This introduces an IntelliJ plugin that's meant to assist with development of the Pkl codebase itself.
The plugin adds a file editor that opens snippet tests in a split editor pane, showing the input on the left side and output on the right side.
This adds logic to build and publish the other executables related to Pkl.
These are:
* pkl-doc
* pkl-codegen-kotlin
* pkl-codegen-java
pkl-codegen-kotlin and pkl-codegen-java are published as executable JARs, whereas pkldoc is published both as an executable JAR, and also native executables (matching the set of os/arch supported by Pkl).
The reason this only publishes executable JARs for pkl-codegen-kotlin and pkl-codegen-java is because we expect that the Java requirement is not a problem for these users, and that the native executable provides negligible added value.
As part of this, the following changes are made:
* Introduce `pklJavaExecutable` plugin, which sets up building and publishing of executable JAR.
* Introduce `pklNativeExecutable` plugin, which sets up building and publishing of native executables.
* Introduce `NativeImageBuild` Gradle task, which knows how to build native-image executables.
* Introduce `ExecutableSpec` extension, for projects that publish executables to configure how those executables should be published.
* `./griddles buildNative`, by default, will only build the executable of the host OS/Arch, and will no longer cross-build.
* The target arch of `./gradlew buildNative` can be changed using `-Dpkl.targetArch=<aarch64|amd64>`.
* On linux/amd64 only, with `./gradlew buildNative`, a statically linked executable can be built using `-Dpkl.musl=true`
* Make `javaExecutable` a dependency of `assemble`
* Make `testStartJavaExecutable` a dependency of `check`
* Change name `pklNativeBuild` to `pklNativeLifecycle` to better match the plugin's purpose
* Remove Truffle SVM classes from main source set (don't publish these classes as part of the pkl-cli JAR)
* Change CircleCI definition to publish new executables
* Change CircleCI definition to call `buildNative` instead of individual task names
This updates the GraalVM and Truffle libraries to 2024.1.2.
This also updates the build logic to compile Java sources using Java 21, due to some compile-only dependencies within GraalVM/Truffle using class file version 65. However, the produced artifact is still compatible with Java 17.
This also changes the Gradle build logic to use toolchains, and to test the Java libraries with JDK 17 and 21.
One consequence of this change is that Truffle is no longer shaded within the fat jars.
feat: support for jvm21+ toolchain
feat: support for gradle toolchains
feat: pass -PnativeArch=native to build with -march=native
test: multi-jdk testing support
test: support for jvm-test-suite plugin
test: add tasks to run jpkl eval on multiple jdks
test: make jdk exec tests respect multi-jdk flags and ranges
fix: remove mrjar classes at >jvm17 from fatjars
fix: use jdk21 to run the tests (needed for Unsafe.ensureInitialized)
fix: truffle svm dependency is required after graalvm 24.0.0
fix: warnings for gvm flag usage, renamed truffle svm macro
fix: build with --add-modules=jdk.unsupported where needed
fix: don't use gu tool for modern graalvm versions
fix: catch Throwable instead of deprecated-for-removal ThreadDeath
chore: buildinfo changes for JVM targets, toolchains
chore: enforce testing at exactly jdk21
chore: enforce build tooling at jdk21+
chore: bump graalvm/truffle libs → 24.1.2
chore: toolchains for buildSrc
Signed-off-by: Sam Gammon <sam@elide.dev>
Graal Native Image is assuming 4k page size here, which is a naughty assumption to make in the modern Linux-on-ARM landscape.
Two very common hardware configurations require 16k minumum page size: the Raspberry Pi 5 and Asahi Linux (running on Apple Silicon hardware).
This change forces 64k pages for Linux/AArch64 native executables to guarantee compatibility with these platforms.
DEVELOPMENT.adoc is also updated to cover the additional dependencies required for building native executables on Linux.
This adds support for Windows.
The in-language path separator is still `/`, to ensure Pkl programs are cross-platform.
Log lines are written using CRLF endings on Windows.
Modules that are combined with `--module-output-separator` uses LF endings to ensure
consistent rendering across platforms.
`jpkl` does not work on Windows as a direct executable.
However, it can work with `java -jar jpkl`.
Additional details:
* Adjust git settings for Windows
* Add native executable for pkl cli
* Add jdk17 windows Gradle check in CI
* Adjust CI test reports to be staged within Gradle rather than by shell script.
* Fix: encode more characters that are not safe Windows paths
* Skip running tests involving symbolic links on Windows (these require administrator privileges to run).
* Introduce custom implementation of `IoUtils.relativize`
* Allow Gradle to initialize ExecutableJar `Property` values
* Add Gradle flag to enable remote JVM debugging
Co-authored-by: Philip K.F. Hölzenspies <holzensp@gmail.com>