Schedule

For each CI config change, we need to follow:

  • scope of work (what will run, how frequently)

  • capacity planning (cost, physical space limitations)

  • will this replace anything or is this 100% new

  • puppet/deployment scripts or documentation

  • setup pool on try server

  • documented updated on this page, communicate with release management and others as appropriate

Current / Future CI config changes

Start Date Completed Tracking Bug Description
TBD TBD TBD Upgrade Ubuntu 18.04 -> Ubuntu 22.04 X11
TBD TBD TBD Add Ubuntu 22.04 Wayland
TBD TBD TBD Upgrade Mac M1 from 11.2.3 -> 13.2.1
TBD TBD TBD replace 2017 acer perf laptops with lower end NUCs
TBD TBD TBD replace windows moonshots with mid level NUCs
TBD TBD TBD Upgrade android emulators to modern version

Completed CI config changes

Start Date Completed Tracking Bug Description
October 2022 March 2023 Bug 1794900 Migrate from win10 -> win11
November 2022 February 2023 Bug 1804790 Migrate Win7 unittests from AWS -> Azure
October 2022 February 2023 Bug 1794895 Migrate unittests from pixel2 -> pixel5
November 2020 August 2021 Bug 1676850 Windows tests migrate from AWS -> Datacenter/Azure and 1803 -> 20.04
May 2022 July 2022 Bug 1767486 Migrate perftests from Moto G5 phones to Samsung A51 phones
March 2021 October 2021 Bug 1699541 Migrate from OSX 10.14 -> 10.15
July 2020 March 2021 Bug 1572739 upgrade datacenter linux perf machines from ubuntu 16.04 to 18.04
September 2020 January 2021 Bug 1665012 Android phones upgrade from version 7 -> 10
October 2020 February 2021 Bug 1673067 Run tests on MacOSX Aarch64 (subset in parallel)
September 2020 March 2021 Bug 1548264 Python 2.7 -> 3.6 migration in CI
July 2020 October 2020 Bug 1653344 Remove EDID dongles from MacOSX machines
August 2020 September 2020 Bug 1643689 Schedule tests by test selection/manifest
June 2020 August 2020 Bug 1486004 Android hardware tests running without rooted phones
August 2019 January 2020 Bug 1572242 Upgrade Ubuntu from 16.04 to 18.04 (finished in January)

Appendix:

  • OS: base operating system such as Android, Linux, Mac OSX, Windows

  • Hardware: specific cpu/memory/disk/graphics/display/inputs that we are using, could be physical hardware we own or manage, or it could be a cloud provider.

  • Platform: a combination of hardware and OS

  • Configuration: what we change on a platform (can be runtime with flags), installed OS software updates (service pack), tools (python/node/etc.), hardware or OS settings (anti aliasing, display resolution, background processes, clipboard), environment variables,

  • Test Failure: a test doesn’t report the expected result (if we expect fail and we crash, that is unexpected). Typically this is a failure, but it can be a timeout, crash, not run, or even pass

  • Greening up: Assuming all tests return expected results (passing), they are green. When tests fail, they are orange. We need to find a way to get all tests green by investigating test failures.