Notify https://code.forgejo.org/forgejo/forgejo that a new release was
published by setting the trigger label to
https://code.forgejo.org/forgejo/forgejo/issues/5.
It is only ever useful when a stable release is published, the
experimental releases are not mirrored. But it is triggered in all
cases. This will waste a few mirror check daily, when experimental
releases are built. This is an improvement compared to the current
situation where mirrors are checked hourly:
* Instead of being checked 24 times per day it will be down to less
than 5
* The mirror happens immediately after the release is published
instead of waiting for the next run of the cron job.
If a mirror operation is in progress, as evidenced by the presence of
the trigger label on the issure, it means two releases are being
published. Wait up to 1h for the mirror to complete and remove the
trigger label.
(cherry picked from commit 7492330721)
The end-to-end tests will always fail when more than one release is
broken. When trying to fix one, the other will get in the way and vice
versa. The only way to get out of this deadlock is to replace all
broken releases but one by doing the following on forgejo-integration:
* set SKIP_END_TO_END to true in the actions vars tab
* pushing a commit to the corresponding branch, fixing the problem
(cherry picked from commit 54c8ac3e39)
It could be used but then `cp --dereference` would need to be used instead in
the forgejo-build-publish action.
+ docker cp forgejo-amd64:/app/gitea/forgejo-cli forgejo-9.0-test-linux-amd64
+ chmod +x forgejo-9.0-test-linux-amd64
chmod: cannot operate on dangling symlink 'forgejo-9.0-test-linux-amd64'
(cherry picked from commit 1a7a9055e4)
- retrieved by the commit hash
- removes bindata tags from integration tests, because it does not seem
to be required
- due to the missing automatically generated data, the zstd tests fail
(they use repo data including node_modules (!) as input to the test,
there is no apparent reason for the size constants)
includes:
- easier repo declaration for playwright tests by @Gusted
- full backend build for pushing Git repos by @Gusted
- playwright testing (which fails with the current diff algorithm, but
passes with the new)
- disable eslint rule for conditional expect, because it defeats the
purpose (working around it would result in much more complex test code
in our cases)
When the Forgejo CLI binary is `forgejo-cli`, the `--verbose` or `--quiet`
arguments are available globally for all sub-commands. The same
sub-commands can be used with `forgejo forgejo-cli`, those flags are
not available.
If the tag of a stable release is removed from integration, it won't
be properly described when building the test release. It will be:
8.0.0-dev-1648-7b31a541c0+gitea-1.22.0
instead of:
8.0.1-5-7b31a541c0+gitea-1.22.0
The releases are created when:
* a tag is pushed to the integration repository it will create a
vX.Y.Z release
* a new commit is pushed to a branch and mirrored to the integration
repository, it will create a vX.Y-test release named after the branch
When both vX.Y.Z and vX.Y-test release are present, the end-to-end
tests will use vX.Y.Z because it comes first in release sort
order. This ensures that a last round of end-to-end tests is run from
the release built in the integration repository, exactly as it will be
published and signed.
In between stable releases, the vX.Y-test releases are built daily and
must be used instead for end-to-end testing so that problems can be
detected as soon as possible. For that to happen, the stable release
must be removed from the integration repository and this is done 24h
after they were published.
The vX.Y-test releases are removed if they have not been updated in 18
months. As of August 2024 it is possible for a LTS to still be needed
in tests over a year after it was last updated, although it is
unlikely that such a lack of activity happens, there is no reason to
remove the test release before that.
* specify the version targeted by the pull request. The end-to-end
tests previously compiled all known branches which was a waste. The
pull request now must specify which version it is targeting so that
only this version is recompiled and used for testing.
* when building the daily releases, use the release from the
integration organization to ensure the tests are run against the
latest build. Clarify in a comment why the lookup order of
organizations is reversed in this particular case.
Refs: https://code.forgejo.org/forgejo/end-to-end/pulls/239
Upgrade to release-notes-assistant 1.1.1:
* multiline release notes drafts were incorrectly categorized
according the first line, instead of for each line
* when there is a backport, link the original PR first
* remove spurious </a>