Commit 19b1b849 authored by Rémy Coutable's avatar Rémy Coutable

Update templates for 8.13

Signed-off-by: default avatarRémy Coutable <remy@rymai.me>
parent f80e7683
...@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ deps ...@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ deps
*.beam *.beam
*.plt *.plt
erl_crash.dump erl_crash.dump
ebin ebin/*.beam
rel/example_project rel/example_project
.concrete/DEV_MODE .concrete/DEV_MODE
.rebar .rebar
...@@ -8,3 +8,6 @@ ...@@ -8,3 +8,6 @@
# Linux trash folder which might appear on any partition or disk # Linux trash folder which might appear on any partition or disk
.Trash-* .Trash-*
# .nfs files are created when an open file is removed but is still being accessed
.nfs*
...@@ -25,3 +25,6 @@ _testmain.go ...@@ -25,3 +25,6 @@ _testmain.go
# Output of the go coverage tool, specifically when used with LiteIDE # Output of the go coverage tool, specifically when used with LiteIDE
*.out *.out
# external packages folder
vendor/
...@@ -39,3 +39,6 @@ jspm_packages ...@@ -39,3 +39,6 @@ jspm_packages
# Optional REPL history # Optional REPL history
.node_repl_history .node_repl_history
# Output of 'npm pack'
*.tgz
...@@ -192,3 +192,6 @@ TSWLatexianTemp* ...@@ -192,3 +192,6 @@ TSWLatexianTemp*
# KBibTeX # KBibTeX
*~[0-9]* *~[0-9]*
# auto folder when using emacs and auctex
/auto/*
...@@ -110,6 +110,10 @@ _TeamCity* ...@@ -110,6 +110,10 @@ _TeamCity*
# DotCover is a Code Coverage Tool # DotCover is a Code Coverage Tool
*.dotCover *.dotCover
# Visual Studio code coverage results
*.coverage
*.coveragexml
# NCrunch # NCrunch
_NCrunch_* _NCrunch_*
.*crunch*.local.xml .*crunch*.local.xml
...@@ -189,6 +193,7 @@ ClientBin/ ...@@ -189,6 +193,7 @@ ClientBin/
*~ *~
*.dbmdl *.dbmdl
*.dbproj.schemaview *.dbproj.schemaview
*.jfm
*.pfx *.pfx
*.publishsettings *.publishsettings
node_modules/ node_modules/
...@@ -258,3 +263,6 @@ paket-files/ ...@@ -258,3 +263,6 @@ paket-files/
# Python Tools for Visual Studio (PTVS) # Python Tools for Visual Studio (PTVS)
__pycache__/ __pycache__/
*.pyc *.pyc
# Cake - Uncomment if you are using it
# tools/
image: ruby:2.3-alpine
test:
script: ruby verify_templates.rb
# This template uses the java:8 docker image because there isn't any
# official Gradle image at this moment
#
# This is the Gradle build system for JVM applications
# https://gradle.org/
# https://github.com/gradle/gradle
image: java:8
# Make the gradle wrapper executable. This essentially downloads a copy of
# Gradle to build the project with.
# https://docs.gradle.org/current/userguide/gradle_wrapper.html
# It is expected that any modern gradle project has a wrapper
before_script:
- chmod +x gradlew
# We redirect the gradle user home using -g so that it caches the
# wrapper and dependencies.
# https://docs.gradle.org/current/userguide/gradle_command_line.html
#
# Unfortunately it also caches the build output so
# cleaning removes reminants of any cached builds.
# The assemble task actually builds the project.
# If it fails here, the tests can't run.
build:
stage: build
script:
- ./gradlew -g /cache/.gradle clean assemble
allow_failure: false
# Use the generated build output to run the tests.
test:
stage: test
script:
- ./gradlew -g /cache./gradle check
# An example .gitlab-ci.yml file to test (and optionally report the coverage
# results of) your [Julia][1] packages. Please refer to the [documentation][2]
# for more information about package development in Julia.
#
# Here, it is assumed that your Julia package is named `MyPackage`. Change it to
# whatever name you have given to your package.
#
# [1]: http://julialang.org/
# [2]: http://julia.readthedocs.org/
# Below is the template to run your tests in Julia
.test_template: &test_definition
# Uncomment below if you would like to run the tests on specific references
# only, such as the branches `master`, `development`, etc.
# only:
# - master
# - development
script:
# Let's run the tests. Substitute `coverage = false` below, if you do not
# want coverage results.
- /opt/julia/bin/julia -e 'Pkg.clone(pwd()); Pkg.test("MyPackage",
coverage = true)'
# Comment out below if you do not want coverage results.
- /opt/julia/bin/julia -e 'Pkg.add("Coverage"); cd(Pkg.dir("MyPackage"));
using Coverage; cl, tl = get_summary(process_folder());
println("(", cl/tl*100, "%) covered")'
# Name a test and select an appropriate image.
test:0.4.6:
image: julialang/julia:v0.4.6
<<: *test_definition
# Maybe you would like to test your package against the development branch:
test:0.5.0-dev:
image: julialang/julia:v0.5.0-dev
# ... allowing for failures, since we are testing against the development
# branch:
allow_failure: true
<<: *test_definition
# REMARK: Do not forget to enable the coverage feature for your project, if you
# are using code coverage reporting above. This can be done by
#
# - Navigating to the `CI/CD Pipelines` settings of your project,
# - Copying and pasting the default `Simplecov` regex example provided, i.e.,
# `\(\d+.\d+\%\) covered` in the `test coverage parsing` textfield.
#
# WARNING: This template is using the `julialang/julia` images from [Docker
# Hub][3]. One can use custom Julia images and/or the official ones found
# in the same place. However, care must be taken to correctly locate the binary
# file (`/opt/julia/bin/julia` above), which is usually given on the image's
# description page.
#
# [3]: http://hub.docker.com/
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