buildman: Don't default to -e when building current source

We probably don't need to enable this option by default. It is useful to
display only failure boards (not errors) and it is easy to add -e if it
is required. Also update the docs.

Signed-off-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
Reported-by: Albert Aribaud <albert.u.boot@aribaud.net>
master
Simon Glass 10 years ago
parent f66153be19
commit 1d8104fe88
  1. 25
      tools/buildman/README
  2. 1
      tools/buildman/control.py

@ -85,10 +85,10 @@ branch. Put all your commits in a branch, set the branch's upstream to a
valid value, and all will be well. Otherwise buildman will perform random
actions. Use -n to check what the random actions might be.
If you just want to build the current source tree, leave off the -b flag.
This will display results and errors as they happen. You can still look
at them later using -s. Note that buildman will assume that the source
has changed, and will build all specified boards in this case.
If you just want to build the current source tree, leave off the -b flag
and add -e. This will display results and errors as they happen. You can
still look at them later using -se. Note that buildman will assume that the
source has changed, and will build all specified boards in this case.
Buildman is optimised for building many commits at once, for many boards.
On multi-core machines, Buildman is fast because it uses most of the
@ -693,9 +693,9 @@ Quick Sanity Check
==================
If you have made changes and want to do a quick sanity check of the
currently-checked-out source, run buildman without the -b flag. This will
build the selected boards and display build status and errors as it runs
(i.e. -v amd -e are enabled automatically).
currently checked-out source, run buildman without the -b flag. This will
build the selected boards and display build status as it runs (i.e. -v is
enabled automatically). Use -e to see errors/warnings as well.
Other options
@ -752,7 +752,7 @@ an error and green indicating that a commit fixed an error. Use the -e
flag to see the full errors and -l to see which boards caused which errors.
If you really want to see build results as they happen, use -v when doing a
build (-e will be enabled automatically).
build (and -e to see the errors/warnings too).
You don't need to stick around on that branch while buildman is running. It
checks out its own copy of the source code, so you can change branches,
@ -816,11 +816,10 @@ TODO
This has mostly be written in my spare time as a response to my difficulties
in testing large series of patches. Apart from tidying up there is quite a
bit of scope for improvement. Things like better error diffs, easier access
to log files, error display while building. Also it would be nice it buildman
could 'hunt' for problems, perhaps by building a few boards for each arch,
or checking commits for changed files and building only boards which use
those files.
bit of scope for improvement. Things like better error diffs and easier
access to log files. Also it would be nice it buildman could 'hunt' for
problems, perhaps by building a few boards for each arch, or checking
commits for changed files and building only boards which use those files.
Credits

@ -188,7 +188,6 @@ def DoBuildman(options, args, toolchains=None, make_func=None, boards=None,
else:
series = None
options.verbose = True
options.show_errors = True
# By default we have one thread per CPU. But if there are not enough jobs
# we can have fewer threads and use a high '-j' value for make.

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