In https://reviews.llvm.org/D123481 we're removing this from the
default builds, but we still want it in CI builds where we know the
platform and compiler configuration.
I created a new queue for the pre-merge checks so that they won't compete for resources
with the post-merge build already running. Obviously that creates some inefficiency, but is
a simple way to make sure neither build gets starved (in particular, we know that the
current setup of 4 agents running on a single 32-core VM is enough to handle the commit
traffic on the main branch whereas pre-merge testing volume is likely to be more
unpredictable.
Now "report" step combines result in a uniform way and processes unit test
results XML output. It works for sub-builds only started from the 'premerge'
pipeline, i.e. non-recursive. One downside is that now one has to wait until
all jobs have finished.
- Add instructions to setup python environment
- added option to do full report cycle but not call Phabricator
- use "annotations" to show build status. That lifts the need to filter ninja
and other output (thus `ph_no_filter_output` param removed) and output
everything. That is nice as script failures no longer lead to loss of logs.
- improved annotate() usability
- misc fixes
fixes#192
additionally:
- install python libs after scripts checkout, so we don't need to
rebuild images and restart agents only to add a new python dependency
- updated lib versions
- similar scripts checkout in steps
Now we run a pre-commit hook that tries to kill any process that locked
a file in target directory.
Updated timeout interval on windows from 120 to 90 minutes.
Fixes#243
Now it's possible to allow sub-projects to define own checks and skip
"generic" ones.
To properly accomodate affected projects that might not have special
treatment we:
1. extend the set of affected projecs with dependent (e.g. add 'libc' if
'clang' was modified)
2. add custom steps for projects that define own workflow. At the moment
it's only libcxx and it has a custom trigger pipeline so it's noop.
3. add dependent projects and run generic check on them.
To illustrate: imagine that we have a dependency graph:
llvm -> clang -> openmp
and only clang was modified in a diff; also clang defines own checks.
Thus list of affected projects will be [clang, openmp].
After adding custom checks and removing their projecst: [openmp].
After adding dependencies: [llvm, clang, openmp]. Generic linux /
windows checks will be run on thouse 3 projects.
So as you can see in some scenarios projects with custom checks will
still go through generic checks.
Note that clang-format and clang-tidy checks are run only for "generic"
checks at the moment.