#!/bin/sh # # Build and test Git in a 32-bit environment # # Usage: # run-linux32-build.sh <host-user-id> # set -ex if test $# -ne 1 || test -z "$1" then echo >&2 "usage: run-linux32-build.sh <host-user-id>" exit 1 fi # Update packages to the latest available versions linux32 --32bit i386 sh -c ' apt update >/dev/null && apt install -y build-essential libcurl4-openssl-dev libssl-dev \ libexpat-dev gettext python >/dev/null ' # If this script runs inside a docker container, then all commands are # usually executed as root. Consequently, the host user might not be # able to access the test output files. # If a non 0 host user id is given, then create a user "ci" with that # user id to make everything accessible to the host user. HOST_UID=$1 if test $HOST_UID -eq 0 then # Just in case someone does want to run the test suite as root. CI_USER=root else CI_USER=ci if test "$(id -u $CI_USER 2>/dev/null)" = $HOST_UID then echo "user '$CI_USER' already exists with the requested ID $HOST_UID" else useradd -u $HOST_UID $CI_USER fi # Due to a bug the test suite was run as root in the past, so # a prove state file created back then is only accessible by # root. Now that bug is fixed, the test suite is run as a # regular user, but the prove state file coming from Travis # CI's cache might still be owned by root. # Make sure that this user has rights to any cached files, # including an existing prove state file. test -n "$cache_dir" && chown -R $HOST_UID:$HOST_UID "$cache_dir" fi # Build and test linux32 --32bit i386 su -m -l $CI_USER -c ' set -ex cd /usr/src/git test -n "$cache_dir" && ln -s "$cache_dir/.prove" t/.prove make make test '