This manual provides information on how to develop the Chromium Updater, including tips and tricks.
NOTE: Knowledge in this section may become out-of-date as LUCI evolves quickly.
There are two sets of configuration files for our builders/testers. One is for chromium-branded and locates in src
. The other one is for chrome-branded and locates in src-internal
.
src
)tools/mb/mb_config.pyl
: specifies GN args.testing/buildbot/gn_isolate_map.pyl
: maps a GN label to GN targets, and provides test arguments, for example test timeout values.testing/buildbot/test_suites.pyl
: maps test suite name to GN label, and provides optional swarming dimensions.testing/buildbot/waterfalls.pyl
: maps tester to test suites names, and specifies OS, architecture etc.infra/config/subprojects/chromium/ci/chromium.updater.star
: defines our testers and builders and how they appear on the console.Command to update json files after configure update:
tools\mb\mb train
(if mb_config.pyl
is changed).lucicfg generate .\infra\config\main.star
(if chromium.updater.star
is changed).vpython3 .\testing\buildbot\generate_buildbot_json.py
Reference CLs:
src-internal
)tools/mb/mb_config.pyl
: specifies GN args.testing/buildbot/gn_isolate_map.pyl
: maps a GN label to GN targets, and provides test arguments, for example test timeout values.testing/buildbot/test_suites.pyl
: maps test suite name to GN label, and provides optional swarming dimensions.testing/buildbot/waterfalls.pyl
: maps tester to test suites names, and specifies OS, architecture etc.infra/config/subprojects/chrome/ci/chrome.updater.star
: defines our testers and builders and how they appear on the console.Command to update json files after configure update:
..\src\tools\mb\mb train -f tools\mb\mb_config.pyl
(if mb_config.pyl
is changed).lucicfg generate .\infra\config\main.star
(if chrome.updater.star
is changed).vpython3 .\testing\buildbot\generate_testing_json.py
Please note changes in src-internal
needs to roll into chromium/src to take effect. This could take hours until a CL authored by chromium-internal-autoroll@
lands. During transition, the configure files could be in inconsistent state and leads to infra error.
mb
tool can upload your private build target (and all the dependencies, based on build rule) to swarming server and run the target on bots. The upload may take quite some time if the target changed a lot since the last upload and/or your network is slow.
Simple scenario:
.\tools\mb\mb.bat run -v --swarmed .\out\Default updater_tests -- --gtest_filter=*Integration*
Sometimes the mb tool may fail to match the testing OS (when doing cross-compile) or you may want to run the task on certain kind of bots. This can be done by specifying bots dimension with switch -d
. Remember --no-default-dimensions
is necessary to avoid dimension value conflict. Example:
.\tools\mb\mb.bat run --swarmed --no-default-dimensions -d pool chromium.win.uac -d os Windows-10 .\out\Default updater_tests_system -- --gtest_filter=*Install*
mb
can schedule tests in the pools managed by different swarming servers. The default server is chromium-swarm.appspot.com. To schedule tests to pools managed by chrome-swarming.appspot.com, for example chrome.tests
, add --internal
flag in the command line:
tools/mb/mb run -v --swarmed --internal --no-default-dimensions -d pool chrome.tests -d os Windows-10 out/WinDefault updater_tests
If mb
command failed with error isolate: original error: interactive login is required
, you need to login:
tools/luci-go/isolate login
If your test introduces dependency on a new app on macOS, you need to let mb
tool know so it can correctly figure out the dependency. Example: https://crrev.com/c/3470143.
To run tests on Arm64
, the mb tool needs to be invoked as follows:
.\tools\mb\mb run -v --swarmed --no-default-dimensions --internal -d pool chrome.tests.arm64 out\Default updater_tests_system -- --gtest_filter=LegacyAppCommandWebImplTest.FailedToLaunchStatus
When system tests crash, the stack is missing from the swarming log. This can be avoided if you suppress the test bot mode:
.\tools\mb\mb run -v --swarmed --no-bot-mode out\Default updater_tests_system
TODO(crbug.com/40841197): Document how to remote into bots for debugging.
An older version of the updater is checked in under //third_party/updater/*/cipd
. This version of the updater is used in some integration tests. The updater is pulled from CIPD based on the versions specified in //DEPS
. A system called 3pp
periodically updates the packages in CIPD, based on a combination of the Chromium build output and what is actually released through Omaha servers. The configuration for 3pp can be found in //third_party/updater/*/3pp
.
To update these copies of the updaters:
fetch.py
scripts for 3pp. For Chrome builds, make sure the build has been released in Omaha then update the fetch script with the desired version number. For Chromium, make sure the build exists in GCS (the chromium-browser-snapshots bucket), then update the min version in the script. The min version usually is different per-platform, since Chromium does not archive a version at every CL. After making these changes, 3pp will import the new versions within a few hours.Where possible, cross-platform code is preferred to other alternatives. This means that the source code of the updater is organized in sub-directories, first by functionality (or feature), and second by platform name. For example, the source code contains updater\net
instead of updater\mac\net
.
To enforce layering, there are enforced rules about what can be included in certain modules. The rules checked by GN
and the build breaks on bots if the dependencies constraints are not satisfied.
Use the following command to check the target dependencies: gn check out\Default chrome/updater:* --check-generated --check-system
After creating your build configuration directory via gn gen
(this step is equivalent across all platforms), you will need to use gn args
to configure the build appropriately.
As of 2023-05-24, the updater cannot be built in component mode. It is also not specifically designed to be built without the updater being enabled. You must specify these options to gn
via gn args
:
is_component_build=false enable_updater=true
Depending on other configuration options, the default symbol_level
, 2, might produce object files too large for the linker to handle (in debug builds). Partial symbols, via symbol_level=1
, fix this. Omitting almost all symbols via symbol_level=0
reuslts in a smaller and faster build but makes debugging nearly impossible (call stacks will not be symbolicated).
Reclient is a distributed compiler service that allows you to compile Chromium fast. The necessary Reclient binaries are distributed via CIPD and automatically installed when you run gclient sync. After you've set up Reclient, specify it in gn args
with use_remoteexec=true
.
To get started on Reclient, and for more information on how to use it, see macOS build instructions, Windows build instructions, or Google-internal documentation, if you are a Google employee.
Chromium projects build in debug mode by default. Release builds (also called “opt”, or “optimized”, builds) are faster to link and run more efficiently; they are, of course, much harder to debug. For a release build, add the following to the build configuration's gn args
:
is_debug=false
With a Google src-internal
checkout, you can create a Chrome-branded build:
is_chrome_branded=true include_branded_entitlements=false
Updater branding affects the path the updater installs itself to, among other things. Differently-branded copies of Chromium Updater are intended to coexist on a machine, operating independently from each other.
Running ninja
with t clean
cleans the build out directory. For example:
ninja -C out\Default chrome/updater:all -t clean
6 different build flavors need to be built in sequence. If you see errors similar to the following:
midl.exe output different from files in gen/chrome/updater/app/server/win, see C:\src\temp\tmppbfwi0ds To rebaseline: copy /y C:\src\temp\tmppbfwi0ds\* c:\src\chromium\src\third_party\win_build_output\midl\chrome\updater\app\server\win\x64 ninja: build stopped: subcommand failed.
You can then run the following command to update IDL COM files for all flavors:
python3 tools/win/update_idl.py
Build outputs will land in the directory created by gn gen
that you have been providing to assorted gn
, ninja
, and autoninja
commands. updater.zip
contains copies of the “final” outputs created by the build. UpdaterSetup
is probably what you want for installing the updater you have built.
Gerrit now down-votes the changes that do not have enough coverage. And it's nice to have good coverage regardless. To improve code-coverage, we need to know what are already covered and what are not.
It's automatically generated. But the coverage shown is the combined result from all OS platforms.
The updater code coverage dashboard supports breakdown by OS platform or test type. But it is only for the code in trunk.
We can quickly get OS-specific coverage result with the local changes:
gn gen out/coverage --args="use_clang_coverage=true is_component_build=false is_chrome_branded=true is_debug=true use_debug_fission=true use_remoteexec=true symbol_level=2" vpython3 tools/code_coverage/coverage.py updater_tests -b out/coverage -o out/report -c 'out/coverage/updater_tests' -f chrome/updater
gn gen out\coverage --args="use_clang_coverage=true is_component_build=false is_chrome_branded=true is_debug=true use_debug_fission=true use_remoteexec=true symbol_level=2" vpython3 tools\code_coverage\coverage.py updater_tests -b out\coverage -o out\report -c out\coverage\updater_tests.exe -f chrome/updater
The last command outputs an HTML file and you can open it in browser to see the coverages.
The updater tests are available as updater_tests
build target in the out
directory of the build.
In general, running branded unit tests locally is likely to break the updater for the browser. To avoid this outcome when unsuspecting developers build and run the branded updater tests, the test don't run locally unless the developer sets an environment variable ISOLATED_OUTDIR
. This is an environment variable which is present on all bots (see the updater logs section below). The presence of ISOLATED_OUTDIR
does not preserve the updater though. It only prevents the tests from being run.
UpdaterSetup.exe --install [--system]
TIP: Debugger may have trouble to find the symbols at the service side even if you add your build output directory to the symbol paths. To workaournd the issue, you can copy
updater.exe*
to the versioned installation directory.
update_service_proxy.*
.--server
(user-level server) or --system --windows-service
(system-level server). Start another debugger and attach the server process. Then set a server-side breakpoint at the place you want to debug.Both the updater and the unit tests can create program logs.
The updater itself logs in the product directory.
The unit tests log into a directory defined by the environment variable ${ISOLATED_OUTDIR}
. When run by Swarming, the updater logs are copied into ${ISOLATED_OUTDIR}
too, so that after the swarming task has completed, both types of logs are available as CAS outputs. The logs for updater_tests_system
and integration_test_helper
are merged into updater_tests_system.log
.
Non-bot systems can set up this environment variable to collect logs for debugging when the tests are run locally.
In some cases, you will want to test the changes you make within chromium/src on specific builders/testers before landing these changes. It is possible to do this with the use of the trybots available on the tryserver.chromium.updater waterfall. The steps are as follows:
git cl upload
git cl try -B luci.chromium.try -b {TRYBOT_NAME}
with the name of the trybot you found.The strings for the metainstaller live in the //chrome/app/chromium_strings.grd and //chrome/app/google_chrome_strings.grd files. This allows the updater strings to utilize the Chromium repo's translation process instead of generating its own. Having it in existing grd files also eliminates the need to onboard updater specific grd files.
During the build process, the updater strings are embedded directly into the metainstaller binary via generate_embedded_i18n
. generate_embedded_i18n
also allows an extractor_datafile
, which can define specific strings to pick out from the originating grd file. This way, the metainstaller only has the strings specific to the updater and not any of the other strings within the grd file. When the generate_embedded_i18n
is complete, it generates an updater_installer_strings.h
header, which contains macro definitions of the message ids and the offsets. The strings are mapped with their var name appended with _BASE
. Then the _BASE
appended macros are defined to be the first localization id in the list, in which case it is _AF
.
An example from the updater_installer_strings.h
#define IDS_BUNDLE_INSTALLED_SUCCESSFULLY_AF 1600 #define IDS_BUNDLE_INSTALLED_SUCCESSFULLY_AM 1601 ... #define IDS_BUNDLE_INSTALLED_SUCCESSFULLY_BASE IDS_BUNDLE_INSTALLED_SUCCESSFULLY_AF ... #define DO_STRING_MAPPING \ HANDLE_STRING(IDS_BUNDLE_INSTALLED_SUCCESSFULLY_BASE, IDS_BUNDLE_INSTALLED_SUCCESSFULLY) \
Within the metainstaller, an l10_util.h/cc has three functions to get localized strings.
GetLocalizedString(int base_message_id) GetLocalizedStringF(int base_message_id, const std::wstring& replacement) GetLocalizedStringF(int base_message_id, std::vector<std::wstring> replacements)
One function for getting the literal string and two functions to get formatted strings. GetLocalizedString()
uses the base id plus the offset based on the language to look through the binary's string table to get the correct, localized string. The formatted strings utilize GetLocalizedString() to get the string and then uses base::ReplaceStringPlaceholders()
to remove the $i
placeholders within the string. With regards to picking the correct language to utilize for the localized string, base::win::i18n::GetUserPreferredUILanguageList()
is used to get the preferred UI languages from MUI. If there are multiple languages in the list, the first language in the list is picked.
<message name="IDS_NO_NETWORK_PRESENT_ERROR" desc="Error message displayed in the main dialog when the Updater is unable to connect to the network."> Unable to connect to the Internet. If you use a firewall, please allowlist <ph name="PRODUCT_EXE_NAME">$1<ex>ChromiumUpdater.exe</ex></ph>. </message>
IDS_NO_NETWORK_PRESENT_ERROR
, in chrome/updater/win/ui/resources/create_metainstaller_string_rc.py.GetLocalizedStringF(IDS_NO_NETWORK_PRESENT_ERROR_BASE, L"updater.exe");
python3 tools/translation/upload_screenshots.py
.sha1
files to your CL. Do not add the actual .png
images to your CL.upload_screenshots.py
, delete them from your local enlistment. However, if upload_screenshots.py
encounters the following error: ServiceException: 401 Anonymous caller does not have storage.objects.list access to the Google Cloud Storage bucket. Permission 'storage.objects.list' denied on resource (or it may not exist).
see crbug.com/1491876 for a resolution or workaround to upload the images.origin/main
since your last successful build, or have never successfully built on your current branch, and the build errors you‘re seeing aren’t obviously related to any changes you've made, check the tree status. Did you pull down a broken version? If so, and the revert is in, pull again and see if it works better. Or skip checking the tree status and just try this as your first debugging step for build breaks after a pull.gclient sync -D
after every pull from origin/main
and every branch change. If you aren‘t sure whether you ran it, just run it, it’s fast if you don't need it.gn args
to verify that symbol_level=1
(or 0
) is present. If it‘s not, you’re running into a known issue where the default symbol level, 2
, outputs symbols too large for the linker to comprehend.