This job does:
1. Download the coverity bundle and untar it
2. Build mutter using clang and the coverity tool
3. Compress the coverity report
4. Upload for analysis
Things to note:
- Analysis are throttled, as per https://scan.coverity.com/faq#frequency
we qualify for 21 weekly builds, 3 daily. Mutter is sometimes a busy
project, so it seems we'd get often those consumed early in the day.
This is something we can resign to, but the times we'll try to upload
a report to have it rejected make the operation kinda pointless and
probably better throttled by ourselves.
- The task is manual, given the restrictions above.
- The task only applies on master, as the envvar holding the coverity
token is protected in gitlab.
- I had to use clang as the coverity tool doesn't seem to work ATM with
gcc as per recent Fedora.
- The coverity tarball is 1.2GB in size, which is a bit too big to have
it downloaded each time. As per their upload instructions, the tarball
gets updated twice yearly, so this is cached to minimize downloads.
- The coverity token for mutter is kept private/hidden in gitlab CI
settings.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1100>
This drops some custom building of various components that are now up to
date. While at it, start using the FDO_DISTRIBUTION_PACKAGES variable to
install packages, as it with the bumped ci-templates version also
doesn't install weak dependencies.
This also requires tweaking the pipewire dead lock work arounds, as it
changed configuration file paths.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1865>
With the surfaceless mode in the headless backend, it's now possible to
initiate the headless mode without any mode setting devices, or render
nodes, without any special CI runner privileges.
The native backend tests include screen cast tests, so make them
possible to run by starting pipewire. Testing shows that enabling audio
support (pulseaudio & jack compat layers) makes the tests dead lock and
eventually timeout, so disable those features for now.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1698>
$CI_COMMIT_REF_NAME can be a branch name or a tag, depending on the
pipeline, but our checkout script only deals with the former at the
moment.
Address this by rather than looking for a remote branch name, just
try to fetch the ref like we do for merge request pipelines.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1630>
We are currently not very good at communicating what's going in,
in particular for non-merge request pipelines where the output
is usually just "Using origin/master instead" (instead of what?).
Improve this by consistently communicate what we are looking for,
whether we found it, and what we end up doing.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1630>
gnome-shell depends on gdm's client library at runtime, but the
new pipeline-built image no longer provides it.
Add it back, but built it from source instead of using the Fedora
package, so we don't draw in all of gdm's runtime dependencies
(which includes a full GNOME session including gnome-shell).
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1590>
If review fails, it'll fail very early in the pipeline, but we won't see
the test case failure until the whole pipeline succeeds, which might be
10 minutes later.
To avoid sitting there wondering why it failed, let the time consuming
jobs wait until the review stage, which tends to take less than 20
seconds, succeeds. This way the review test result will be presented
earlier.
This changes the pipeline to run the check-commit-log job also for
non-merge requests, with the difference being that it will pass
immediately if it's not a merge request.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1549>
Clutter is a "scope", so everything under should be its own
"sub-prefix", e.g. changes to ClutterActor should be prefixed
'clutter/actor', ClutterFrameClock with 'clutter/frame-clock',
CoglFramebuffer with 'cogl/framebuffer' etc.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1549>
In order to run gnome-shell as part of the CI pipeline, we need
an additional runtime dependency plus python3 modules to mock
required system services and run gnome-shell-perf-tool.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1401
While we don't have an high number of tests, we still have some code
coverage and so we can track this via gitlab CI, given that it supports it
natively.
So add gcovr to the DockerFile dependency, build with -Db_coverage=true
meson native parameter, and add another manual job to make ninja to generate
the coverage reports on requests or in any master or tag ref.
Keep the artifacts around to be able to browse the generated HTML files and
eventually print the text reports so that they can be parsed by gitlab.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1236
We have branched now, time for a shiny new CI image.
Update the Dockerfile to:
- switch to F32
- use a single shared copr
- drop dependencies that are now covered by builddep
- do not include weak deps
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1176
While the old merge request URLs still work, gitlab recently started
including an additional /- for merge requests.
Adjust the regex to account for that, so that simply copying the URL
from gitlab works again.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1090
Podman can also be used to create the image. The only thing to keep in
mind with podman is to add --format docker, so that the image will be
compatible with all CI runners.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/966
For stable branches, we currently only check out the correct shell
branch for merge requests. For the regular pipeline, our code to
determine the current mutter branch fails because CI runs on a
temporary "pipeline/12345" branch that doesn't exist for gnome-shell.
Switching to the correct gitlab environment variable fixes that.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/811
Since 3.34, the gnome-shell package was cleaned up to only depend
on gnome-control-center-filesystem at build-time. However one of
the gnome-shell tests needs the gettext ITS file for keybindings
provided by the main gnome-control-center package (in fact, the
COPR package is stripped down to just that file), so install that
explicitly.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/901
Rather than just the latest one, otherwise it might leave the patch
submitter to iterate over every commit, if they didn't know every patch
needed a reference.
Closes: #1809
The passive phrasing makes it sound like there's something inherently
broken with the commit, rather than simply being missing an annotation
that the author can add.
Closes: #1809
Graphene is a small library with data types and APIs
specially crafted to computer graphics. It contains
performant implementations of matrices, vectors, points
and rotation tools. It is performance because, among
other reasons, it uses vectorized processor commands
to compute various operations.
Add Graphene dependency to Mutter.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/458
This applies 'egl/x11: calloc dri2_surf so it's properly zeroed' to
mesa-19.0.7, as it fixes a crash introduced by 'egl/dri: flesh out and
use dri2_create_drawable()' included in 19.0.6.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/648
Instead of either figuring out themself, or looking at the commit that
added the file, just make life easier by providing the commands for
rebuilding and pushing as a comment in the Dockerfile itself.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/648
The currently used package links are outdated. Instead of updating them
to the current release number, rely on copr repos having a higher priority
than system repos and simply specify the package name.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/644
This commit is a bit deceitful: The main change in the image is *not* the
more recent Fedora base, but an updated (and not backward-compatible)
evolution-data-server package from the fmuellner/gnome-shell-ci copr.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/501 ports
gnome-shell to the new API, so to keep mutter and gnome-shell CI
working after that change, we need to build against the correct
EDS version.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/582
Prefixes use an abbreviated form of the module or section being changed.
For example, changes to MetaBackend/meta-backend.c are prefixed with
`backend:` and generic changes to src/x11/ are prefixed `x11:`.
This extra nit picking check is meant to avoid using non-abbreviated
prefixes, e.g. `MetaBackend:`, or `meta-backend:`, other prefixes are
Currently consisting of only a "blacklist".
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/519
This adds a pipeline stage for merge requests that checks that the
commit message contains an URL to either a issue or a merge request.
This means that for merge requests without corresponding issues will
always fail initially, as the merge request URL is not known until after
it is created. This is still arguably better than accidentally merging
merge requests without URLs.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/440
cogl-path uses types from glu.h, but to avoid a build dependency on glu,
it kept a minified copy of glu.h in tree. Drop this file and just use
the actual glu.h. To avoid linking to libGLU.so, just use the
includepath, instead of actually adding glu as a real dependency.
This means we can remove an includepath meant to make it possible to
include <GL/glu.h>.