* Makefile: all: only depend on cmake-build
Previously `make` would first run `cmake-build` (`make` in `build/`),
and then run `make -C build awesome` afterwards again (which gets built
by the first step already).
* Makefile: get rid of cmake-build
* Travis: testing previous commits: make distclean
Otherwise it might fail due to permission errors for existing files:
https://travis-ci.org/awesomeWM/awesome/jobs/476612117#L2785
-- Build files have been written to: /home/travis/build/awesomeWM/awesome/build
[ 1%] Generating manpages/man1/awesome.1
[ 2%] Generating manpages/man1/awesome.1.gz
/bin/sh: 1: cannot create /home/travis/build/awesomeWM/awesome/build/manpages/man1/awesome.1.gz: Permission denied
make[3]: *** [manpages/man1/awesome.1.gz] Error 2
make[2]: *** [CMakeFiles/man.dir/all] Error 2
make[1]: *** [all] Error 2
make: *** [cmake-build] Error 2
This makes sense in general (every check target should get its own
flag), and might help with tracking down unexpected coverage changes
(although those appear to be related to the C code only (gcov)).
Just configure `check-unit` to use `--coverage` with `busted` with
`DO_COVERAGE=1`.
I got confused why `check-unit` would not generate coverage.
This keeps it in line with other targets that generate coverage when
used with the same name.
Instead of printing the list of commits for which tests failed, this
printed all commits.
Testing done on this change: None. Testing the infrastructure for Travis
is a bit hard and quite meta. (Tests for the tests?)
Signed-off-by: Uli Schlachter <psychon@znc.in>
This is not really a test. It just starts xeyes and sees if anything
explodes.
However, the reason for this test is to stabilise code coverage.
Apparently, Gtk(?) sometimes creates shaped windows. This had the effect
that codecov always reports random changes to code coverage, depending
on if this specific test run saw any shaped client windows or not.
Thus, by explicitly adding a test that runs a shaped client, hopefully
these random fluctuations disappear.
Hopefully-fixes: https://github.com/awesomeWM/awesome/issues/1975
Signed-off-by: Uli Schlachter <psychon@znc.in>
- install luacov.runner in tests/_runner.lua.
- use Lua's `dofile` to execute the test files, which will give us
coverage for them.
- CMakeLists.txt: revert DO_COVERAGE env injection
- revert cd: make f absolute if not in source_dir
It might be well known that test-menubar.lua fails with "cannot do calls
on non-normal thread" when run under our Lua 5.3 build with coverage
tracking enabled. This new, extra assertion catches the error earlier
and in a different way. Since more assertions means more errors caught,
let's add this.
Signed-off-by: Uli Schlachter <psychon@znc.in>
codecov-bash runs it by default already, therefore we do not not have to
do so manually before do_codecov_gcov.
And with `do_codecov` itself, it gets disabled using `-X gcov`.
Using exit code != 1 (e.g. 2 as with "make") appears to cause Travis to
consider the build job as an error ("!"), instead of a failure ("X").
Example build: https://travis-ci.org/awesomeWM/awesome/builds/248484247
!: https://travis-ci.org/awesomeWM/awesome/jobs/248484252
Test finished successfully
There were 3 errors!
make[4]: *** [CMakeFiles/check-integration] Error 1
make[3]: *** [CMakeFiles/check-integration.dir/all] Error 2
make[2]: *** [CMakeFiles/check-integration.dir/rule] Error 2
make[1]: *** [check-integration] Error 2
make: *** [check-integration] Error 2
++return
X: https://travis-ci.org/awesomeWM/awesome/jobs/248484250
Test finished successfully
There were 3 errors!