This will allow users to use AppImageUpdate to update their AppImage.
It requires publishing the created zsync file alongside the appimage
file for the releases.
This also removes LINT_FILE environment variable, other then that functionality
is kept. It is expected that developers needing partial linting will use `make
lint`, touching interesting file before (if not done already by writing to
them).
Lesser form of include-what-you-use: at least guarantees that header
file did not forget to include something through some other included
file.
Activate run_single_includes_tests on CI.
Fix some IWYU violations.
References #5321
- Add support for TEST_FILE to the `oldtest` target, for consistency
with the busted/lua tests.
Caveat: with the busted/lua tests TEST_FILE takes a full path, whereas
for `oldtest` it must be "test_foo.res".
- Add support for NVIM_PRG, again so that all test-related targets are
consistent.
- Use consistent name for NVIM_PRG. But still need to support NVIM_PROG
for QuickBuild CI.
Note: The `oldtest` target is driven by the top-level Makefile, because
it requires a TTY. CMake 3.2 added a USES_TERMINAL flag to
add_custom_target(). But we support CMake 2.8...
add_custom_target(oldtest
COMMAND make clean
COMMAND make NVIM_PRG=$<TARGET_FILE:nvim> $ENV{MAKEOVERRIDES}
DEPENDS nvim
WORKING_DIRECTORY "${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/src/nvim/testdir"
USES_TERMINAL true
)
We use a Makefile which in turn uses cmake. If we wanted to set the install
prefix for cmake, we had to do this so far:
make CMAKE_FLAGS="-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/tmp/nvim"
That's long and hard to remember. Following the conventions of other Makefiles,
this now works as well and is equivalent:
make PREFIX=/tmp/nvim
Specify that the ${GENERATED_HELP_TAGS} "command" (output) depends on
`helptags` so that it always regenerates the doc/ tags. (cmake "targets"
always run, whereas "commands" are contingent on their dependencies. But
we don't define doc/ dependencies because they are circular.)
refs https://github.com/neovim/neovim/pull/2124#discussion_r26107174
Unlike Travis, `make test` currently only runs functional tests.
This can cause confusion since one might (understandably) think that `make
test` runs unit tests too, which it doesn't.
The `oldtest` target is still left out because it's quite slow and
Travis already runs it.
Problem: With some regexp patterns the NFA engine uses many states and
becomes very slow. To the user it looks like Vim freezes.
Solution: When the number of states reaches a limit fall back to the old
engine. (Christian Brabandt)
https://github.com/vim/vim/releases/tag/v7-4-497
Helped-by: David Bürgin <676c7473@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Justin M. Keyes <justinkz@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Scott Prager <splinterofchaos@gmail.com>
- third-party is built under .deps by default instead of using its own
${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}, move this default setting out of the cmake
settings and into the Makefile.
- As a consequence the workflow of building third-party using CMake
should feel more natural, avoid the additional folder or setting
DEPS_DIR from the command line.
- This commit does not change the default behaviour when calling the
Makefile wrapper.
Remove build warning:
The target name "test" is reserved or not valid for certain CMake
features, such as generator expressions, and may result in undefined
behavior.
The 'lupa' python package provides a simple way to seamless integrate lua and
python code.
This commit replaces vroom by a python script that exposes the 'neovim' package
to a lua state, and invokes busted to run functional tests. This is a temporary
solution that will enable writing functional tests using lua/bused while a lua
client library is not available.
The reason for dropping vroom is flexibility: Lua/busted has a nice DSL-style
syntax while also providing the customization power of a full programming
language. Another reason is to use a single framework for unit/functional tests.
Two other changes were performed in this commit:
- Instead of "gcc-unittest/gcc-ia32", the travis builds for gcc are now
identified by "gcc/gcc-32". They will run unit/functional tests for both 64
and 32 bits.
- Old integration tests(in src/nvim/testdir) are now ran by the 'oldtest' target
- Leave src as include dir (for includes to recognize 'nvim/' prefix).
- Change subdirectory from src to src/nvim.
- Fix msgpack generation.
- Fix some other paths to new locations.
This achieves several goals:
* Less reliance on scripts so we have better portability to Windows
(though we still have a ways to go for proper Windows support).
Luajit, luarocks, moonscript, and busted are all installed via CMake
now.
* Trying to make use of pkg-config to get the correct libraries. The
latest libuv is still broken in this regard, but we'll at least be in
a position to use it.
* Allow the use of Ninja or make. The former runs faster in many
environments, and automatically makes use of parallel builds.
This also allows for system installed dependencies--though not through
the Makefile just yet--and adds support for FreeBSD.
This also make us build libuv and luajit as static libraries only, since
we're only concerned about having static libraries for our bundled
dependencies.
Include a new SINGLE_MAKE which can be used to invoke make but using
only a single job, and in way that avoids any warnings from make.
Use SINGLE_MAKE to execute the tests, since they're meant to be run
serially.
Also, prefer the use of $(MAKE) to avoid invoking an extra subshell
(saves some time).
Tests will be written using the [moonscript](http://moonscript.org/) language,
a lua 'dialect' that is whitespace-significant and has a syntax similar to
coffeescript. The test framework used is [busted](http://olivinelabs.com/busted/),
a bdd framework for lua/moonscript.
Luajit has a nice ffi module, which lets lua programs link shared libraries and
call it's functions without writing any C code.
To take advantage of this fact for testing C functions, a new target was added
to CMakeLists.txt, which compiles neovim as a shared library that is loaded by
the process running the tests.
This commit adds necessary code for downloading and installing a lua package
manager(luarocks) locally. It wasn't added as a subtree because there are quite
a few blobs in its source tree.
Change an explicit ``cd build && make`` into the more usual
``${MAKE} -C build`` style of invoking make in a subdirectory. This
should mean that ``make -jN`` from the top-level Makefile should work.
Closes#162.