While for the other platforms we can simply copy our binaries (maybe
after signing them), for Fedora and Ubuntu we have to trigger fresh
builds.
The most logical way that I could think of to do this was to push the
same commit corresponding with the intended current release into a
branch named 'current' and have that trigger Copr and Launchpad builds
that post into our release repos.
So 'master' keeps moving forward, keeps creating new build numbers.
At some point we pick a build number that we want to be the next
'current' release. We then update the current branch to the commit that
corresponds to that build number and push the current branch which
triggers new builds in the correct repos on Copr and Launchpad.
This commit removes the silly 'push' argument from the make-package
scripts (after all, they are used to push those packages to the
respective build services) and instead use the branch name as argument
to those scripts - allowing us to pick which repo to push into.
Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
Add a GitHub action that builds the docker image to run builds for the
Windows (MXE) version of Subsurface.
Also update the MXE image Dockerfile to the latest version of MXE, and
add a patch to use a current version of mdbtools.
Configure GitHub actions that do not build docker images to not trigger
on changes to the contents of `scripts/docker/`.
Signed-off-by: Michael Keller <github@ike.ch>
In order to make it easier to see what's happening inside get-atomic-buildnr.sh
write the result to a file that can be read by the caller. Not quite as
elegant, but hopefully more practical to see what's going wrong when no new
build number is created.
Make sure that post-releasenotes is successfull by actually posting a release
artifact (apparently the gh release action otherwise quietly fails).
Try to ensure we find the Android APK when uploading to the release.
Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
- for now all versions start with v6.0
- CICD builds use the monolithic build number as patch level, e.g. v6.0.12345
- local builds use the following algorithm
- find the newest commit with a CICD build number that is included in the
working tree
- count the number of commits in the working tree since that commit
- if there are no commits since the last CICD build, the local build version
will be v6.0.12345-local
- if there are N commits since the last CICD build, it will be
v6.0.12345-N-local
- test builds in the CICD that don't create artifacts simply use a dummy release
in order to not incorrectly increment the build number and also not to waste
time and resources by manually checking out the nightly-build repo for each of
these builds.
Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
Pull requests can be triggered by anyone - we should not publish code
that comes in through pull requests to either GitHub releases or
Launchpad, Copr, etc.
Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>