commit | f539a47c9ed95a7dcd43779d95dc7fd5c42f8a89 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Nicholas Levin <nglevin@google.com> | Wed Dec 20 20:48:24 2017 +0000 |
committer | David Goldman <davg@google.com> | Wed Jan 03 21:29:40 2018 +0000 |
tree | 2c8b7fc1590ab4a611d7e89ef7f77ba3393c54cb | |
parent | d22af843019cef34415176ea9216353a6c30a851 [diff] |
Remove _test_host_ that's no longer used. This was removed when [] was submitted, eliminating fake test host targets from the Tulsi Xcode project generator. -- PiperOrigin-RevId: 179721615 MOS_MIGRATED_REVID=179721615
Open src/Tulsi.xcodeproj, and within Xcode, build the TulsiApp.
Run the TulsiApp.
Tulsi-generated Xcode projects use Bazel to build, rather than Xcode. This means that many common components of an Xcode project are handled differently than you may be used to. For example, the Info.plist file is governed entirely by BUILD rules in Bazel and is not displayed in the Xcode UI. It also means that changes made to your BUILD files, such as adding new library dependencies, are incorporated automatically when building your generated project. The only time you need to re-run Tulsi is if you want to add additional build targets or have new source files show up in Xcode for editing.