git/ci/lib.sh

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# Library of functions shared by all CI scripts
skip_branch_tip_with_tag () {
# Sometimes, a branch is pushed at the same time the tag that points
# at the same commit as the tip of the branch is pushed, and building
# both at the same time is a waste.
#
# When the build is triggered by a push to a tag, $CI_BRANCH will
# have that tagname, e.g. v2.14.0. Let's see if $CI_BRANCH is
# exactly at a tag, and if so, if it is different from $CI_BRANCH.
# That way, we can tell if we are building the tip of a branch that
# is tagged and we can skip the build because we won't be skipping a
# build of a tag.
if TAG=$(git describe --exact-match "$CI_BRANCH" 2>/dev/null) &&
test "$TAG" != "$CI_BRANCH"
then
echo "$(tput setaf 2)Tip of $CI_BRANCH is exactly at $TAG$(tput sgr0)"
exit 0
fi
}
travis-ci: record and skip successfully built trees Travis CI dutifully builds and tests each new branch tip, even if its tree has previously been successfully built and tested. This happens often enough in contributors' workflows, when a work-in-progress branch is rebased changing e.g. only commit messages or the order or number of commits while leaving the resulting code intact, and is then pushed to a Travis CI-enabled GitHub fork. This is wasting Travis CI's resources and is sometimes scary-annoying when the new tip commit with a tree identical to the previous, successfully tested one is suddenly reported in red, because one of the OSX build jobs happened to exceed the time limit yet again. So extend our Travis CI build scripts to skip building commits whose trees have previously been successfully built and tested. Use the Travis CI cache feature to keep a record of the object names of trees that tested successfully, in a plain and simple flat text file, one line per tree object name. Append the current tree's object name at the end of every successful build job to this file, along with a bit of additional info about the build job (commit object name, Travis CI job number and id). Limit the size of this file to 1000 records, to prevent it from growing too large for git/git's forever living integration branches. Check, using a simple grep invocation, in each build job whether the current commit's tree is already in there, and skip the build if it is. Include a message in the skipped build job's trace log, containing the URL to the build job successfully testing that tree for the first time and instructions on how to force a re-build. Catch the case when a build job, which successfully built and tested a particular tree for the first time, is restarted and omit the URL of the previous build job's trace log, as in this case it's the same build job and the trace log has just been overwritten. Note: this won't kick in if two identical trees are on two different branches, because Travis CI caches are not shared between build jobs of different branches. Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-12-31 18:12:05 +08:00
# Save some info about the current commit's tree, so we can skip the build
# job if we encounter the same tree again and can provide a useful info
# message.
save_good_tree () {
echo "$(git rev-parse $CI_COMMIT^{tree}) $CI_COMMIT $CI_JOB_NUMBER $CI_JOB_ID" >>"$good_trees_file"
travis-ci: record and skip successfully built trees Travis CI dutifully builds and tests each new branch tip, even if its tree has previously been successfully built and tested. This happens often enough in contributors' workflows, when a work-in-progress branch is rebased changing e.g. only commit messages or the order or number of commits while leaving the resulting code intact, and is then pushed to a Travis CI-enabled GitHub fork. This is wasting Travis CI's resources and is sometimes scary-annoying when the new tip commit with a tree identical to the previous, successfully tested one is suddenly reported in red, because one of the OSX build jobs happened to exceed the time limit yet again. So extend our Travis CI build scripts to skip building commits whose trees have previously been successfully built and tested. Use the Travis CI cache feature to keep a record of the object names of trees that tested successfully, in a plain and simple flat text file, one line per tree object name. Append the current tree's object name at the end of every successful build job to this file, along with a bit of additional info about the build job (commit object name, Travis CI job number and id). Limit the size of this file to 1000 records, to prevent it from growing too large for git/git's forever living integration branches. Check, using a simple grep invocation, in each build job whether the current commit's tree is already in there, and skip the build if it is. Include a message in the skipped build job's trace log, containing the URL to the build job successfully testing that tree for the first time and instructions on how to force a re-build. Catch the case when a build job, which successfully built and tested a particular tree for the first time, is restarted and omit the URL of the previous build job's trace log, as in this case it's the same build job and the trace log has just been overwritten. Note: this won't kick in if two identical trees are on two different branches, because Travis CI caches are not shared between build jobs of different branches. Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-12-31 18:12:05 +08:00
# limit the file size
tail -1000 "$good_trees_file" >"$good_trees_file".tmp
mv "$good_trees_file".tmp "$good_trees_file"
}
# Skip the build job if the same tree has already been built and tested
# successfully before (e.g. because the branch got rebased, changing only
# the commit messages).
skip_good_tree () {
if ! good_tree_info="$(grep "^$(git rev-parse $CI_COMMIT^{tree}) " "$good_trees_file")"
travis-ci: record and skip successfully built trees Travis CI dutifully builds and tests each new branch tip, even if its tree has previously been successfully built and tested. This happens often enough in contributors' workflows, when a work-in-progress branch is rebased changing e.g. only commit messages or the order or number of commits while leaving the resulting code intact, and is then pushed to a Travis CI-enabled GitHub fork. This is wasting Travis CI's resources and is sometimes scary-annoying when the new tip commit with a tree identical to the previous, successfully tested one is suddenly reported in red, because one of the OSX build jobs happened to exceed the time limit yet again. So extend our Travis CI build scripts to skip building commits whose trees have previously been successfully built and tested. Use the Travis CI cache feature to keep a record of the object names of trees that tested successfully, in a plain and simple flat text file, one line per tree object name. Append the current tree's object name at the end of every successful build job to this file, along with a bit of additional info about the build job (commit object name, Travis CI job number and id). Limit the size of this file to 1000 records, to prevent it from growing too large for git/git's forever living integration branches. Check, using a simple grep invocation, in each build job whether the current commit's tree is already in there, and skip the build if it is. Include a message in the skipped build job's trace log, containing the URL to the build job successfully testing that tree for the first time and instructions on how to force a re-build. Catch the case when a build job, which successfully built and tested a particular tree for the first time, is restarted and omit the URL of the previous build job's trace log, as in this case it's the same build job and the trace log has just been overwritten. Note: this won't kick in if two identical trees are on two different branches, because Travis CI caches are not shared between build jobs of different branches. Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-12-31 18:12:05 +08:00
then
# Haven't seen this tree yet, or no cached good trees file yet.
# Continue the build job.
return
fi
echo "$good_tree_info" | {
read tree prev_good_commit prev_good_job_number prev_good_job_id
if test "$CI_JOB_ID" = "$prev_good_job_id"
travis-ci: record and skip successfully built trees Travis CI dutifully builds and tests each new branch tip, even if its tree has previously been successfully built and tested. This happens often enough in contributors' workflows, when a work-in-progress branch is rebased changing e.g. only commit messages or the order or number of commits while leaving the resulting code intact, and is then pushed to a Travis CI-enabled GitHub fork. This is wasting Travis CI's resources and is sometimes scary-annoying when the new tip commit with a tree identical to the previous, successfully tested one is suddenly reported in red, because one of the OSX build jobs happened to exceed the time limit yet again. So extend our Travis CI build scripts to skip building commits whose trees have previously been successfully built and tested. Use the Travis CI cache feature to keep a record of the object names of trees that tested successfully, in a plain and simple flat text file, one line per tree object name. Append the current tree's object name at the end of every successful build job to this file, along with a bit of additional info about the build job (commit object name, Travis CI job number and id). Limit the size of this file to 1000 records, to prevent it from growing too large for git/git's forever living integration branches. Check, using a simple grep invocation, in each build job whether the current commit's tree is already in there, and skip the build if it is. Include a message in the skipped build job's trace log, containing the URL to the build job successfully testing that tree for the first time and instructions on how to force a re-build. Catch the case when a build job, which successfully built and tested a particular tree for the first time, is restarted and omit the URL of the previous build job's trace log, as in this case it's the same build job and the trace log has just been overwritten. Note: this won't kick in if two identical trees are on two different branches, because Travis CI caches are not shared between build jobs of different branches. Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-12-31 18:12:05 +08:00
then
cat <<-EOF
$(tput setaf 2)Skipping build job for commit $CI_COMMIT.$(tput sgr0)
travis-ci: record and skip successfully built trees Travis CI dutifully builds and tests each new branch tip, even if its tree has previously been successfully built and tested. This happens often enough in contributors' workflows, when a work-in-progress branch is rebased changing e.g. only commit messages or the order or number of commits while leaving the resulting code intact, and is then pushed to a Travis CI-enabled GitHub fork. This is wasting Travis CI's resources and is sometimes scary-annoying when the new tip commit with a tree identical to the previous, successfully tested one is suddenly reported in red, because one of the OSX build jobs happened to exceed the time limit yet again. So extend our Travis CI build scripts to skip building commits whose trees have previously been successfully built and tested. Use the Travis CI cache feature to keep a record of the object names of trees that tested successfully, in a plain and simple flat text file, one line per tree object name. Append the current tree's object name at the end of every successful build job to this file, along with a bit of additional info about the build job (commit object name, Travis CI job number and id). Limit the size of this file to 1000 records, to prevent it from growing too large for git/git's forever living integration branches. Check, using a simple grep invocation, in each build job whether the current commit's tree is already in there, and skip the build if it is. Include a message in the skipped build job's trace log, containing the URL to the build job successfully testing that tree for the first time and instructions on how to force a re-build. Catch the case when a build job, which successfully built and tested a particular tree for the first time, is restarted and omit the URL of the previous build job's trace log, as in this case it's the same build job and the trace log has just been overwritten. Note: this won't kick in if two identical trees are on two different branches, because Travis CI caches are not shared between build jobs of different branches. Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-12-31 18:12:05 +08:00
This commit has already been built and tested successfully by this build job.
To force a re-build delete the branch's cache and then hit 'Restart job'.
EOF
else
cat <<-EOF
$(tput setaf 2)Skipping build job for commit $CI_COMMIT.$(tput sgr0)
travis-ci: record and skip successfully built trees Travis CI dutifully builds and tests each new branch tip, even if its tree has previously been successfully built and tested. This happens often enough in contributors' workflows, when a work-in-progress branch is rebased changing e.g. only commit messages or the order or number of commits while leaving the resulting code intact, and is then pushed to a Travis CI-enabled GitHub fork. This is wasting Travis CI's resources and is sometimes scary-annoying when the new tip commit with a tree identical to the previous, successfully tested one is suddenly reported in red, because one of the OSX build jobs happened to exceed the time limit yet again. So extend our Travis CI build scripts to skip building commits whose trees have previously been successfully built and tested. Use the Travis CI cache feature to keep a record of the object names of trees that tested successfully, in a plain and simple flat text file, one line per tree object name. Append the current tree's object name at the end of every successful build job to this file, along with a bit of additional info about the build job (commit object name, Travis CI job number and id). Limit the size of this file to 1000 records, to prevent it from growing too large for git/git's forever living integration branches. Check, using a simple grep invocation, in each build job whether the current commit's tree is already in there, and skip the build if it is. Include a message in the skipped build job's trace log, containing the URL to the build job successfully testing that tree for the first time and instructions on how to force a re-build. Catch the case when a build job, which successfully built and tested a particular tree for the first time, is restarted and omit the URL of the previous build job's trace log, as in this case it's the same build job and the trace log has just been overwritten. Note: this won't kick in if two identical trees are on two different branches, because Travis CI caches are not shared between build jobs of different branches. Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-12-31 18:12:05 +08:00
This commit's tree has already been built and tested successfully in build job $prev_good_job_number for commit $prev_good_commit.
The log of that build job is available at $(url_for_job_id $prev_good_job_id)
travis-ci: record and skip successfully built trees Travis CI dutifully builds and tests each new branch tip, even if its tree has previously been successfully built and tested. This happens often enough in contributors' workflows, when a work-in-progress branch is rebased changing e.g. only commit messages or the order or number of commits while leaving the resulting code intact, and is then pushed to a Travis CI-enabled GitHub fork. This is wasting Travis CI's resources and is sometimes scary-annoying when the new tip commit with a tree identical to the previous, successfully tested one is suddenly reported in red, because one of the OSX build jobs happened to exceed the time limit yet again. So extend our Travis CI build scripts to skip building commits whose trees have previously been successfully built and tested. Use the Travis CI cache feature to keep a record of the object names of trees that tested successfully, in a plain and simple flat text file, one line per tree object name. Append the current tree's object name at the end of every successful build job to this file, along with a bit of additional info about the build job (commit object name, Travis CI job number and id). Limit the size of this file to 1000 records, to prevent it from growing too large for git/git's forever living integration branches. Check, using a simple grep invocation, in each build job whether the current commit's tree is already in there, and skip the build if it is. Include a message in the skipped build job's trace log, containing the URL to the build job successfully testing that tree for the first time and instructions on how to force a re-build. Catch the case when a build job, which successfully built and tested a particular tree for the first time, is restarted and omit the URL of the previous build job's trace log, as in this case it's the same build job and the trace log has just been overwritten. Note: this won't kick in if two identical trees are on two different branches, because Travis CI caches are not shared between build jobs of different branches. Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-12-31 18:12:05 +08:00
To force a re-build delete the branch's cache and then hit 'Restart job'.
EOF
fi
}
exit 0
}
check_unignored_build_artifacts ()
{
! git ls-files --other --exclude-standard --error-unmatch \
-- ':/*' 2>/dev/null ||
{
echo "$(tput setaf 1)error: found unignored build artifacts$(tput sgr0)"
false
}
}
# Set 'exit on error' for all CI scripts to let the caller know that
# something went wrong.
# Set tracing executed commands, primarily setting environment variables
# and installing dependencies.
set -ex
if test true = "$TRAVIS"
then
CI_TYPE=travis
# When building a PR, TRAVIS_BRANCH refers to the *target* branch. Not
# what we want here. We want the source branch instead.
CI_BRANCH="${TRAVIS_PULL_REQUEST_BRANCH:-$TRAVIS_BRANCH}"
CI_COMMIT="$TRAVIS_COMMIT"
CI_JOB_ID="$TRAVIS_JOB_ID"
CI_JOB_NUMBER="$TRAVIS_JOB_NUMBER"
CI_OS_NAME="$TRAVIS_OS_NAME"
CI_REPO_SLUG="$TRAVIS_REPO_SLUG"
cache_dir="$HOME/travis-cache"
url_for_job_id () {
echo "https://travis-ci.org/$CI_REPO_SLUG/jobs/$1"
}
BREW_INSTALL_PACKAGES="git-lfs gettext"
export GIT_PROVE_OPTS="--timer --jobs 3 --state=failed,slow,save"
export GIT_TEST_OPTS="--verbose-log -x --immediate"
else
echo "Could not identify CI type" >&2
exit 1
fi
good_trees_file="$cache_dir/good-trees"
mkdir -p "$cache_dir"
skip_branch_tip_with_tag
travis-ci: record and skip successfully built trees Travis CI dutifully builds and tests each new branch tip, even if its tree has previously been successfully built and tested. This happens often enough in contributors' workflows, when a work-in-progress branch is rebased changing e.g. only commit messages or the order or number of commits while leaving the resulting code intact, and is then pushed to a Travis CI-enabled GitHub fork. This is wasting Travis CI's resources and is sometimes scary-annoying when the new tip commit with a tree identical to the previous, successfully tested one is suddenly reported in red, because one of the OSX build jobs happened to exceed the time limit yet again. So extend our Travis CI build scripts to skip building commits whose trees have previously been successfully built and tested. Use the Travis CI cache feature to keep a record of the object names of trees that tested successfully, in a plain and simple flat text file, one line per tree object name. Append the current tree's object name at the end of every successful build job to this file, along with a bit of additional info about the build job (commit object name, Travis CI job number and id). Limit the size of this file to 1000 records, to prevent it from growing too large for git/git's forever living integration branches. Check, using a simple grep invocation, in each build job whether the current commit's tree is already in there, and skip the build if it is. Include a message in the skipped build job's trace log, containing the URL to the build job successfully testing that tree for the first time and instructions on how to force a re-build. Catch the case when a build job, which successfully built and tested a particular tree for the first time, is restarted and omit the URL of the previous build job's trace log, as in this case it's the same build job and the trace log has just been overwritten. Note: this won't kick in if two identical trees are on two different branches, because Travis CI caches are not shared between build jobs of different branches. Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-12-31 18:12:05 +08:00
skip_good_tree
travis-ci: introduce a $jobname variable for 'ci/*' scripts A couple of 'ci/*' scripts are shared between different build jobs: 'ci/lib-travisci.sh', being a common library, is sourced from almost every script, while 'ci/install-dependencies.sh', 'ci/run-build.sh' and 'ci/run-tests.sh' are shared between the "regular" GCC and Clang Linux and OSX build jobs, and the latter two scripts are used in the GETTEXT_POISON Linux build job as well. Our builds could benefit from these shared scripts being able to easily tell which build job they are taking part in. Now, it's already quite easy to tell apart Linux vs OSX and GCC vs Clang build jobs, but it gets trickier with all the additional Linux-based build jobs included explicitly in the build matrix. Unfortunately, Travis CI doesn't provide much help in this regard. The closest we've got is the $TRAVIS_JOB_NUMBER variable, the value of which is two dot-separated integers, where the second integer indicates a particular build job. While it would be possible to use that second number to identify the build job in our shared scripts, it doesn't seem like a good idea to rely on that: - Though the build job numbering sequence seems to be stable so far, Travis CI's documentation doesn't explicitly states that it is indeed stable and will remain so in the future. And even if it were stable, - if we were to remove or insert a build job in the middle, then the job numbers of all subsequent build jobs would change accordingly. So roll our own means of simple build job identification and introduce the $jobname environment variable in our builds, setting it in the environments of the explicitly included jobs in '.travis.yml', while constructing one in 'ci/lib-travisci.sh' as the combination of the OS and compiler name for the GCC and Clang Linux and OSX build jobs. Use $jobname instead of $TRAVIS_OS_NAME in scripts taking different actions based on the OS and build job (when installing P4 and Git LFS dependencies and including them in $PATH). The following two patches will also rely on $jobname. Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-12-12 07:34:44 +08:00
if test -z "$jobname"
then
jobname="$CI_OS_NAME-$CC"
travis-ci: introduce a $jobname variable for 'ci/*' scripts A couple of 'ci/*' scripts are shared between different build jobs: 'ci/lib-travisci.sh', being a common library, is sourced from almost every script, while 'ci/install-dependencies.sh', 'ci/run-build.sh' and 'ci/run-tests.sh' are shared between the "regular" GCC and Clang Linux and OSX build jobs, and the latter two scripts are used in the GETTEXT_POISON Linux build job as well. Our builds could benefit from these shared scripts being able to easily tell which build job they are taking part in. Now, it's already quite easy to tell apart Linux vs OSX and GCC vs Clang build jobs, but it gets trickier with all the additional Linux-based build jobs included explicitly in the build matrix. Unfortunately, Travis CI doesn't provide much help in this regard. The closest we've got is the $TRAVIS_JOB_NUMBER variable, the value of which is two dot-separated integers, where the second integer indicates a particular build job. While it would be possible to use that second number to identify the build job in our shared scripts, it doesn't seem like a good idea to rely on that: - Though the build job numbering sequence seems to be stable so far, Travis CI's documentation doesn't explicitly states that it is indeed stable and will remain so in the future. And even if it were stable, - if we were to remove or insert a build job in the middle, then the job numbers of all subsequent build jobs would change accordingly. So roll our own means of simple build job identification and introduce the $jobname environment variable in our builds, setting it in the environments of the explicitly included jobs in '.travis.yml', while constructing one in 'ci/lib-travisci.sh' as the combination of the OS and compiler name for the GCC and Clang Linux and OSX build jobs. Use $jobname instead of $TRAVIS_OS_NAME in scripts taking different actions based on the OS and build job (when installing P4 and Git LFS dependencies and including them in $PATH). The following two patches will also rely on $jobname. Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-12-12 07:34:44 +08:00
fi
travis-ci: move setting environment variables to 'ci/lib-travisci.sh' Our '.travis.yml's 'env.global' section sets a bunch of environment variables for all build jobs, though none of them actually affects all build jobs. It's convenient for us, and in most cases it works just fine, because irrelevant environment variables are simply ignored. However, $GIT_SKIP_TESTS is an exception: it tells the test harness to skip the two test scripts that are prone to occasional failures on OSX, but as it's set for all build jobs those tests are not run in any of the build jobs that are capable to run them reliably, either. Therefore $GIT_SKIP_TESTS should only be set in the OSX build jobs, but those build jobs are included in the build matrix implicitly (i.e. by combining the matrix keys 'os' and 'compiler'), and there is no way to set an environment variable only for a subset of those implicit build jobs. (Unless we were to add new scriptlets to '.travis.yml', which is exactly the opposite direction that we took with commit 657343a60 (travis-ci: move Travis CI code into dedicated scripts, 2017-09-10)). So move setting $GIT_SKIP_TESTS to 'ci/lib-travisci.sh', where it can trivially be set only for the OSX build jobs. Furthermore, move setting all other environment variables from '.travis.yml' to 'ci/lib-travisci.sh', too, because a couple of environment variables are already set there, and this way all environment variables will be set in the same place. All the logic controlling our builds is already in the 'ci/*' scripts anyway, so there is really no good reason to keep the environment variables separately. Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-12-12 07:34:45 +08:00
export DEVELOPER=1
export DEFAULT_TEST_TARGET=prove
export GIT_TEST_CLONE_2GB=YesPlease
if [ "$jobname" = linux-gcc ]; then
export CC=gcc-8
fi
travis-ci: move setting environment variables to 'ci/lib-travisci.sh' Our '.travis.yml's 'env.global' section sets a bunch of environment variables for all build jobs, though none of them actually affects all build jobs. It's convenient for us, and in most cases it works just fine, because irrelevant environment variables are simply ignored. However, $GIT_SKIP_TESTS is an exception: it tells the test harness to skip the two test scripts that are prone to occasional failures on OSX, but as it's set for all build jobs those tests are not run in any of the build jobs that are capable to run them reliably, either. Therefore $GIT_SKIP_TESTS should only be set in the OSX build jobs, but those build jobs are included in the build matrix implicitly (i.e. by combining the matrix keys 'os' and 'compiler'), and there is no way to set an environment variable only for a subset of those implicit build jobs. (Unless we were to add new scriptlets to '.travis.yml', which is exactly the opposite direction that we took with commit 657343a60 (travis-ci: move Travis CI code into dedicated scripts, 2017-09-10)). So move setting $GIT_SKIP_TESTS to 'ci/lib-travisci.sh', where it can trivially be set only for the OSX build jobs. Furthermore, move setting all other environment variables from '.travis.yml' to 'ci/lib-travisci.sh', too, because a couple of environment variables are already set there, and this way all environment variables will be set in the same place. All the logic controlling our builds is already in the 'ci/*' scripts anyway, so there is really no good reason to keep the environment variables separately. Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-12-12 07:34:45 +08:00
travis-ci: introduce a $jobname variable for 'ci/*' scripts A couple of 'ci/*' scripts are shared between different build jobs: 'ci/lib-travisci.sh', being a common library, is sourced from almost every script, while 'ci/install-dependencies.sh', 'ci/run-build.sh' and 'ci/run-tests.sh' are shared between the "regular" GCC and Clang Linux and OSX build jobs, and the latter two scripts are used in the GETTEXT_POISON Linux build job as well. Our builds could benefit from these shared scripts being able to easily tell which build job they are taking part in. Now, it's already quite easy to tell apart Linux vs OSX and GCC vs Clang build jobs, but it gets trickier with all the additional Linux-based build jobs included explicitly in the build matrix. Unfortunately, Travis CI doesn't provide much help in this regard. The closest we've got is the $TRAVIS_JOB_NUMBER variable, the value of which is two dot-separated integers, where the second integer indicates a particular build job. While it would be possible to use that second number to identify the build job in our shared scripts, it doesn't seem like a good idea to rely on that: - Though the build job numbering sequence seems to be stable so far, Travis CI's documentation doesn't explicitly states that it is indeed stable and will remain so in the future. And even if it were stable, - if we were to remove or insert a build job in the middle, then the job numbers of all subsequent build jobs would change accordingly. So roll our own means of simple build job identification and introduce the $jobname environment variable in our builds, setting it in the environments of the explicitly included jobs in '.travis.yml', while constructing one in 'ci/lib-travisci.sh' as the combination of the OS and compiler name for the GCC and Clang Linux and OSX build jobs. Use $jobname instead of $TRAVIS_OS_NAME in scripts taking different actions based on the OS and build job (when installing P4 and Git LFS dependencies and including them in $PATH). The following two patches will also rely on $jobname. Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-12-12 07:34:44 +08:00
case "$jobname" in
linux-clang|linux-gcc)
travis-ci: set GIT_TEST_HTTPD in 'ci/lib-travisci.sh' Commit 657343a60 (travis-ci: move Travis CI code into dedicated scripts, 2017-09-10) converted '.travis.yml's default 'before_install' scriptlet to the 'ci/install-dependencies.sh' script, and while doing so moved setting GIT_TEST_HTTPD=YesPlease for the 64-bit GCC and Clang Linux build jobs to that script. This is wrong for two reasons: - The purpose of that script is, as its name suggests, to install dependencies, not to set any environment variables influencing which tests should be run (though, arguably, this was already an issue with the original 'before_install' scriptlet). - Setting the variable has no effect anymore, because that script is run in a separate shell process, and the variable won't be visible in any of the other scripts, notably in 'ci/run-tests.sh' responsible for, well, running the tests. Luckily, this didn't have a negative effect on our Travis CI build jobs, because GIT_TEST_HTTPD is a tri-state variable defaulting to "auto" and a functioning web server was installed in those Linux build jobs, so the httpd tests were run anyway. Apparently the httpd tests run just fine without GIT_TEST_HTTPD being set, therefore we could simply remove this environment variable. However, if a bug were to creep in to change the Travis CI build environment to run the tests as root or to not install Apache, then the httpd tests would be skipped and the build job would still succeed. We would only notice if someone actually were to look through the build job's trace log; but who would look at the trace log of a successful build job?! Since httpd tests are important, we do want to run them and we want to be loudly reminded if they can't be run. Therefore, move setting GIT_TEST_HTTPD=YesPlease for the 64-bit GCC and Clang Linux build jobs to 'ci/lib-travisci.sh' to ensure that the build job fails when the httpd tests can't be run. (We could set it in 'ci/run-tests.sh' just as well, but it's better to keep all environment variables in one place in 'ci/lib-travisci.sh'.) Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-12-12 07:34:46 +08:00
export GIT_TEST_HTTPD=YesPlease
travis-ci: move setting environment variables to 'ci/lib-travisci.sh' Our '.travis.yml's 'env.global' section sets a bunch of environment variables for all build jobs, though none of them actually affects all build jobs. It's convenient for us, and in most cases it works just fine, because irrelevant environment variables are simply ignored. However, $GIT_SKIP_TESTS is an exception: it tells the test harness to skip the two test scripts that are prone to occasional failures on OSX, but as it's set for all build jobs those tests are not run in any of the build jobs that are capable to run them reliably, either. Therefore $GIT_SKIP_TESTS should only be set in the OSX build jobs, but those build jobs are included in the build matrix implicitly (i.e. by combining the matrix keys 'os' and 'compiler'), and there is no way to set an environment variable only for a subset of those implicit build jobs. (Unless we were to add new scriptlets to '.travis.yml', which is exactly the opposite direction that we took with commit 657343a60 (travis-ci: move Travis CI code into dedicated scripts, 2017-09-10)). So move setting $GIT_SKIP_TESTS to 'ci/lib-travisci.sh', where it can trivially be set only for the OSX build jobs. Furthermore, move setting all other environment variables from '.travis.yml' to 'ci/lib-travisci.sh', too, because a couple of environment variables are already set there, and this way all environment variables will be set in the same place. All the logic controlling our builds is already in the 'ci/*' scripts anyway, so there is really no good reason to keep the environment variables separately. Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-12-12 07:34:45 +08:00
# The Linux build installs the defined dependency versions below.
# The OS X build installs the latest available versions. Keep that
# in mind when you encounter a broken OS X build!
export LINUX_P4_VERSION="16.2"
export LINUX_GIT_LFS_VERSION="1.5.2"
P4_PATH="$HOME/custom/p4"
GIT_LFS_PATH="$HOME/custom/git-lfs"
export PATH="$GIT_LFS_PATH:$P4_PATH:$PATH"
;;
travis-ci: move setting environment variables to 'ci/lib-travisci.sh' Our '.travis.yml's 'env.global' section sets a bunch of environment variables for all build jobs, though none of them actually affects all build jobs. It's convenient for us, and in most cases it works just fine, because irrelevant environment variables are simply ignored. However, $GIT_SKIP_TESTS is an exception: it tells the test harness to skip the two test scripts that are prone to occasional failures on OSX, but as it's set for all build jobs those tests are not run in any of the build jobs that are capable to run them reliably, either. Therefore $GIT_SKIP_TESTS should only be set in the OSX build jobs, but those build jobs are included in the build matrix implicitly (i.e. by combining the matrix keys 'os' and 'compiler'), and there is no way to set an environment variable only for a subset of those implicit build jobs. (Unless we were to add new scriptlets to '.travis.yml', which is exactly the opposite direction that we took with commit 657343a60 (travis-ci: move Travis CI code into dedicated scripts, 2017-09-10)). So move setting $GIT_SKIP_TESTS to 'ci/lib-travisci.sh', where it can trivially be set only for the OSX build jobs. Furthermore, move setting all other environment variables from '.travis.yml' to 'ci/lib-travisci.sh', too, because a couple of environment variables are already set there, and this way all environment variables will be set in the same place. All the logic controlling our builds is already in the 'ci/*' scripts anyway, so there is really no good reason to keep the environment variables separately. Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-12-12 07:34:45 +08:00
osx-clang|osx-gcc)
# t9810 occasionally fails on Travis CI OS X
# t9816 occasionally fails with "TAP out of sequence errors" on
# Travis CI OS X
export GIT_SKIP_TESTS="t9810 t9816"
;;
i18n: make GETTEXT_POISON a runtime option Change the GETTEXT_POISON compile-time + runtime GIT_GETTEXT_POISON test parameter to only be a GIT_TEST_GETTEXT_POISON=<non-empty?> runtime parameter, to be consistent with other parameters documented in "Running tests with special setups" in t/README. When I added GETTEXT_POISON in bb946bba76 ("i18n: add GETTEXT_POISON to simulate unfriendly translator", 2011-02-22) I was concerned with ensuring that the _() function would get constant folded if NO_GETTEXT was defined, and likewise that GETTEXT_POISON would be compiled out unless it was defined. But as the benchmark in my [1] shows doing a one-off runtime getenv("GIT_TEST_[...]") is trivial, and since GETTEXT_POISON was originally added the GIT_TEST_* env variables have become the common idiom for turning on special test setups. So change GETTEXT_POISON to work the same way. Now the GETTEXT_POISON=YesPlease compile-time option is gone, and running the tests with GIT_TEST_GETTEXT_POISON=[YesPlease|] can be toggled on/off without recompiling. This allows for conditionally amending tests to test with/without poison, similar to what 859fdc0c3c ("commit-graph: define GIT_TEST_COMMIT_GRAPH", 2018-08-29) did for GIT_TEST_COMMIT_GRAPH. Do some of that, now we e.g. always run the t0205-gettext-poison.sh test. I did enough there to remove the GETTEXT_POISON prerequisite, but its inverse C_LOCALE_OUTPUT is still around, and surely some tests using it can be converted to e.g. always set GIT_TEST_GETTEXT_POISON=. Notes on the implementation: * We still compile a dedicated GETTEXT_POISON build in Travis CI. Perhaps this should be revisited and integrated into the "linux-gcc" build, see ae59a4e44f ("travis: run tests with GIT_TEST_SPLIT_INDEX", 2018-01-07) for prior art in that area. Then again maybe not, see [2]. * We now skip a test in t0000-basic.sh under GIT_TEST_GETTEXT_POISON=YesPlease that wasn't skipped before. This test relies on C locale output, but due to an edge case in how the previous implementation of GETTEXT_POISON worked (reading it from GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS) wasn't enabling poison correctly. Now it does, and needs to be skipped. * The getenv() function is not reentrant, so out of paranoia about code of the form: printf(_("%s"), getenv("some-env")); call use_gettext_poison() in our early setup in git_setup_gettext() so we populate the "poison_requested" variable in a codepath that's won't suffer from that race condition. * We error out in the Makefile if you're still saying GETTEXT_POISON=YesPlease to prompt users to change their invocation. * We should not print out poisoned messages during the test initialization itself to keep it more readable, so the test library hides the variable if set in $GIT_TEST_GETTEXT_POISON_ORIG during setup. See [3]. See also [4] for more on the motivation behind this patch, and the history of the GETTEXT_POISON facility. 1. https://public-inbox.org/git/871s8gd32p.fsf@evledraar.gmail.com/ 2. https://public-inbox.org/git/20181102163725.GY30222@szeder.dev/ 3. https://public-inbox.org/git/20181022202241.18629-2-szeder.dev@gmail.com/ 4. https://public-inbox.org/git/878t2pd6yu.fsf@evledraar.gmail.com/ Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2018-11-09 05:15:29 +08:00
GIT_TEST_GETTEXT_POISON)
export GIT_TEST_GETTEXT_POISON=YesPlease
travis-ci: move setting environment variables to 'ci/lib-travisci.sh' Our '.travis.yml's 'env.global' section sets a bunch of environment variables for all build jobs, though none of them actually affects all build jobs. It's convenient for us, and in most cases it works just fine, because irrelevant environment variables are simply ignored. However, $GIT_SKIP_TESTS is an exception: it tells the test harness to skip the two test scripts that are prone to occasional failures on OSX, but as it's set for all build jobs those tests are not run in any of the build jobs that are capable to run them reliably, either. Therefore $GIT_SKIP_TESTS should only be set in the OSX build jobs, but those build jobs are included in the build matrix implicitly (i.e. by combining the matrix keys 'os' and 'compiler'), and there is no way to set an environment variable only for a subset of those implicit build jobs. (Unless we were to add new scriptlets to '.travis.yml', which is exactly the opposite direction that we took with commit 657343a60 (travis-ci: move Travis CI code into dedicated scripts, 2017-09-10)). So move setting $GIT_SKIP_TESTS to 'ci/lib-travisci.sh', where it can trivially be set only for the OSX build jobs. Furthermore, move setting all other environment variables from '.travis.yml' to 'ci/lib-travisci.sh', too, because a couple of environment variables are already set there, and this way all environment variables will be set in the same place. All the logic controlling our builds is already in the 'ci/*' scripts anyway, so there is really no good reason to keep the environment variables separately. Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-12-12 07:34:45 +08:00
;;
esac