This is to add the generation of `compat.json` as a release artifact. It
describes the runtime requirements of the release in question. The next
step is to have the upgrade server use this information to filter
releases provided to clients. This is per the discussion in #9656
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Co-authored-by: Ross Smith II <ross@smithii.com>
Go is not cgroup aware and by default will set GOMAXPROCS to the number
of available threads, regardless of whether it is within the allocated
quota. This behaviour causes high amount of CPU throttling and degraded
application performance.
This is sort of a proof of concept, but since our current Windows
builder is down this might solve the problem. It includes a change for
easier code signing (taking the certificate in a secret/env var rather
than existing already on disk), but otherwise mirrors precisely what we
already do in the build server.
all: Add package runtimeos for runtime.GOOS comparisons
I grew tired of hand written string comparisons. This adds generated
constants for the GOOS values, and predefined Is$OS constants that can
be iffed on. In a couple of places I rewrote trivial switch:es to if:s,
and added Illumos where we checked for Solaris (because they are
effectively the same, and if we're going to target one of them that
would be Illumos...).
When GOBIN is set, 'go install' cannot install cross-compilied binaries.
To satisfy cross-compilation, it's necessary to add the '-o' to build
target, otherwise 'go build' will discarding the resulting objects when
compiling multiple packages.
Signed-off-by: bekcpear <i@bitbili.net>
* Provide a sysctl config to raise max UDP buffer size
* Add sysctl config to deb
* Check if `deb-systemd-invoke` is available
Co-authored-by: otbutz <tbutz@optitool.de>
Quoting the manual:
-trimpath
remove all file system paths from the resulting executable.
Instead of absolute file system paths, the recorded file names
will begin with either "go" (for the standard library),
or a module path@version (when using modules),
or a plain import path (when using GOPATH).
That is, when we panic, instead of:
goroutine 1 [running]:
main.main()
/Users/jb/dev/syncthing/syncthing/cmd/syncthing/main.go:272 +0x116
we get:
goroutine 1 [running]:
main.main()
github.com/syncthing/syncthing@/cmd/syncthing/main.go:272 +0x116
(Module path and file path within module.)
Apparently our Tags field depended on having specific files react to
tags and add themselves there. This, instead, works for all tags.
Also, pass tags to the test command line.
Currently a random dev version has a version string like this:
v1.7.0-rc.1+23-gef3441bd6
That is, the tag name followed by a plus sign and the git describe
metadata (number of commits and hash) plus -dirty or -branchname in some
cases.
We introduced the plus sign in #473, where a dev version would
previously be called v0.9.0-42-gwhatever which is considered older than
v0.9.0 and hence caused a downgrade. The problem with the plus is that
per semver everything after the plus is ignored as build metadata, which
means we won't upgrade from v1.7.0-rc.1 to v1.7.0-rc.1+22-g946170f3f.
With this change the we instead either just add a dev suffix (if we're
already on a prerelease version) or we wind the patch version and add a
dev suffix.
v1.7.0-rc.1+23-gef3441bd6 => v1.7.0-rc.1.dev.23.gef3441bd6
v1.6.1+80-gef3441bd6 => v1.6.2-dev.80.gef3441bd6
This should preserve the ordering and keep versions semver-ish.
This changes the build script to build all the things in one go
invocation, instead of one invocation per cmd. This is a lot faster
because it means more things get compiled concurrently. It's especially
a lot faster when things *don't* need to be rebuilt, possibly because it
only needs to build the dependency map and such once instead of once per
binary.
In order for this to work we need to be able to pass the same ldflags to
all the binaries. This means we can't set the program name with an
ldflag.
When it needs to rebuild everything (go clean -cache):
( ./old-build -gocmd go1.14.2 build all 2> /dev/null; ) 65.82s user 11.28s system 574% cpu 13.409 total
( ./new-build -gocmd go1.14.2 build all 2> /dev/null; ) 63.26s user 7.12s system 1220% cpu 5.766 total
On a subsequent run (nothing to build, just link the binaries):
( ./old-build -gocmd go1.14.2 build all 2> /dev/null; ) 26.58s user 7.53s system 582% cpu 5.853 total
( ./new-build -gocmd go1.14.2 build all 2> /dev/null; ) 18.66s user 2.45s system 1090% cpu 1.935 total