Hi Yi,

Re 1) If your PR is in the same repo, the multibranch pipeline plugin could 
automatically setup builds for every branch. If your PR is from the outside, I 
have seen this for other projects. I think there’s a dedicated build-type for 
that.

Re 2) yes ASF should be able to provide you with that capability.
Regarding the JDK versions: There’s a maven concept for this called 
“toolchains” we are using that in the Apache Edgent project to run our tests on 
multiple JDKs … so that’s quite easy.
Regarding the OSes … I know we have Windows nodes on the ASF and I think there 
even was a Mac build node. We can setup the build to run multiple steps on 
different nodes (very easy to setup).
I wouldn’t do this in multiple builds. But all on one … this way for example 
Sonar can see the code coverage for Unit-Tests and Integration-Tests .. how to 
merge the coverages for all JDK versions and OSes would be worth investigating.

Chris


Von: 徐毅 <[email protected]>
Antworten an: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Datum: Mittwoch, 2. Januar 2019 um 07:31
An: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Betreff: Re:Re: Plans of January of 2019

Hi
I have some questions about ASF's Jenkins.
1) Can anyone who forks our project use this jenkens when he creates a pull 
request from his forked project?
2) In our own jenkins, we create a pipeline to run unit test for every 
sub-module. Specially, for iotdb sub-module, we have two pipelines which run 
unit test and integration test. See the following picture, we run our tests on 
different os(now we have win10 and ubuntu, we will add osx soon) and different 
jdk versions(jdk8 and jdk11). Some of them are time-consuming and require lots 
of memory resources(our integration test takes 5 minutes for each run). So I 
wonder whether ASF's Jenkins can provide such capabilities to run multiple 
tests?



[cid:43cdda76$1$1680d42579b$Coremail$xuyithuss$126.com]

Thanks
Yi Xu

At 2019-01-02 01:28:26, "Christofer Dutz" <[email protected]> wrote:

>Hi all,

>

>a happy new year from me too ...

>I think we should add one or two more steps:

>

>(5) setup the Jenkins build on ASF's Jenkins (I'd be glad to help with that)

>

>Regarding the issues ... ever thought of programmatically migrating them to 
>Jira? Sort of a run-once program, that pulls the issues from github and posts 
>them in Jira?

>Done something like that several times before (however never for Apache 
>projects)

>

>Chris

>

>

>

>

>Am 01.01.19, 16:53 schrieb "Xiangdong Huang" <[email protected]>:

>

>    Hi all,

>

>    Happy New Year! Thank all developers and Mentors (and the Champion) of

>    IoTDB for your efforts in 2018.

>

>    I think the most important things in January of 2019 is migrating all codes

>    to Apache repository and finishing the website of IoTDB.

>

>    Tasks of the website:

>    - @Xinyi Zhao and @Yi Xu, can you organize contributors to finish the

>    website, as well as  the English documents?

>    - By the way, I suggest that we write more documents/JavaDocs to help new

>    developers to join our project.

>

>    Tasks of migration to Apache repository:

>    - There are 4 steps:

>    (1) solving the problem of the IO speed of flushing WAL on disk. @Rui Liu,

>    can you organize developers to solve it?

>    (2) Merge the branch `kill_Thanos` into the master  on thulab

>    repository. @Gaofei Cao.

>    (3) Add Apache header, change all package names, and add JavaDocs for each

>    java file.

>    (4) Migrating codes from thulab to Apache repository.

>    - By the way, don't forget that there are more than 100 issues on

>    github.com/thulab/iotdb/issues.

>

>    To finish all the above, we need the effort of everyone in our community!

>

>    Here's to a great 2019!

>

>    Thanks,

>    -----------------------------------

>    Xiangdong Huang

>    School of Software, Tsinghua University

>

>     黄向东

>    清华大学 软件学院

>

>





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