To use Tulsi, clone this repository and run build_and_run.sh
. By default this will install the Tulsi.app inside $HOME/Applications
. Additionally, following options are available:
-b
: Bazel binary that Tulsi should use to build and install the app (Default isbazel
)-d
: The folder where to install the Tulsi app into (Default is$HOME/Applications
)-x
: The Xcode version Tulsi should be built for (Default is13.4.1
)
If your project can be built with Bazel 5.0.0 or newer, you can integrate Tulsi into your project.
Put the following content into your WORKSPACE file:
TULSI_COMMIT_HASH = "518f18da4948192c72074e07fa1dfe15858d40f4"
http_archive(
name = "tulsi",
url = "https://github.com/bazelbuild/tulsi/archive/{0}.tar.gz".format(TULSI_COMMIT_HASH),
strip_prefix = "tulsi-{0}".format(TULSI_COMMIT_HASH),
sha256 = "92c89fcabfefc313dafea1cbc96c9f68d6f2025f2436ee11f7a4e4eb640fa151",
)
Now you can run Tulsi with the following command:
bazel run @tulsi//:tulsi
You can also generate an Xcode project with the following command:
bazel run -- @tulsi//:tulsi -- --genconfig "/path/to/your.tulsiproj:target" --outputfolder="/path/to/output"
Replace "/path/to/your.tulsiproj:target
with the location of your Tulsi
project and the target you want to generate the Xcode project for. Replace the
/path/to/output
with the directory's path where you want the generated Xcode
project to be. Both paths need to be absolute path since bazel run
will change
the execution directory.
The TULSI_COMMIT_HASH
is the git commit hash of the Tulsi you want to use.
When you want to update Tulsi, you can replace the value of TULSI_COMMIT_HASH
with the new commit hash you want. In this way, you can easily update Tulsi
across the whole team.
If you do not know the sha256
of the new Tulsi archive you want to use, you
can remove the sha256
attribute. Then when you do bazel run @tulsi//:tulsi
you will say a debug log like this:
DEBUG: Rule 'tulsi' indicated that a canonical reproducible form can be obtained by modifying arguments sha256 = "92c89fcabfefc313dafea1cbc96c9f68d6f2025f2436ee11f7a4e4eb640fa151"
If you trust the source, you can then use the sha256
value in the log.
Tulsi-generated Xcode projects use Bazel to build, not Xcode. Building in Xcode will cause it to only run a script; the script invokes Bazel to build the configured Bazel target and copies the artifacts to where Xcode expects them to be. This means that many common components of an Xcode project are handled differently than you may be used to. Notable differences:
- BUILD files are the source of truth; most changes made to your Xcode project
won't affect the build.
- Adding new sources to the Xcode project won't include them in your app; they must be added to BUILD files.
- Changes made to your BUILD files, such as adding new library dependencies, are incorporated automatically when building your generated project. The only time you need to re-run Tulsi is if you want to add additional build targets or have new source files show up in Xcode for editing.
- The Info.plist file is governed entirely by BUILD rules in Bazel and is not displayed in the Xcode UI.
- Changes to compilation flags (i.e. -DHELLO) should be made in the BUILD files in order to affect the build; changes made to compilation settings in the Xcode UI will only affect indexing. You may want to regenerate your project using Tulsi after modifying compilation flags.
- Tulsi will set some Tulsi-specific flags for
bazel
invocations, some of which may affect Bazel caching. In order to maximize cache re-use when building from the command line, try using theuser_build.py
script which is located in the generated xcodeproj at<xcodeproj>/.tulsi/Scripts/user_build.py
.
Tulsi projects contain a few settings which control various behaviors during project generation and builds.
- Bazel
build
flags, customizable per compilation mode (dbg
andopt
) - Bazel
build
startup flags, also customizable per compilation mode - Generation platform configuration: Target platform and arch used during project
generation.
- Can change from targeting iOS sim to iOS device or from iOS to macOS. Setting this improperly shouldn't break your project although it may potentially worsen generation and build performance.
- Generation compilation mode: Bazel compilation mode (
dbg
oropt
, nofastbuild
) used during project generation.- Defaults to
dbg
, swap toopt
if you normally build Release builds in Xcode (i.e. profiling your app). Setting this improperly shouldn't break your project although it may potentially worsen generation and build performance.
- Defaults to
- Prioritize Swift: set this to inform Tulsi that it should use Swift-specific
flags during project generation.
- Defaults to
No
, swap toYes
if your project contains Swift (even in its dependencies). Setting this improperly shouldn't break your project although it may potentially worsen generation and build performance.
- Defaults to