On 8 December 2015 at 07:25, m...@rpzdesign.com <m...@rpzdesign.com> wrote: > I was reading at various places about Qt putting in place a new CI system. > > Where can I get the specs of the new CI build system? > > Where are you running your IOS builds? > Android builds?
Sorry to hijack the thread a bit, but I was thinking recently about adding contributor projects to some sort of CI. There's some nice Qt libraries around and some nice out-of-tree QtCreator plugins in the wild, wouldn't it be nice if such Open Source projects were integrated in such CI systems? Even if they are clearly marked as unsupported/unofficial/untested/<insert-your-statement-here>? > I want to start putting together my own CI resources > but want to take advantage of the cumulative learning. > > Just putting up Jenkins would be ignoring that Qt is likely leaving Jenkins > is my point. I have the same goal here, I'm planning on setting up my own CI for some of my projects, and I wouldn't mind to let other people use it (within some yet-to-be-defined fair limits and conditions [1]). I'm currently renting a decent build machine (x86_64/OpenSuSe running Jenkins) and planning to add another one before Christmas (likely x86_64/Ubuntu). I am considering as well running a "cheap" dedicated ARM64/Ubuntu server. As a side note, I'm only interested by modern setup (recent architecture, recent OS, recent Qt/QtC version) Chris [1] Typ. Don't eat all the bandwidth, don't eat all the CPU and disk space. Open Source projects only. > > Anybody have comments? > > Thanks, > > md > _______________________________________________ > Interest mailing list > Interest@qt-project.org > http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/interest _______________________________________________ Interest mailing list Interest@qt-project.org http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/interest