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Compile Elixir applications into single, easily distributed executable binaries

Bakeware

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Compile Elixir applications into single, easily distributed executable binaries

The Bakeware oven

Bakeware was made over a weekend at SpawnFest 2020 and thanks to the response from the community, we're working on finishing it off. While it's not ready for production, it's definitely ready for experimentation - just expect APIs to change in the near-term. If you'd like to help, please let us know and stay tuned!

Bakeware extends Mix releases with the ability to turn Elixir projects into single binaries that can be copied and directly run. No need to install Erlang or untar files. The binaries look and feel like the build-products from other languages.

Here's a quick list of features:

  • Simple - add the bakeware dependency and the Bakeware assembler to your Mix release settings
  • Supports OSX, Linux and Windows (we wrote the code with the BSDs in mind, so support may not be far off)
  • Zstandard compression for smaller binaries
  • Optional support for automatic software updates (work in progress)
  • Command-line argument passing conveniences
  • Lots of examples

This README contains the basics of making your applications work with Bakeware and reference material for when you need to dig into how it works.

Since everything was written quickly and the integration is fairly straightforward, we recommend that you take a look at the examples. The examples are bare bones Elixir scripts, OTP applications, Phoenix applications and more with small changes to their mix.exs files and instructions for running that you can try out for yourself.

Using

Mix release

Bakeware supports tieing in executable binary assembly into a Mix release as a step by using the Bakeware.assemble/1 function.

This will assemble the necessary components to create a Bakeware executable that can be distributed across machines to run the script/application without extra environment setup (such as installing Elixir/Erlang, etc)

To use, add this to your release as a step after assembly:

def release do
  [
    demo: [
      steps: [:assemble, &Bakeware.assemble/1]
    ]
  ]
end

Bakeware adds the following options in the release scoped to :bakeware key:

  • :compression_level - Zstandard compression level (1 to 19) where higher numbers generally result in better compression, but are slower to build
  • :start_command - The start script command to run when invoked. This defaults to "start", but can be changed to "start_iex", for example, if you want a prompt. See Mix.Release for supported commands.
def release do
  [
    demo: [
      bakeware: [
        compression_level: 1,
        start_command: "daemon"
      ]
    ]
  ]
end

Scripting

Bakeware supports an API similar to Erlang's escript for implementing a main function. Here's an example module:

defmodule MyApp.Main do
  use Bakeware.Script

  @impl Bakeware.Script
  def main(_args) do
    IO.puts "Hello, World!"
    0
  end
end

The return value sets the scripts exit status (0 for success and other values for errors). Other value types are supported. See :erlang.halt/2 for how these work.

Next, add this module to your mix.exs's application description. This usually looks something like this:

  def application do
    [
      extra_applications: [:logger],
      mod: {Myapp.Main, []}
    ]
  end

Why does the module get added to :mod? Everything with Bakeware operates on OTP Releases. The macros in Bakeware.Script add the scaffolding to invoke your main/1 function from the release.

Tips

Minimizing executable size

Bakeware binaries appear to have a lower bound of about 12 MB in size. We expect that they can be made smaller out-of-the-box, but here are a few things you can do:

  1. Make sure zstd is installed to enable compression during assembly:
  • MacOS: brew install zstd
  • Ubuntu: apt-get install zstd
  • Windows: choco install zstandard
  1. Build using MIX_ENV=prod. The default is MIX_ENV=dev, so be sure that the environment variable is set.
  2. Run rm -fr _build and then mix release. During development cruft builds up in the release directory. Bakeware can't tell the difference between the important files and the cruft, so executables will slowly grow in size if you don't do a clean build.
  3. Inspect your _build/prod/rel/<name> directory and especially under lib for files or dependencies that you might be including on accident.
  4. Make sure that compile-time dependencies are marked as runtime: false in your mix.exs so that they're not included
  5. Try raising the compression Zstandard compression level by setting :compression_level in the mix.exs release config

Erlang distribution

Bakeware uses Mix releases and inherits the default of starting of Erlang distribution. If you're using Bakeware for commandline or other short-lived applications, this unnecessarily starts Erlang distribution servers running and prevents two application instances from running at a time.

To disable, run mix release.init to create starter env.sh.eex and env.bat.eex files in the rel directory. Then edit the files to set RELEASE_DISTRIBUTION=none.

Creating cross-platform binaries

Bakeware binaries include the Erlang runtime but there are still dependencies on the host system. These include the C runtime and other libraries referenced by the Erlang runtime and any NIFs and ports in your application. Luckily, the binary ABIs of many libraries are very stable, but if distributing to a wide audience, it's useful to build on a system with older library versions. Python has a useful pointers in their packaging guides.

Static Compiling OpenSSL into Erlang Distribution

Sometimes wierd SSL state bugs arise with a release when openssl is not statically compiled in. You're affected by these ssl issues if you see things like an SSL connection being established but after sending the first packet the remote end drops you. Attached is a Dockerfile that can be built with Podman and used to build your baked released.

#Edit the versions of libraries in Dockerfile
ENV SSL_VERSION=1.1.1j
ENV OTP_VERSION=OTP-23.1.4
ENV ELIXIR_VERSION=v1.11.3

#Build erlang with static openssl
podman build --tag mybuilder DockerfileFolder/

#Bake your release
podman run -it --rm -v .:/root/myproject --entrypoint bash mybuilder -c "cd /root/myproject && ./build.sh"

#Build.sh
export MIX_ENV=prod
rm -rf _build
mix deps.get
mix release
cp _build/prod/rel/bakeware/myproject .

Building on Windows

Bakeware is tested to work in mingw environment on Windows 8 and 10. In order to setup the environment follow these steps:

  • Install chocolatey
  • Install elixir, zstandard, make, and mingw using chocolatey: choco install -y elixir zstandard make mingw
  • Change the default MAKE environment variable used by elixir_make from nmake to make (set it permanently to get rid of the errors in VSCode)
  • Set the CC environment variable
  • Build the release

PowerShell

$env:MAKE="make"
$env:CC="gcc"
mix release

Command Prompt

set MAKE=make
set CC=gcc
mix release

MinGW

Note: after building the release in MinGW, you need to switch back to PowerShell/CMD to run the application

export MAKE=make
export CC=gcc
mix release

Reference material

Command-line arguments

In general, command-line arguments passed to Bakeware applications are passed through to Elixir. A few special command-line arguments can be passed to adjust the launchers behavior. Bakeware stops parsing command-line arguments when it encounters a --. Processed command-line arguments are not passed along to Elixir.

The following arguments may be passed:

  • --bw-info - Print out information about the application and exit
  • --bw-gc - This cleans up all unused entries in the cache (NOT IMPLEMENTED)
  • --bw-install - Unpack the application to the cache only. Do not run.
  • --bw-system-install - Install to a system-wide location (NOT IMPLEMENTED)
  • --bw-command - use the specified Mix.Release command when running the executable

Environment variables

The Bakeware launcher sets the following environment variables for use in Elixir:

Variable name Description
BAKEWARE_EXECUTABLE The absolute path to the executable
BAKEWARE_ARG1 The first command-line argument
BAKEWARE_ARGn The nth command-line argument
BAKEWARE_ARGC The number of arguments

See the Scripting section of this document for a more user friendly API.

Binary format

Bakeware application binaries look like this:

  • Bakeware application launcher
  • A CPIO archive of an Erlang/OTP release
  • Trailer

The CPIO archive can be compressed. This depends on the contents of the trailer.

Trailer format (multi-byte fields are big endian):

Offset from end Field Type Description
-4 Magic 4 byte string Set to "BAKE"
-5 Trailer version 8-bit integer Set to 1
-6 Compression 8-bit integer 0 = No compression, 1 = Zstandard
-8 Flags 16-bit integer Set to 0 (no flags yet)
-12 Contents offset 32-bit integer Offset of CPIO archive
-16 Contents length 32-bit integer Length of CPIO archive
-48 SHA1 20 bytes SHA-1 of the CPIO archive

Cache directory

Bakeware maintains a cache of extracted binaries. This is needed to run the OTP releases and it enables start-time optimizations.

The default cache directory location is system-specific:

  • Windows - "C:/Users/<USER>/AppData/Local/Bakeware/cache"
  • MacOS - "~/Library/Caches/Bakeware"
  • Linux and other Unixes - "~/.cache/bakeware"

You can override it by setting the $BAKEWARE_CACHE environment variable.

Here's the layout of each cache entry:

Path Created by Description
$CACHE_DIR/$SHA1/bin CPIO OTP release's bin directory
$CACHE_DIR/$SHA1/erts-x.y.z CPIO OTP release's ERTS
$CACHE_DIR/$SHA1/lib CPIO OTP release's lib directory
$CACHE_DIR/$SHA1/releases CPIO OTP release's releases directory
$CACHE_DIR/$SHA1/start CPIO Start script. E.g., bin/my_otp_release start

LICENSE

All code is licensed under Apache-2.0 with the exception of zstd which is dual licensed BSD/GPL. See it's LICENSE and COPYING files for more details.