This is a Jekyll project, which only includes the [test] command as files are served as-is with GitHub Pages.
Unlike code-based projects, we test documentation-only commits: this is literally a website!
build-bin
holds portable scripts used in CI to test and deploy the project.
The scripts here are portable. They do not include any CI provider-specific logic or ENV variables.
This helps .travis.yml
and test.yml
(GitHub Actions) contain nearly the same contents, even if
certain OpenZipkin projects need slight adjustments here. Portability has proven necessary, as
OpenZipkin has had to transition CI providers many times due to feature and quota constraints.
These scripts serve a second purpose, which is to facilitate manual releases, which has also happened many times due usually to service outages of CI providers. While tempting to use CI-provider specific tools, doing so can easily create a dependency where no one knows how to release anymore. Do not use provider-specific mechanisms to implement release flow. Instead, automate triggering of the scripts here.
The only scripts that should be modified per project are in the base directory. Those in sub directories, such as [docker], should not vary project to project except accident of version drift. Intentional changes in sub directories should be relevant and tested on multiple projects to ensure they can be blindly copy/pasted.
Conversely, the files in the base directory are project specific entry-points for test and deploy actions and are entirely appropriate to vary per project. Here’s an overview:
Test builds and runs any tests of the project, including integration tests. CI providers should be configured to run tests on pull requests or pushes to the master branch, notably when the tag is blank. Tests should not run on documentation-only commits. Tests must not depend on authenticated resources, as running tests can leak credentials. Git checkouts should include the full history so that license headers or other git analysis can take place.
A simplest GitHub Actions test.yml
runs tests after configuring them, but only on relevant event
conditions. The name test.yml
and job test
allows easy references to status badges and parity of
the scripts it uses.
The on:
section obviates job creation and resource usage for irrelevant events. Notably, GitHub
Actions includes the ability to skip documentation-only jobs.
Combine [configure_test] and [test] into the same run:
when configure_test
primes file system
cache.
Here’s a partial test.yml
including only the aspects mentioned above.
on:
push:
tags: ''
branches: master
paths-ignore: '**/*.md'
pull_request:
branches: master
paths-ignore: '**/*.md'
jobs:
test:
steps:
- name: Checkout Repository
uses: actions/checkout@v2
with:
fetch-depth: 0 # full git history
- name: Test
run: build-bin/configure_test && build-bin/test
.travis.yml
is a monolithic configuration file broken into stages, of which the default is “test”.
A simplest Travis test
job configures tests in install
and runs them as script
, but only on
relevant event conditions.
The if:
section obviates job creation and resource usage for irrelevant events. Travis does not
support file conditions. A before_install
step to skip documentation-only commits will likely
complete in less than a minute (10 credit cost).
Here’s a partial .travis.yml
including only the aspects mentioned above.
git:
depth: false # full git history for license check, and doc-only skipping
jobs:
include:
- stage: test
if: branch = master AND tag IS blank AND type IN (push, pull_request)
name: Run unit and integration tests
before_install: |
if [ -n "${TRAVIS_COMMIT_RANGE}" ] && ! git diff --name-only "${TRAVIS_COMMIT_RANGE}" -- | grep -qv '\.md$'; then
echo "Stopping job as changes only affect documentation (ex. README.md)"
travis_terminate 0
fi
install: ./build-bin/configure_test
script: ./build-bin/test
Deploy builds and pushes artifacts to a remote repository for master and release commits on it. CI
providers deploy pushes to master on when the tag is blank, but not on documentation-only commits.
Releases should deploy on version tags (ex /^[0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]+/
), without consideration of if
the commit is documentation only or not.
A simplest GitHub Actions deploy.yml
deploys after logging in, but only on relevant event
conditions. The name deploy.yml
and job deploy
allows easy references to status badges and
parity of the scripts it uses.
The on:
section obviates job creation and resource usage for irrelevant events. GitHub Actions
cannot implement “master, except documentation only-commits” in the same file. Hence, deployments of
master will happen even on README change.
Combine [configure_deploy] and [deploy] into the same run:
when configure_deploy
primes file
system cache.
Here’s a partial deploy.yml
including only the aspects mentioned above. Notice env variables are
explicitly defined and on.tags
is a glob pattern.
on:
push:
tags: '[0-9]+.[0-9]+.[0-9]+**' # Ex. 8.272.10 or 15.0.1_p9
branches: master
jobs:
deploy:
steps:
- name: Checkout Repository
uses: actions/checkout@v2
with:
fetch-depth: 1 # only needed to get the sha label
- name: Deploy
env:
GH_USER: $
GH_TOKEN: $
run: | # GITHUB_REF will be refs/heads/master or refs/tags/N.M.L
build-bin/configure_deploy &&
build-bin/deploy $(echo ${GITHUB_REF} | cut -d/ -f 3)
.travis.yml
is a monolithic configuration file broken into stages. This means test
and deploy
are in the same file. A simplest Travis deploy
stage has two jobs: one for master pushes and
another for version tags. These jobs are controlled by event conditions.
The if:
section obviates job creation and resource usage for irrelevant events. Travis does not
support file conditions. A before_install
step to skip documentation-only commits will likely
complete in less than a minute (10 credit cost).
As billing is by the minute, it is most cost effective to combine test and deploy on master push.
Here’s a partial .travis.yml
including only the aspects mentioned above. Notice YAML anchors work
in Travis and tag =~
condition is a regular
expression.
git:
depth: false # full git history for license check, and doc-only skipping
_terminate_if_only_docs: &terminate_if_only_docs |
if [ -n "${TRAVIS_COMMIT_RANGE}" ] && ! git diff --name-only "${TRAVIS_COMMIT_RANGE}" -- | grep -qv '\.md$'; then
echo "Stopping job as changes only affect documentation (ex. README.md)"
travis_terminate 0
fi
jobs:
include:
- stage: test
if: branch = master AND tag IS blank AND type IN (push, pull_request)
before_install: *terminate_if_only_docs
install: |
if [ "${TRAVIS_SECURE_ENV_VARS}" = "true" ] && [ "${TRAVIS_PULL_REQUEST}" = "false" ]; then
export SHOULD_DEPLOY=true
./build-bin/configure_deploy
else
export SHOULD_DEPLOY=false
./build-bin/configure_test
fi
script:
- ./build-bin/test || travis_terminate 1
- if [ "${SHOULD_DEPLOY}" != "true" ]; then travis_terminate 0; fi
- travis_wait ./build-bin/deploy master
- stage: deploy
# Ex. 8.272.10 or 15.0.1_p9
if: tag =~ /^[0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]+/ AND type = push AND env(GH_TOKEN) IS present
install: ./build-bin/configure_deploy
script: ./build-bin/deploy ${TRAVIS_TAG}