fa8ade300f421dcc3b0cd956ab03a50a5ae80646 refactor: Avoid GCC false positive error (MarcoFalke) fa40807fa830ee9724b5cfeef263263aaa6ce5d9 ci: Enable DEBUG=1 for one GCC-12+ build to catch 117966 regressions (MarcoFalke) Pull request description: It is possible that someone accidentally removes the workaround in fa9e0489f57968945d54ef56b275f51540f3e5e4, or more likely that someone accidentally adds new code without the workaround. Avoid this by adding a temporary CI check. This can be tested by reverting the workaround and observing a failure. ACKs for top commit: hebasto: ACK fa8ade300f421dcc3b0cd956ab03a50a5ae80646, I've tested locally on Ubuntu 24.04. Tree-SHA512: 7ee1538fd5304a5ab91ac8c7619a573548d7e0345592a1e9d38b3b73729e09e7c77a9ee703d64cf02a8218de3148376d7836e294abb939aa7533034ba36dfb6c
CI Scripts
This directory contains scripts for each build step in each build stage.
Running a Stage Locally
Be aware that the tests will be built and run in-place, so please run at your own risk. If the repository is not a fresh git clone, you might have to clean files from previous builds or test runs first.
The ci needs to perform various sysadmin tasks such as installing packages or writing to the user's home directory. While it should be fine to run the ci system locally on your development box, the ci scripts can generally be assumed to have received less review and testing compared to other parts of the codebase. If you want to keep the work tree clean, you might want to run the ci system in a virtual machine with a Linux operating system of your choice.
To allow for a wide range of tested environments, but also ensure reproducibility to some extent, the test stage
requires bash
, docker
, and python3
to be installed. To run on different architectures than the host qemu
is also required. To install all requirements on Ubuntu, run
sudo apt install bash docker.io python3 qemu-user-static
It is recommended to run the ci system in a clean env. To run the test stage with a specific configuration,
env -i HOME="$HOME" PATH="$PATH" USER="$USER" bash -c 'FILE_ENV="./ci/test/00_setup_env_arm.sh" ./ci/test_run_all.sh'
Configurations
The test files (FILE_ENV
) are constructed to test a wide range of
configurations, rather than a single pass/fail. This helps to catch build
failures and logic errors that present on platforms other than the ones the
author has tested.
Some builders use the dependency-generator in ./depends
, rather than using
the system package manager to install build dependencies. This guarantees that
the tester is using the same versions as the release builds, which also use
./depends
.
It is also possible to force a specific configuration without modifying the file. For example,
env -i HOME="$HOME" PATH="$PATH" USER="$USER" bash -c 'MAKEJOBS="-j1" FILE_ENV="./ci/test/00_setup_env_arm.sh" ./ci/test_run_all.sh'
The files starting with 0n
(n
greater than 0) are the scripts that are run
in order.
Cache
In order to avoid rebuilding all dependencies for each build, the binaries are cached and reused when possible. Changes in the dependency-generator will trigger cache-invalidation and rebuilds as necessary.