CI: Document the build and container process

Explain what we do within our CI and why, with links as required.

Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniels@collabora.com>
dev
Daniel Stone 3 years ago
parent 29c1087b7b
commit ebca36da66
  1. 67
      .gitlab-ci.yml
  2. 40
      .gitlab-ci/debian-install.sh

@ -1,12 +1,54 @@
# vim: set expandtab shiftwidth=2 tabstop=8 textwidth=0:
.templates_sha: &template_sha 567700e483aabed992d0a4fea84994a0472deff6 # see https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/ci/yaml/#includefile
# This file uses the freedesktop ci-templates to build Weston and run our
# tests in CI.
#
# ci-templates uses a multi-stage build process. First, the base container
# image is built which contains the core distribution, the toolchain, and
# all our build dependencies. This container is aggressively cached; if a
# container image matching $FDO_DISTRIBUTION_TAG is found in either the
# upstream repo (wayland/weston) or the user's downstream repo, it is
# reused for the build. This gives us predictability of build and far
# quicker runtimes, however it means that any changes to the base container
# must also change $FDO_DISTRIBUTION_TAG. When changing this, please use
# the current date as well as a unique build identifier.
#
# After the container is either rebuilt (tag mismatch) or reused (tag
# previously used), the build stage executes within this container.
#
# The final stage is used to expose documentation and coverage information,
# including publishing documentation to the public site when built on the
# main branch.
#
# Apart from the 'variables', 'include', and 'stages' top-level anchors,
# everything not beginning with a dot ('.') is the name of a job which will
# be executed as part of CI, unless the rules specify that it should not be
# run.
#
# Variables prefixed with CI_ are generally provided by GitLab itself;
# variables prefixed with FDO_ and templates prefixed by .fdo are provided
# by the ci-templates.
#
# For more information on GitLab CI, including the YAML syntax, see:
# https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/ci/yaml/README.html
#
# Note that freedesktop.org uses the 'Community Edition' of GitLab, so features
# marked as 'premium' or 'ultimate' are not available to us.
#
# For more information on ci-templates, see:
# - documentation at https://freedesktop.pages.freedesktop.org/ci-templates/
# - repo at https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/freedesktop/ci-templates/
variables:
FDO_UPSTREAM_REPO: wayland/weston
include:
# Here we use a fixed ref in order to isolate ourselves from ci-templates
# API changes. If you need new features from ci-templates you must bump
# this to the current SHA you require from the ci-templates repo, however
# be aware that you may need to account for API changes when doing so.
- project: 'freedesktop/ci-templates'
ref: *template_sha
file: '/templates/debian.yml'
@ -15,6 +57,8 @@ include:
file: '/templates/ci-fairy.yml'
# Define the build stages. These are used for UI grouping as well as
# dependencies.
stages:
- review
- container_prep
@ -22,6 +66,7 @@ stages:
- pages
# Base variables used for anything using a Debian environment
.debian:
variables:
FDO_DISTRIBUTION_VERSION: buster
@ -50,6 +95,9 @@ check-commit:
junit: results.xml
# Build our base container image, which contains the core distribution, the
# toolchain, and all our build dependencies. This will be reused in the build
# stage.
container_prep:
extends:
- .ci-rules
@ -59,6 +107,8 @@ container_prep:
stage: container_prep
# Core templates for all of our build steps. These are reused by all build jobs
# through the `extends` keyword.
.build-env:
extends:
- .ci-rules
@ -74,6 +124,9 @@ container_prep:
- export TESTS_RES_PATH="$BUILDDIR/tests-res.txt"
- mkdir "$BUILDDIR" "$PREFIX"
# Extends the core build templates to also provide for running our testing. We
# run this inside a virtme (qemu wrapper) VM environment so we can test the DRM
# backend using the 'vkms' virtual driver under Linux.
.build-and-test:
extends: .build-env
tags:
@ -101,6 +154,7 @@ container_prep:
reports:
junit: $BUILDDIR/meson-logs/testlog.junit.xml
# Same as above, but without running any tests.
.build-no-test:
extends: .build-env
tags:
@ -154,6 +208,13 @@ build-no-gl:
-Dlauncher-libseat=true
extends: .build-and-test
# Expose docs and coverage reports, so we can show users any changes to these
# inside their merge requests, letting us check them before merge.
#
# This does not build the docs or coverage information itself, but just reuses
# the docs and coverage information from the x86-64 Debian builds as the
# canonical sources of coverage information; the docs themselves should be
# invariant across any architecture or OS.
docs-and-coverage:
extends:
- .ci-rules
@ -177,7 +238,11 @@ docs-and-coverage:
- Documentation/
- Test_Coverage/
# does not inherit .ci-rules
# Generate the documentation for https://wayland.pages.freedesktop.org/weston/
# Anything under public/ is published to this URL.
#
# Does not inherit .ci-rules as it should only run in our default branch for
# the upstream repo.
pages:
extends:
- .debian

@ -1,4 +1,8 @@
#!/bin/bash
#
# Constructs the base container image used to build Weston within CI. Per the
# comment at the top of .gitlab-ci.yml, any changes in this file must bump the
# $FDO_DISTRIBUTION_TAG variable so we know the container has to be rebuilt.
set -o xtrace -o errexit
@ -99,13 +103,23 @@ apt-get -y --no-install-recommends install \
apt-get -y --no-install-recommends -t buster-backports install \
freerdp2-dev
# Build and install Meson. Generally we want to keep this in sync with what
# we require inside meson.build, however per wayland/weston@bcf37c937a36,
# we use a higher version here
pip3 install --user git+https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson.git@0.57.0
export PATH=$HOME/.local/bin:$PATH
# for documentation
# Our docs are built using Sphinx (top-level organisation and final HTML/CSS
# generation), Doxygen (parse structures/functions/comments from source code),
# Breathe (a bridge between Doxygen and Sphinx), and we use the Read the Docs
# theme for the final presentation.
pip3 install sphinx==2.1.0 --user
pip3 install breathe==4.13.0.post0 --user
pip3 install sphinx_rtd_theme==0.4.3 --user
# Build a Linux kernel for use in testing. We enable the VKMS module so we can
# predictably test the DRM backend in the absence of real hardware. We lock the
# version here so we see predictable results.
apt-get -y --no-install-recommends install $LINUX_DEV_PKGS
git clone --depth=1 --branch=drm-next-2020-06-11-1 https://anongit.freedesktop.org/git/drm/drm.git linux
cd linux
@ -120,7 +134,11 @@ mv linux/arch/x86/boot/bzImage /weston-virtme/bzImage
mv linux/.config /weston-virtme/.config
rm -rf linux
# Link to upstream virtme: https://github.com/amluto/virtme
# Build virtme, a QEMU wrapper: https://github.com/amluto/virtme
#
# virtme makes our lives easier by abstracting handling of the console,
# filesystem, etc, so we can pretend that the VM we execute in is actually
# just a regular container.
#
# The reason why we are using a fork here is that it adds a patch to have the
# --script-dir command line option. With that we can run scripts that are in a
@ -137,6 +155,8 @@ git checkout -b snapshot 69e3cb83b3405edc99fcf9611f50012a4f210f78
./setup.py install
cd ..
# Build and install Wayland; keep this version in sync with our dependency
# in meson.build.
git clone --branch 1.18.0 --depth=1 https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland
cd wayland
git show -s HEAD
@ -146,6 +166,9 @@ cd build
make install
cd ../../
# Keep this version in sync with our dependency in meson.build. If you wish to
# raise a MR against custom protocol, please change this reference to clone
# your relevant tree, and make sure you bump $FDO_DISTRIBUTION_TAG.
git clone --branch 1.19 https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland-protocols
cd wayland-protocols
git show -s HEAD
@ -156,6 +179,13 @@ make install
cd ../../
rm -rf wayland-protocols
# Build and install our own version of Mesa. Debian provides a perfectly usable
# Mesa, however llvmpipe's rendering behaviour can change subtly over time.
# This doesn't work for our tests which expect pixel-precise reproduction, so
# we lock it to a set version for more predictability. If you need newer
# features from Mesa then bump this version and $FDO_DISTRIBUTION_TAG, however
# please be prepared for some of the tests to change output, which will need to
# be manually inspected for correctness.
apt-get -y --no-install-recommends install $MESA_DEV_PKGS
git clone --single-branch --branch 20.3 --shallow-since='2020-12-15' https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa.git mesa
cd mesa
@ -166,6 +196,9 @@ ninja ${NINJAFLAGS} -C build install
cd ..
rm -rf mesa
# PipeWire is used for remoting support. Unlike our other dependencies its
# behaviour will be stable, however as a pre-1.0 project its API is not yet
# stable, so again we lock it to a fixed version.
rm -rf pipewire
git clone --depth=1 --branch 0.3.31 https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pipewire/pipewire.git pipewire
cd pipewire
@ -174,6 +207,9 @@ ninja ${NINJAFLAGS} -C build install
cd ..
rm -rf pipewire
# seatd lets us avoid the pain of handling VTs manually through weston-launch
# or open-coding TTY assignment within Weston. We use this for our tests using
# the DRM backend.
git clone --depth=1 --branch 0.5.0 https://git.sr.ht/~kennylevinsen/seatd
cd seatd
meson build -Dauto_features=disabled \

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