#!/bin/bash set -ex # go to the repo root cd $(dirname $0)/../../.. if [[ -t 0 ]]; then DOCKER_TTY_ARGS="-it" else # The input device on kokoro is not a TTY, so -it does not work. DOCKER_TTY_ARGS= fi # crosscompile protoc as we will later need it for the javascript build. # we build it under the dockcross/manylinux2014-aarch64 image so that the resulting protoc binary is compatible # with a wide range of linux distros (including any docker images we will use later to build and test javascript) kokoro/linux/aarch64/dockcross_helpers/run_dockcross_manylinux2014_aarch64.sh kokoro/linux/aarch64/protoc_crosscompile_aarch64.sh # use an actual aarch64 docker image (with a real aarch64 nodejs) to run build & test protobuf javascript under an emulator # * mount the protobuf root as /work to be able to access the crosscompiled files # * to avoid running the process inside docker as root (which can pollute the workspace with files owned by root), we force # running under current user's UID and GID. To be able to do that, we need to provide a home directory for the user # otherwise the UID would be homeless under the docker container and pip install wouldn't work. For simplicity, # we just run map the user's home to a throwaway temporary directory # Note that the docker image used for running the tests is arm64v8/openjdk, not arm64v8/node # This is because some of the node tests require java to be available and adding node # binary distribution into a java image is easier than vice versa. docker run $DOCKER_TTY_ARGS --rm --user "$(id -u):$(id -g)" -e "HOME=/home/fake-user" -v "$(mktemp -d):/home/fake-user" -v "$(pwd)":/work -w /work arm64v8/openjdk:11-jdk-buster kokoro/linux/aarch64/javascript_build_and_run_tests_with_qemu_aarch64.sh