-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 3
/
.travis.yml
156 lines (129 loc) · 5.77 KB
/
.travis.yml
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
# We set the language to c because python isn't supported on the MacOS X nodes
# on Travis. However, the language ends up being irrelevant anyway, since we
# install Python ourselves using conda.
language: c
os:
- linux
# Setting sudo to false opts in to Travis-CI container-based builds.
sudo: false
# The apt packages below are needed for sphinx builds. A full list of packages
# that can be included can be found here:
#
# https://github.com/travis-ci/apt-package-whitelist/blob/master/ubuntu-precise
addons:
apt:
packages:
- graphviz
- texlive-latex-extra
- dvipng
env:
global:
# The following versions are the 'default' for tests, unless
# overridden underneath. They are defined here in order to save having
# to repeat them for all configurations.
- PYTHON_VERSION=3.6
- NUMPY_VERSION=stable
- ASTROPY_VERSION=stable
- MAIN_CMD='python setup.py'
- SETUP_CMD='test'
- PIP_DEPENDENCIES=''
- EVENT_TYPE='pull_request push'
# For this package-template, we include examples of Cython modules,
# so Cython is required for testing. If your package does not include
# Cython code, you can set CONDA_DEPENDENCIES=''
- CONDA_DEPENDENCIES='Cython'
# Conda packages for affiliated packages are hosted in channel
# "astropy" while builds for astropy LTS with recent numpy versions
# are in astropy-ci-extras. If your package uses either of these,
# add the channels to CONDA_CHANNELS along with any other channels
# you want to use.
- CONDA_CHANNELS='astropy-ci-extras astropy'
# If there are matplotlib or other GUI tests, uncomment the following
# line to use the X virtual framebuffer.
# - SETUP_XVFB=True
matrix:
# Make sure that egg_info works without dependencies
- PYTHON_VERSION=2.7 SETUP_CMD='egg_info'
- PYTHON_VERSION=3.3 SETUP_CMD='egg_info'
- PYTHON_VERSION=3.4 SETUP_CMD='egg_info'
- PYTHON_VERSION=3.5 SETUP_CMD='egg_info'
- PYTHON_VERSION=3.6 SETUP_CMD='egg_info'
matrix:
# Don't wait for allowed failures
fast_finish: true
include:
# Try MacOS X
- os: osx
env: SETUP_CMD='test'
# Do a coverage test.
- os: linux
env: SETUP_CMD='test --coverage'
# Check for sphinx doc build warnings - we do this first because it
# may run for a long time
- os: linux
env: SETUP_CMD='build_docs -w'
# Now try Astropy dev and LTS vesions with the latest 3.x and 2.7.
- os: linux
env: PYTHON_VERSION=2.7 ASTROPY_VERSION=development
EVENT_TYPE='pull_request push cron'
- os: linux
env: ASTROPY_VERSION=development
EVENT_TYPE='pull_request push cron'
- os: linux
env: PYTHON_VERSION=2.7 ASTROPY_VERSION=lts
- os: linux
env: ASTROPY_VERSION=lts
# Try all python versions and Numpy versions. Since we can assume that
# the Numpy developers have taken care of testing Numpy with different
# versions of Python, we can vary Python and Numpy versions at the same
# time.
- os: linux
env: PYTHON_VERSION=2.7 NUMPY_VERSION=1.7
- os: linux
env: PYTHON_VERSION=3.3 NUMPY_VERSION=1.8
- os: linux
env: PYTHON_VERSION=3.4 NUMPY_VERSION=1.9
- os: linux
env: PYTHON_VERSION=3.5 NUMPY_VERSION=1.10
- os: linux
env: NUMPY_VERSION=1.11
# Try numpy pre-release
- os: linux
env: NUMPY_VERSION=prerelease
EVENT_TYPE='pull_request push cron'
# Do a PEP8 test with pycodestyle
- os: linux
env: MAIN_CMD='pycodestyle packagename --count' SETUP_CMD=''
allow_failures:
# Do a PEP8 test with pycodestyle
# (allow to fail unless your code completely compliant)
- os: linux
env: MAIN_CMD='pycodestyle packagename --count' SETUP_CMD=''
install:
# We now use the ci-helpers package to set up our testing environment.
# This is done by using Miniconda and then using conda and pip to install
# dependencies. Which dependencies are installed using conda and pip is
# determined by the CONDA_DEPENDENCIES and PIP_DEPENDENCIES variables,
# which should be space-delimited lists of package names. See the README
# in https://github.com/astropy/ci-helpers for information about the full
# list of environment variables that can be used to customize your
# environment. In some cases, ci-helpers may not offer enough flexibility
# in how to install a package, in which case you can have additional
# commands in the install: section below.
- git clone git://github.com/astropy/ci-helpers.git
- source ci-helpers/travis/setup_conda_$TRAVIS_OS_NAME.sh
# As described above, using ci-helpers, you should be able to set up an
# environment with dependencies installed using conda and pip, but in some
# cases this may not provide enough flexibility in how to install a
# specific dependency (and it will not be able to install non-Python
# dependencies). Therefore, you can also include commands below (as
# well as at the start of the install section or in the before_install
# section if they are needed before setting up conda) to install any
# other dependencies.
script:
- $MAIN_CMD $SETUP_CMD
after_success:
# If coveralls.io is set up for this package, uncomment the line
# below and replace "packagename" with the name of your package.
# The coveragerc file may be customized as needed for your package.
# - if [[ $SETUP_CMD == *coverage* ]]; then coveralls --rcfile='packagename/tests/coveragerc'; fi