Comment by 🖥️ mrrobinhood5

=> Re: "Collaborative build servers" | In: u/lufte

trust is not something that comes around easily nowadays

=> 🖥️ mrrobinhood5

2024-09-23 · 4 months ago

3 Later Comments ↓

=> 🦋 CarloMonte · Sep 25 at 10:30:

The Go language offers another elegant solution: super-easy cross-compilation.

=> 🛰️ lufte [OP] · Sep 25 at 14:15:

I tried cross-compilation with rust and it almost worked, but it definitely looks like it's built to support it even if there are some rough edges. Yeah, this is probably the way to go instead of designing a platform which, as many here have pointed out, would most likely be a security nightmare.

=> 🦋 CarloMonte · Sep 26 at 19:41:

@lufte: I think that the target platform is only needed for testing, if the language has good cross-compilation. Even here, Go has advantages. It compiles statically, which means that you don't care about which libraries are installed on the given target system. Probably the specific binary format is not that important. You might need to test on each bus width and endian architecture you target. That might be doable in some sort of emulation.

Original Post

=> 🛰️ lufte

Collaborative build servers — Is there such a thing as a collaborative network of build servers? Let's say you write a native application and you can build it for your own machine's architecture, but you also want to build artifacts for other operating systems or architectures. You don't want to pay for multiple CI/CD servers, so you request time in other people's computers to do the building, and you offer your own computer's time in return so other people can run things on it.

=> 💬 6 comments · 1 like · 2024-09-22 · 4 months ago

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