This would normally be not needed at all, but the problem here is the
Shell-in-YAML which GitLab interprets. It outputs every command that
appears as a line in the 'script' segment in a color-coded fashion for
easy identification of problems. Well, that useful feature is lost when
there's indirection and one script calls into another in which case it
would only output the respective script name which would make failure
investigation harder. This simple helper tackles that by echoing the
command to be run by any script/function with a color escape sequence
so that we don't lose track of the *actual* shell commands being run as
part of the GitLab job pipelines. An example of what the output then
might look like:
[RUN COMMAND]: 'meson compile -C build install-web'
Signed-off-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet(a)redhat.com>
---
ci/build.sh | 6 ++++++
1 file changed, 6 insertions(+)
diff --git a/ci/build.sh b/ci/build.sh
index 02ff1a8388..d4fbf0ab37 100644
--- a/ci/build.sh
+++ b/ci/build.sh
@@ -25,6 +25,12 @@ meson setup build --werror -Dsystem=true $MESON_ARGS || \
ninja -C build $NINJA_ARGS
+run_cmd() {
+ local CMD="$(echo $CMD | tr -s ' ')" # truncate any additional
spaces
+
+ printf "\e[93m[RUN COMMAND]: '%s'\e[0m\n" "$CMD"; eval
"$CMD"
+}
+
run_meson_setup() {
if [ -d "${GIT_ROOT}/build/meson-private" ]; then
return
--
2.41.0