75 lines
3.1 KiB
YAML
75 lines
3.1 KiB
YAML
# This is an example .gitlab-ci.yml file to test (and optionally report the coverage
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# results of) your [Julia][1] packages. Please refer to the [documentation][2]
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# for more information about package development in Julia.
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#
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# Here, it is assumed that your Julia package is named `MyPackage`. Change it to
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# whatever name you have given to your package.
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#
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# [1]: http://julialang.org/
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# [2]: https://docs.julialang.org/en/v1/manual/documentation/index.html
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# Below is the template to run your tests in Julia
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.test_template: &test_definition
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# Uncomment below (and adjust as needed) to run the tests for specific references
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# only, such as the default branch, a `development` branch, and so on:
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# rules:
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# - if: $CI_COMMIT_BRANCH == $CI_DEFAULT_BRANCH
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# - if: $CI_COMMIT_BRANCH == "development"
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script:
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# Let's run the tests. Substitute `coverage = false` below, if you do not
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# want coverage results.
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- julia -e 'using Pkg; Pkg.clone(pwd()); Pkg.build("MyPackage"); Pkg.test("MyPackage"; coverage = true)'
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# Comment out below if you do not want coverage results.
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- julia -e 'using Pkg; Pkg.add("Coverage");
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import MyPackage; cd(joinpath(dirname(pathof(MyPackage)), ".."));
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using Coverage; cl, tl = get_summary(process_folder());
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println("(", cl/tl*100, "%) covered")'
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# Name a test and select an appropriate image.
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# images comes from Docker hub
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test:0.7:
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image: julia:0.7
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<<: *test_definition
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test:1.0:
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image: julia:1.0
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<<: *test_definition
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# Maybe you would like to test your package against the development branch:
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# test:1.1-dev (not sure there is such an image in docker, so not tested yet):
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# image: julia:v1.1-dev
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# # ... allowing for failures, since we are testing against the development
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# # branch:
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# allow_failure: true
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# <<: *test_definition
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# REMARK: Do not forget to enable the coverage feature for your project, if you
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# are using code coverage reporting above. This can be done by
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#
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# - Navigating to the `CI/CD Pipelines` settings of your project,
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# - Copying and pasting the default `Simplecov` regex example provided, i.e.,
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# `\(\d+.\d+\%\) covered` in the `test coverage parsing` textfield.
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# Example documentation deployment
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pages:
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image: julia:0.7
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stage: deploy
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script:
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- apt-get update -qq && apt-get install -y git # needed by Documenter
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- julia -e 'using Pkg; Pkg.clone(pwd()); Pkg.build("MyPackage");' # rebuild Julia (can be put somewhere else I'm sure
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- julia -e 'using Pkg; import MyPackage; Pkg.add("Documenter")' # install Documenter
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- julia --color=yes docs/make.jl # make documentation
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- mv docs/build public # move to the directory picked up by Gitlab pages
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artifacts:
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paths:
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- public
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rules:
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- if: $CI_COMMIT_BRANCH == $CI_DEFAULT_BRANCH
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# WARNING: This template is using the `julia` images from [Docker
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# Hub][3]. One can use custom Julia images and/or the official ones found
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# in the same place. However, care must be taken to correctly locate the binary
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# file (`/opt/julia/bin/julia` above), which is usually given on the image's
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# description page.
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#
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# [3]: https://hub.docker.com/_/julia/
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