# An example .gitlab-ci.yml file to test (and optionally report the coverage # results of) your [Julia][1] packages. Please refer to the [documentation][2] # for more information about package development in Julia. # # Here, it is assumed that your Julia package is named `MyPackage`. Change it to # whatever name you have given to your package. # # [1]: http://julialang.org/ # [2]: http://julia.readthedocs.org/ # Below is the template to run your tests in Julia .test_template: &test_definition # Uncomment below if you would like to run the tests on specific references # only, such as the branches `master`, `development`, etc. # only: # - master # - development script: # Let's run the tests. Substitute `coverage = false` below, if you do not # want coverage results. - /opt/julia/bin/julia -e 'Pkg.clone(pwd()); Pkg.test("MyPackage", coverage = true)' # Comment out below if you do not want coverage results. - /opt/julia/bin/julia -e 'Pkg.add("Coverage"); cd(Pkg.dir("MyPackage")); using Coverage; cl, tl = get_summary(process_folder()); println("(", cl/tl*100, "%) covered")' # Name a test and select an appropriate image. test:0.4.6: image: julialang/julia:v0.4.6 <<: *test_definition # Maybe you would like to test your package against the development branch: test:0.5.0-dev: image: julialang/julia:v0.5.0-dev # ... allowing for failures, since we are testing against the development # branch: allow_failure: true <<: *test_definition # REMARK: Do not forget to enable the coverage feature for your project, if you # are using code coverage reporting above. This can be done by # # - Navigating to the `CI/CD Pipelines` settings of your project, # - Copying and pasting the default `Simplecov` regex example provided, i.e., # `\(\d+.\d+\%\) covered` in the `test coverage parsing` textfield. # # WARNING: This template is using the `julialang/julia` images from [Docker # Hub][3]. One can use custom Julia images and/or the official ones found # in the same place. However, care must be taken to correctly locate the binary # file (`/opt/julia/bin/julia` above), which is usually given on the image's # description page. # # [3]: http://hub.docker.com/