libvirt/ci/Makefile

247 lines
8.6 KiB
Makefile
Raw Normal View History

tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
# -*- makefile -*-
# vim: filetype=make
# The root directory of the libvirt.git checkout
CI_GIT_ROOT = $(shell git rev-parse --show-toplevel)
# The root directory for all CI-related contents
CI_ROOTDIR = $(CI_GIT_ROOT)/ci
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
# The directory holding content on the host that we will
# expose to the container.
CI_SCRATCHDIR = $(CI_ROOTDIR)/scratch
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
# The directory holding the clone of the git repo that
# we will expose to the container
CI_HOST_SRCDIR = $(CI_SCRATCHDIR)/src
# The directory holding the source inside the
# container, i.e. where we want to expose
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
# the $(CI_HOST_SRCDIR) directory from the host
CI_CONT_SRCDIR = $(CI_USER_HOME)/libvirt
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
# Script containing build instructions
CI_BUILD_SCRIPT = $(CI_ROOTDIR)/build.sh
# Location of the container images we're going to pull
# Can be useful to override to use a locally built
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
# image instead
CI_IMAGE_PREFIX = registry.gitlab.com/libvirt/libvirt/ci-
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
# The default tag is ':latest' but if the container
# repo above uses different conventions this can override it
CI_IMAGE_TAG = :latest
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
# We delete the virtual root after completion, set
# to 0 if you need to keep it around for debugging
CI_CLEAN = 1
# We'll always freshly clone the virtual root each
# time in case it was not cleaned up before. Set
# to 1 if you want to try restarting a previously
# preserved env
CI_REUSE = 0
# We need the user's login and home directory to prepare the
# environment the way some programs expect it
CI_USER_LOGIN = $(shell whoami)
CI_USER_HOME = $(shell eval echo "~$(CI_USER_LOGIN)")
# We also need the container process to run with current host IDs
# so that it can access the passed in build directory
CI_UID = $(shell id -u "$(CI_USER_LOGIN)")
CI_GID = $(shell id -g "$(CI_USER_LOGIN)")
CI_ENGINE = auto
# Container engine we are going to use, can be overridden per make
# invocation, if it is not we try podman and then default to docker.
ifeq ($(CI_ENGINE),auto)
override CI_ENGINE = $(shell podman version >/dev/null 2>&1 && echo podman || echo docker)
endif
# IDs you run as do not need to exist in
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
# the container's /etc/passwd & /etc/group files, but
# if they do not, then libvirt's 'ninja test' will fail
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
# many tests.
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
# We do not directly mount /etc/{passwd,group} as Docker
# is liable to mess with SELinux labelling which will
# then prevent the host accessing them. And podman cannot
# relabel the files due to it running rootless. So
# copying them first is safer and less error-prone.
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
CI_PWDB_MOUNTS = \
--volume $(CI_SCRATCHDIR)/group:/etc/group:ro,z \
--volume $(CI_SCRATCHDIR)/passwd:/etc/passwd:ro,z \
$(NULL)
CI_HOME_MOUNTS = \
--volume $(CI_SCRATCHDIR)/home:$(CI_USER_HOME):z \
$(NULL)
CI_SCRIPT_MOUNTS = \
--volume $(CI_SCRATCHDIR)/build:$(CI_USER_HOME)/build:z \
$(NULL)
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
# Docker containers can have very large ulimits
# for nofiles - as much as 1048576. This makes
# libvirt very slow at exec'ing programs.
CI_ULIMIT_FILES = 1024
ifeq ($(CI_ENGINE),podman)
# Podman cannot reuse host namespace when running non-root
# containers. Until support for --keep-uid is added we can
# just create another mapping that will do that for us.
# Beware, that in {uid,git}map=container_id:host_id:range, the
# host_id does actually refer to the uid in the first mapping
# where 0 (root) is mapped to the current user and rest is
# offset.
#
# In order to set up this mapping, we need to keep all the
# user IDs to prevent possible errors as some images might
# expect UIDs up to 90000 (looking at you fedora), so we don't
# want the overflowuid to be used for them. For mapping all
# the other users properly, some math needs to be done.
# Don't worry, it's just addition and subtraction.
#
# 65536 ought to be enough (tm), but for really rare cases the
# maximums might need to be higher, but that only happens when
# your /etc/sub{u,g}id allow users to have more IDs. Unless
# --keep-uid is supported, let's do this in a way that should
# work for everyone.
CI_MAX_UID = $(shell sed -n "s/^$(CI_USER_LOGIN):[^:]\+://p" /etc/subuid)
CI_MAX_GID = $(shell sed -n "s/^$(CI_USER_LOGIN):[^:]\+://p" /etc/subgid)
ifeq ($(CI_MAX_UID),)
CI_MAX_UID = 65536
endif
ifeq ($(CI_MAX_GID),)
CI_MAX_GID = 65536
endif
CI_UID_OTHER = $(shell echo $$(($(CI_UID)+1)))
CI_GID_OTHER = $(shell echo $$(($(CI_GID)+1)))
CI_UID_OTHER_RANGE = $(shell echo $$(($(CI_MAX_UID)-$(CI_UID))))
CI_GID_OTHER_RANGE = $(shell echo $$(($(CI_MAX_GID)-$(CI_GID))))
ifneq ($(CI_UID), 0)
CI_PODMAN_ARGS = \
--uidmap 0:1:$(CI_UID) \
--uidmap $(CI_UID):0:1 \
--uidmap $(CI_UID_OTHER):$(CI_UID_OTHER):$(CI_UID_OTHER_RANGE) \
--gidmap 0:1:$(CI_GID) \
--gidmap $(CI_GID):0:1 \
--gidmap $(CI_GID_OTHER):$(CI_GID_OTHER):$(CI_GID_OTHER_RANGE) \
$(NULL)
endif
endif
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
# Args to use when cloning a git repo.
# -c stop it complaining about checking out a random hash
# -q stop it displaying progress info for local clone
# --local ensure we don't actually copy files
CI_GIT_ARGS = \
-c advice.detachedHead=false \
-q \
--local \
$(NULL)
# Args to use when running the container
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
# --rm stop inactive containers getting left behind
# --user we execute as the same user & group account
# as dev so that file ownership matches host
# instead of root:root
# --workdir we change to user's home dir in the container
# before running the workload
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
# --volume to pass in the cloned git repo & config
# --ulimit lower files limit for performance reasons
# --interactive
# --tty Ensure we have ability to Ctrl-C the build
CI_ENGINE_ARGS = \
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
--rm \
--interactive \
--tty \
--user "$(CI_UID)":"$(CI_GID)" \
--workdir "$(CI_USER_HOME)" \
--env CI_CONT_SRCDIR="$(CI_CONT_SRCDIR)" \
--env CI_MESON_ARGS="$(CI_MESON_ARGS)" \
--env CI_NINJA_ARGS="$(CI_NINJA_ARGS)" \
$(CI_PODMAN_ARGS) \
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
$(CI_PWDB_MOUNTS) \
$(CI_HOME_MOUNTS) \
$(CI_SCRIPT_MOUNTS) \
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
--volume $(CI_HOST_SRCDIR):$(CI_CONT_SRCDIR):z \
--ulimit nofile=$(CI_ULIMIT_FILES):$(CI_ULIMIT_FILES) \
--cap-add=SYS_PTRACE \
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
$(NULL)
ci-check-engine:
@echo -n "Checking if $(CI_ENGINE) is available..." && \
$(CI_ENGINE) version 1>/dev/null && echo "yes"
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
ci-prepare-tree: ci-check-engine
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
@test "$(CI_REUSE)" != "1" && rm -rf $(CI_SCRATCHDIR) || :
@if ! test -d $(CI_SCRATCHDIR) ; then \
mkdir -p $(CI_SCRATCHDIR); \
cp /etc/passwd $(CI_SCRATCHDIR); \
cp /etc/group $(CI_SCRATCHDIR); \
mkdir -p $(CI_SCRATCHDIR)/home; \
cp "$(CI_BUILD_SCRIPT)" $(CI_SCRATCHDIR)/build; \
chmod +x "$(CI_SCRATCHDIR)/build"; \
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
echo "Cloning $(CI_GIT_ROOT) to $(CI_HOST_SRCDIR)"; \
git clone $(CI_GIT_ARGS) $(CI_GIT_ROOT) $(CI_HOST_SRCDIR) || exit 1; \
for mod in $$(git submodule | awk '{ print $$2 }' | sed -E 's,^../,,g') ; \
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
do \
test -f $(CI_GIT_ROOT)/$$mod/.git || continue ; \
echo "Cloning $(CI_GIT_ROOT)/$$mod to $(CI_HOST_SRCDIR)/$$mod"; \
git clone $(CI_GIT_ARGS) $(CI_GIT_ROOT)/$$mod $(CI_HOST_SRCDIR)/$$mod || exit 1; \
done ; \
fi
ci-run-command@%: ci-prepare-tree
$(CI_ENGINE) run \
$(CI_ENGINE_ARGS) \
$(CI_IMAGE_PREFIX)$*$(CI_IMAGE_TAG) \
$(CI_COMMAND)
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
@test "$(CI_CLEAN)" = "1" && rm -rf $(CI_SCRATCHDIR) || :
ci-shell@%:
$(MAKE) -C $(CI_ROOTDIR) ci-run-command@$* CI_COMMAND="/bin/bash"
ci-build@%:
$(MAKE) -C $(CI_ROOTDIR) ci-run-command@$* CI_COMMAND="$(CI_USER_HOME)/build"
ci-test@%:
$(MAKE) -C $(CI_ROOTDIR) ci-build@$* CI_NINJA_ARGS=test
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
ci-list-images:
@echo
@echo "Available x86 container images:"
@echo
@sh list-images.sh "$(CI_IMAGE_PREFIX)" | grep -v cross
@echo
@echo "Available cross-compiler container images:"
@echo
@sh list-images.sh "$(CI_IMAGE_PREFIX)" | grep cross
@echo
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
ci-help:
@echo "Build libvirt inside containers used for CI"
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
@echo
@echo "Available targets:"
@echo
@echo " ci-build@\$$IMAGE - run a default 'ninja' build"
@echo " ci-check@\$$IMAGE - run a 'ninja test'"
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
@echo " ci-shell@\$$IMAGE - run an interactive shell"
@echo " ci-list-images - list available images"
@echo " ci-help - show this help message"
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
@echo
@echo "Available make variables:"
@echo
@echo " CI_CLEAN=0 - do not delete '$(CI_SCRATCHDIR)' after completion"
@echo " CI_REUSE=1 - re-use existing '$(CI_SCRATCHDIR)' content"
@echo " CI_ENGINE=auto - container engine to use (podman, docker)"
@echo " CI_USER_LOGIN= - which user should run in the container (default is $$USER)"
@echo " CI_IMAGE_PREFIX= - override to prefer a locally built image, (default is $(CI_IMAGE_PREFIX))"
@echo " CI_IMAGE_TAG=:latest - optionally use in conjunction with 'CI_IMAGE_PREFIX'"
@echo " CI_MESON_ARGS= - extra arguments passed to meson"
@echo " CI_NINJA_ARGS= - extra arguments passed to ninja"
tests: add targets for building libvirt inside Docker containers The Travis CI system uses Docker containers for its build environment. These are pre-built and hosted under quay.io/libvirt so that developers can use them for reproducing problems locally. Getting the right Docker command syntax to use them, however, is not entirely easy. This patch addresses that usability issue by introducing some make targets. To run a simple build (aka 'make all') using the Fedora 28 container: make ci-build@fedora-28 To also run unit tests make ci-check@fedora-28 This is just syntax sugar for calling the previous command with a custom make target make ci-build@fedora-28 CI_MAKE_ARGS="check" To do a purely interactive build it is possible to request a shell make ci-shell@fedora-28 To do a MinGW build, it is currently possible to use the fedora-rawhide image and request a different configure script make ci-build@fedora-rawhide CI_CONFIGURE=mingw32-configure It is also possible to do cross compiled builds via the Debian containers make ci-build@debian-9-cross-s390x In all cases the GIT source tree is cloned locally into a 'ci-tree/src' sub-directory which is then exposed to the container at '/src'. It is setup to use a separate build directory so the build takes place in a subdir '/src/build'. A source tree build can be requested instead by passing an empty string CI_VPATH= arg to make. The make rules are kept in a standalone file that is included into the main Makefile.am, so that it is possible to run them without having to invoke autotools first. It is neccessary to disable the gnulib submodule commit check because this fails due to the way we have manually cloned submodule repos as primary git repos with their own .git directory, instead of letting git treat them as submodules in the top level .git directory. make[1]: Entering directory '/src/build' fatal: Not a valid object name origin fatal: run_command returned non-zero status for .gnulib . maint.mk: found non-public submodule commit make: *** [/src/maint.mk:1448: public-submodule-commit] Error 1 Reviewed-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
2019-01-25 16:28:23 +00:00
@echo