conda-smithy | The tool for managing conda-forge feedstocks | Continous Integration library
kandi X-RAY | conda-smithy Summary
kandi X-RAY | conda-smithy Summary
conda-smithy is a tool for combining a conda recipe with configurations to build using freely hosted CI services into a single repository, also known as a feedstock. conda-smithy is still a work-in-progress, but when complete, conda-smithy will:.
Support
Quality
Security
License
Reuse
Top functions reviewed by kandi - BETA
- Run lintify
- Check if line is a selector line
- Get section section
- Get a list section section
- Update the content of a conda recipe
- Returns the name of the file
- Iterate over a tar archive
- Get the compiler for a given URL
- Render a circle
- Set the migration_fns in the factory
- Return a dict containing the command - line arguments
- Extract version information from VCS
- Render a pep440 branch based on given pieces
- Add conda hooks to the repo
- Render a README file
- Add a variant key to another
- Load forge configuration
- Removes a variant key from v1
- Generate the appropriate setup for github actions
- Configure a Travis repo
- Scans the setup py and returns a boolean indicating whether the package is missing
- Create the versioneer config file
- Generate a build setup
- Extract version information from setup py
- Load feedstocks yaml file
- Adds a token to Travis
- Add project to Travis CI
- Set the migration_fns in the fedora
conda-smithy Key Features
conda-smithy Examples and Code Snippets
Community Discussions
Trending Discussions on Continous Integration
QUESTION
I am trying to create a simple continous integration workflow for my React app in which for every new pull request to master branch I run the unit tests and create build. I have deployed the yaml configuration file for GitHub Actions to my repository. When I create a pull request, it starts the checks for the pull request, but it gets stuck on the build step. I am using webpack to build my React app.
integrate.yml
...ANSWER
Answered 2020-Dec-23 at 04:53The issue here was when building project using the webpack
command, after the build is complete, it does not returns the control and keeps on running. Therefore it gets stuck on the Build Project
step in the yaml
file and does not go the next step in Github Actions. The solution is to add a compiler hook
in the webpack config to exit after the build is complete. This is how I added it in my config and it is working fine now.
QUESTION
I am working on a online-school where student projects are decentralized on git repositories. When a student wishes to correct a project:
- The student must specify his git-repo-url + private key in order to pull it on the correction-server
- Then several tasks are applied on the project (compilation check, output checks).
I'd like to check the code quality and return a feedback for each user. I guess sonarqube would be a good choice since it supports 28+ languages.
I am familiar with sonarqube used with a continous integration, but I can't find in their documentation how to call sonarqube for my use case. I'd need something like a rest api for requesting a code analysis by giving the git url & its key and get a response with the code quality output.
Would it be possible?
...ANSWER
Answered 2020-Aug-04 at 08:21I think there is a misunderstanding, between SonarQube Server and SonarQube Scanner, this is already well explained in https://stackoverflow.com/a/49588950/3708208
So to do an analysis, you actually need to run a SonarQube scanner with some specificaitons, which is pretty well documented. When you have successfully set up the scanner, you can easily retrieve reports, status, quality gate via REST API.
QUESTION
I'm building a continous integration pipeline based on a git repository.
I have 3 branch:
- master branch for the dev environment
- test branch for the test environment
- prod branch for the prod environment
Any time a branch is updated, a pipeline update my website, eg:
- when a push on master branch is made, a pipeline update https://dev.website.com
- when a push on test branch is made, a pipeline update https://test.website.com
- when a push on prod branch is made, a pipeline update https://prod.website.com
Everytime I release a new version, I update the master branch and tag the commit whit the version number:
...ANSWER
Answered 2020-Apr-10 at 10:50you can try to reset the branch and after push it
QUESTION
when closing a branch in a continous integration environment my scripts are also supposed to delete associated sonarqube projects.
To achieve this I am using the sonarqube API as described in the WebAPI documentation. I am adressing the endpoint api/projects/delete
with corresponding project-key. If the deletion is successful the http request is answered with 204 - No content
if the project was not created in sonarqube or was deleted already I get 404 - Not found
which makes sense and can be handled programmatically.
Since a few weeks the responses are inconsistent and it can happen that I get the response 200 - Ok
for a ressource that is not in Sonarqube. The results are different per day, time or project I try to delete.
Does anyone has an idea where this could come from? The Sonarqube API documentation lacks some detail regarding to the expected status codes.
It is obvious that I could handle this in my code as well. But since the solution worked like this for ages I am wondering where this did come from.
I am running Sonarqube 6.7.5.38563.
Thanks in advance.
Max
...ANSWER
Answered 2020-Feb-05 at 13:49After alot of manual API calls with Postman I found the problem.
Deletion is taking to long so that SonarQube is displaying the "Loading..." pages which give back a response code 200.
Strange behaviour because this can't be fixed by increasing the timeouts on the calling side. Is there any chance to adjust the value in Sonarqube when a Loading Page should be displayed?
QUESTION
I am trying to create a build pipeline in Azure DevOps to deploy an Azure Function Application automatically as part of a continous integration pipeline. When the Function App Deploy step is run, the step fails with 'credentials' cannot be null.
Does anyone know why this happens?
My Build Pipeline:
The Log output when the step runs:
The only thing that I think that it can be is the Azure Resource Manager subscription which I am using Publish Profile Based Authentication however I have managed to create a similar pipeline for a web application with a deploy option using this authentication and it worked successfully. I just cannot deploy the function application.
...ANSWER
Answered 2020-Jan-09 at 16:22This same problem also ocurrs with publishing web apps I found. There are two different tasks that can be used for web apps to publish and you have to use the right one.
There is a task called Azure Web App Deploy that works.
Also a task called Azure App Service Deploy that doesn't.
This is with Publish Profile Based Authentication.
I found that to deploy the Function Application you can also use the Azure Web App Deploy task and it seems to work.
Community Discussions, Code Snippets contain sources that include Stack Exchange Network
Vulnerabilities
No vulnerabilities reported
Install conda-smithy
You need a token from github, travis-ci.com, appveyor.com and circleci.com to try out conda-smithy. The commands which need this will tell you where to get these tokens and where to place them. If you need help getting tokens please ask on the conda-forge google group. You should be able to test parts of conda-smithy with whatever tokens you have. For example, you should be able to conda smithy register-github without the CI service tokens. Re-rendering an existing feedstock is also possible without CI service tokens set.
When everything is configured you can trigger a build with a push to the feedstock repo on github.
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