This page is currently being updated as we work on a revised build process, which is to be explained here in detail. |
In order to keep the KIELER code as stable as possible, we use automatic continuous integration builds. Once you push something into one of the KIELER repositories, you trigger the automatic build process. If the build fails for whatever reason – be it failed unit tests or simply compilation errors – you are notified of the problem.
This page describes the software and setup we use to implement all of this.
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To implement our automatic builds, we use the popular Maven tool in conjunction with Tycho, a set of Maven plug-ins that allow Maven to build Eclipse projects. To implement our continuous integration builds, we use Atlassian Bamboo.
Maven is a build tool for Java projects. It takes care of dependency management, including in-build dependencies (the order in which packages are compiled) as well as dependencies to third-party libraries. The latter are automatically fetched from special Maven repositories. Without getting too technical, a Maven build consists of several phases, such as compile and package. Within each phase, several Maven plug-ins handle different tasks (or goals, as Maven calls them). The maven-compile-plugin for example compiles .java
files into .class
files.
To correctly compile a project, Maven needs to be told about the project. While the popular Ant build tool uses build.xml
files to describe the steps to be executed for building a project, Maven uses pom.xml
files to describe the project and figures out the steps for itself. The POM files may inherit settings from a parent POM file.
Tycho is a set of Maven plugins that handles compiling and dependency management as well as bundling of Eclipse plug-ins. Tycho understands Eclipse metadata files such as plugin.xml
or feature.xml
, provides dependency information extracted from those files, and provides an Eclipse instance for compiling and packaging Eclipse bundles.
While Maven and Tycho know how to compile KIELER, Bamboo knows when to compile KIELER and what to do with the compiled project. Bamboo has access to our source code repositories and triggers continuous integration builds every time someone pushes new code into a repository. It also does a full build every night and copies the results onto our nightly build update site to be accessed by people all around the world. And beyond. Tell your friends!
In KIELER there is a parent POM located in build/de.cau.cs.kieler.parent
, there are mid-level POMs in features
and plugins
and finally each plugin and feature directory contains a POM file. Furthermore to handle building an Eclipse P2 repository and the KIELER RCA there is a special repository project with its own POM in build/de.cau.cs.kieler.repository
. As KIELER is built against a P2 repository generated from our Eclipse reference installation, the following magic command updates the P2 build repository after changes to the installation.
java@aeon:~$ java -jar eclipse_3.8/plugins/org.eclipse.equinox.launcher_*.jar \ -application org.eclipse.equinox.p2.publisher.FeaturesAndBundlesPublisher \ -metadataRepository file:/home/java/repository/juno382 \ -artifactRepository file:/home/java/repository/juno382 \ -source /home/java/eclipse_3.8/ \ -publishArtifacts |
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A full KIELER build on the command line is done as follows
. /home/java/java-env #sets environment variables for java and maven cd build/de.cau.cs.kieler.parent mvn clean package -P <profile> # Available profiles include indigo, juno38, juno42 |
Afterwards the assembled RCA and P2 repository may be found in build/de.cau.cs.kieler.repository/target
. Similarly single plugins or features are found in the target
subdirectory of the respective package.
There are basically three different build plans for each of the KIELER projects:
/home/kieler/public_html/files/nightly
. Update sites are published in /home/kieler/public_html/updatesite/nightly
. This plan is run once every night./home/kieler/public_html/rating
. This plan is run once every night.