On Wed, Jan 16, 2013 at 10:54 AM, Todd <[email protected]> wrote: > On Jan 16, 2013 9:30 AM, "Fernando Perez" <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> On Wed, Jan 16, 2013 at 12:10 AM, Nelle Varoquaux >> <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> > Last but not least, maybe we can see what numfocus has to offer. >> >> Absolutely! I'll be offline for two weeks, but others on the list can >> certainly propose this to numfocus on the list and we can look into >> what can be done, esp. in a way that could also help other projects as >> well. >> >> Also, there's snakebite: http://www.snakebite.net. The project seemed >> very dormant for a long time, but there's been some activity since: >> http://www.snakebite.net/network. I'd ping Titus Brown on Twitter >> (@ctitusbrown) for info... >> >> Cheers, > > There is also the open build service, which is more of a build farm but can > be set up pull, build, test, and publish git snapshots for most common Linux > distributions to your own online software repository simultaneously with one > click on a website or one commandline call. > > https://build.opensuse.org/ > > They provide hosting, building, and distribution for free. You can probably > set up a script to automatically rebuild master on a change, or daily. > However, setting it up to test individual commits would be overly difficult > and probably be seen as an abuse of the system. Using it to always build, > test, and release offer the latest master to most linux distros, on the > other hand, would be fine. If someone contacts them they can probably set > up a repository just for you, or if this sort of thing is useful a more > general repository you can share with others (there is already > devel:languages:python, maybe devel:languages:python:unstable). > > You can also use it to build release rpms and debs for various distros. It > is already being used to build the packages discussed so far for openSUSE, > but if someone is willing to maintain them they can be built for other > distros as well.
GitHub allow for a custom service-hook. If, as Mike says, it's not too hard to garner compute cycles, it shouldn't be too hard to write a small script to execute the test suite when the github repo receives a push. -- Damon McDougall http://www.damon-is-a-geek.com Institute for Computational Engineering Sciences 201 E. 24th St. Stop C0200 The University of Texas at Austin Austin, TX 78712-1229 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Master Java SE, Java EE, Eclipse, Spring, Hibernate, JavaScript, jQuery and much more. Keep your Java skills current with LearnJavaNow - 200+ hours of step-by-step video tutorials by Java experts. SALE $49.99 this month only -- learn more at: http://p.sf.net/sfu/learnmore_122612 _______________________________________________ Matplotlib-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-devel