Though the YAML people recommend .yaml for the file extension, in Android
land it seems clear that .yml has won out:
* .travis.yml
* .gitlab-ci.yml
* .circle.yml
* Ansible main.yml
serverwebroot has long supported uploading to multiple servers, this bit of
metadata communicates those official mirrors to the client so that it can
automatically do something useful with that information.
closes#14https://gitlab.com/fdroid/fdroidserver/issues/14
This will report the version embedded in the module if it is installed, and
will report `git describe` if being run from git. If someone installs from
git using pip, this will probably report the version in setup.py, which
will be wrong. But that is not a documented install method, and I haven't
heard of anyone using it. The recommended way is to run straight from git.
In order to prevent confusion caused by multiple metadata files for a given
app, fdroid will exit with an error if it finds any app metadata file with
the same package ID as one that has already been parsed.
This provides the final option in this series, allowing the user to just
add --create-key to `fdroid update, and thereby upgrade an unsigned repo to
a proper signed repo. It also might be useful
closes#13https://gitlab.com/fdroid/fdroidserver/issues/13
This is a more flexible approach than testing for the complete SDK and
build-tools up front. This will only test for the commands that are
actually being run, so that if you only have `aapt` installed, you can do
`fdroid update` without errors, but other commands will still give
appropriate errors.
This also makes the build_tools item in config.py optional, it is only
needed if you want to force a specific version of the build-tools.
Just getting into the habit of adding tests to everything that I change...
Also, it should be useful to have an unsigned APK in the test collection,
since `fdroid update` should handle it gracefully and give a warning of
some kind.
The test for the help flag threw an error if there were 0 args, or if arg 1
was set to a space-separated list. The -z tests would fail if the arg was
set to a space-separated list.
This reverts b637568a62 since it added a
redundant check that broke `fdroid init` when the default version dir of
build_tools does not exist on the local system. It then uses the function
that was already in place for checking the build_tools setup in a way that
does not break `fdroid init`.
Now that the fake android home version is not matching the default version,
the tests will catch this bug in the future.
This is testing the build-tools version auto-detect in `fdroid init`, so it
should be kept as an older version. This is not meant to test the current
version of the build tools.
This means you can just do `cd tests/ && ./run-tests` to run the tests now.
You can still override the APK source with the first argument, like:
cd tests/ && ./run-tests /path/to/lots/of/apks/dir
To support a fully offline build/signing machine, there is the "local copy
dir". The repo is generated on the offline machine and then copied to a
local dir where a thumb drive or SD Card is mounted. Then on the online
machine, using `fdroid server update --sync-from-local-copy-dir` allows
the whole server update process to happen in a single command:
0. read config.py on online machine's repo
1. rsync from the local_copy_dir to the current dir
2. copy to serverwebroot, awsbucket, etc.
This allows a dir to be specified in config.py that `fdroid server update`
will automatically rsync the repo to. The idea is that the path would
point to an SD card on a fully offline machine that serves as the secure
repo signing machine.
Not everyone adds the build-tools to their PATH, so this makes it so this
script will find aapt in the most recent build-tools version that is
installed on the local system.
In this case, ANDROID_HOME is set to a fake, non-working version that will
be detected by fdroid as an Android SDK install. It should use the path
set by --android-home over the one in ANDROID_HOME, therefore if it uses
the one in ANDROID_HOME, it won't work because it is a fake one. Only
--android-home provides a working one.
This lets people easily set whatever dir they want, while letting jenkins
search through its whole workspace for any APKs that have been built. Also,
only include the latest version of a given packageName+versionCode.
Yes, this includes a binary file, but it is only for the tests, and it is
free software since I wrote it. The source is here:
https://github.com/eighthave/urzip
Previously, `fdroid update -c` would only create the new metadata, but
would not add the new apps/apks to the repo. That required a second run of
`fdroid update`. This has been fixes, so this test makes sure it stays
fixed, in a very generic way.
Make sure that fdroid can find aapt in the current config, otherwise exit
with an error. Some users don't have build_tools set, and their SDK does
not include the build-tools in the default versioned dir, so this should
warn them of what is wrong.
This allows the user to set the path to their Android SDK from the command
line. This option is named after the standard env var ANDROID_HOME, as used
in the build.xml generated by `android update project`. --android-home
takes precendence over the ANDROID_HOME env var if it is set.