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ciphermask/.circleci/config.yml

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version: 2.1
executors:
node-browsers:
docker:
- image: circleci/node:14-browsers
node-browsers-medium-plus:
docker:
- image: circleci/node:14-browsers
resource_class: medium+
environment:
NODE_OPTIONS: --max_old_space_size=2048
shellcheck:
docker:
- image: koalaman/shellcheck-alpine@sha256:35882cba254810c7de458528011e935ba2c4f3ebcb224275dfa7ebfa930ef294
workflows:
test_and_release:
jobs:
- create_release_pull_request:
requires:
- prep-deps
filters:
branches:
only:
- /^Version-v(\d+)[.](\d+)[.](\d+)/
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
5 years ago
- prep-deps
- test-deps
- prep-build:
requires:
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
5 years ago
- prep-deps
- prep-build-test:
requires:
- prep-deps
- prep-build-test-metrics:
requires:
- prep-deps
- prep-build-storybook:
requires:
- prep-deps
- test-lint:
requires:
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
5 years ago
- prep-deps
- test-lint-shellcheck
- test-lint-lockfile:
requires:
- prep-deps
- test-e2e-chrome:
requires:
- prep-build-test
- test-e2e-firefox:
requires:
- prep-build-test
- test-e2e-chrome-metrics:
requires:
- prep-build-test-metrics
- test-e2e-firefox-metrics:
requires:
- prep-build-test-metrics
- test-unit:
requires:
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
5 years ago
- prep-deps
- test-unit-global:
requires:
- prep-deps
- validate-source-maps:
requires:
- prep-build
- test-mozilla-lint:
requires:
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
5 years ago
- prep-deps
- prep-build
- all-tests-pass:
requires:
- test-lint
- test-lint-shellcheck
- test-lint-lockfile
- test-unit
- test-unit-global
- validate-source-maps
- test-mozilla-lint
- test-e2e-chrome
- test-e2e-firefox
- test-e2e-chrome-metrics
- test-e2e-firefox-metrics
- benchmark:
requires:
- prep-build-test
- job-publish-prerelease:
requires:
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
5 years ago
- prep-deps
- prep-build
- prep-build-storybook
- benchmark
- all-tests-pass
- job-publish-release:
filters:
branches:
only: master
requires:
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
5 years ago
- prep-deps
- prep-build
- all-tests-pass
- job-publish-storybook:
filters:
branches:
only: develop
requires:
- prep-build-storybook
jobs:
create_release_pull_request:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Create GitHub Pull Request for version
command: |
.circleci/scripts/release-bump-changelog-version.sh
.circleci/scripts/release-bump-manifest-version.sh
.circleci/scripts/release-create-release-pr.sh
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
5 years ago
prep-deps:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- restore_cache:
key: dependency-cache-{{ checksum "yarn.lock" }}
- run:
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
5 years ago
name: Install deps
command: |
.circleci/scripts/deps-install.sh
- save_cache:
key: dependency-cache-{{ checksum "yarn.lock" }}
paths:
- node_modules/
- build-artifacts/yarn-install-har/
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
paths:
- node_modules
- build-artifacts
prep-build:
executor: node-browsers-medium-plus
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: build:dist
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
5 years ago
command: yarn dist
- run:
name: build:debug
command: find dist/ -type f -exec md5sum {} \; | sort -k 2
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
paths:
- dist
- builds
prep-build-test:
executor: node-browsers-medium-plus
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Build extension for testing
command: yarn build:test
- run:
name: Move test build to 'dist-test' to avoid conflict with production build
command: mv ./dist ./dist-test
- run:
name: Move test zips to 'builds-test' to avoid conflict with production build
command: mv ./builds ./builds-test
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
paths:
- dist-test
- builds-test
prep-build-test-metrics:
executor: node-browsers-medium-plus
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Build extension for testing metrics
command: yarn build:test:metrics
- run:
name: Move test build to 'dist-test-metrics' to avoid conflict with production build
command: mv ./dist ./dist-test-metrics
- run:
name: Move test zips to 'builds-test' to avoid conflict with production build
command: mv ./builds ./builds-test-metrics
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
paths:
- dist-test-metrics
- builds-test-metrics
prep-build-storybook:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Build Storybook
command: yarn storybook:build
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
paths:
- storybook-build
test-lint:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Lint
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
5 years ago
command: yarn lint
- run:
name: Verify locales
command: yarn verify-locales --quiet
test-lint-shellcheck:
executor: shellcheck
steps:
- checkout
- run: apk add --no-cache bash jq yarn
- run:
name: ShellCheck Lint
command: ./development/shellcheck.sh
test-lint-lockfile:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: lockfile-lint
command: yarn lint:lockfile
test-deps:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
5 years ago
name: yarn audit
command: .circleci/scripts/yarn-audit.sh
test-e2e-chrome:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- run:
name: Re-Install Chrome
command: ./.circleci/scripts/chrome-install.sh
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Move test build to dist
command: mv ./dist-test ./dist
- run:
name: Move test zips to builds
command: mv ./builds-test ./builds
- run:
name: test:e2e:chrome
command: |
if .circleci/scripts/test-run-e2e.sh
then
yarn test:e2e:chrome
fi
no_output_timeout: 20m
- store_artifacts:
path: test-artifacts
destination: test-artifacts
test-e2e-chrome-metrics:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- run:
name: Re-Install Chrome
command: ./.circleci/scripts/chrome-install.sh
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Move test build to dist
command: mv ./dist-test-metrics ./dist
- run:
name: Move test zips to builds
command: mv ./builds-test-metrics ./builds
- run:
name: test:e2e:chrome:metrics
command: |
if .circleci/scripts/test-run-e2e.sh
then
yarn test:e2e:chrome:metrics
fi
no_output_timeout: 20m
- store_artifacts:
path: test-artifacts
destination: test-artifacts
test-e2e-firefox:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- run:
name: Install Firefox
command: ./.circleci/scripts/firefox-install.sh
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Move test build to dist
command: mv ./dist-test ./dist
- run:
name: Move test zips to builds
command: mv ./builds-test ./builds
- run:
name: test:e2e:firefox
command: |
if .circleci/scripts/test-run-e2e.sh
then
yarn test:e2e:firefox
fi
no_output_timeout: 20m
- store_artifacts:
path: test-artifacts
destination: test-artifacts
test-e2e-firefox-metrics:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- run:
name: Install Firefox
command: ./.circleci/scripts/firefox-install.sh
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Move test build to dist
command: mv ./dist-test-metrics ./dist
- run:
name: Move test zips to builds
command: mv ./builds-test-metrics ./builds
- run:
name: test:e2e:firefox:metrics
command: |
if .circleci/scripts/test-run-e2e.sh
then
yarn test:e2e:firefox:metrics
fi
no_output_timeout: 20m
- store_artifacts:
path: test-artifacts
destination: test-artifacts
benchmark:
executor: node-browsers-medium-plus
steps:
- checkout
- run:
name: Re-Install Chrome
command: ./.circleci/scripts/chrome-install.sh
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Move test build to dist
command: mv ./dist-test ./dist
- run:
name: Move test zips to builds
command: mv ./builds-test ./builds
- run:
name: Run page load benchmark
command: yarn benchmark:chrome --out test-artifacts/chrome/benchmark/pageload.json
- store_artifacts:
path: test-artifacts
destination: test-artifacts
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
paths:
- test-artifacts
job-publish-prerelease:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: build:source-map-explorer
command: ./development/source-map-explorer.sh
- store_artifacts:
path: dist/sourcemaps
destination: builds/sourcemaps
- store_artifacts:
path: builds
destination: builds
- store_artifacts:
path: coverage
destination: coverage
- store_artifacts:
path: test-artifacts
destination: test-artifacts
# important: generate lavamoat viz AFTER uploading builds as artifacts
# Temporarily disabled until we can update to a version of `sesify` with
# this fix included: https://github.com/LavaMoat/LavaMoat/pull/121
- run:
name: build:lavamoat-viz
command: ./.circleci/scripts/create-lavamoat-viz.sh
- store_artifacts:
path: build-artifacts
destination: build-artifacts
- store_artifacts:
path: storybook-build
destination: storybook
- run:
name: build:announce
command: ./development/metamaskbot-build-announce.js
job-publish-release:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: sentry sourcemaps upload
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
5 years ago
command: yarn sentry:publish
- run:
name: Create GitHub release
command: |
.circleci/scripts/release-create-gh-release.sh
- run:
name: Create GitHub Pull Request to sync master with develop
command: .circleci/scripts/release-create-master-pr.sh
job-publish-storybook:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- add_ssh_keys:
fingerprints:
- "5e:a3:2d:35:b6:25:b5:87:b1:41:11:0d:77:50:96:73"
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: storybook:deploy
command: |
git remote add storybook git@github.com:MetaMask/metamask-storybook.git
yarn storybook:deploy
test-unit:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: test:coverage
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
5 years ago
command: yarn test:coverage
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
paths:
- .nyc_output
- coverage
test-unit-global:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: test:unit:global
command: yarn test:unit:global
validate-source-maps:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Validate source maps
command: yarn validate-source-maps
test-mozilla-lint:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: test:mozilla-lint
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
5 years ago
command: NODE_OPTIONS=--max_old_space_size=3072 yarn mozilla-lint
all-tests-pass:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- run:
name: All Tests Passed
command: echo 'weew - everything passed!'