azure-pipelines/coverity.yml


Log

Author Commit Date CI Message
Patrick Steinhardt 86c54cc8 2020-02-04T11:51:56 azure: coverity: fix Coverity builds due to various issues There's several issues with our Coverity builds, like e.g. missing wget in our containers. Simplify our Coverity pipeline and fix these issues.
Patrick Steinhardt ccffea6b 2020-02-04T11:47:16 azure: coverity: convert to use self-built containers Back in commit 5a6740e7f (azure: build Docker images as part of the pipeline, 2019-08-02), we have converted our pipelines to use self-built Docker images to ease making changes to our Dockerfiles. The commit didn't adjust our Coverity pipeline, though, so let's do this now.
Patrick Steinhardt b4eb0282 2020-02-04T11:46:05 azure: coverity: fix invalid syntax for Docker image In commit bbc0b20bd (azure: fix Coverity's build due to wrong container name, 2019-08-02), Coverity builds were fixed to use the correct container names. Unfortunately, the "fix" completely broke our Coverity builds due to using wrong syntax for the Docker task. Let's fix this by using "imageName" instead of the Docker dict.
Patrick Steinhardt 3c884cc3 2019-09-21T15:05:36 azure: avoid building and testing in Docker as root Right now, all tests in libgit2's CI are being executed as root user. As libgit2 will usually not run as a root user in "normal" usecases and furthermore as there are tests that rely on the ability to _not_ be able to create certain paths, let's instead create an unprivileged user "libgit2" and use that across all docker images.
Patrick Steinhardt bbc0b20b 2019-08-02T10:27:24 azure: fix Coverity's build due to wrong container name The Coverity build is still referencing an old "trusty-openssl" container that is not provided by either our own now-inlined images nor by the libgit2/libgit2-docker repository. Convert it to build and use Xenial images instead.
Patrick Steinhardt ffac520e 2019-06-24T16:19:35 azure: move build scripts into "azure-pipelines" directory Since we have migrated to Azure Pipelines, we have deprecated and subsequentally removed all infrastructure for AppVeyor and Travis. Thus it doesn't make a lot of sense to have the split between "ci/" and "azure-pipelines/" directories anymoer, as "azure-pipelines/" is essentially our only CI. Move all CI scripts into the "azure-pipelines/" directory to have everything centrally located and to remove clutter in the top-level directory.
Edward Thomson 0cf5b6b1 2019-01-28T10:48:49 ci: ignore coverity failures in nightly runs Coverity is back but it's only read-only! Agh. Just allow it to fail and not impact the overall job run.
Edward Thomson 08d71f72 2019-01-27T22:46:07 ci: return coverity to the nightlies
Etienne Samson 3c6d1979 2019-01-11T02:06:41 ci: move coverity in its own pipeline Since Coverity is down for a unspecified timeframe, isolate it from the "hosted" nightlies.