![Version][badge.version] ![Travis status][badge.travis] ![AppVeyor status][badge.appveyor] # Continuous Integration Scripts for EPICS Modules The scripts inside this repository are intended to provide a common, easy-to-use and flexible way to add Continuous Integration to EPICS software modules, e.g. Device or Driver Support modules. By including this repository as a Git Submodule, you will be able to use the same flexible, powerful CI setup that EPICS Bases uses, including a way to specify sets of dependent modules (with versions) that you want to compile your module against. By using the submodule mechanism, your module will always use an explicit commit, i.e. a fixed version of the scripts. This ensures that any further development of the ci-scripts will never break existing use. ## This Repository In addition to the scripts themselves (in the subdirectories), this repository contains the test suite that is used to verify functionality and features of the ci-scripts. You are welcome to use the test suite as a reference, but keep in mind that in your module the path to the scripts has one level more (e.g., `./travis/abc` here would be `./.ci/travis/abc` in your module). Also, a test suite might not show the same level of quality as an example. ## Features - Compile against different branches or releases of EPICS Base and additional dependencies (modules like asyn, std, etc.). - Define settings files that declare sets of dependencies with their versions and locations. - Define hook scripts for any dependency. Hooks are run on the dependency module before it is compiled, so the module can be patched or further configured. - Define static or shared builds (executables, libraries). - Run tests (using the EPICS unit test suite). ## Supported CI Services ### Travis-CI - Use different compilers (gcc, clang) - Use different gcc versions - Cross-compile for Windows 32bit and 64bit using MinGW and WINE - Cross-compile for RTEMS 4.9 and 4.10 (Base >= 3.16.2) - Compile on MacOS - Built dependencies are cached (for faster builds) ### AppVeyor - Use different compilers (Visual Studio, MinGW) - Use different Visual Studio versions: \ 2008, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2015, 2017, 2019 - Compile for Windows 32bit and 64bit ## How to Use the CI-Scripts 1. Get an account on a supported CI service provider platform. (e.g. [Travis-CI](https://travis-ci.org/), [AppVeyor](https://www.appveyor.com/), Azure Pipelines...) (More details in the specific README of the subdirectory.) 2. In your Support Module, add this ci-scripts repository as a Git Submodule (name suggestion: `.ci`). ```bash git submodule add https://github.com/epics-base/ci-scripts .ci ``` 3. Create setup files for different sets of dependencies you want to compile against. (See below.) E.g., a setup file `stable.set` specifying ``` MODULES=sncseq asyn BASE=3.15 ASYN=R4-34 SNCSEQ=R2-2-8 ``` will compile against the EPICS Base 3.15 branch, the Sequencer release 2.2.8 and release 4.34 of asyn. (Any settings can be overridden from the specific job configuration in e.g. `.travis.yml`.) 4. Create a configuration for the CI service by copying one of the examples provided in the service specific subdirectory and editing it to include the jobs you want the service to run. Use your setup by defining e.g. `SET=stable` in the environment of a job. 5. Push your changes and check the CI service for your build results. ## Setup Files Your module might depend on EPICS Base and a few other support modules. (E.g., a specific driver might need StreamDevice, ASYN and the Sequencer.) In that case, building against every possible combination of released versions of those dependencies is not possible: Base (37) x StreamDevice (50) x ASYN (40) x Sequencer (51) would produce more than 3.7 million different combinations, i.e. build jobs. A more reasonable approach is to create a few setups, each being a combination of dependency releases, that do a few scans of the available "version space". One for the oldest versions you want to support, one or two for stable versions that many of your users have in production, one for the latest released versions and one for the development branches. ## Setup File Syntax Setup files are loaded by the build scripts. They are found by searching the locations in `SETUP_PATH` (space or colon separated list of directories, relative to your module's root directory). Setup files can include other setup files by calling `include ` (omitting the `.set` extension of the setup file). The configured `SETUP_PATH` is searched for the include. Any `VAR=value` setting of a variable is only executed if `VAR` is unset or empty. That way any settings can be overridden by settings in the main configuration (e.g., `.travis.yml`). Empty lines or lines starting with `#` are ignored. `MODULES=` should list the dependencies (software modules) by using their well-known slugs, separated by spaces. EPICS Base (slug: `base`) will always be a dependency and will be added and compiled first. The other dependencies are added and compiled in the order they are defined in `MODULES`. Modules needed only for specific jobs (e.g., on specific architectures) can be added in the main configuration file by setting `ADD_MODULES` for the specific job(s). `REPOOWNER=` sets the default GitHub owner (or organization) for all dependency modules. Useful if you want to compile against a complete set of dependencies forked into your private GitHub area. For any module mentioned as `foo` in the `MODULES` setting (and for `BASE`), the following settings can be configured: `FOO=` Set version of the module that should be used. Must either be a *tag* name or a *branch* name. [default: `master`] `FOO_REPONAME=` Set the name of the remote repository as `.git`. [default is the slug in lower case: `foo`] `FOO_REPOOWNER=` Set the name of the GitHub owner (or organization) that the module repository can be found under. `FOO_REPOURL=""` Set the complete URL of the remote repository. Useful for dependencies that are not hosted on GitHub. The default URL for the repository is pointing to GitHub, under `$FOO_REPOOWNER` else `$REPOOWNER` else `epics-modules`, using `$FOO_REPONAME` else `foo` and the extension`.git`. `FOO_DEPTH=` Set the depth of the git clone operation. Use 0 for a full clone. [default: 5] `FOO_RECURSIVE=YES/NO` Set to `NO` (or `0`) for a flat clone without recursing into submodules. [default is including submodules: `YES`] `FOO_DIRNAME=` Set the local directory name for the checkout. This will be always be extended by the release or branch name as `-`. [default is the slug in lower case: `foo`] `FOO_HOOK=