| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Just ran into first issue from using the portable /bin/sh rather than a
modern shell:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/15744421/read-command-doesnt-wait-for-input
Turn on errexit everywhere.
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Yet another fix for CI.
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Fix CI.
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Purge remaining `makefile`s, without breaking CI.
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Fix CI. Didn't mean to push just yet :/
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Three separate CI fixes(!)
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Fix CI.
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Follow convention more closely by using CXXFLAGS for C++ files.
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I kept suspecting Valgrind and kept finding that Valgrind wasn't
actually slowing down Travis CI, but I'd been running it like this:
valgrind ./mu test edit
Which wasn't actually running the underlying ./mu_bin binary atop
Valgrind.
Ok, so Mu is just super slow running any non-trivial apps atop Valgrind.
That's ok, we've rarely needed an app to flush out memory leaks in Mu.
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Reorganize build system to minimize duplication while handling 3
scenarios:
1. Locally running tests with `mu test`
2. Locally running tests until some layer with `build_and_test_until`
3. Running on Linux with `test_layers`
4. Running on Travis CI with multiple sharded calls to `test_layers`
One thing we drop at this point is support for OSX in test_layers. We
don't need it now that we have Travis CI working.
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More tweaking; edit/ still taking too long to test on Travis CI.
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2943 almost worked; just a couple of tweaks:
a) Divide up the work a little more finely since we still timed out on
some jobs.
b) Use clang and valgrind when running apps as well.
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I'm already using grep and perl, bash is no worse, and it's *much* nicer
to work in than plain Bourne sh.
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It easily exceeded the 50-minute timeout.
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