TODO(zra)
All Dart sources for a Mojo application are collected in a specially formatted snapshot file, which is understood by Dart's content handler in the Mojo shell. This section describes what the various parts of that package are, and how they all make it to the right place.
Dart Mojo applications are built with the GN template ‘dart_pkg’ defined in //mojo/public/dart/rules.gni
. Here is an example:
dart_pkg("foo") { app_name_override = "dart_foo" app = "lib/main.dart" sources = [ "lib/foo.dart", "pubspec.yaml", ] deps = [ ":foo_mojom", "//third_party/dart-pkg", ] } mojom("foo_mojom") { sources = [ "foo.mojom", ] }
There are several parts. See the documentation in //mojo/public/dart/rules.gni
for all the details.
Dart Mojo applications may use packages from the pub package repository at pub.dartlang.org.
The “foo” example above has uses_pub
set to true. Suppose the “foo” package's pubspec.yaml
is as follows:
name: foo version: 0.0.1 description: Foo dependencies: crypto: ">=0.9.0 <0.10.0"
The script //mojo/public/tools/git/dart_pub_get.py
should be run before build time, e.g. as a “runhooks” action during gclient sync
. The script traverses a directory tree looking for pubspec.yaml
files. On finding one, in the containing directory, it runs pub get
. This creates a “packages/” directory in the source tree adjacent to the pubspec.yaml
file containing the downloaded Dart packages. pub get
also creates a pubspec.lock
file that locks down pub packages to specific versions. This pubspec.lock
file must be checked in in order to have hermetic builds.
During the build, The dart_pkg
rule looks for a “packages/” directory, and ensures that its contents are available when running the application.
The script //mojo/public/tools/bindings/generators/mojom_dart_generator.py
and the templates under //mojo/public/tools/bindings/generators/dart_templates
govern how .mojom
files are compiled into Dart code.
Consider the foo.mojom
file used by our example:
[DartPackage="foo"] module foo; struct Foo { int32 code; string? description; };
This contents of this file are in the foo
module. The Dart source generated for this file will end up under, e.g. //out/Debug/gen/dart- pkg/foo/lib/foo/network_error.mojom.dart
, along with the other Dart sources generated for .mojom
files with the “foo” DartPackage
annotation in the foo
module.
The dart_pkg
rule has two results. The first result is a Dart snapshot file zipped up into a .mojo file in the build output directory---something like //out/Release/foo.mojo
. This file is understood by the Dart content handler and is suitable for deployment. The second result is a directory layout of the “foo” app that can be served by a webserver. When the URL of lib/main.dart
is given to the mojo_shell
, the app will be run in the Dart content handler.
They layout for our “foo” example will be the following:
//lib/main.dart //lib/foo.dart //lib/foo/foo.mojom.dart //packages/crypto/... # Dart's crypto pub package. //packages/mojo/... # Mojo SDK Dart libraries.
Where //packages/mojo
contains Dart's Mojo bindings, //packages/crypto
contains the crypto
pub package, and //lib/foo/
contains the bindings generated for foo.mojom
.
Mojo's Dart content handler sets the package root for a Dart application to be the packages directory. Therefore, Dart sources in this application can use the following imports:
import 'package:crypto/crypto.dart'; import 'package:foo/foo/foo.mojom.dart'; import 'package:mojo/application.dart';