Zig itself), but
Windows/Linux are unaffected and should be able to build natively and
cross-compile.
Signed-off-by: Stephen Gutekanst <stephen@hexops.com>