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BUILD.md

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Building CacheLib

Dependencies

CacheLib depends on multiple libraries and programs. Some are available as system packages, and others need to be build from source.

The primary dependecies are:

These dependencies further require multiple libraries:

Currently, some dependencies can be easily installed using the system's package manager (e.g. dnf/yum/apt), while others need to be rebuild from source code.

Build Script

CacheLib provides a build script which prepares and installs all dependencies and prerequisites, then builds CacheLib. The build script has been tested to work on CentOS 8, Ubuntu 18.04, and Debian 10.

git clone https://github.com/facebookincubator/CacheLib
cd CacheLib
./contrib/build.sh -d -j -v

# The resulting library and executables:
./build-cachelib/cachebench/cachebench --help

Re-running ./contrib/build.sh will update CacheLib and its dependencies to their latest versions and rebuild them.

The build script supports the following options:

$ ./contrib/build.sh -h
CacheLib dependencies builder

usage: build.sh [-BdhijOStv]

options:
  -d    build with DEBUG configuration
        (default is RELEASE with debug information)
  -h    This help screen
  -j    build using all available CPUs ('make -j')
        (default is to use single CPU)
  -O    skip OS package installation (apt/yum/dnf)
  -S    skip git-clone/git-pull step
  -t    build tests
        (default is to skip tests if supported by the package)
  -v    verbose build

Build Process Details

The build process involves the following steps. These steps can be run manually for troubleshooting and/or adapting the build to a new system. The wrapper script ./contrib/build.sh performs them one by one:

Step 1 - System packages

Installs the suitable tools and packages for the operating system flavor and version (e.g. Debian 10). This step requires sudo, and uses one of the following scripts: contrib/prerequisites-centos8.sh, contrib/prerequisites-debian10.sh, contrib/prerequisites-ubuntu18.sh.

For Debian/Ubuntu it is a simple matter of running apt-get with a known list of packages. For CentOS, the script first adds the Power Tools repository (required for some of the packages).

It is safe to re-run these scripts - if the required packages are already installed, the script will terminate quickly.

Step 2 - Update Git-Submodules

The CacheLib project includes several library as git-submodules (folly,fbthrift,wangle,fizz). Due to the way internal facebook projects are converted to git and exported to github, the updating process is slightly more complicated than a simple git submodule update.

The script ./contrib/update-submodules.sh performs the required steps to synchronize the required git revisions.

It is safe to re-run the update-submodules.sh script - it will simply pull the latest changes (if any).

Step 3 - Build libraries from source code

Downloads the latest source code version of the following libraries, builds and installs them (using sudo): googleflags, googlelog, sparsemap, fmt, folly, fizz, wangle, fbthrift.

In some cases the operating system has a pre-packaged version of some of these libraries, but they are too old. In these cases the library is rebuilt from source code.

Building each library is performed using the following script:

$ ./contrib/build-package.sh -h
CacheLib dependencies builder

usage: build-package.sh [-BdhijStv] NAME

options:
  -B    skip build step
        (default is to build with cmake & make)
  -d    build with DEBUG configuration
        (default is RELEASE with debug information)
  -h    This help screen
  -i    install after build using 'sudo make install'
        (default is to build but not install)
  -j    build using all available CPUs ('make -j')
        (default is to use single CPU)
  -S    skip git-clone/git-pull step
        (default is to get the latest source)
  -t    build tests
        (default is to skip tests if supported by the package)
  -v    verbose build

NAME: the dependency to build supported values are:
  googlelog, googleflags, googletest,
  fmt, sparsemap,
  folly, fizz, wangle, fbthrift,
  cachelib

All the required packages use cmake, and will be built in a new subdirectory named build-[PACKAGE] (e.g. running ./contrib/build-package.sh fmt will create the build-fmt subdirectory).

Example: Running the command ./contrib/build-package.sh -i -j -d -t fmt is equivalent to the following commands:

cd cachelib/external
git clone https://github.com/fmtlib/fmt.git
cd ../..
mkdir build-fmt
cmake ../cachelib/external/fmt -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug
make -j
sudo make install

Step 4 - Build CacheLib

Building CacheLib is identical to installing packages (above), with the exception of system-wide installation - cachelib is not installed by the build.sh wrapper script.

To build cachelib, run:

./contrib/build-package.sh -j -d -v cachelib.

To install the cachelib files, either add -i to the build-package.sh script, or manually install with:

$ cd build-cachelib
$ sudo make install

The installed files will be:

  • Header files in /usr/local/include/cachelib/
  • Library files in /usr/local/lib/libcachelib_*.so
  • cachebench and cachebench-util executables in /usr/local/bin.

Development Cycle

When working on CacheLib itself (e.g. tweaking caching algorithms or adding features to cachebench), the following is recommended:

  • Run ./contrib/build.sh -j -d -v to install dependencies and build cachelib.
  • The resulting cachelib files will be stored in the build-cachelib subdirectory.
  • Modify source code files in ./cachelib/
  • Rebuild the modified files in build-cachelib using make.

Example:

$ ./contrib/build.sh -d -j -v
[... after build is complete ...]

$ cd build-cachelib
$ make
[... cachelib and cachebench are rebuild ...]

$ touch touch ../cachelib/cachebench/main.cpp
$ make
[... cachelib and cachebench are rebuild ...]

Updating to latest source code version

Facebook internal development cycle tightly couples cachelib with its dependencies (e.g. folly, fbthrifth, wangle, fizz), and all are frequently updated. Particularly, the folly library does not provide stable API, and using mismatched version can cause compilation errors.

Therefore, it is recommended to always update (and rebuild) all dependencies before updating cachelib. That is, a simple git pull for cachelib alone can often lead to failed builds.

Running the contrib/build.sh script takes care of first updating and rebuilding all dependencies, and then updating and rebuilding cachelib. Use the -O option to skip the installation of system packages, e.g. ./contrib/build.sh -d -v -j -O.

As all dependencies use git/cmake/make, rebuilding the same code (if there were no updates) will be very fast.

Downloading the source code without building

The default build.sh wrapper script requires internet connection (for package installation and github updates).

For special build circumstances where internet connection is not available, it is possible to download the source code on one machine, then copy it and build it on another.

Use build-package.sh -B option to only download the latest source code (using git clone/git pull) without building.

Example:

./contrib/build-package.sh -B googlelog
./contrib/build-package.sh -B googleflags
./contrib/build-package.sh -B googletest
./contrib/build-package.sh -B fmt
./contrib/build-package.sh -B sparsemap
./contrib/build-package.sh -B folly
./contrib/build-package.sh -B fizz
./contrib/build-package.sh -B wangle
./contrib/build-package.sh -B fbthrift
./contrib/build-package.sh -B cachelib

Will download the latest source code of all libraries under the ./cachelib/external subdirectory.

Then the entire build tree can be copied to another machine (one that does not have internet connectivity). CacheLib can then be build be adding the -S option to build.sh (meaning: skip the git clone/git pull step):

$ ./contrib/build.sh -d -j -v -S