Gitlab
You can use the Gitlab CI cloud or local service to automatically build and test your project in Linux/MacOS/Windows environments. It is free for OSS projects, and offers an easy integration with Gitlab, so builds can be automatically fired in Gitlab CI after a git push to Gitlab.
You can use Gitlab CI both for:
Building and testing your project, which manages dependencies with Conan, and probably a conanfile.txt file
Building and testing Conan binary packages for a given Conan package recipe (with a conanfile.py)
Building and testing your project
We are going to use an example with GTest package, with Gitlab CI support to run the tests.
Clone the project from github:
$ git clone https://github.com/lasote/conan-gtest-example
Create a .gitlab-ci.yml
file and paste this code in it:
image: conanio/gcc63
build:
before_script:
# Upgrade Conan version
- sudo pip install --upgrade conan
# Automatic detection of your arch, compiler, etc.
- conan user
script:
# Download dependencies, build, test and create package
- conan create . user/channel
Gitlab CI will install the conan tool and will execute the conan install command. Then, the script section creates the build folder, compiles the project with cmake and runs the tests.
On Windows the Gitlab runner may be running as a service and not have a home directory, in which case you need to set a custom value for CONAN_USER_HOME
.
Creating, testing and uploading Conan binary packages
You can use Gitlab CI to automate the building of binary packages, which will be created in the
cloud after pushing to Gitlab. You can probably setup your own way, but Conan has some utilities to help in the process.
The command conan new has arguments to create a default working .gitlab-ci.yml
file.
Other setups might be possible, but for this example we are assuming that you are using github and also uploading your final packages to Bintray.
You could follow these steps:
First, create an empty gitlab repository, let’s call it “hello”, for creating a “hello world” package. Gitlab allows to create it with a Readme, license and .gitignore.
Get the credentials User and API Key (remember, Bintray uses the API key as “password”, not your main Bintray account password)
Create a Conan repository in Bintray under your user or organization, and get its URL (“Set me up”). We will call it
UPLOAD_URL
Under your project page, Settings -> Pipelines -> Add a variable, add the
CONAN_PASSWORD
environment variable with the Bintray API Key. If your Bintray user is different from the package user, you can also define your Bintray username, defining the environment variableCONAN_LOGIN_USERNAME
Clone the repo: git clone <your_repo/hello> && cd hello.
Create the package: conan new hello/0.1@<user>/testing -t -s -ciglg -ciglc -cis -ciu=UPLOAD_URL where user is your Bintray username.
You can inspect the created files: both .gitlab-ci.yml and the build.py script, that is used by conan-package-tools utility to split different builds with different configurations in different GitLab CI jobs.
You can test locally, before pushing, with conan create or by GitLab Runner.
Add the changes, commit and push: git add . && git commit -m "first commit" && git push.
Go to Pipelines page and see the pipeline, with the different jobs.
When it has finished, go to your Bintray repository, you should see there the uploaded packages for different configurations.
Check locally, searching in Bintray: conan search hello/0.1@<user>/testing -r=mybintray.
If something fails, please report an issue in the conan-package-tools github repository: https://github.com/conan-io/conan-package-tools