Instead of a local database, this script now imports the data
into the shared postgres database. this way the data can be used
for other queries as well.
feel free to extend the data model if you
need additional columns.
This is a wild attempt to fix the pre-commit CI which has been failing
for a few hours. I think the authors of 1f2c851 are not available right
now, so I'm taking the freedom to try this out. I hope I'm not overstepping
any boundary.
using metadata tags set in #298 finds and cancels existing builds before
starting a new one.
One caveat is that no result is reported back to Phabricator for the
cancelled build. That should not be an issue in the normal usecase.
For #278
Current mechanism does not work well due to need to upload version.
Rebuilding a container from an alder revision also leads to overriding
existing container version.
The current default version in Chocolatey, 5.28, fails to install.
This was previously worked around by pinning a newer upcoming
version, 5.28.0.20210106. However this version never got approved
into Chocolatey (for unknown reasons), so it's no longer available.
Therefore instead request the previous older version, 5.24.3.2404001,
which installs correctly.
The current default version in Chocolatey (5.28) fails to install,
with the following error:
ERROR: The response content cannot be parsed because the Internet
Explorer engine is not available, or Internet Explorer's first-launch
configuration is not complete. Specify the UseBasicParsing parameter
and try again.
This is fixed in a newer version of packaging of ActivePerl, thus request
this particular version.
The libcxx tests currently require bash to be available (although
that might change), and the bash provided with Git is enough for
fulfilling this need. (Bash can also be useful for running other
scripts in the libcxx CI chain outside of the tests themselves.)
For the main LLVM testing, this works once
https://reviews.llvm.org/D98858 is merged.
This also allows getting rid of GnuWin altogether.
The GnuWin32 tools installed by Chocolatey reside in C:\GnuWin, and
are added automatically to the path.
The CMake tools aren't added automatically to the path though, so
that entry still is useful.
(However, the Visual Studio installation also brings along
a different version of CMake that ends up found if the one we
installed via Chocolatey isn't available.)