@ -73,6 +73,7 @@ One of these three distributions of Make will run on Windows:
- MSYS2 is a collection of tools and libraries providing you with an easy-to-use environment for building, installing and running native Windows software, it includes MinGW-w64.
- MSYS2 is a collection of tools and libraries providing you with an easy-to-use environment for building, installing and running native Windows software, it includes MinGW-w64.
- In MingGW-w64, the binary is called `mingw32-make.exe` instead of `make.exe`. Add the `bin` folder to `PATH`.
- In MingGW-w64, the binary is called `mingw32-make.exe` instead of `make.exe`. Add the `bin` folder to `PATH`.
- In MSYS2, you can use `make` directly. See [MSYS2 Porting](https://www.msys2.org/wiki/Porting/).
- In MSYS2, you can use `make` directly. See [MSYS2 Porting](https://www.msys2.org/wiki/Porting/).
- To compile Gitea with CGO_ENABLED (eg: SQLite3), you might need to use [tdm-gcc](https://jmeubank.github.io/tdm-gcc/) instead of MSYS2 gcc, because MSYS2 gcc headers lack some Windows-only CRT functions like `_beginthread`.
- [Chocolatey package](https://chocolatey.org/packages/make). Run `choco install make`
- [Chocolatey package](https://chocolatey.org/packages/make). Run `choco install make`
**Note**: If you are attempting to build using make with Windows Command Prompt, you may run into issues. The above prompts (Git bash, or MinGW) are recommended, however if you only have command prompt (or potentially PowerShell) you can set environment variables using the [set](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-server/administration/windows-commands/set_1) command, e.g. `set TAGS=bindata`.
**Note**: If you are attempting to build using make with Windows Command Prompt, you may run into issues. The above prompts (Git bash, or MinGW) are recommended, however if you only have command prompt (or potentially PowerShell) you can set environment variables using the [set](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-server/administration/windows-commands/set_1) command, e.g. `set TAGS=bindata`.
@ -273,10 +274,17 @@ make test-sqlite-migration # with SQLite switched for the appropriate database
There are two types of test run by Gitea: Unit tests and Integration Tests.
There are two types of test run by Gitea: Unit tests and Integration Tests.
### Unit Tests
Unit tests are covered by `*_test.go` in `go test` system.
You can set environment variable `GITEA_UNIT_TESTS_VERBOSE=1` to see detail logs during the test.
```bash
```bash
TAGS="bindata sqlite sqlite_unlock_notify" make test # Runs the unit tests
TAGS="bindata sqlite sqlite_unlock_notify" make test # Runs the unit tests
```
```
### Integration Tests
Unit tests will not and cannot completely test Gitea alone. Therefore, we
Unit tests will not and cannot completely test Gitea alone. Therefore, we
have written integration tests; however, these are database dependent.
have written integration tests; however, these are database dependent.
@ -288,10 +296,12 @@ will run the integration tests in an SQLite environment. Integration tests
require `git lfs` to be installed. Other database tests are available but
require `git lfs` to be installed. Other database tests are available but
may need adjustment to the local environment.
may need adjustment to the local environment.
Look at
Take a look at [`integrations/README.md`](https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/blob/main/integrations/README.md)