pybind11/.travis.yml

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language: cpp
travis-ci: switch to trusty; cache pip packages This applies several changes to the non-docker travis-ci builds: - Make all builds use trusty rather than precise. pybind can't really build in precise anyway (we install essentially the entire toolchain backported from trusty on every build), and so this saves needing to install all the backported packages during the build setup. - Updated the 3.5 build to 3.6 (via deadsnakes, which didn't backport 3.6 to ubuntu releases earlier than trusty). - As a result of the switch to trusty, the BAREBONES build now picks up the (default installed) python 3.5 installation. - Invoke pip everywhere via $PYTHON -m pip rather than the pip executable, which saves us having to figure out what the pip executable is, and ensures that we are using the correct pip. - Install packages with `pip --user` rather than in a virtualenv. - Add the local user python package archive to the travis-ci cache (rather than the pip cache). This saves needing to install packages during installation (unless there are updates, in which case the package and the cache are updated). - Install numpy and scipy on the pypy build. This has to build from source (and so blas and fortran need to be installed on the build), but given the above caching, the build will only be slow for the first build after a new numpy/scipy release. This testing is valuable: numpy has various behaviour differences under pypy. - Added set -e/+e around the before_install/install blocks so that a failure here (e.g. a pip install failure or dependency download failure) triggers a build failure. - Update eigen version to latest (3.3.3), mainly to be consistent with the appveyor build. - The travis trusty environment has an upgraded cmake, so this downgrades cmake (to the stock trusty version) on the first couple jobs so that we're still including some cmake 2.8.12 testing.
2017-04-13 18:18:13 +00:00
dist: trusty
sudo: false
matrix:
include:
- os: linux
env: PYTHON=2.7 CPP=11 GCC=4.8
addons:
apt:
travis-ci: switch to trusty; cache pip packages This applies several changes to the non-docker travis-ci builds: - Make all builds use trusty rather than precise. pybind can't really build in precise anyway (we install essentially the entire toolchain backported from trusty on every build), and so this saves needing to install all the backported packages during the build setup. - Updated the 3.5 build to 3.6 (via deadsnakes, which didn't backport 3.6 to ubuntu releases earlier than trusty). - As a result of the switch to trusty, the BAREBONES build now picks up the (default installed) python 3.5 installation. - Invoke pip everywhere via $PYTHON -m pip rather than the pip executable, which saves us having to figure out what the pip executable is, and ensures that we are using the correct pip. - Install packages with `pip --user` rather than in a virtualenv. - Add the local user python package archive to the travis-ci cache (rather than the pip cache). This saves needing to install packages during installation (unless there are updates, in which case the package and the cache are updated). - Install numpy and scipy on the pypy build. This has to build from source (and so blas and fortran need to be installed on the build), but given the above caching, the build will only be slow for the first build after a new numpy/scipy release. This testing is valuable: numpy has various behaviour differences under pypy. - Added set -e/+e around the before_install/install blocks so that a failure here (e.g. a pip install failure or dependency download failure) triggers a build failure. - Update eigen version to latest (3.3.3), mainly to be consistent with the appveyor build. - The travis trusty environment has an upgraded cmake, so this downgrades cmake (to the stock trusty version) on the first couple jobs so that we're still including some cmake 2.8.12 testing.
2017-04-13 18:18:13 +00:00
packages: [cmake=2.\*, cmake-data=2.\*]
- os: linux
travis-ci: switch to trusty; cache pip packages This applies several changes to the non-docker travis-ci builds: - Make all builds use trusty rather than precise. pybind can't really build in precise anyway (we install essentially the entire toolchain backported from trusty on every build), and so this saves needing to install all the backported packages during the build setup. - Updated the 3.5 build to 3.6 (via deadsnakes, which didn't backport 3.6 to ubuntu releases earlier than trusty). - As a result of the switch to trusty, the BAREBONES build now picks up the (default installed) python 3.5 installation. - Invoke pip everywhere via $PYTHON -m pip rather than the pip executable, which saves us having to figure out what the pip executable is, and ensures that we are using the correct pip. - Install packages with `pip --user` rather than in a virtualenv. - Add the local user python package archive to the travis-ci cache (rather than the pip cache). This saves needing to install packages during installation (unless there are updates, in which case the package and the cache are updated). - Install numpy and scipy on the pypy build. This has to build from source (and so blas and fortran need to be installed on the build), but given the above caching, the build will only be slow for the first build after a new numpy/scipy release. This testing is valuable: numpy has various behaviour differences under pypy. - Added set -e/+e around the before_install/install blocks so that a failure here (e.g. a pip install failure or dependency download failure) triggers a build failure. - Update eigen version to latest (3.3.3), mainly to be consistent with the appveyor build. - The travis trusty environment has an upgraded cmake, so this downgrades cmake (to the stock trusty version) on the first couple jobs so that we're still including some cmake 2.8.12 testing.
2017-04-13 18:18:13 +00:00
env: PYTHON=3.6 CPP=11 GCC=4.8
addons:
apt:
travis-ci: switch to trusty; cache pip packages This applies several changes to the non-docker travis-ci builds: - Make all builds use trusty rather than precise. pybind can't really build in precise anyway (we install essentially the entire toolchain backported from trusty on every build), and so this saves needing to install all the backported packages during the build setup. - Updated the 3.5 build to 3.6 (via deadsnakes, which didn't backport 3.6 to ubuntu releases earlier than trusty). - As a result of the switch to trusty, the BAREBONES build now picks up the (default installed) python 3.5 installation. - Invoke pip everywhere via $PYTHON -m pip rather than the pip executable, which saves us having to figure out what the pip executable is, and ensures that we are using the correct pip. - Install packages with `pip --user` rather than in a virtualenv. - Add the local user python package archive to the travis-ci cache (rather than the pip cache). This saves needing to install packages during installation (unless there are updates, in which case the package and the cache are updated). - Install numpy and scipy on the pypy build. This has to build from source (and so blas and fortran need to be installed on the build), but given the above caching, the build will only be slow for the first build after a new numpy/scipy release. This testing is valuable: numpy has various behaviour differences under pypy. - Added set -e/+e around the before_install/install blocks so that a failure here (e.g. a pip install failure or dependency download failure) triggers a build failure. - Update eigen version to latest (3.3.3), mainly to be consistent with the appveyor build. - The travis trusty environment has an upgraded cmake, so this downgrades cmake (to the stock trusty version) on the first couple jobs so that we're still including some cmake 2.8.12 testing.
2017-04-13 18:18:13 +00:00
sources: [deadsnakes]
packages: [python3.6-dev python3.6-venv, cmake=2.\*, cmake-data=2.\*]
- sudo: true
services: docker
env: PYTHON=2.7 CPP=14 GCC=6
- sudo: true
services: docker
env: PYTHON=3.5 CPP=14 GCC=6 DEBUG=1
- sudo: true
services: docker
env: PYTHON=3.6 CPP=17 GCC=7
- os: linux
env: PYTHON=3.6 CPP=17 CLANG=4.0
addons:
apt:
sources: [deadsnakes, llvm-toolchain-trusty-4.0]
packages: [python3.6-dev python3.6-venv clang-4.0 llvm-4.0-dev, lld-4.0]
- os: osx
osx_image: xcode7.3
env: PYTHON=2.7 CPP=14 CLANG
- os: osx
osx_image: xcode7.3
env: PYTHON=3.6 CPP=14 CLANG
# Test a PyPy 2.7 build
- os: linux
env: PYPY=5.8 PYTHON=2.7 CPP=11 GCC=4.8
addons:
apt:
travis-ci: switch to trusty; cache pip packages This applies several changes to the non-docker travis-ci builds: - Make all builds use trusty rather than precise. pybind can't really build in precise anyway (we install essentially the entire toolchain backported from trusty on every build), and so this saves needing to install all the backported packages during the build setup. - Updated the 3.5 build to 3.6 (via deadsnakes, which didn't backport 3.6 to ubuntu releases earlier than trusty). - As a result of the switch to trusty, the BAREBONES build now picks up the (default installed) python 3.5 installation. - Invoke pip everywhere via $PYTHON -m pip rather than the pip executable, which saves us having to figure out what the pip executable is, and ensures that we are using the correct pip. - Install packages with `pip --user` rather than in a virtualenv. - Add the local user python package archive to the travis-ci cache (rather than the pip cache). This saves needing to install packages during installation (unless there are updates, in which case the package and the cache are updated). - Install numpy and scipy on the pypy build. This has to build from source (and so blas and fortran need to be installed on the build), but given the above caching, the build will only be slow for the first build after a new numpy/scipy release. This testing is valuable: numpy has various behaviour differences under pypy. - Added set -e/+e around the before_install/install blocks so that a failure here (e.g. a pip install failure or dependency download failure) triggers a build failure. - Update eigen version to latest (3.3.3), mainly to be consistent with the appveyor build. - The travis trusty environment has an upgraded cmake, so this downgrades cmake (to the stock trusty version) on the first couple jobs so that we're still including some cmake 2.8.12 testing.
2017-04-13 18:18:13 +00:00
packages: [libblas-dev, liblapack-dev, gfortran]
- sudo: true
services: docker
env: ARCH=i386 PYTHON=3.5 CPP=14 GCC=6
Independent tests (#665) * Make tests buildable independently This makes "tests" buildable as a separate project that uses find_package(pybind11 CONFIG) when invoked independently. This also moves the WERROR option into tests/CMakeLists.txt, as that's the only place it is used. * Use Eigen 3.3.1's cmake target, if available This changes the eigen finding code to attempt to use Eigen's system-installed Eigen3Config first. In Eigen 3.3.1, it exports a cmake Eigen3::Eigen target to get dependencies from (rather than setting the include path directly). If it fails, we fall back to the trying to load allowing modules (i.e. allowing our tools/FindEigen3.cmake). If we either fallback, or the eigen version is older than 3.3.1 (or , we still set the include directory manually; otherwise, for CONFIG + new Eigen, we get it via the target. This is also needed to allow 'tests' to be built independently, when the find_package(Eigen3) is going to find via the system-installed Eigen3Config.cmake. * Add a install-then-build test, using clang on linux This tests that `make install` to the actual system, followed by a build of the tests (without the main pybind11 repository available) works as expected. To also expand the testing variety a bit, it also builds using clang-3.9 instead of gcc. * Don't try loading Eigen3Config in cmake < 3.0 It could FATAL_ERROR as the newer cmake includes a cmake 3.0 required line. If doing an independent, out-of-tree "tests" build, the regular find_package(Eigen3) is likely to fail with the same error, but I think we can just let that be: if you want a recent Eigen with proper cmake loading support *and* want to do an independent tests build, you'll need at least cmake 3.0.
2017-02-24 22:07:53 +00:00
# This next one does a make install *before* testing, then builds the tests against the installed version:
- sudo: true
services: docker
env: PYTHON=3.5 CPP=14 CLANG=3.9 INSTALL=1
script:
- |
$SCRIPT_RUN_PREFIX sh -c "set -e
cmake ${CMAKE_EXTRA_ARGS} -DPYBIND11_INSTALL=1 -DPYBIND11_TEST=0
make install
cp -a tests /pybind11-tests
mkdir /build-tests && cd /build-tests
cmake ../pybind11-tests ${CMAKE_EXTRA_ARGS} -DPYBIND11_WERROR=ON
make pytest -j 2"
# A barebones build makes sure everything still works without optional deps (numpy/scipy/eigen)
# and also tests the automatic discovery functions in CMake (Python version, C++ standard).
- os: linux
travis-ci: switch to trusty; cache pip packages This applies several changes to the non-docker travis-ci builds: - Make all builds use trusty rather than precise. pybind can't really build in precise anyway (we install essentially the entire toolchain backported from trusty on every build), and so this saves needing to install all the backported packages during the build setup. - Updated the 3.5 build to 3.6 (via deadsnakes, which didn't backport 3.6 to ubuntu releases earlier than trusty). - As a result of the switch to trusty, the BAREBONES build now picks up the (default installed) python 3.5 installation. - Invoke pip everywhere via $PYTHON -m pip rather than the pip executable, which saves us having to figure out what the pip executable is, and ensures that we are using the correct pip. - Install packages with `pip --user` rather than in a virtualenv. - Add the local user python package archive to the travis-ci cache (rather than the pip cache). This saves needing to install packages during installation (unless there are updates, in which case the package and the cache are updated). - Install numpy and scipy on the pypy build. This has to build from source (and so blas and fortran need to be installed on the build), but given the above caching, the build will only be slow for the first build after a new numpy/scipy release. This testing is valuable: numpy has various behaviour differences under pypy. - Added set -e/+e around the before_install/install blocks so that a failure here (e.g. a pip install failure or dependency download failure) triggers a build failure. - Update eigen version to latest (3.3.3), mainly to be consistent with the appveyor build. - The travis trusty environment has an upgraded cmake, so this downgrades cmake (to the stock trusty version) on the first couple jobs so that we're still including some cmake 2.8.12 testing.
2017-04-13 18:18:13 +00:00
env: BAREBONES PYTHON=3.5
install: $PY_CMD -m pip install --user --upgrade pytest
# Documentation build:
- os: linux
language: docs
env: DOCS STYLE LINT
install:
travis-ci: switch to trusty; cache pip packages This applies several changes to the non-docker travis-ci builds: - Make all builds use trusty rather than precise. pybind can't really build in precise anyway (we install essentially the entire toolchain backported from trusty on every build), and so this saves needing to install all the backported packages during the build setup. - Updated the 3.5 build to 3.6 (via deadsnakes, which didn't backport 3.6 to ubuntu releases earlier than trusty). - As a result of the switch to trusty, the BAREBONES build now picks up the (default installed) python 3.5 installation. - Invoke pip everywhere via $PYTHON -m pip rather than the pip executable, which saves us having to figure out what the pip executable is, and ensures that we are using the correct pip. - Install packages with `pip --user` rather than in a virtualenv. - Add the local user python package archive to the travis-ci cache (rather than the pip cache). This saves needing to install packages during installation (unless there are updates, in which case the package and the cache are updated). - Install numpy and scipy on the pypy build. This has to build from source (and so blas and fortran need to be installed on the build), but given the above caching, the build will only be slow for the first build after a new numpy/scipy release. This testing is valuable: numpy has various behaviour differences under pypy. - Added set -e/+e around the before_install/install blocks so that a failure here (e.g. a pip install failure or dependency download failure) triggers a build failure. - Update eigen version to latest (3.3.3), mainly to be consistent with the appveyor build. - The travis trusty environment has an upgraded cmake, so this downgrades cmake (to the stock trusty version) on the first couple jobs so that we're still including some cmake 2.8.12 testing.
2017-04-13 18:18:13 +00:00
- export PATH="~/.local/bin:$PATH"
- $PY_CMD -m pip install --user --upgrade sphinx sphinx_rtd_theme breathe flake8 pep8-naming
- |
curl -fsSL ftp://ftp.stack.nl/pub/users/dimitri/doxygen-1.8.12.linux.bin.tar.gz | tar xz
export PATH="$PWD/doxygen-1.8.12/bin:$PATH"
script:
- make -C docs html SPHINX_OPTIONS=-W
- tools/check-style.sh
- flake8
2016-01-21 18:21:59 +00:00
cache:
directories:
travis-ci: switch to trusty; cache pip packages This applies several changes to the non-docker travis-ci builds: - Make all builds use trusty rather than precise. pybind can't really build in precise anyway (we install essentially the entire toolchain backported from trusty on every build), and so this saves needing to install all the backported packages during the build setup. - Updated the 3.5 build to 3.6 (via deadsnakes, which didn't backport 3.6 to ubuntu releases earlier than trusty). - As a result of the switch to trusty, the BAREBONES build now picks up the (default installed) python 3.5 installation. - Invoke pip everywhere via $PYTHON -m pip rather than the pip executable, which saves us having to figure out what the pip executable is, and ensures that we are using the correct pip. - Install packages with `pip --user` rather than in a virtualenv. - Add the local user python package archive to the travis-ci cache (rather than the pip cache). This saves needing to install packages during installation (unless there are updates, in which case the package and the cache are updated). - Install numpy and scipy on the pypy build. This has to build from source (and so blas and fortran need to be installed on the build), but given the above caching, the build will only be slow for the first build after a new numpy/scipy release. This testing is valuable: numpy has various behaviour differences under pypy. - Added set -e/+e around the before_install/install blocks so that a failure here (e.g. a pip install failure or dependency download failure) triggers a build failure. - Update eigen version to latest (3.3.3), mainly to be consistent with the appveyor build. - The travis trusty environment has an upgraded cmake, so this downgrades cmake (to the stock trusty version) on the first couple jobs so that we're still including some cmake 2.8.12 testing.
2017-04-13 18:18:13 +00:00
- $HOME/.local/bin
- $HOME/.local/lib
- $HOME/.local/include
travis-ci: switch to trusty; cache pip packages This applies several changes to the non-docker travis-ci builds: - Make all builds use trusty rather than precise. pybind can't really build in precise anyway (we install essentially the entire toolchain backported from trusty on every build), and so this saves needing to install all the backported packages during the build setup. - Updated the 3.5 build to 3.6 (via deadsnakes, which didn't backport 3.6 to ubuntu releases earlier than trusty). - As a result of the switch to trusty, the BAREBONES build now picks up the (default installed) python 3.5 installation. - Invoke pip everywhere via $PYTHON -m pip rather than the pip executable, which saves us having to figure out what the pip executable is, and ensures that we are using the correct pip. - Install packages with `pip --user` rather than in a virtualenv. - Add the local user python package archive to the travis-ci cache (rather than the pip cache). This saves needing to install packages during installation (unless there are updates, in which case the package and the cache are updated). - Install numpy and scipy on the pypy build. This has to build from source (and so blas and fortran need to be installed on the build), but given the above caching, the build will only be slow for the first build after a new numpy/scipy release. This testing is valuable: numpy has various behaviour differences under pypy. - Added set -e/+e around the before_install/install blocks so that a failure here (e.g. a pip install failure or dependency download failure) triggers a build failure. - Update eigen version to latest (3.3.3), mainly to be consistent with the appveyor build. - The travis trusty environment has an upgraded cmake, so this downgrades cmake (to the stock trusty version) on the first couple jobs so that we're still including some cmake 2.8.12 testing.
2017-04-13 18:18:13 +00:00
- $HOME/Library/Python
before_install:
- |
# Configure build variables
if [ "$TRAVIS_OS_NAME" = "linux" ]; then
Independent tests (#665) * Make tests buildable independently This makes "tests" buildable as a separate project that uses find_package(pybind11 CONFIG) when invoked independently. This also moves the WERROR option into tests/CMakeLists.txt, as that's the only place it is used. * Use Eigen 3.3.1's cmake target, if available This changes the eigen finding code to attempt to use Eigen's system-installed Eigen3Config first. In Eigen 3.3.1, it exports a cmake Eigen3::Eigen target to get dependencies from (rather than setting the include path directly). If it fails, we fall back to the trying to load allowing modules (i.e. allowing our tools/FindEigen3.cmake). If we either fallback, or the eigen version is older than 3.3.1 (or , we still set the include directory manually; otherwise, for CONFIG + new Eigen, we get it via the target. This is also needed to allow 'tests' to be built independently, when the find_package(Eigen3) is going to find via the system-installed Eigen3Config.cmake. * Add a install-then-build test, using clang on linux This tests that `make install` to the actual system, followed by a build of the tests (without the main pybind11 repository available) works as expected. To also expand the testing variety a bit, it also builds using clang-3.9 instead of gcc. * Don't try loading Eigen3Config in cmake < 3.0 It could FATAL_ERROR as the newer cmake includes a cmake 3.0 required line. If doing an independent, out-of-tree "tests" build, the regular find_package(Eigen3) is likely to fail with the same error, but I think we can just let that be: if you want a recent Eigen with proper cmake loading support *and* want to do an independent tests build, you'll need at least cmake 3.0.
2017-02-24 22:07:53 +00:00
if [ -n "$CLANG" ]; then
export CXX=clang++-$CLANG CC=clang-$CLANG
COMPILER_PACKAGES="clang-$CLANG llvm-$CLANG-dev"
Independent tests (#665) * Make tests buildable independently This makes "tests" buildable as a separate project that uses find_package(pybind11 CONFIG) when invoked independently. This also moves the WERROR option into tests/CMakeLists.txt, as that's the only place it is used. * Use Eigen 3.3.1's cmake target, if available This changes the eigen finding code to attempt to use Eigen's system-installed Eigen3Config first. In Eigen 3.3.1, it exports a cmake Eigen3::Eigen target to get dependencies from (rather than setting the include path directly). If it fails, we fall back to the trying to load allowing modules (i.e. allowing our tools/FindEigen3.cmake). If we either fallback, or the eigen version is older than 3.3.1 (or , we still set the include directory manually; otherwise, for CONFIG + new Eigen, we get it via the target. This is also needed to allow 'tests' to be built independently, when the find_package(Eigen3) is going to find via the system-installed Eigen3Config.cmake. * Add a install-then-build test, using clang on linux This tests that `make install` to the actual system, followed by a build of the tests (without the main pybind11 repository available) works as expected. To also expand the testing variety a bit, it also builds using clang-3.9 instead of gcc. * Don't try loading Eigen3Config in cmake < 3.0 It could FATAL_ERROR as the newer cmake includes a cmake 3.0 required line. If doing an independent, out-of-tree "tests" build, the regular find_package(Eigen3) is likely to fail with the same error, but I think we can just let that be: if you want a recent Eigen with proper cmake loading support *and* want to do an independent tests build, you'll need at least cmake 3.0.
2017-02-24 22:07:53 +00:00
else
if [ -z "$GCC" ]; then GCC=4.8
else COMPILER_PACKAGES=g++-$GCC
Independent tests (#665) * Make tests buildable independently This makes "tests" buildable as a separate project that uses find_package(pybind11 CONFIG) when invoked independently. This also moves the WERROR option into tests/CMakeLists.txt, as that's the only place it is used. * Use Eigen 3.3.1's cmake target, if available This changes the eigen finding code to attempt to use Eigen's system-installed Eigen3Config first. In Eigen 3.3.1, it exports a cmake Eigen3::Eigen target to get dependencies from (rather than setting the include path directly). If it fails, we fall back to the trying to load allowing modules (i.e. allowing our tools/FindEigen3.cmake). If we either fallback, or the eigen version is older than 3.3.1 (or , we still set the include directory manually; otherwise, for CONFIG + new Eigen, we get it via the target. This is also needed to allow 'tests' to be built independently, when the find_package(Eigen3) is going to find via the system-installed Eigen3Config.cmake. * Add a install-then-build test, using clang on linux This tests that `make install` to the actual system, followed by a build of the tests (without the main pybind11 repository available) works as expected. To also expand the testing variety a bit, it also builds using clang-3.9 instead of gcc. * Don't try loading Eigen3Config in cmake < 3.0 It could FATAL_ERROR as the newer cmake includes a cmake 3.0 required line. If doing an independent, out-of-tree "tests" build, the regular find_package(Eigen3) is likely to fail with the same error, but I think we can just let that be: if you want a recent Eigen with proper cmake loading support *and* want to do an independent tests build, you'll need at least cmake 3.0.
2017-02-24 22:07:53 +00:00
fi
export CXX=g++-$GCC CC=gcc-$GCC
fi
if [ "$GCC" = "6" ] || [ "$CLANG" = "3.9" ]; then DOCKER=${ARCH:+$ARCH/}debian:stretch
elif [ "$GCC" = "7" ]; then DOCKER=debian:buster
fi
elif [ "$TRAVIS_OS_NAME" = "osx" ]; then
export CXX=clang++ CC=clang;
fi
if [ -n "$CPP" ]; then CPP=-std=c++$CPP; fi
if [ "${PYTHON:0:1}" = "3" ]; then PY=3; fi
if [ -n "$DEBUG" ]; then CMAKE_EXTRA_ARGS="${CMAKE_EXTRA_ARGS} -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug"; fi
- |
# Initialize environment
travis-ci: switch to trusty; cache pip packages This applies several changes to the non-docker travis-ci builds: - Make all builds use trusty rather than precise. pybind can't really build in precise anyway (we install essentially the entire toolchain backported from trusty on every build), and so this saves needing to install all the backported packages during the build setup. - Updated the 3.5 build to 3.6 (via deadsnakes, which didn't backport 3.6 to ubuntu releases earlier than trusty). - As a result of the switch to trusty, the BAREBONES build now picks up the (default installed) python 3.5 installation. - Invoke pip everywhere via $PYTHON -m pip rather than the pip executable, which saves us having to figure out what the pip executable is, and ensures that we are using the correct pip. - Install packages with `pip --user` rather than in a virtualenv. - Add the local user python package archive to the travis-ci cache (rather than the pip cache). This saves needing to install packages during installation (unless there are updates, in which case the package and the cache are updated). - Install numpy and scipy on the pypy build. This has to build from source (and so blas and fortran need to be installed on the build), but given the above caching, the build will only be slow for the first build after a new numpy/scipy release. This testing is valuable: numpy has various behaviour differences under pypy. - Added set -e/+e around the before_install/install blocks so that a failure here (e.g. a pip install failure or dependency download failure) triggers a build failure. - Update eigen version to latest (3.3.3), mainly to be consistent with the appveyor build. - The travis trusty environment has an upgraded cmake, so this downgrades cmake (to the stock trusty version) on the first couple jobs so that we're still including some cmake 2.8.12 testing.
2017-04-13 18:18:13 +00:00
set -e
if [ -n "$DOCKER" ]; then
docker pull $DOCKER
containerid=$(docker run --detach --tty \
--volume="$PWD":/pybind11 --workdir=/pybind11 \
--env="CC=$CC" --env="CXX=$CXX" --env="DEBIAN_FRONTEND=$DEBIAN_FRONTEND" \
--env=GCC_COLORS=\ \
$DOCKER)
SCRIPT_RUN_PREFIX="docker exec --tty $containerid"
$SCRIPT_RUN_PREFIX sh -c 'for s in 0 15; do sleep $s; apt-get update && apt-get -qy dist-upgrade && break; done'
else
if [ "$PYPY" = "5.8" ]; then
curl -fSL https://bitbucket.org/pypy/pypy/downloads/pypy2-v5.8.0-linux64.tar.bz2 | tar xj
PY_CMD=$(echo `pwd`/pypy2-v5.8.0-linux64/bin/pypy)
CMAKE_EXTRA_ARGS="${CMAKE_EXTRA_ARGS} -DPYTHON_EXECUTABLE:FILEPATH=$PY_CMD"
travis-ci: switch to trusty; cache pip packages This applies several changes to the non-docker travis-ci builds: - Make all builds use trusty rather than precise. pybind can't really build in precise anyway (we install essentially the entire toolchain backported from trusty on every build), and so this saves needing to install all the backported packages during the build setup. - Updated the 3.5 build to 3.6 (via deadsnakes, which didn't backport 3.6 to ubuntu releases earlier than trusty). - As a result of the switch to trusty, the BAREBONES build now picks up the (default installed) python 3.5 installation. - Invoke pip everywhere via $PYTHON -m pip rather than the pip executable, which saves us having to figure out what the pip executable is, and ensures that we are using the correct pip. - Install packages with `pip --user` rather than in a virtualenv. - Add the local user python package archive to the travis-ci cache (rather than the pip cache). This saves needing to install packages during installation (unless there are updates, in which case the package and the cache are updated). - Install numpy and scipy on the pypy build. This has to build from source (and so blas and fortran need to be installed on the build), but given the above caching, the build will only be slow for the first build after a new numpy/scipy release. This testing is valuable: numpy has various behaviour differences under pypy. - Added set -e/+e around the before_install/install blocks so that a failure here (e.g. a pip install failure or dependency download failure) triggers a build failure. - Update eigen version to latest (3.3.3), mainly to be consistent with the appveyor build. - The travis trusty environment has an upgraded cmake, so this downgrades cmake (to the stock trusty version) on the first couple jobs so that we're still including some cmake 2.8.12 testing.
2017-04-13 18:18:13 +00:00
else
PY_CMD=python$PYTHON
travis-ci: switch to trusty; cache pip packages This applies several changes to the non-docker travis-ci builds: - Make all builds use trusty rather than precise. pybind can't really build in precise anyway (we install essentially the entire toolchain backported from trusty on every build), and so this saves needing to install all the backported packages during the build setup. - Updated the 3.5 build to 3.6 (via deadsnakes, which didn't backport 3.6 to ubuntu releases earlier than trusty). - As a result of the switch to trusty, the BAREBONES build now picks up the (default installed) python 3.5 installation. - Invoke pip everywhere via $PYTHON -m pip rather than the pip executable, which saves us having to figure out what the pip executable is, and ensures that we are using the correct pip. - Install packages with `pip --user` rather than in a virtualenv. - Add the local user python package archive to the travis-ci cache (rather than the pip cache). This saves needing to install packages during installation (unless there are updates, in which case the package and the cache are updated). - Install numpy and scipy on the pypy build. This has to build from source (and so blas and fortran need to be installed on the build), but given the above caching, the build will only be slow for the first build after a new numpy/scipy release. This testing is valuable: numpy has various behaviour differences under pypy. - Added set -e/+e around the before_install/install blocks so that a failure here (e.g. a pip install failure or dependency download failure) triggers a build failure. - Update eigen version to latest (3.3.3), mainly to be consistent with the appveyor build. - The travis trusty environment has an upgraded cmake, so this downgrades cmake (to the stock trusty version) on the first couple jobs so that we're still including some cmake 2.8.12 testing.
2017-04-13 18:18:13 +00:00
if [ "$TRAVIS_OS_NAME" = "osx" ]; then
if [ "$PY" = "3" ]; then
brew update; brew install python$PY;
else
curl -fsSL https://bootstrap.pypa.io/get-pip.py | $PY_CMD - --user
fi
fi
fi
travis-ci: switch to trusty; cache pip packages This applies several changes to the non-docker travis-ci builds: - Make all builds use trusty rather than precise. pybind can't really build in precise anyway (we install essentially the entire toolchain backported from trusty on every build), and so this saves needing to install all the backported packages during the build setup. - Updated the 3.5 build to 3.6 (via deadsnakes, which didn't backport 3.6 to ubuntu releases earlier than trusty). - As a result of the switch to trusty, the BAREBONES build now picks up the (default installed) python 3.5 installation. - Invoke pip everywhere via $PYTHON -m pip rather than the pip executable, which saves us having to figure out what the pip executable is, and ensures that we are using the correct pip. - Install packages with `pip --user` rather than in a virtualenv. - Add the local user python package archive to the travis-ci cache (rather than the pip cache). This saves needing to install packages during installation (unless there are updates, in which case the package and the cache are updated). - Install numpy and scipy on the pypy build. This has to build from source (and so blas and fortran need to be installed on the build), but given the above caching, the build will only be slow for the first build after a new numpy/scipy release. This testing is valuable: numpy has various behaviour differences under pypy. - Added set -e/+e around the before_install/install blocks so that a failure here (e.g. a pip install failure or dependency download failure) triggers a build failure. - Update eigen version to latest (3.3.3), mainly to be consistent with the appveyor build. - The travis trusty environment has an upgraded cmake, so this downgrades cmake (to the stock trusty version) on the first couple jobs so that we're still including some cmake 2.8.12 testing.
2017-04-13 18:18:13 +00:00
if [ "$PY" = 3 ] || [ -n "$PYPY" ]; then
$PY_CMD -m ensurepip --user
fi
$PY_CMD -m pip install --user --upgrade pip wheel
fi
travis-ci: switch to trusty; cache pip packages This applies several changes to the non-docker travis-ci builds: - Make all builds use trusty rather than precise. pybind can't really build in precise anyway (we install essentially the entire toolchain backported from trusty on every build), and so this saves needing to install all the backported packages during the build setup. - Updated the 3.5 build to 3.6 (via deadsnakes, which didn't backport 3.6 to ubuntu releases earlier than trusty). - As a result of the switch to trusty, the BAREBONES build now picks up the (default installed) python 3.5 installation. - Invoke pip everywhere via $PYTHON -m pip rather than the pip executable, which saves us having to figure out what the pip executable is, and ensures that we are using the correct pip. - Install packages with `pip --user` rather than in a virtualenv. - Add the local user python package archive to the travis-ci cache (rather than the pip cache). This saves needing to install packages during installation (unless there are updates, in which case the package and the cache are updated). - Install numpy and scipy on the pypy build. This has to build from source (and so blas and fortran need to be installed on the build), but given the above caching, the build will only be slow for the first build after a new numpy/scipy release. This testing is valuable: numpy has various behaviour differences under pypy. - Added set -e/+e around the before_install/install blocks so that a failure here (e.g. a pip install failure or dependency download failure) triggers a build failure. - Update eigen version to latest (3.3.3), mainly to be consistent with the appveyor build. - The travis trusty environment has an upgraded cmake, so this downgrades cmake (to the stock trusty version) on the first couple jobs so that we're still including some cmake 2.8.12 testing.
2017-04-13 18:18:13 +00:00
set +e
install:
- |
# Install dependencies
travis-ci: switch to trusty; cache pip packages This applies several changes to the non-docker travis-ci builds: - Make all builds use trusty rather than precise. pybind can't really build in precise anyway (we install essentially the entire toolchain backported from trusty on every build), and so this saves needing to install all the backported packages during the build setup. - Updated the 3.5 build to 3.6 (via deadsnakes, which didn't backport 3.6 to ubuntu releases earlier than trusty). - As a result of the switch to trusty, the BAREBONES build now picks up the (default installed) python 3.5 installation. - Invoke pip everywhere via $PYTHON -m pip rather than the pip executable, which saves us having to figure out what the pip executable is, and ensures that we are using the correct pip. - Install packages with `pip --user` rather than in a virtualenv. - Add the local user python package archive to the travis-ci cache (rather than the pip cache). This saves needing to install packages during installation (unless there are updates, in which case the package and the cache are updated). - Install numpy and scipy on the pypy build. This has to build from source (and so blas and fortran need to be installed on the build), but given the above caching, the build will only be slow for the first build after a new numpy/scipy release. This testing is valuable: numpy has various behaviour differences under pypy. - Added set -e/+e around the before_install/install blocks so that a failure here (e.g. a pip install failure or dependency download failure) triggers a build failure. - Update eigen version to latest (3.3.3), mainly to be consistent with the appveyor build. - The travis trusty environment has an upgraded cmake, so this downgrades cmake (to the stock trusty version) on the first couple jobs so that we're still including some cmake 2.8.12 testing.
2017-04-13 18:18:13 +00:00
set -e
if [ -n "$DOCKER" ]; then
if [ -n "$DEBUG" ]; then
PY_DEBUG="python$PYTHON-dbg python$PY-scipy-dbg"
CMAKE_EXTRA_ARGS="${CMAKE_EXTRA_ARGS} -DPYTHON_EXECUTABLE=/usr/bin/python${PYTHON}dm"
fi
$SCRIPT_RUN_PREFIX sh -c "for s in 0 15; do sleep \$s; \
apt-get -qy --no-install-recommends install \
$PY_DEBUG python$PYTHON-dev python$PY-pytest python$PY-scipy \
libeigen3-dev libboost-dev cmake make ${COMPILER_PACKAGES} && break; done"
else
if [ "$CLANG" = "4.0" ]; then
if ! [ -d ~/.local/include/c++/v1 ]; then
# Neither debian nor llvm provide a libc++ 4.0 deb; luckily it's fairly quick
# to build, install (and cache), so do it ourselves:
git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/llvm-mirror/llvm.git llvm-source
git clone https://github.com/llvm-mirror/libcxx.git llvm-source/projects/libcxx -b release_40
git clone https://github.com/llvm-mirror/libcxxabi.git llvm-source/projects/libcxxabi -b release_40
mkdir llvm-build && cd llvm-build
# Building llvm requires a newer cmake than is provided by the trusty container:
CMAKE=cmake-3.8.0-Linux-x86_64
curl https://cmake.org/files/v3.8/$CMAKE.tar.gz | tar xz
./$CMAKE/bin/cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=~/.local ../llvm-source
make -j2 install-cxxabi install-cxx
cp -a include/c++/v1/*cxxabi*.h ~/.local/include/c++/v1
cd ..
fi
export CXXFLAGS="-isystem $HOME/.local/include/c++/v1 -stdlib=libc++"
export LDFLAGS="-L$HOME/.local/lib -fuse-ld=lld-$CLANG"
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH="$HOME/.local/lib${LD_LIBRARY_PATH:+:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH}"
if [ "$CPP" = "-std=c++17" ]; then CPP="-std=c++1z"; fi
fi
travis-ci: switch to trusty; cache pip packages This applies several changes to the non-docker travis-ci builds: - Make all builds use trusty rather than precise. pybind can't really build in precise anyway (we install essentially the entire toolchain backported from trusty on every build), and so this saves needing to install all the backported packages during the build setup. - Updated the 3.5 build to 3.6 (via deadsnakes, which didn't backport 3.6 to ubuntu releases earlier than trusty). - As a result of the switch to trusty, the BAREBONES build now picks up the (default installed) python 3.5 installation. - Invoke pip everywhere via $PYTHON -m pip rather than the pip executable, which saves us having to figure out what the pip executable is, and ensures that we are using the correct pip. - Install packages with `pip --user` rather than in a virtualenv. - Add the local user python package archive to the travis-ci cache (rather than the pip cache). This saves needing to install packages during installation (unless there are updates, in which case the package and the cache are updated). - Install numpy and scipy on the pypy build. This has to build from source (and so blas and fortran need to be installed on the build), but given the above caching, the build will only be slow for the first build after a new numpy/scipy release. This testing is valuable: numpy has various behaviour differences under pypy. - Added set -e/+e around the before_install/install blocks so that a failure here (e.g. a pip install failure or dependency download failure) triggers a build failure. - Update eigen version to latest (3.3.3), mainly to be consistent with the appveyor build. - The travis trusty environment has an upgraded cmake, so this downgrades cmake (to the stock trusty version) on the first couple jobs so that we're still including some cmake 2.8.12 testing.
2017-04-13 18:18:13 +00:00
export NPY_NUM_BUILD_JOBS=2
echo "Installing pytest, numpy, scipy..."
${PYPY:+travis_wait 30} $PY_CMD -m pip install --user --upgrade pytest numpy scipy \
${PYPY:+--extra-index-url https://imaginary.ca/trusty-pypi}
travis-ci: switch to trusty; cache pip packages This applies several changes to the non-docker travis-ci builds: - Make all builds use trusty rather than precise. pybind can't really build in precise anyway (we install essentially the entire toolchain backported from trusty on every build), and so this saves needing to install all the backported packages during the build setup. - Updated the 3.5 build to 3.6 (via deadsnakes, which didn't backport 3.6 to ubuntu releases earlier than trusty). - As a result of the switch to trusty, the BAREBONES build now picks up the (default installed) python 3.5 installation. - Invoke pip everywhere via $PYTHON -m pip rather than the pip executable, which saves us having to figure out what the pip executable is, and ensures that we are using the correct pip. - Install packages with `pip --user` rather than in a virtualenv. - Add the local user python package archive to the travis-ci cache (rather than the pip cache). This saves needing to install packages during installation (unless there are updates, in which case the package and the cache are updated). - Install numpy and scipy on the pypy build. This has to build from source (and so blas and fortran need to be installed on the build), but given the above caching, the build will only be slow for the first build after a new numpy/scipy release. This testing is valuable: numpy has various behaviour differences under pypy. - Added set -e/+e around the before_install/install blocks so that a failure here (e.g. a pip install failure or dependency download failure) triggers a build failure. - Update eigen version to latest (3.3.3), mainly to be consistent with the appveyor build. - The travis trusty environment has an upgraded cmake, so this downgrades cmake (to the stock trusty version) on the first couple jobs so that we're still including some cmake 2.8.12 testing.
2017-04-13 18:18:13 +00:00
echo "done."
travis-ci: switch to trusty; cache pip packages This applies several changes to the non-docker travis-ci builds: - Make all builds use trusty rather than precise. pybind can't really build in precise anyway (we install essentially the entire toolchain backported from trusty on every build), and so this saves needing to install all the backported packages during the build setup. - Updated the 3.5 build to 3.6 (via deadsnakes, which didn't backport 3.6 to ubuntu releases earlier than trusty). - As a result of the switch to trusty, the BAREBONES build now picks up the (default installed) python 3.5 installation. - Invoke pip everywhere via $PYTHON -m pip rather than the pip executable, which saves us having to figure out what the pip executable is, and ensures that we are using the correct pip. - Install packages with `pip --user` rather than in a virtualenv. - Add the local user python package archive to the travis-ci cache (rather than the pip cache). This saves needing to install packages during installation (unless there are updates, in which case the package and the cache are updated). - Install numpy and scipy on the pypy build. This has to build from source (and so blas and fortran need to be installed on the build), but given the above caching, the build will only be slow for the first build after a new numpy/scipy release. This testing is valuable: numpy has various behaviour differences under pypy. - Added set -e/+e around the before_install/install blocks so that a failure here (e.g. a pip install failure or dependency download failure) triggers a build failure. - Update eigen version to latest (3.3.3), mainly to be consistent with the appveyor build. - The travis trusty environment has an upgraded cmake, so this downgrades cmake (to the stock trusty version) on the first couple jobs so that we're still including some cmake 2.8.12 testing.
2017-04-13 18:18:13 +00:00
wget -q -O eigen.tar.gz https://bitbucket.org/eigen/eigen/get/3.3.3.tar.gz
tar xzf eigen.tar.gz
export CMAKE_INCLUDE_PATH="${CMAKE_INCLUDE_PATH:+:}$PWD/eigen-eigen-67e894c6cd8f"
fi
travis-ci: switch to trusty; cache pip packages This applies several changes to the non-docker travis-ci builds: - Make all builds use trusty rather than precise. pybind can't really build in precise anyway (we install essentially the entire toolchain backported from trusty on every build), and so this saves needing to install all the backported packages during the build setup. - Updated the 3.5 build to 3.6 (via deadsnakes, which didn't backport 3.6 to ubuntu releases earlier than trusty). - As a result of the switch to trusty, the BAREBONES build now picks up the (default installed) python 3.5 installation. - Invoke pip everywhere via $PYTHON -m pip rather than the pip executable, which saves us having to figure out what the pip executable is, and ensures that we are using the correct pip. - Install packages with `pip --user` rather than in a virtualenv. - Add the local user python package archive to the travis-ci cache (rather than the pip cache). This saves needing to install packages during installation (unless there are updates, in which case the package and the cache are updated). - Install numpy and scipy on the pypy build. This has to build from source (and so blas and fortran need to be installed on the build), but given the above caching, the build will only be slow for the first build after a new numpy/scipy release. This testing is valuable: numpy has various behaviour differences under pypy. - Added set -e/+e around the before_install/install blocks so that a failure here (e.g. a pip install failure or dependency download failure) triggers a build failure. - Update eigen version to latest (3.3.3), mainly to be consistent with the appveyor build. - The travis trusty environment has an upgraded cmake, so this downgrades cmake (to the stock trusty version) on the first couple jobs so that we're still including some cmake 2.8.12 testing.
2017-04-13 18:18:13 +00:00
set +e
script:
- $SCRIPT_RUN_PREFIX cmake ${CMAKE_EXTRA_ARGS}
-DPYBIND11_PYTHON_VERSION=$PYTHON
-DPYBIND11_CPP_STANDARD=$CPP
-DPYBIND11_WERROR=${WERROR:-ON}
-DDOWNLOAD_CATCH=ON
- $SCRIPT_RUN_PREFIX make pytest -j 2
- $SCRIPT_RUN_PREFIX make cpptest -j 2
- $SCRIPT_RUN_PREFIX make test_cmake_build
after_failure: cat tests/test_cmake_build/*.log*
after_script:
- if [ -n "$DOCKER" ]; then docker stop "$containerid"; docker rm "$containerid"; fi