It's a leftover artifact that currently just acts as an unnecessary
intermediary script that calls the Makefile. It can be replaced by just
calling the Makefile directly.
Our previous mangling of gettext broke the `HAVE_WORKING_LIBINTL` test
because it prevented CMake from finding `libintl.h`. Let's fix that by
linking Gettext's `include` directory into `/usr/local` too.
Problem:
Dirs "config", "packaging", and "third-party" are all closely related
but this is not obvious from the layout. This adds friction for new
contributors.
Solution:
- rename config/ to cmake.config/
- rename test/config/ to test/cmakeconfig/ because it is used in Lua
tests: require('test.cmakeconfig.paths').
- rename packaging/ to cmake.packaging/
- rename third-party/ to cmake.deps/ (parallel with .deps/)
After some tweaks to our dep builds, we can now build a universal binary
for macOS by using `CMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES`. So, let's do that. This
requires a number of additional changes:
1. We need to build on macOS 11, since earlier versions do not support
building universal (M1 + Intel) binaries.
2. We need to provision a universal `libintl`. The linker will look for
an ARM64 version of this library when linking the `nvim` binary.
While we're here:
1. Link statically to `libintl`. This allows to to avoid having to do
any install name rewriting or codesigning to package Neovim.
2. Bump the `MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET` to `11`. We're already using a
`libintl` built by Homebrew (through the pre-installed version of
`gettext`), and that is built for macOS 11.
In order to ensure we link to `libintl.a` instead of `libintl.dylib`, we
have to make sure that CMake can't find the latter. This ideally should
be a matter of doing `brew unlink gettext`. However, CMake is too adept
at finding things that Homebrew has installed (even when not linked), so
we have to do a bit more than that. This appears in the additional step
ensuring static linkage to `libintl`.
We end up breaking some Homebrew-installed software in the process, and
some of these software is called during our build (e.g. curl, git,
wget). To avoid any adverse effects, let's just uninstall them.
Problem:
The release script bundles a system library (CoreServices) that was
added in #18294, which leads to errors on M1 since the architecture is
different from the Github runner.
Solution:
Skip CoreServices when bundling the libraries (as was done for the
CoreFoundation library that #18294 replaced with CoreServices).
* build: move the logic for linters to cmake
Cmake is our source of truth. We should have as much of our build
process there as possible so everyone can make use of it.
* build: remove redundant check for ninja generator
The minimum cmake version as of writing this is 3.10, which has ninja
support.
Since we're not running tests or other things that are more sensitive to
changes in the VM environment, use ubuntu-latest to avoid the busy work
of updating the VM image.
This lint job will ensure that the C codebase is properly formatted at
all times. This helps eliminate most of clint.py.
To save CI time, it's faster to manually compile uncrustify and cache
the binary instead of using homebrew (the apt-get package is too old).
previous: https://github.com/neovim/neovim/pull/14123
CI tests were disabled on drafts #18566 to manage the
large number of incoming jobs. While this did help, it had the drawback
of making the purpose of the ready-for-review a bit fuzzier. It went
from a clear "my PR is ready" signal to maintainers to somewhere between
"my PR is ready but I need the tests to confirm" to "please don't merge
yet, I just need to see the test results". Worse is that the specific
case of wanting to see the test results but not wanting it merged is
that this needs to be actively conveyed to the maintainers with a [DNM]
or a comment to not merge the PR yet. All of this causes weird
workarounds and noises which I believe isn't necessary.
The reason why I don't think this workaround is needed anymore is that
our CI now aborts a job if a new job from the same pull requests is
created, which makes the "10 simultaneous jobs per PR" situations that
triggered this not possible.
- Removed NSIS installer.
- Prevents undefined behaviour when two installations are performed to the same directory (NSIS + MSI).
- Reduced cost of maintaining two installers that do the same thing.
- Chose Wix MSI due to its better integration with Windows.
- Added Wix patch file to add neovim binaries to the system path during installation.
- Replaced neovim installer icons with better looking versions.
- Renamed neovim installer icons from logo.ico -> neovim.ico for all
icons to better reflect contents.
1. Add new pattern `runtime/doc/**`. This is a common case were the
contributor modifies only the help file but the doc gen would discard
their changes.
2. Add to the output what the changes after running doc gen would be.
[skip ci]
Repurpose the api-docs workflow to also run in all PR's but work only as
a check, if the changes in the PR introduce doc changes that are not
committed fail.
[skip ci]
Addresses: #12571
- Added the following installers through CMake files:
- Windows NSIS.
- Windows MSI.
- Windows zip.
- MacOs tarball.
- Linux tarball.
- Linux Deb package.
- Tweaked pipeline CPack commands to build using new CMakeLists.txt configuration file.
- Added icons and relevant packaging files.
- Updated notes.md to reflect new installation instructions.
This isn't meant to be the perfect solution, it's simply a first pass at using a
simple packaging system to build Windows installers. A Debian package has also
been added since it's very easy but other packages have been left out due to
limiting the scope. Hopefully we can build further upon this and improve it
over time with code signing, better icons and more user-friendly installation
graphics and so on.
The VS 2019 CMake generator no longer has different generator types for
different architectures. Now, the architecture is specified via CMake's
`-A` switch. However, this requires we also propagate
`${CMAKE_GENERATOR_PLATFORM}` to the bundled deps, so they build for the
same architecture as Nvim.
“make clint-full” bypasses the normal mechanisms used to communicate
build flags in the CI jobs, so explicitly build nvim before running the
lint jobs.
This reverts commit 559aa4179c.
I mistakenly believed both ways of writing were equivalent; this is
untrue. Setting continue-on-error to true will make the job pass, but
an error annotation will still be created which is misleading since it's
not actually an error.
GH workflows aren't allowed to trigger other GH workflows. Since
commitlint is a required check now, we need something manual to happen
for it to run on vim-patch/api-doc PRs.
Creating these PRs as drafts and then marking them as "ready to review"
when we want to merge them will provide the manual trigger to run
commitlint.
[skip ci]
Co-authored-by: Sean Dewar <seandewar@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Gregory Anders <greg@gpanders.com>
Co-authored-by: Sebastian Volland <seb@baunz.net>
Co-authored-by: Lewis Russell <lewis6991@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: zeertzjq <zeertzjq@outlook.com>
Even though the releaes itself gets deleted, if the tag is not, then
creating a new release just re-uses the same tag, even though we're
using “--target <sha>”.
[skip ci]
Now that we have various GH actions creating branches in the main repo,
using the generic '**' pattern for the CI workflow is just wasting CI
time and leading to more queued jobs.
[skip ci]
Trigger the backport action upon merge by marking a PR with the label `backport <branchname>` or after merge by applying the label and writing a comment containing `/backport`.
* build(cmake): update cmake min version to 3.10
* ci: test cmake minimum required version
* build(cmake): remove some legacy includes
* Since version 3.5 cmake_parse_arguments is implemented natively.
By default, the pull_request target only runs for the "opened",
"synchronize", and "reopened" events.
Since we've disabled GHA CI for "draft" PRs, the "ready_for_review"
event also needs to be included so CI is automatically run when leaving
draft status.
Unlike Release build type, RelWithDebInfo does not disable asserts.
This helps get better debug info from people brave enough to use the
nightly builds, but shouldn't be used for official releases.
[skip ci]
The "pull_request" trigger only enables read-access for forks,
"pull_request_target" is required if a fork is to be a trigger. Also
changed the python script to reflect this change.
macOS CI was failing because:
- brew upgrade fails because,
- mongodb-community cant upgrade because,
- some symlinks are owned by ... mongodb-community...
We don't use mogodb, so we can just remove it wholesale.
In https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/14150 , investigations showed
that using an older gcc to build the appimage could result in severe
perf issues. This is because older gcc versions happily replace calls to
libc functions with their own, which happen to be less optimized than
their libc counterparts.
We fix this problem by upgrading to gcc-11 on ubuntu-18.04.
Upon pushing updates to files which may contain API documentation, the
workflow will regenerate the docs and, if there are relevant changes,
create a PR targeting the source branch.
[skip ci]
This reverts #13733. Disabling delete of the release leaves behind a
draft release associated with the previous nightly tag, which is
annoying to cleanup.
In the rare circumstances that the creation of a new nightly fails after
deleting the previous nightly, the job can be re-run or a nightly can be
missing for a day.
Assuming the `CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE` directive is case-sensitive, this *actually* prevents the nightly build from being optimized. Even if it doesn't, the typo causes `:checkhealth` to issue a dummy warning in the Performance section.
Stop explicitly installing Ubuntu's python package, since most of the
Python 2 packages (and importantly pip/setuptools) have been removed in
this Ubuntu version.
The general skeleton of each job is the same, so consolidate the
definition to a single job with an explicit matrix.
Use conditional steps to handle steps that are unique to a certain job
(e.g., installing clang-11 for better ASAN support).
The env var is being set to the default value, as of ccache 3.3, which
is available in Zesty and newer. All of our CI is using Bionic, so this
is already available.
We have a GitHub Sponsors page for the neovim organization now:
- https://github.com/sponsors/neovim
It can be reached by clicking on the "Sponsor" button on the
[organization page](https://github.com/neovim).
This commit replaces Salt by GitHub Sponsors and Open Collective.