Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 255679603
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bazel has a lot of dependencies and users don't want to install them
just to build gvisor.
These changes allows to run bazel in a docker container.
A bazel cache is on the local file system (~/.cache/bazel), so
incremental builds should be fast event after recreating a bazel
container.
Here is an example how to build runsc:
make BAZEL_OPTIONS="build runsc:runsc" bazel
Change-Id: I8c0a6d0c30e835892377fb6dd5f4af7a0052d12a
PiperOrigin-RevId: 246570877
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Based on the guidelines at
https://opensource.google.com/docs/releasing/authors/.
1. $ rg -l "Google LLC" | xargs sed -i 's/Google LLC.*/The gVisor Authors./'
2. Manual fixup of "Google Inc" references.
3. Add AUTHORS file. Authors may request to be added to this file.
4. Point netstack AUTHORS to gVisor AUTHORS. Drop CONTRIBUTORS.
Fixes #209
PiperOrigin-RevId: 245823212
Change-Id: I64530b24ad021a7d683137459cafc510f5ee1de9
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The previous implementation revolved around runes instead of bytes, which caused
weird behavior when converting between the two. For example, peekRune would read
the byte 0xff from a buffer, convert it to a rune, then return it. As rune is an
alias of int32, 0xff was 0-padded to int32(255), which is the hex code point for
?. However, peekRune also returned the length of the byte (1). When calling
utf8.EncodeRune, we only allocated 1 byte, but tried the write the 2-byte
character ?.
tl;dr: I apparently didn't understand runes when I wrote this.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 241789081
Change-Id: I14c788af4d9754973137801500ef6af7ab8a8727
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PiperOrigin-RevId: 224886231
Change-Id: I0fccb4d994601739d8b16b1d4e6b31f40297fb22
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