blob: 52e2f571d80e9f1b5b8e34197c9ca8e835abe265 [file] [log] [blame]
#!/bin/bash
rm -rf autogen
mkdir -p autogen/dockerversion
cat > autogen/dockerversion/dockerversion.go <<DVEOF
// AUTOGENERATED FILE; see $BASH_SOURCE
package dockerversion
var (
GITCOMMIT string = "$GITCOMMIT"
VERSION string = "$VERSION"
BUILDTIME string = "$BUILDTIME"
IAMSTATIC string = "${IAMSTATIC:-true}"
INITSHA1 string = "$DOCKER_INITSHA1"
INITPATH string = "$DOCKER_INITPATH"
)
DVEOF
# Compile the Windows resources into the sources
mkdir -p autogen/winresources
cat > autogen/winresources/resources.go <<WREOF
// AUTOGENERATED FILE; see $BASH_SOURCE
package winresources
/*
This package is for embedding a manifest file and an icon into docker.exe.
The benefit of this is that a manifest file does not need to be alongside
the .exe, and there is an icon when docker runs, or viewed through Windows
explorer.
When make binary is run, the Dockerfile prepares the build environment by:
- Cloning github.com/akavel/rsrc
- Go-installing the rsrc executable
make.sh invokes hack/make/.go-autogen to:
- Run rsrc to create a binary file (autogen/winresources/rsrc.syso) that
contains the manifest and icon. This file is automatically picked up by
'go build', so no post-processing steps are required. The sources for
rsrc.syso are under hack/make/.resources-windows.
*/
WREOF
if [ "$(go env GOOS)" = 'windows' ]; then
rsrc \
-manifest hack/make/.resources-windows/docker.exe.manifest \
-ico hack/make/.resources-windows/docker.ico \
-o autogen/winresources/rsrc.syso > /dev/null
fi