The "linux-gcc-default" job is mostly doing the same as the "linux-gcc"
job, except for a couple of minor differences:
- We use an explicit GCC version instead of the default version
provided by the distribution. We have other jobs that test with
"gcc-8", making this distinction pointless.
- We don't set up the Python version explicitly, and instead use the
default Python version. Python 2 has been end-of-life for quite a
while now though, making this distinction less interesting.
- We set up the default branch name to be "main" in "linux-gcc". We
have other testcases that don't and also some that explicitly use
"master".
- We use "ubuntu:20.04" in one job and "ubuntu:latest" in another. We
already have a couple other jobs testing these respectively.
So overall, the job does not add much to our test coverage.
Drop the "linux-gcc-default" job and adapt "linux-gcc" to start using
the default GCC compiler, effectively merging those two jobs into one.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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|---|---|---|
| .. | ||
| config | ||
| util | ||
| check-directional-formatting.bash | ||
| check-whitespace.sh | ||
| install-dependencies.sh | ||
| install-sdk.ps1 | ||
| lib.sh | ||
| make-test-artifacts.sh | ||
| mount-fileshare.sh | ||
| print-test-failures.sh | ||
| run-build-and-minimal-fuzzers.sh | ||
| run-build-and-tests.sh | ||
| run-static-analysis.sh | ||
| run-style-check.sh | ||
| run-test-slice.sh | ||
| test-documentation.sh | ||