Instead of doing the shallow checkout followed by an unshallow-with-tags,
just set fetch-depth=0 to get the full history to start with.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
The intention of using `tee` is to both print the code size change in
the CI logs and save them to a file. Using redirection to a file
caused it to not print the changes.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
This modifies the automated code size comment to edit an existing comment
if one already exists instead of always creating a new comment. This
reduces noise on pull requests that are repeatedly updated.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
This adds a concurrency section to all github workflows to cancel any
in progress workflow when a branch is updated. This should cancel any
ongoing or queued workflows, e.g. when a pull request is updated.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
This fixes the case for the code size comment action where there is no
matching artifact. Apparently, the result of the github-script action was
not treating `false` as a boolean value. To fix the problem we change the
result to use string. Also add some logging to make the step a bit less
cryptic.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
This changes the code size workflow to post a comment on pull requests with
the code size report. It also removes the error threshold so that the test
won't fail if code size increases.
Allowable code size changes are subjective, so shouldn't cause CI to fail.
In addition, failing CI tests can cause other hooks like code coverage
reports to be suppressed, so this fixes that problem as well.
Fixes issue #8464.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
The existing actions/checkout@v2 is causing Node v12 deprecation warnings
to be shown in GitHub Actions. v3 uses Node v16, which will stop the
warnings.
This is a no-op for coverage and minimal.
The standard and dev variants have been merged and enable the same feature
set as a typical bare-metal board. And remove the CI for the dev build.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
The executable now lives in the build directory, and since the build
directory already contains the variant name there is no need to also add
it to the executable.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Binaries built using the Make build system now no longer appear in the
working directory of the build, but rather in the build directory. Thus
some paths had to be adjusted.
Move the "delete placeholder" to the end, so it's not the first thing the
reader does. And add extra text calling out "how do I?" questions.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
The CI scripts were using a PPA to get a backported version of uncrustify
on Ubuntu 20.04. However, this causes CI to intermittently fail due to
connection issues to launchpad.net or the key server.
Ubuntu 22.04 has a newer version of uncrustify removing the need for the
PPA. Ubuntu 22.04 is now in beta on GitHub actions, so it can be used.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
When opening a new issue the following selection is now shown:
- Bug reports
- Feature requests
- Security issue
- Documentation issue
- Link to forum
- Link to docs
- Link to downloads
IDF v4.4 does not have an official release so for now use the latest
master. Also remove building GENERIC with no options (all the other boards
are no-option builds), to keep CI time reasonable.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Coverage calculated by Codecov has the same reliability/deterministic
issues as Coveralls did, so the problem is likely to do with the output of
lcov/gcov, rather than the analysis and display of the data.
Switch from lcov to gcov for data generation to try and simplify this
process of computing coverage.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
As discussed in #7455, Coveralls doesn't work properly anymore, it has
many spurious errors with reduced coverage.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Following on from ef16834887, this adds a
coverage build and running of the test suite on an ARM 32-bit Linux-based
architecture.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This adds a coverage build and running of the test suite on a MIPS 32-bit
big endian architecture. It uses the feature of qemu to execute foreign
code as though it were native to the system (using qemu user mode). The
code compiled for MIPS will run under the qemu VM, but all syscalls made by
this code go to the host (Linux) system.
See related #7268 and #7273.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>