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code-server/ci/lib.sh
Asher afb8662d4d
Query artifacts by branch name ()
This way workflows will still work even if there have been enough runs
to push the version branch run off the first page.
2021-07-30 18:32:22 +00:00

125 lines
3.4 KiB
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#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -euo pipefail
pushd() {
builtin pushd "$@" > /dev/null
}
popd() {
builtin popd > /dev/null
}
pkg_json_version() {
jq -r .version package.json
}
vscode_version() {
jq -r .version lib/vscode/package.json
}
os() {
local os
os=$(uname | tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]')
if [[ $os == "linux" ]]; then
# Alpine's ldd doesn't have a version flag but if you use an invalid flag
# (like --version) it outputs the version to stderr and exits with 1.
local ldd_output
ldd_output=$(ldd --version 2>&1 || true)
if echo "$ldd_output" | grep -iq musl; then
os="alpine"
fi
elif [[ $os == "darwin" ]]; then
os="macos"
fi
echo "$os"
}
arch() {
cpu="$(uname -m)"
case "$cpu" in
aarch64)
echo arm64
;;
x86_64 | amd64)
echo amd64
;;
*)
echo "$cpu"
;;
esac
}
# Grabs the most recent ci.yaml github workflow run that was triggered from the
# pull request of the release branch for this version (regardless of whether
# that run succeeded or failed). The release branch name must be in semver
# format with a v prepended.
# This will contain the artifacts we want.
# https://developer.github.com/v3/actions/workflow-runs/#list-workflow-runs
get_artifacts_url() {
local artifacts_url
local version_branch="v$VERSION"
local workflow_runs_url="repos/:owner/:repo/actions/workflows/ci.yaml/runs?event=pull_request&branch=$version_branch"
artifacts_url=$(gh api "$workflow_runs_url" | jq -r ".workflow_runs[] | select(.head_branch == \"$version_branch\") | .artifacts_url" | head -n 1)
if [[ -z "$artifacts_url" ]]; then
echo >&2 "ERROR: artifacts_url came back empty"
echo >&2 "We looked for a successful run triggered by a pull_request with for code-server version: $VERSION and a branch named $version_branch"
echo >&2 "URL used for gh API call: $workflow_runs_url"
exit 1
fi
echo "$artifacts_url"
}
# Grabs the artifact's download url.
# https://developer.github.com/v3/actions/artifacts/#list-workflow-run-artifacts
get_artifact_url() {
local artifact_name="$1"
gh api "$(get_artifacts_url)" | jq -r ".artifacts[] | select(.name == \"$artifact_name\") | .archive_download_url" | head -n 1
}
# Uses the above two functions to download a artifact into a directory.
download_artifact() {
local artifact_name="$1"
local dst="$2"
local tmp_file
tmp_file="$(mktemp)"
gh api "$(get_artifact_url "$artifact_name")" > "$tmp_file"
unzip -q -o "$tmp_file" -d "$dst"
rm "$tmp_file"
}
rsync() {
command rsync -a --del "$@"
}
VERSION="$(pkg_json_version)"
export VERSION
ARCH="$(arch)"
export ARCH
OS=$(os)
export OS
# RELEASE_PATH is the destination directory for the release from the root.
# Defaults to release
RELEASE_PATH="${RELEASE_PATH-release}"
# VS Code bundles some modules into an asar which is an archive format that
# works like tar. It then seems to get unpacked into node_modules.asar.
#
# I don't know why they do this but all the dependencies they bundle already
# exist in node_modules so just symlink it. We have to do this since not only VS
# Code itself but also extensions will look specifically in this directory for
# files (like the ripgrep binary or the oniguruma wasm).
symlink_asar() {
rm -rf node_modules.asar
if [ "${WINDIR-}" ]; then
# mklink takes the link name first.
mklink /J node_modules.asar node_modules
else
# ln takes the link name second.
ln -s node_modules node_modules.asar
fi
}