glib/.gitlab-ci
Philip Withnall 020ebe42f9 build: Change default for -Dman-pages from disabled to auto
Previously, `-Dman=false` was the default, because the generated man
pages were shipped in the distribution tarball already, so the option
actually mostly controlled whether to *re*build them.

The generated pages are no longer shipped in the tarball (and probably
haven’t been since the port to Meson, though I haven’t checked), so it
makes sense to change the default to encourage building the man pages if
the right tooling (`rst2man`) is available.

Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@gnome.org>
2023-12-21 16:13:03 +00:00
..

CI support stuff

Docker image

GitLab CI jobs run in a Docker image, defined here. To update that image (perhaps to install some more packages):

  1. Edit .gitlab-ci/*.Dockerfile with the changes you want
  2. Run .gitlab-ci/run-docker.sh build --base=debian-stable --base-version=1 to build the new image (bump the version from the latest listed for that base on https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/container_registry). If rebuilding the coverity.Dockerfile image, youll need to have access to Coverity Scan and will need to specify your project name and access token as the environment variables COVERITY_SCAN_PROJECT_NAME and COVERITY_SCAN_TOKEN.
  3. Run .gitlab-ci/run-docker.sh push --base=debian-stable --base-version=1 to upload the new image to the GNOME GitLab Docker registry
    • If this is the first time you're doing this, you'll need to log into the registry
    • If you use 2-factor authentication on your GNOME GitLab account, you'll need to create a personal access token and use that rather than your normal password — the token should have read_registry and write_registry permissions
  4. Edit .gitlab-ci.yml (in the root of this repository) to use your new image