Declare an explicit Python version. Pick 3.5 which is the default
version on Ubuntu 16.04. This is necessary on Travis to have a working
pip for Python 3.
Install Pylint 2.4.4. There's nothing special about this version, it's
just the latest version.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
Split the build between:
* Basic checks
* A build in the default configuration with extensive tests
* Builds in other configurations with less testing
The intent is to have one shorter job with basic tests, and two longer
jobs that take roughly the same amount of time (split as evenly as
possible while keeping an easy-to-understand separation).
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
In practice, we hardly ever get different outcomes, so there is no
gain in running tests with different compilers.
Experimentally, with the builds and tests we currently do and with the
compiler versions on a Travis Ubuntu 16.04, gcc jobs are significantly
faster than clang jobs (13 min vs 24 min). So use gcc.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
"coverity_scan" branch is been removed as Travis shouldn't be
blocked from triggering it to run Coverity on it.
"development-psa" branch isn't used anymore and also it used to
depend on a private submodule which Travis would fail to get.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
This is what we do in Jenkins, so it only makes sense to do it here as well.
This will avoid random failures for no other reason than the proxy was
dropping all the messages due to an unlucky PRNG seed.
See https://docs.travis-ci.com/user/environment-variables/ for syntax
Apparently the version of openssl available on travis machines does not
support all the ciphersuites expected by compat.sh. While waiting for this
script to handle various openssl versions better, just disable openssl.
Causing spurious fails of ssl-opt.sh. Likely a version issue. It would be
better to investigate the exact problem, and maybe adapt ssl-opt.sh to be
check for a minimum version just as compat.sh does, but this is a quick fix.