Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
This uses skopeo to not think about docker daemons. I, however, noticed
that the docker image we had would have totally terrible cache hits, so
I rewrote it.
Fixes: https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues/252
Change-Id: I3c5b6c1f3ba0b9dfcac212b2148f390e0cd542b7
|
|
Change-Id: If87beb3f31dfb5d59862294ac2e1c821ea864277
|
|
Change-Id: I5ff3396a302565ee5ee6c2db97e048e403779076
|
|
Change-Id: If8f3825d2bdcc3f1d00583a11d890c1c8ab37b9f
|
|
This had a regression last time: https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1196
But f3f68fcfa fixed upgrade-nix to not be broken, so this should be ok tbh.
Change-Id: I48ea1359790878bb8ead5d8a4b3f61caa4aabfb5
|
|
It seems like someone implemented precompiled headers a long time ago
and then it never got ported to meson or maybe didn't work at all.
This is, however, blessedly easy to simply implement. I went looking for
`#define` that could affect the result of precompiling the headers, and
as far as I can tell we aren't doing any of that, so this should truly
just be free build time savings.
Previous state:
Compilation (551 times):
Parsing (frontend): 1302.1 s
Codegen & opts (backend): 956.3 s
New state:
**** Time summary:
Compilation (567 times):
Parsing (frontend): 1123.0 s
Codegen & opts (backend): 1078.1 s
I wonder if the "regression" in codegen time is just doing the PCH
operation a few times, because meson does it per-target.
Change-Id: I664366b8069bab4851308b3a7571bea97ac64022
|
|
When we changed this in I91cb6eb6668f3a8eace36ecbdb01eb367861d77b to
not run in nested shells, we didn't predict that `nix develop` would do
something ridiculous and append -env to things silently. `nix-shell` of
course does not do this, so we need to tolerate both.
Change-Id: Ibe7cf546823d7358ebc0414ecbe154e3e3194f45
|
|
Change-Id: I310830951106f194f6960a6b2d52b5081a7f6156
|
|
Change-Id: I394bb72d9f378cd78acc6cf67a9bb15e342d57c4
|
|
If our shellHook is being run from a nested nix-shell (see 7a12bc200¹),
then (I think) it is run from a bash function due to the nesting, then
`return` is correct. If its `eval`'d though, then there isn't really a
correct way to early exit. So we can just unconditionally be executed in
a function.
Basically, we have IIFE at home.
[1]: 7a12bc2007accb5022037b5a04b0e5475a8bb409
Change-Id: Iacad25cbbf66cde2911604e6061e56ad6212af7e
|
|
Change-Id: I5ffeac894a5bff101683cf3d566c63b478779962
|
|
If a nested nix-shell is run inside a nix-shell, then the outer shell's
shellHook will be passed through and run again, unless the nested shell
defines its own.
With lix's hook, this can be annoying: forgetting to exit its nix-shell,
cd'ing to another repository & entering a nested nix-shell will happily
install lix's pre-commit hook in it.
This change makes lix's hook return early in such cases.
Change-Id: I91cb6eb6668f3a8eace36ecbdb01eb367861d77b
|
|
Editline just wasn't being built with --enable-sigstop lol
Change-Id: I35a78f74ea100d97f26b2b41990deb373fd9cd9a
|
|
nix-repl> lib.getExe (builtins.getFlake ".").packages.x86_64-linux.nix
"/nix/store/ajps2zn5hlap0l2abvnfdaphg8k0789r-lix-2.90.0pre20240524_dirty/bin/nix"
Fixes #316.
Change-Id: Iec3125dc2dc99d100beb6357f7d1555456924ddc
|
|
Embarrassingly, I submitted a CL overriding submit requirements since
I thought it was spurious failures. However, the CI failure was in fact
real, and I have hopefully learned my lesson. The CI failure is that:
```
vm-test-run-nix-upgrade-nix> machine # installing 'nix-2.18.1'
vm-test-run-nix-upgrade-nix> machine # building '/nix/store/2b6fdf7wvahd00bg2ff0393bhd597a0h-user-environment.drv'...
vm-test-run-nix-upgrade-nix> machine # error: Unable to build profile. There is a conflict for the following files:
vm-test-run-nix-upgrade-nix> machine #
vm-test-run-nix-upgrade-nix> machine # /nix/store/dn6mhhr92bh3ad0n4pd1538ww88khjii-nix-2.18.1/lib/libboost_context.so
vm-test-run-nix-upgrade-nix> machine # /nix/store/w4vffn9iq0znk8bcg5i2giij90xy6db6-lix-2.90.0pre20240523_c97e171/lib/libboost_context.so
vm-test-run-nix-upgrade-nix> machine # error: builder for '/nix/store/2b6fdf7wvahd00bg2ff0393bhd597a0h-user-environment.drv' failed with exit code 1
vm-test-run-nix-upgrade-nix> machine # error: program '/nix/store/w4vffn9iq0znk8bcg5i2giij90xy6db6-lix-2.90.0pre20240523_c97e171/bin/nix-env' failed with exit code 100
```
This is definitely caused by the pname not being the same, so we had
better revert that part of the change until we know we won't regress
anything by doing this.
Fixes: https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1152/5
Change-Id: I0e9d573987f2819c106fb7cea87410fa75152274
|
|
This breaks downstreams linking to us on purpose to make sure that if
someone is linking to Lix they're doing it on purpose and crucially not
mixing up Nix and Lix versions in compatibility code.
We still need to fix the internal includes to follow the same schema so
we can drop the single-level include system entirely. However, this
requires a little more effort.
This adds pkg-config for libfetchers and config.h.
Migration path:
expr.hh -> lix/libexpr/expr.hh
nix/config.h -> lix/config.h
To apply this migration automatically, remove all `<nix/>` from
includes, so: `#include <nix/expr.hh>` -> `#include <expr.hh>`. Then,
the correct paths will be resolved from the tangled mess, and the
clang-tidy automated fix will work.
Then run the following for out of tree projects:
```
lix_root=$HOME/lix
(cd $lix_root/clang-tidy && nix develop -c 'meson setup build && ninja -C build')
run-clang-tidy -checks='-*,lix-fixincludes' -load=$lix_root/clang-tidy/build/liblix-clang-tidy.so -p build/ -fix src
```
Related: https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/nix-eval-jobs/pulls/5
Fixes: https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues/279
Change-Id: I7498e903afa6850a731ef8ce77a70da6b2b46966
|
|
Fixes #183, #110, #116.
The default flake-registry option becomes 'vendored', and refers
to a vendored flake-registry.json file in the install path.
Vendored copy of the flake-registry is from github:NixOS/flake-registry
at commit 9c69f7bd2363e71fe5cd7f608113290c7614dcdd.
Change-Id: I752b81c85ebeaab4e582ac01c239d69d65580f37
|
|
This should have been in there originally, which is our mistake,
considering that debugging CI failures is basically impossible without
it.
Change-Id: I4ab8799e6e0abca1984ed9801fe10c58200861a3
|
|
We don't need bear anymore, since we don't have any more bad build
systems that lack compile commands generation inside Lix.
Change-Id: I7809ddfd993180468f846e8cd862bdd54d5b31ec
|
|
Surely if you have unreleased changes you want them on a page right?
`officialRelease` means "this is a *release version*", which is a
reasonable case to not want it, but we are not that here.
I understand wanting to be able to turn it off for deps reasons or
something, but other than that, uhh, seems better to just turn it on
always; it is basically free compute-wise to the point we run it on
pre-commit.
Part two of fixing lix#297.
Fixes: https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues/297
Change-Id: I0f8dd1ae42458df371aef529c456e47a7ac04ae0
|
|
This includes the update to libseccomp 2.5.5[1], so we don't need to
override it on our own.
[1] https://nixpk.gs/pr-tracker.html?pr=306070
Change-Id: I1fa9c7fcc23e501d75f774745107c6bb086ced70
|
|
Now instead of a derivation overridden from Lix, we use a mkShell
derivation parameterized on an already called package.nix. This also
lets callPackage take care of the buildPackages distinction for the
devShell.
Change-Id: I5ddfec40d83fa6136032da7606fe6d3d5014ef42
|
|
Change-Id: I0e2df55efc1cd6ea0a3252b9f26676e84612fdb6
|
|
We're not using it anymore. Any leftover bugs in the Meson buildsystem
are now just bugs.
Closes #249.
Change-Id: I0465a0c37ae819f94d40e7829f5bff046aa63d73
|
|
* changes:
Always initialize curl in parent process on darwin
Fix failing darwin tests
|
|
Because of an objc quirk[1], calling curl_global_init for the first time
after fork() will always result in a crash.
Up until now the solution has been to set
OBJC_DISABLE_INITIALIZE_FORK_SAFETY for every nix process to ignore
that error.
This is less than ideal because we were setting it in package.nix,
which meant that running nix tests locally would fail because
that variable was not set.
Instead of working around that error we address it at the core -
by calling curl_global_init inside initLibStore, which should mean
curl will already have been initialized by the time we try to do so in
a forked process.
[1] https://github.com/apple-oss-distributions/objc4/blob/01edf1705fbc3ff78a423cd21e03dfc21eb4d780/runtime/objc-initialize.mm#L614-L636
Change-Id: Icf26010a8be655127cc130efb9c77b603a6660d0
|
|
Now we will simply hit cache every time anyone changes readme, yay!
Change-Id: I5906f589d319ff6d43cbd2b467887e08f7474283
|
|
This has the following downsides:
* you cannot build Lix against nixos-unstable.
* this will immediately break as soon as libseccomp will hit
nixos-23.11 (given that people will probably use the package.nix via
our overlay or override nixpkgs via `follows`).
Hence, removing the assert again and add a better FIXME comment.
Change-Id: I284e10cf08e1873fef70ed869a1638aa89792422
|
|
With Linux kernel >=6.6 & glibc 2.39 a `fchmodat2(2)` is available that
isn't filtered away by the libseccomp sandbox.
Being able to use this to bypass that restriction has surprising results
for some builds such as lxc[1]:
> With kernel ≥6.6 and glibc 2.39, lxc's install phase uses fchmodat2,
> which slips through https://github.com/NixOS/nix/blob/9b88e5284608116b7db0dbd3d5dd7a33b90d52d7/src/libstore/build/local-derivation-goal.cc#L1650-L1663.
> The fixupPhase then uses fchmodat, which fails.
> With older kernel or glibc, setting the suid bit fails in the
> install phase, which is not treated as fatal, and then the
> fixup phase does not try to set it again.
Please note that there are still ways to bypass this sandbox[2] and this is
mostly a fix for the breaking builds.
This change works by creating a syscall filter for the `fchmodat2`
syscall (number 452 on most systems). The problem is that glibc 2.39
is needed to have the correct syscall number available via
`__NR_fchmodat2` / `__SNR_fchmodat2`, but this flake is still on
nixpkgs 23.11. To have this change everywhere and not dependent on the
glibc this package is built against, I added a header
"fchmodat2-compat.hh" that sets the syscall number based on the
architecture. On most platforms its 452 according to glibc with a few
exceptions:
$ rg --pcre2 'define __NR_fchmodat2 (?!452)'
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/x32/arch-syscall.h
58:#define __NR_fchmodat2 1073742276
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/mips64/n32/arch-syscall.h
67:#define __NR_fchmodat2 6452
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/mips64/n64/arch-syscall.h
62:#define __NR_fchmodat2 5452
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/mips32/arch-syscall.h
70:#define __NR_fchmodat2 4452
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/alpha/arch-syscall.h
59:#define __NR_fchmodat2 562
I added a small regression-test to the setuid integration-test that
attempts to set the suid bit on a file using the fchmodat2 syscall.
I confirmed that the test fails without the change in
local-derivation-goal.
Additionally, we require libseccomp 2.5.5 or greater now: as it turns
out, libseccomp maintains an internal syscall table and
validates each rule against it. This means that when using libseccomp
2.5.4 or older, one may pass `452` as syscall number against it, but
since it doesn't exist in the internal structure, `libseccomp` will refuse
to create a filter for that. This happens with nixpkgs-23.11, i.e. on
stable NixOS and when building Lix against the project's flake.
To work around that
* a backport of libseccomp 2.5.5 on upstream nixpkgs has been
scheduled[3].
* the package now uses libseccomp 2.5.5 on its own already. This is to
provide a quick fix since the correct fix for 23.11 is still a staging cycle
away.
We still need the compat header though since `SCMP_SYS(fchmodat2)`
internally transforms this into `__SNR_fchmodat2` which points to
`__NR_fchmodat2` from glibc 2.39, so it wouldn't build on glibc 2.38.
The updated syscall table from libseccomp 2.5.5 is NOT used for that
step, but used later, so we need both, our compat header and their
syscall table 🤷
Relevant PRs in CppNix:
* https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/10591
* https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/10501
[1] https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/300635#issuecomment-2031073804
[2] https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/300635#issuecomment-2030844251
[3] https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/306070
(cherry picked from commit ba6804518772e6afb403dd55478365d4b863c854)
Change-Id: I6921ab5a363188c6bff617750d00bb517276b7fe
|
|
Meson cross files layer, the last value of each key takes effect.
https: //mesonbuild.com/Machine-files.html#loading-multiple-machine-files
Change-Id: I22d886f71cd51f0ce520d3fc22aed4bcf074bb91
|
|
This commit makes Meson the default buildsystem for Lix.
The Make buildsystem is now deprecated and will be removed soon, but has
not yet, which will be done in a later commit when all seems good. The
mesonBuild jobs have been removed, and have not been replaced with
equivalent jobs to ensure the Make buildsystem still works.
The full, new commands in a development shell are:
$ meson setup ./build "--prefix=$out" $mesonFlags
(A simple `meson setup ./build` will also build, but will do a different
thing, not having the settings from package.nix applied.)
$ meson compile -C build
$ meson test -C build --suite=check
$ meson install -C build
$ meson test -C build --suite=installcheck
(Check and installcheck may both be done after install, allowing you to
omit the --suite argument entirely, but this is the order package.nix
runs them in.)
If tests fail and Meson helpfully has no output for why, use the
`--print-error-logs` option to `meson test`. Why this is not the default
I cannot explain.
If you change a setting in the buildsystem, most cases will
automatically regenerate the Meson configuration, but some cases, like
trying to build a specific target whose name is new to the buildsystem
(e.g. `meson compile -C build src/libmelt/libmelt.dylib`, when
`libmelt.dylib` did not exist as a target the last time the buildsystem
was generated), then you can reconfigure using new settings but
existing options, and only recompiling stuff affected by the changes:
$ meson setup --reconfigure build
Note that changes to the default values in `meson.options` or in the
`default_options :` argument to project() are NOT propagated with
`--reconfigure`.
If you want a totally clean build, you can use:
$ meson setup --wipe build
That will work regardless of if `./build` exists or not.
Specific, named targets may be addressed in
`meson build -C build <target>` with the "target ID" if there is one,
which is the first string argument passed to target functions that
have one, and unrelated to the variable name, e.g.:
libexpr_dylib = library('nixexpr', …)
can be addressed with:
$ meson compile -C build nixexpr
All targets may be addressed as their output, relative to the build
directory, e.g.:
$ meson compile -C build src/libexpr/libnixexpr.so
But Meson does not consider intermediate files like object files
targets. To build a specific object file, use Ninja directly and
specify the output file relative to the build directory:
$ ninja -C build src/libexpr/libnixexpr.so.p/nixexpr.cc.o
To inspect the canonical source of truth on what the state of the
buildsystem configuration is, use:
$ meson introspect
Have fun!
Change-Id: Ia3e7b1e6fae26daf3162e655b4ded611a5cd57ad
|
|
This should fix cross compilation in the base case, but this is
difficult to test as cross compilation is broken in many different
places right now. This should bring Meson back up to cross parity with
the Make buildsystem though.
Change-Id: If09be8142d1fc975a82b994143ff35be1297dad8
|
|
Change-Id: I2f6c0d42245204a516d2e424eea26a6391e975ad
|
|
This commit adds the capability for building the Doxygen internal API
docs in the Meson buildsystem, and also makes doing so the default for
the internal-api-docs hydra job. Aside from the /nix-support directory,
which differed only by the hash part of a store path, the outputs of
hydraJobs.internal-api-docs before and after this commit were
bit-for-bit identical on my machine.
Change-Id: I98f0017891c25b06866c15f7652fe74f706ec8e1
|
|
Change-Id: I61efeb666ff7481c05fcb247168290e86a250151
|
|
package.nix previously needed this callPackage'd externally, which
didn't make a lot of sense to us since this is an internal dependency.
Thus we changed it to make it more self contained.
Change-Id: I4935bc0bc80e1a132bc9b1519e917791da95037c
|
|
The following command is now sufficient to build Lix from outside of the
flake:
nix-build -E 'let pkgs = import <nixpkgs> { }; in pkgs.callPackage
./package.nix { build-release-notes = false; nix-doc = pkgs.callPackage
./nix-doc/package.nix { }; }'
Change-Id: Ie6b14b446480ac07c7266d4fba20042b04cc35b9
|
|
In our view it really doesn't make sense to not have this in in
package.nix in some way. These patches aren't just for performance or
something -- Lix flat out doesn't build without these patches.
(Arguably that makes them a buildsystem responsibility as well, but that
can wait for when we're ready to start adding subproject fallback
dependency resolution to Meson.)
This is a step towards making `package.nix` more self-sufficient and
`callPackage`able without excessive external logic.
With this change the following command is enough to build Lix from out
of the flake:
nix-build -E 'let pkgs = import <nixpkgs> { }; in pkgs.callPackage
./package.nix { build-release-notes = false; inherit (pkgs.lib) fileset;
nix-doc = pkgs.callPackage ./nix-doc/package.nix { }; }'
Change-Id: Ia37fe8171f87d3293033de8be07d9bab12716f1d
|
|
Commit c21d11ac0 "docs: replace sed invocation with an mdbook
preprocessor for @docroot@" added a direct build dependency on Python.
This has been accidentally working so far because Python is already a
*transitive* dependency of Lix's derivation.
Change-Id: I32d6b4f2665dbbfad7014613457dd58aa4ec73da
|
|
This prevents the autotools build from discovering Boost in Homebrew
installation directories on macOS.
Change-Id: I624309165c9371c391fd657424ba4c4f3182b385
|
|
For a long time `nix repl` has supported displaying documentation set on
builtins, however, it has long been convention to use Markdown comments
on Nix functions themselves for documentation. This exposes that
information to `nix repl` users in a nice and formatted way.
NixOS/rfcs#145 doc-comments are primarily what this feature is intended
to consume, however, support for lambda documentation in the repl is
experimental. We do our best effort to support the RFC here.
These changes are based on [the nix-doc library](https://github.com/lf-/nix-doc) and
are licensed under the terms described in the relevant source files.
Change-Id: Ic6fe947d39a22540705d890737e336c4720b0a22
|
|
Change-Id: Ie1bfb0aa784e6136a82d518a652d0ae60c4b047a
|
|
|
|
|
|
This is UB, we should not be doing it, and we can cheaply turn it into
crashes reliably. We would much rather have crashes than the program
doing something silly.
Benchmarks, but i wonder if they are nonsense because they get identical
times across compilers?!
| Command | Mean [ms] | Min [ms] | Max [ms] | Relative |
|:---|---:|---:|---:|---:|
| `result-clang/bin/nix eval -f ../nixpkgs/pkgs/development/haskell-modules/hackage-packages.nix` | 375.5 ± 24.0 | 353.8 | 408.8 | 1.00 |
| `result-gcc/bin/nix eval -f ../nixpkgs/pkgs/development/haskell-modules/hackage-packages.nix` | 407.9 ± 26.0 | 385.1 | 449.5 | 1.09 ± 0.10 |
| `result-clangsan/bin/nix eval -f ../nixpkgs/pkgs/development/haskell-modules/hackage-packages.nix` | 382.2 ± 26.6 | 354.9 | 419.0 | 1.02 ± 0.10 |
| `result-gccsan/bin/nix eval -f ../nixpkgs/pkgs/development/haskell-modules/hackage-packages.nix` | 408.6 ± 24.6 | 384.5 | 441.9 | 1.09 ± 0.10 |
| Command | Mean [s] | Min [s] | Max [s] | Relative |
|:---|---:|---:|---:|---:|
| `result-clang/bin/nix search --no-eval-cache github:nixos/nixpkgs/e1fa12d4f6c6fe19ccb59cac54b5b3f25e160870 hello` | 17.199 ± 0.167 | 16.930 | 17.499 | 1.01 ± 0.01 |
| `result-gcc/bin/nix search --no-eval-cache github:nixos/nixpkgs/e1fa12d4f6c6fe19ccb59cac54b5b3f25e160870 hello` | 17.409 ± 0.126 | 17.242 | 17.633 | 1.02 ± 0.01 |
| `result-clangsan/bin/nix search --no-eval-cache github:nixos/nixpkgs/e1fa12d4f6c6fe19ccb59cac54b5b3f25e160870 hello` | 17.080 ± 0.137 | 16.879 | 17.350 | 1.00 |
| `result-gccsan/bin/nix search --no-eval-cache github:nixos/nixpkgs/e1fa12d4f6c6fe19ccb59cac54b5b3f25e160870 hello` | 17.396 ± 0.160 | 17.131 | 17.660 | 1.02 ± 0.01 |
| Command | Mean [s] | Min [s] | Max [s] | Relative |
|:---|---:|---:|---:|---:|
| `result-clang/bin/nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'` | 6.267 ± 0.069 | 6.197 | 6.415 | 1.02 ± 0.01 |
| `result-gcc/bin/nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'` | 6.232 ± 0.045 | 6.180 | 6.311 | 1.01 ± 0.01 |
| `result-clangsan/bin/nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'` | 6.162 ± 0.020 | 6.133 | 6.196 | 1.00 |
| `result-gccsan/bin/nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'` | 6.229 ± 0.031 | 6.199 | 6.289 | 1.01 ± 0.01 |
| Command | Mean [s] | Min [s] | Max [s] | Relative |
|:---|---:|---:|---:|---:|
| `GC_INITIAL_HEAP_SIZE=10g result-clang/bin/nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'` | 4.683 ± 0.044 | 4.630 | 4.761 | 1.00 |
| `GC_INITIAL_HEAP_SIZE=10g result-gcc/bin/nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'` | 4.750 ± 0.041 | 4.680 | 4.812 | 1.01 ± 0.01 |
| `GC_INITIAL_HEAP_SIZE=10g result-clangsan/bin/nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'` | 4.703 ± 0.040 | 4.640 | 4.760 | 1.00 ± 0.01 |
| `GC_INITIAL_HEAP_SIZE=10g result-gccsan/bin/nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'` | 4.766 ± 0.037 | 4.727 | 4.844 | 1.02 ± 0.01 |
Change-Id: I616ca3eab670317587d47b41870d8ac963c019ae
|
|
We don't apply any patches to it, and vendoring it locks users into
bugs (it hasn't been updated since its introduction in late 2021).
Closes https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues/164
Change-Id: Ied071c841fc30b0dfb575151afd1e7f66970fdb9
|
|
Functional tests can be run with
`meson test -C build --suite installcheck`.
Notably, functional tests must be run *after* running `meson install`
(Lix's derivation runs the installcheck suite in installCheckPhase so it
does this correctly), due to some quirks between Meson and the testing
system.
As far as I can tell the functional tests are meant to be run after
installing anyway, but unfortunately I can't transparently make
`meson test --suite installcheck` depend on the install targets.
The script that runs the functional tests, meson/run-test.py, checks
that `meson install` has happened and fails fast with a (hopefully)
helpful error message if any of the functional tests are run before
installing.
TODO: this change needs reflection in developer documentation
Change-Id: I8dcb5fdfc0b6cb17580973d24ad930abd57018f6
|
|
hacking changelog-d to support not just github but also forgejo and
gerrit is a lot more complicated than it's worth, even moreso since
the entire thing can just as well be done with ~60 lines of python.
this new script is also much cheaper to instantiate (being python),
so having it enabled in all shells is far less of a hassle.
we've also adjusted existing release notes that referenced a gerrit
cl to auto-link to the cl in question, making the diff a bit bigger
closes https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues/176
Change-Id: I8ba7dd0070aad9ba4474401731215fcf5d9d2130
|
|
Unit tests can be run with `meson test -C build --suite check`.
`--suite check` is optional, as right now that's the only test suite,
but when functional tests are added those will be in a separate suite.
Change-Id: I7f22f1cde4b489b3cdb5f9a36a544f0c409fcc1f
|
|
This commit adds several meson.build, which successfully build and
install Lix executables, libraries, and headers. Meson does not yet
build docs, Perl bindings, or run tests, which will be added in
following commits. As such, this commit does not remove the existing
build system, or make it the default, and also as such, this commit has
several FIXMEs and TODOs as notes for what should be done before the
existing autoconf + make buildsystem can be removed and Meson made the
default. This commit does not modify any source files.
A Meson-enabled build is also added as a Hydra job, and to
`nix flake check`.
Change-Id: I667c8685b13b7bab91e281053f807a11616ae3d4
|