A test case failure usually also triggers valgrind leaks, sifting through those
to find the actual test failure is painful. So let's separate the tests and run
them separately.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
This makes it easier for contributors to check if their code runs correctly
without having to file a PR.
The Mac and Windows workflows are a bit more involved, so let's keep those on
pull requests only.
"main" is a bit non-descriptive, let's name them after the platforms we run them
on. Splitting them up allows us to be less selective on how we run the various
workflows, e.g. always running the linux one.
Instead of using the unpredictable chocolatey let's just handle it
ourselves. The versions are pinned but that's arguably good.
Fixes https://github.com/xkbcommon/libxkbcommon/issues/179
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com>
Drop the ronn source files, check in the generated files instead. This gets rid
of the ruby+gem+ronn toolchain requirement at the cost of having to edit raw man
pages.
ronn files are as-generated but with the preamble and generation date removed.
The latter isn't important enough to keep, it'll just go stale for manually
maintained files and it's not worth setting up a configure_file() just for that
date.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
This is the base tool, no subtools are currently connected so you only get help
and version for now. The goal here is to have a git-like infrastructure where
/usr/bin/xkbcli is the main tool, anything else will hide in libexec.
The infrastructure for this is copied from libinput. Tools themselves will
will be installed in $prefix/libexec/xkbcommon and the xkbcli tool forks
off whatever argv[1] is after modifying the PATH to include the libexec dir.
libinput has additional code for checking whether we're running this from the
builddir but it's a bit iffy and it's usefulness is limited - if you're in the
builddir anyway you can just run ./builddir/xkbcli-<toolname> directly.
So for this code here, running ./builddir/xkbcli <toolname> will execute the
one in the prefix/libexecdir.
Since we want that tool available everywhere even where some of the subtools
aren't present, we need to ifdef the getopt handling.
man page generation is handled via ronn which is a ruby program but allows
markdown for the sources. It's hidden behind a meson option to disable where
downloading ronn isn't an option. The setup is generic enough that we can add
other man-pages by just appending to the array.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
This way we can invoke the expected setup with
meson test --setup=valgrind
And because we don't care about valgrinding python script, mark that test as
part of the "python-tests" suite and skip it during our CI valgrind run.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com>
Python leaks like crazy when run under valgrind. But if we make the script
executable **and** it has uses the env invocation (i.e. #!/usr/bin/env python3),
the leaks disappear. This is not the case for a shebang of /usr/bin/python3.
Why exactly this is the case I'm not sure but executables we plan to run
should have the exec bit set. So this is a janitor patch with the nice side
effect of fixing our valgrind runs.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
The CI started installing some wrapper instead of a real bash which is
what gets found.
See:
https://github.com/actions/virtual-environments/pull/1081
Given meson is written in python, it should always be available
hopefully.
Disabled valgrind wrapper for now because it now also applies to the
python interpreter which leaks like a sieve.
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com>
The bison sourceforge download is quite slow and unreliable.
Hopefully this works. Stolen directly from ruby:
a50750c8a9/.github/workflows/windows.yml (L26)
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com>
This library is the replacement for clients parsing evdev.xml directly.
Instead, they should use the API here so that in the future we may even
be able to swap evdev.xml for a more suitable data format.
The library parses through evdev.xml (using libxml2) and - if requested -
through evdev.extras.xml as well. The merge approach is optimised for
the default case where we have a system-installed rules XML and another file in
$XDG_CONFIG_DIR that adds a few entries. We load the system file first, then
append any custom ones to that. It's not possible to overwrite the MLVO list
provided by the system files - if you want to do that, get the change upstream.
XML validation is handled through the DTD itself which means we only need to
check for a nonempty name, everything else the DTD validation should complain
about.
The logging system is effectively identical to xkbcommon.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
We currently use Azure Pipelines. But it became out of date. Also it
requires a different account and setup than github account itself.
The configuration here is probably not very good and is less featureful
than the Azure one but it's what I managed.
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com>