Andrew Kelley e0ffac4e3c introduce a web interface for fuzzing
* new .zig-cache subdirectory: 'v'
  - stores coverage information with filename of hash of PCs that want
    coverage. This hash is a hex encoding of the 64-bit coverage ID.
* build runner
  * fixed bug in file system inputs when a compile step has an
    overridden zig_lib_dir field set.
  * set some std lib options optimized for the build runner
    - no side channel mitigations
    - no Transport Layer Security
    - no crypto fork safety
  * add a --port CLI arg for choosing the port the fuzzing web interface
    listens on. it defaults to choosing a random open port.
  * introduce a web server, and serve a basic single page application
    - shares wasm code with autodocs
    - assets are created live on request, for convenient development
      experience. main.wasm is properly cached if nothing changes.
    - sources.tar comes from file system inputs (introduced with the
      `--watch` feature)
  * receives coverage ID from test runner and sends it on a thread-safe
    queue to the WebServer.
* test runner
  - takes a zig cache directory argument now, for where to put coverage
    information.
  - sends coverage ID to parent process
* fuzzer
  - puts its logs (in debug mode) in .zig-cache/tmp/libfuzzer.log
  - computes coverage_id and makes it available with
    `fuzzer_coverage_id` exported function.
  - the memory-mapped coverage file is now namespaced by the coverage id
    in hex encoding, in `.zig-cache/v`
* tokenizer
  - add a fuzz test to check that several properties are upheld
2024-08-07 00:48:32 -07:00
2024-07-02 02:04:10 -04:00
2024-08-07 00:48:32 -07:00
2024-03-06 14:17:41 -05:00
2024-04-19 13:16:09 -07:00

ZIG

A general-purpose programming language and toolchain for maintaining robust, optimal, and reusable software.

https://ziglang.org/

Documentation

If you are looking at this README file in a source tree, please refer to the Release Notes, Language Reference, or Standard Library Documentation corresponding to the version of Zig that you are using by following the appropriate link on the download page.

Otherwise, you're looking at a release of Zig, and you can find documentation here:

  • doc/langref.html
  • doc/std/index.html

Installation

A Zig installation is composed of two things:

  1. The Zig executable
  2. The lib/ directory

At runtime, the executable searches up the file system for the lib/ directory, relative to itself:

  • lib/
  • lib/zig/
  • ../lib/
  • ../lib/zig/
  • (and so on)

In other words, you can unpack a release of Zig anywhere, and then begin using it immediately. There is no need to install it globally, although this mechanism supports that use case too (i.e. /usr/bin/zig and /usr/lib/zig/).

Building from Source

Ensure you have the required dependencies:

  • CMake >= 3.15
  • System C/C++ Toolchain
  • LLVM, Clang, LLD development libraries == 18.x

Then it is the standard CMake build process:

mkdir build
cd build
cmake ..
make install

For more options, tips, and troubleshooting, please see the Building Zig From Source page on the wiki.

Building from Source without LLVM

In this case, the only system dependency is a C compiler.

cc -o bootstrap bootstrap.c
./bootstrap

This produces a zig2 executable in the current working directory. This is a "stage2" build of the compiler, without LLVM extensions, and is therefore lacking these features:

However, a compiler built this way does provide a C backend, which may be useful for creating system packages of Zig projects using the system C toolchain. In such case, LLVM is not needed!

Contributing

Donate monthly.

Zig is Free and Open Source Software. We welcome bug reports and patches from everyone. However, keep in mind that Zig governance is BDFN (Benevolent Dictator For Now) which means that Andrew Kelley has final say on the design and implementation of everything.

One of the best ways you can contribute to Zig is to start using it for an open-source personal project.

This leads to discovering bugs and helps flesh out use cases, which lead to further design iterations of Zig. Importantly, each issue found this way comes with real world motivations, making it straightforward to explain the reasoning behind proposals and feature requests.

You will be taken much more seriously on the issue tracker if you have a personal project that uses Zig.

The issue label Contributor Friendly exists to help you find issues that are limited in scope and/or knowledge of Zig internals.

Please note that issues labeled Proposal but do not also have the Accepted label are still under consideration, and efforts to implement such a proposal have a high risk of being wasted. If you are interested in a proposal which is still under consideration, please express your interest in the issue tracker, providing extra insights and considerations that others have not yet expressed. The most highly regarded argument in such a discussion is a real world use case.

For more tips, please see the Contributing page on the wiki.

Community

The Zig community is decentralized. Anyone is free to start and maintain their own space for Zig users to gather. There is no concept of "official" or "unofficial". Each gathering place has its own moderators and rules. Users are encouraged to be aware of the social structures of the spaces they inhabit, and work purposefully to facilitate spaces that align with their values.

Please see the Community wiki page for a public listing of social spaces.

Description
General-purpose programming language and toolchain for maintaining robust, optimal, and reusable software.
Readme MIT 710 MiB
Languages
Zig 98.3%
C 1.1%
C++ 0.2%
Python 0.1%