[您也可以查看 單頁版本 的文件。]
Greg Stein 為 Subversion 編寫了一個自訂建置系統,Subversion 之前使用 `automake` 和遞迴式 Makefiles。現在它使用單一的頂層 Makefile,從 Makefile.in(受版本控制)產生。`Makefile.in` 進而包含 `build-outputs.mk`,由 `gen-make.py` 腳本從 `build.conf` 自動產生。因此,後兩者受版本控制,但 `build-outputs.mk` 則不受。
以下是 Greg 描述系統的原始郵件,後面是一些關於如何破解它的建議
From: Greg Stein <gstein@lyra.org> Subject: new build system (was: Re: CVS update: MODIFIED: ac-helpers ...) To: dev@subversion.tigris.org Date: Thu, 24 May 2001 07:20:55 -0700 Message-ID: <20010524072055.F5402@lyra.org> On Thu, May 24, 2001 at 01:40:17PM -0000, gstein@tigris.org wrote: > User: gstein > Date: 01/05/24 06:40:17 > > Modified: ac-helpers .cvsignore svn-apache.m4 > Added: . Makefile.in > Log: > Switch over to the new non-recursive build system. >... Okay... this is it. We're now on the build system. "It works on my machine." I suspect there may be some tweaks to make on different OSs. I'd be interested to hear if Ben can really build with normal BSD make. It should be possible. The code supports building, installation, checking, and dependencies. It does *NOT* yet deal with the doc/ subdirectory. That is next; I figured this could be rolled out and get the kinks worked out while I do the doc/ stuff. Oh, it doesn't build Neon or APR yet either. I also saw a problem where libsvn_fs wasn't getting built before linking one of the test proggies (see below). Basic operation: same as before. $ ./autogen.sh $ ./configure OPTIONS $ make $ make check $ make install There are some "make check" scripts that need to be fixed up. That'll happen RSN. Some of them create their own log, rather than spewing to stdout (where the top-level make will place the output into [TOP]/tests.log). The old Makefile.am files are still around, but I'll be tossing those along with a bunch of tweaks to all the .cvsignore files. There are a few other cleanups, too. But that can happen as a step two. [ $ cvs rm -f `find . -name Makefile.rm` See the mistake in that line? I didn't when I typed it. The find returned nothing, so cvs rm -f proceeded to delete my entire tree. And the -f made sure to delete all my source files, too. Good fugging thing that I had my mods in some Emacs buffers, or I'd be bitching. I am *so* glad that Ben coded SVN to *not* delete locally modified files *and* that we have an "undel" command. I had to go and tweak a bazillion Entries files to undo the delete... ] The top-level make has a number of shortcuts in it (well, actually in build-outputs.mk): $ make subversion/libsvn_fs/libsvn_fs.la or $ make libsvn_fs The two are the same. So... when your test proggie fails to link because libsvn_fs isn't around, just run "make libsvn_fs" to build it immediately, then go back to the regular "make". Note that the system still conditionally builds the FS stuff based on whether DB (See 'Building on Unix' below) is available, and mod_dav_svn if Apache is available. Handy hint: if you don't like dependencies, then you can do: $ ./autogen.sh -s That will skip the dependency generation that goes into build-outputs.mk. It makes the script run quite a bit faster (48 secs vs 2 secs on my poor little Pentium 120). Note that if you change build.conf, you can simply run: $ ./gen-make.py build.conf to regen build-outputs.mk. You don't have to go back through the whole autogen.sh / configure process. You should also note that autogen.sh and configure run much faster now that we don't have the automake crap. Oh, and our makefiles never re-run configure on you out of the blue (gawd, I hated when automake did that to me). Obviously, there are going to be some tweaky things going on. I also think that the "shadow" builds or whatever they're called (different source and build dirs) are totally broken. Something tweaky will have to happen there. But, thankfully, we only have one Makefile to deal with. Note that I arrange things so that we have one generated file (build-outputs.mk), and one autoconf-generated file (Makefile from .in). I also tried to shove as much logic/rules into Makefile.in. Keeping build-outputs.mk devoid of rules (thus, implying gen-make.py devoid of rules in its output generation) manes that tweaking rules in Makefile.in is much more approachable to people. I think that is about it. Send problems to the dev@ list and/or feel free to dig in and fix them yourself. My next steps are mostly cleanup. After that, I'm going to toss out our use of libtool and rely on APR's libtool setup (no need for us to replicate what APR already did). Cheers, -g -- Greg Stein, http://www.lyra.org/
以下是一些建議,提供給那些變更或測試組態/建置系統的人
From: Karl Fogel <kfogel@collab.net> To: dev@subversion.tigris.org Subject: when changing build/config stuff, always do this first Date: Wed 28 Nov 2001 Yo everyone: if you change part of the configuration/build system, please make sure to clean out any old installed Subversion libs *before* you try building with your changes. If you don't do this, your changes may appear to work fine, when in fact they would fail if run on a truly pristine system. This script demonstrates what I mean by "clean out". This is `/usr/local/cleanup.sh' on my system. It cleans out the Subversion libs (and the installed httpd-2.0 libs, since I'm often reinstalling that too): #!/bin/sh # Take care of libs cd /usr/local/lib || exit 1 rm -f APRVARS rm -f libapr* rm -f libexpat* rm -f libneon* rm -f libsvn* # Take care of headers cd /usr/local/include || exit 1 rm -f apr* rm -f svn* rm -f neon/* # Take care of headers cd /usr/local/apache2/lib || exit 1 rm -f * When someone reports a configuration bug and you're trying to reproduce it, run this first. :-) The voice of experience, -Karl
建置系統是所有在 trunk 上工作的開發人員的重要工具。有時候,對建置系統所做的變更對一位開發人員來說運作良好,但卻會無意間中斷另一位開發人員的建置系統。
為了避免生產力損失,任何提交者(全部或部分)都可以立即還原任何中斷他們在所選平台上有效進行開發能力的建置系統變更,作為例行程序,而不必擔心被指控反應過度。還原變更的提交記錄訊息應包含說明備註,說明為何還原變更,並包含足夠的詳細資料,以便在 dev@ 上開始討論問題,如果有人選擇回覆提交郵件。
但是,應注意不要進入「預設還原模式」。如果您能快速修正問題,請這麼做。如果不能,請停下來思考一分鐘。在您思考過後,仍然沒有解決方案,請繼續還原變更,並將討論帶到清單中。
一旦變更已還原,由還原變更的原始提交者重新提交原始變更的修正版本,如果根據還原提交者的理由,他們非常確定新版本已確定修正,或者在再次提交之前提交已修正版本供還原提交者測試。
有關如何使用和新增測試至 Subversion 的自動化測試架構的說明,請閱讀 subversion/tests/README 和 subversion/tests/cmdline/README。
ASF 基礎架構 團隊管理 BuildBot 建置/測試農場。Subversion 專案的 Buildbot 瀑布位於此處
有關建置服務的更多資訊,請前往 ci2.apache.org。
如果您想接收有關 buildbot 建置和測試失敗的通知,請訂閱 notifications@ 郵件清單。
Buildbot 在 Infra 存放庫 中進行設定,特別是 subversion.py 檔案。
From: Karl Fogel <kfogel@collab.net> Subject: writing test cases To: dev@subversion.tigris.org Date: Mon, 5 Mar 2001 15:58:46 -0600 Many of us implementing the filesystem interface have now gotten into the habit of writing the test cases (see fs-test.c) *before* writing the actual code. It's really helping us out a lot -- for one thing, it forces one to define the task precisely in advance, and also it speedily reveals the bugs in one's first try (and second, and third...). I'd like to recommend this practice to everyone. If you're implementing an interface, or adding an entirely new feature, or even just fixing a bug, a test for it is a good idea. And if you're going to write the test anyway, you might as well write it first. :-) Yoshiki Hayashi's been sending test cases with all his patches lately, which is what inspired me to write this mail to encourage everyone to do the same. Having those test cases makes patches easier to examine, because they show the patch's purpose very clearly. It's like having a second log message, one whose accuracy is verified at run-time. That said, I don't think we want a rigid policy about this, at least not yet. If you encounter a bug somewhere in the code, but you only have time to write a patch with no test case, that's okay -- having the patch is still useful; someone else can write the test case. As Subversion gets more complex, though, the automated test suite gets more crucial, so let's all get in the habit of using it early. -K