A tool to import swiftc
and clang
generated indexes into Xcode.
The index-import
tool makes indexes portable. The ability to copy indexes into Xcode has a few possible uses:
- Using a separate build system (Bazel, Buck, CMake, SwiftPM, etc)
- Distributing a CI built index to developer machines
- Sharing an index between two or more local checkouts
The common goal is to reduce or eliminate the time Xcode spends indexing.
For Xcode to be able to use an index, the file paths contained in the index must match the paths Xcode uses for lookup. This is the main feature of index-import
, rewriting the paths inside the index files. This path remapping requires knowing input and output paths.
Path remapping is done with regex substitution. index-import
accepts one or more -remap
flags which are formatted as <regex>=<substitution>
. See the examples below. Path remapping is conceptually similar to sed s/regex/substitution/
. In all cases, the substitution will either be a path within the project, or a path within DerivedData
.
The simplest example is to consider the case of two checkouts of the same project on the same machine. If one project has a built index, it can be imported into the other. To do this, two paths need to be remapped: the project directory and the build directory (DerivedData
).
#!/bin/bash
build_dir1="/Users/me/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/MyApp-abc123"
build_dir2="/Users/me/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/MyApp-xyz789"
index-import \
-remap "/Users/me/MyApp=/Users/me/MyApp2" \
-remap "$build_dir1=$build_dir2" \
"$build_dir1/Index/DataStore" \
"$build_dir2/Index/DataStore"
A more complex example is importing an index from a Bazel built project. This example would be run as an Xcode "Run Script" build phase, which provides many environment variables, including: SRCROOT
, CONFIGURATION_TEMP_DIR
, ARCHS
.
#!/bin/bash
set -euo pipefail
# Input: /Users/me/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/PROJECT-abc/Build/Products
# Output: /Users/me/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/PROJECT-abc
derived_data_root=$(dirname "$(dirname "$BUILD_DIR")")
readonly xcode_index_root="$derived_data_root/Index.noindex/DataStore"
# Captures: 1) module name
readonly bazel_swiftmodules="^/__build_bazel_rules_swift/swiftmodules/(.+).swiftmodule"
readonly xcode_swiftmodules="$BUILT_PRODUCTS_DIR/\$1.swiftmodule/$ARCHS.swiftmodule"
# Captures: 1) target name, 2) object name
readonly bazel_objects="^\./bazel-out/.+?/bin/.*?(?:[^/]+)/([^/]+?)_objs(?:/.*)*/(.+?)\.swift\.o$"
readonly xcode_objects="$CONFIGURATION_TEMP_DIR/\$1.build/Objects-normal/$ARCHS/\$2.o"
index-import
-remap "$bazel_swiftmodules=$xcode_swiftmodules" \
-remap "$bazel_objects=$xcode_objects" \
-remap "^\.=$SRCROOT" \
-remap "DEVELOPER_DIR=$DEVELOPER_DIR" \
-incremental \
@"$index_stores_file" \
"$xcode_index_root"
Since Xcode 14 / Swift 5.7, clang
and swiftc
support remapping paths
in index data using -ffile-prefix-map=foo=bar
and -file-prefix-map foo=bar
respectively. Using this makes it easy to generate a
reproducible index that can be transferred between machines, and then
remapped to local only paths using one of the examples above.
The build uses CMake because Apple's LLVM fork uses CMake. The index-import
build script is small, but depends on the libraries from LLVM. To build index-import
, first install the tools required by Swift, then build swift by following the Swift build instructions.
When building Swift, keep the following in mind:
- Checkout the desired release branch of Swift using something like
./swift/utils/update-checkout --clone --scheme release/5.7
. - Build Swift using
--release
/-R
for performance
Building all of Swift can take a long time, and most of that isn't needed by index-import
. A faster way to build index-import
, is to build only libIndexStore.dylib
. Here are the commands to do just that:
./swift/utils/build-script --release --skip-build --llvm-targets-to-build X86
ninja -C build/Ninja-ReleaseAssert/llvm-macosx-x86_64 libIndexStore.dylib
Once swift (or libIndexStore.dylib
) has been built, index-import
can be built as follows. The key step is to update your PATH
variable to include the llvm bin/
directory (from the swift-source build directory). This ensures CMake can find all necessary build dependencies.
# From the index-import directory
mkdir build
cd build
PATH="path/to/swift-source/build/Ninja-ReleaseAssert/llvm-macosx-x86_64/bin:$PATH"
cmake -G Ninja -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release ..
ninja
If you need to cross compile checkout RELEASING.md
Or, if you prefer Xcode for building and debugging, you can replace the last 2 lines with the following:
cmake -G Xcode -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release ..
open index-import.xcodeproj
The index consists of two types of files, Unit files and Record files. Both are LLVM Bitstream, a common binary format used by LLVM/Clang/Swift. Record files contain no paths and can be simply copied. Only Unit files contain paths, so only unit files need to be rewritten. A read/write API is available in the clangIndex
library. index-import
uses IndexUnitReader
and IndexUnitWriter
.
The best information on the swiftc
and clang
index store comes from these two resources:
- Adding Index‐While‐Building and Refactoring to Clang, 2017 LLVM Developers Meeting, by Alex Lorenz and Nathan Hawes
- Indexing While Building whitepaper