[dpdk-dev] [PATCH 4/4] ci: reorganise Travis jobs

David Marchand david.marchand at redhat.com
Thu Feb 20 13:22:54 CET 2020


On Thu, Feb 20, 2020 at 11:42 AM Thomas Monjalon <thomas at monjalon.net> wrote:
>
> 19/02/2020 22:39, Aaron Conole:
> > David Marchand <david.marchand at redhat.com> writes:
> >
> > > Let's prune the jobs list to limit the amount of time spent by the robot
> > > in Travis.
> > >
> > > Since meson enables automatically the relevant components, there is not
> > > much gain in testing with extra_packages vs required_packages only.
> > >
> > > For a given arch/compiler/env combination, compilation is first tested
> > > in all jobs that run tests or build the docs or run the ABI checks.
> > > In the same context, for jobs that accumulates running tests, building
> > > the docs etc..., those steps are independent and can be split to save
> > > some cpu on Travis.
> > >
> > > With this, we go down from 21 to 15 jobs.
> > >
> > > Note: this patch requires a flush of the existing caches in Travis.
> > >
> > > Signed-off-by: David Marchand <david.marchand at redhat.com>
> > > ---
> >
> > In general, I think the idea with required vs. extra was to have a build
> > that did the minimum required, and one that did all the packages (to
> > allow a minimum vs. full DPDK).
> >
> > At least, that's from
> > http://mails.dpdk.org/archives/dev/2019-January/124007.html
>
> I think the benefit of a minimum build is to have a quick report,
> and easy to setup.

Yes, Travis serves as a first gate when submitting patches.
But since Travis is best effort/free, we can't have a full coverage.


> > Not sure if that's still something anyone cares about.
>
> Given that Travis knows how to satisfy the dependencies,
> and that we must wait for all jobs to finish,
> I don't see any benefit of a minimal setup.

This minimal setup also tests that dpdk dependencies are correct.
If a change makes something rely on libX and libX is in the packages
always installed in Travis, the missing dependency would not get
caught.

But here, this adds too many jobs.

UNH, Intel and other CIs should step in and fill this kind of gap.


--
David Marchand



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