Commit Graph

10 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Joey Parrish 68b50f656d build: Stop using hermetic clang, libc++, etc
This brings our default build config more in line with what is
necessary for some platforms anyway: using the system-installed
toolchain and sysroot to build everything.

We will no longer fetch source or binaries for any specific build
tools, such as libc++, clang, gold, binutils, or valgrind.

The main part of this change is the changing of default gyp settings
in gyp_packager.py.  For this, a bug in gyp_packager.py had to be
fixed, in which similar GYP_DEFINE key names (such as clang and
host_clang) would conflict, causing some defaults not to be installed
properly.

In order to enable clang=0 by default, some changes had to be made in
common.gypi:
  - compiler macros added to fix a compatibility issue between
    Chromium's base/mac/ folder and the actual OSX SDK
	- replaced clang_warning_flags variables with standard cflags
	  settings, plus xcode_settings for OSX
  - turned off warnings-as-errors for non-shaka code, rather than
		allow-listing specific warning types, since we can't actually fix
    those warnings on any platform
  - disabled two specific warnings in shaka code, both of which are
    caused by headers from our non-shaka dependencies

Also, one warning (missing "override" keyword) has been fixed in
vod_media_info_dump_muxer_listener.h.

Although these changes were done to make building simpler on a wider
array of platforms (arm64, for example), it seems to make the build a
bit faster, too.  For me, at least, on my main Linux workstation:
  - "gclient sync" now runs 20-30% faster
  - "ninja -C out/Release" now runs 5-13% faster

The following environment variables are no longer required:
  - DEPOT_TOOLS_WIN_TOOLCHAIN
  - MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET
Documentation, Dockerfiles, and GitHub Actions workflows have been
updated to reflect this.

The following GYP_DEFINES are no longer required for anyone:
  - clang=0
  - host_clang=0
  - clang_xcode=1
  - use_allocator=none
  - use_experimental_allocator_shim=0
Documentation, Dockerfiles, and GitHub Actions workflows have been
updated to reflect this.

The following repos are no longer dependencies in gclient:
  - binutils
  - clang
  - gold
  - libc++
  - libc++abi
  - valgrind

The following gclient hooks have been removed:
  - clang
  - mac_toolchain
  - sysroot

Change-Id: Ie94ccbeec722ab73c291cb7df897d20761a09a70
2021-07-29 13:54:44 -07:00
Joey Parrish 9f11077768 Install pylint explicitly in custom linter action
Change-Id: I61891ef6682af209ee94b187b247f5b779e83c8a
2021-06-21 16:37:24 -07:00
Joey Parrish 56e227267c Fix python linter errors and add linter checks to CI
Internal CI systems and the new GitHub CI system were out of sync,
with the external system not doing any linting.  Further, the internal
system was using an internal-only linter for Python.

This creates a script for Python linting based on the open-source
pylint tool, checks in the Google Style Guide's pylintrc file, creates
a custom action for linting and adds it to the existing workflows,
fixes pre-existing linter errors in Python scripts, and updates pylint
overrides.

b/190743862

Change-Id: Iff1f5d4690b32479af777ded0834c31c2161bd10
2021-06-21 21:46:48 +00:00
Joey Parrish acafc0fd93 Make CI workflows safe when testing in a fork
Testing CI workflows is a pain.  This usually involves forking the
main repo and testing various operations there, where the results will
not break the main repo.

However, some things like NPM and Docker package names were initially
hard-coded.  This meant that a fork would need to customize those in
the workflows to avoid pushing official-looking packages during CI
testing.

This change moves those hard-coded names to GitHub Secrets.  Though
the names are not actually secret, the secret store is per-repo, and
will be independent in a fork.  This makes it easier to avoid
accidentally pushing official-looking releases during testing, even if
the fork has access to the same auth tokens.

Change-Id: Ide8f7aa92a028dd217200fca60881333bf8ae579
2021-06-17 13:36:59 -07:00
Joey Parrish a2e07a901e Refactor actions and workflows
It turns out that workflows were the wrong way to abstract reusable
pieces of work.  This turns common steps into custom actions (build
docs, build packager, test packager) which can be used as encapsulated
steps in multiple workflows.

This is a much more natural way to avoid duplication compared to the
previous approach of triggering one workflow from another.  This also
has the benefit of all of the steps of a release being represented on
GitHub as a single workflow, making it easier to understand what is
happening and what event triggered those steps.

Change-Id: Ife156d60069a39594c7b3bb3bc32080e6453b544
2021-06-17 10:32:24 -07:00
Joey Parrish 53c39ef9ac Address PR feedback
- Document necessary repo secrets
 - Compress build artifacts directly to the arifacts folder
 - Log test commands as they are executed
 - Add comments

Change-Id: I1cc150995d339e2e93bee4570d80263dae362bb9
2021-06-16 14:24:24 -07:00
Joey Parrish 0fdd046a14 Tweak job name in Update Docs workflow
Change-Id: Ifdf4343613921aa4e34a91a76fa241ab85862760
2021-06-16 12:18:01 -07:00
Joey Parrish 0f8749a211 CI overhaul based on GitHub Actions
This replaces Travis (for Linux & Mac) and Appveyor (for Windows) with
GitHub Actions.  In addition to using GitHub Actions to test PRs, this
also expands the automation of releases so that the only manual steps
are:

 1. Create a new CHANGELOG.md entry
 2. Create a release tag

Workflows have been create for building and testing PRs and releases,
for publishing releases to GitHub, NPM, and Docker Hub, and for
updating documentation on GitHub Pages.

When a new PR is created, GitHub Actions will:
 - Build and test on all combinations of OS, release type, and library
   type

Appveyor's workflow took ~2 hours, whereas the new GitHub Actions
workflow takes ~30 minutes.

When a new release tag is created, GitHub Actions will:
 - Create a draft release on GitHub
 - Extract release notes from CHANGELOG.md & attach them to the
   draft release
 - Build and test on all combinations of OS, release type, and library
   type, aborting if any build or test fails
 - Attach release artifacts to the draft release, aborting if any
   one artifact can't be prepared
 - Fully publish the draft release on GitHub
 - Publish the same release to NPM (triggered by GitHub release)
 - Publish the same release to Docker Hub (triggered by GitHub release)
 - Update the docs on GitHub pages

Closes #336 (GitHub Actions workflow to replace Travis and Appveyor)

b/190743862 (internal; tracking replacement of Travis)

Change-Id: Ic53eef60a8587c5d1487769a0cefaa16eb9b46e7
2021-06-16 11:52:02 -07:00
KongQun Yang a430a20eaf Update github issue template with mailing list for test files
Change-Id: I0efa92c8288df192234509e9be57c4e20de2e708
2017-06-02 18:16:41 +00:00
Kongqun Yang 95ef816740 Add an issue template
Change-Id: If9be7f840f0c4a24d2898eb2871b0f8612d3831a
2017-03-21 17:18:39 +00:00