A simple Cake module to enhance running from a hosted CI environment
This module will introduce a number of features for running in hosted CI build environments to tightly integrate with the host environment/tools. These modules require no changes to build scripts and instead rely on your Cake script's standard aliases and lifecycle events to integrate your script into the environment.
Currently this module supports:
This applies to TFS and VSTS
- Individual timeline records for each task
- Percentage reporting on build progress
- Integrates
Warning
andError
logging aliases with the Build Issues summary - Includes a Cake Build Summary widget on the build summary page
Tested with TeamCity 10
- Build Logs are separated (and nested) for each executed task
- Current/ongoing build status is updated to currently running task
Error
logging aliases are highlighted in build log output
Supports the MyGet Build Service
- Task records are added to build logs
- Includes a task summary in the build log
- Integrates
Warning
,Error
andFatal
logging aliases with the build log and report
This module is affected by a bug in Travis CI's Linux image (see travis-ci/travis-ci#7262)
- Log folding for the Cake build and for individual tasks
Each build system's functionality resides in its own module, with Cake.Module.Shared
used for shared types. Each module will conditionally register itself, meaning they will only be loaded in their respective CI environments. This means all modules can be deployed with a single codebase without interference.
If you're using the latest bootstrapper example (always available in this repo), you can simply add a tools/Modules/packages.config
file with the following contents:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<packages>
<package id="Cake.BuildSystems.Module" version="##see below for note on versioning##" />
</packages>
The next time you run the bootstrapper, the modules should be installed.
You can also integrate this module into your own build process, even with a customised build.ps1
/build.sh
. As long as the Cake.BuildSystems.Module
NuGet package is installed into your modules directory (by default ./tools/Modules
), cake.exe
should pick them up when it runs. Note that you can also change your modules directory using the cake.config
file or passing arguments to cake.exe
as outlined in the documentation).
Note that since modules interact with the internals of Cake, they are tied to a specific version of Cake. The version of Cake supported by the particular module version will always be in the Release Notes of the NuGet package (and therefore also on nuget.org). Make sure to match this version number to the Cake version you're using.
Running build.ps1
with the default target will build all system modules into dist/modules
. Copy this to tools/Modules
(you may need to disable the MD5 check if using the bootstrapper) and run your script.