| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ |
| |
| Continuous Integration testing |
| ============================== |
| |
| All changes require passing our continuous integration tests prior to being |
| merged in to mainline. To help facilitate merges being accepted quickly, |
| custodians are encouraged but not required to run a pipeline prior to sending a |
| pull request. Individual developers submitting significant or widespread |
| changes are encouraged to run a pipeline themselves prior to posting. |
| |
| In order to make this process as easy as possible, the ability to run a CI |
| pipeline is provided in both Azure and GitLab. Both of these pipelines perform |
| their Linux build jobs on the same Docker container image and to cover the same |
| platforms. In addition, Azure is also used to confirm that our host tools can |
| be built with mingw to run on Windows. |
| |
| Each of the pipelines is written in such as way as to be a "world build" style |
| test and as such we try and build all possible platforms. In addition, for all |
| platforms that support being run in QEMU we run them in QEMU and use our pytest |
| suite. See :doc:`py_testing` for more information about those tests. |
| |
| Azure Pipelines |
| --------------- |
| |
| This pipeline is defined in the top-level ``.azure-pipelines.yml`` file. |
| Currently there are two ways to run a Microsoft Azure Pipeline test for U-Boot. |
| |
| The first way is to create an account with Microsoft at |
| https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/services/devops/ and then use the |
| ``.azure-pipelines.yml`` file in the U-Boot repository as the pipeline |
| description. |
| |
| The second way is to use GitHub. This requires a GitHub account |
| and to fork the repository at https://github.com/u-boot/u-boot and to then |
| submit a pull request as this will trigger an Azure pipeline run. Clicking on |
| your pull request on the list at https://github.com/u-boot/u-boot/pulls and |
| then the "Checks" tab will show the results. |
| |
| GitLab CI Pipelines |
| ------------------- |
| |
| This pipeline is defined in the top-level ``.gitlab-ci.yml`` file. Currently, |
| we support running GitLab CI pipelines only for custodians, due to the |
| resources the project has available. For Custodians, it is a matter of |
| enabling the pipeline feature in your project repository following the standard |
| GitLab documentation. For non-custodians, the pipeline itself is part of the |
| tree and should be able to be used on any GitLab instance, with whatever |
| runners you are able to provide. While it is intended to be able to run this |
| pipeline on the free public instances provided at https://gitlab.com/ a problem |
| with our squashfs tests currently prevents this. |
| |
| To push to Gitlab without triggering a pipeline use: |
| |
| .. code-block:: bash |
| |
| git push -o ci.skip |
| |
| Docker container |
| ---------------- |
| |
| As previously stated, both of the above pipelines build using the same Docker |
| container image. This is maintained in the U-Boot source tree at |
| ``tools/docker/Dockerfile`` and new images are made as needed to support new |
| tests or features. This file needs to be updated whenever adding new external |
| tool requirements to tests. |
| |
| Customizing CI |
| -------------- |
| |
| As noted above, the CI pipelines perform a world build. While this is good for |
| overall project testing, it can be less useful for testing specific cases or |
| developing features. In that case, it can be useful as part of your own |
| testing cycle to edit these pipelines in separate local commits to pair them |
| down to just the jobs you're interested in. These changes must be removed |
| prior to submission. |