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Use i128 to track disciminants instead of i64. #92

Use i128 to track disciminants instead of i64.

Use i128 to track disciminants instead of i64. #92

Workflow file for this run

name: Rust
on:
push: {}
pull_request: {}
env:
RUST_BACKTRACE: 1
jobs:
test:
name: Test Rust ${{ matrix.rust }} on ${{ matrix.os }}
runs-on: ${{ matrix.os }}
strategy:
matrix:
# it's a little tempting to use `matrix` to do a cartesian product with
# our `--feature` config here, but doing so will be very slow, as the
# free tier only supports up to 20 job runners at a time.
include:
# versions (all on linux-x86_64)
- { rust: 1.34.0, os: ubuntu-latest }
- { rust: stable, os: ubuntu-latest }
- { rust: beta, os: ubuntu-latest }
- { rust: nightly, os: ubuntu-latest }
# non-linux platforms (ones which don't require `cross`)
- { rust: stable, os: macos-latest }
- { rust: stable, os: windows-latest }
- { rust: stable-x86_64-gnu, os: windows-latest }
- { rust: stable-i686-msvc, os: windows-latest }
- { rust: stable-i686-gnu, os: windows-latest }
steps:
- uses: hecrj/setup-rust-action@v1
with:
rust-version: ${{ matrix.rust }}
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- run: cargo test --verbose
- run: cargo test --verbose --no-default-features
- run: cargo test --verbose
- run: cargo test --verbose --all-features
if: matrix.rust == 'nightly'
- run: cargo test --verbose --manifest-path=derive/Cargo.toml --all-features
if: matrix.rust == 'nightly'
cross-test:
name: Test on ${{ matrix.target }} with cross
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
strategy:
matrix:
# we once had mips runners for Big-endian coverage but those got demoted to tier 3.
target: [i686-unknown-linux-gnu]
steps:
- uses: hecrj/setup-rust-action@v1
with:
rust-version: nightly
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- run: cargo install cross
- run: cross test --verbose --target=${{ matrix.target }} --no-default-features
- run: cross test --verbose --target=${{ matrix.target }}
- run: cross test --verbose --target=${{ matrix.target }} --all-features
if: matrix.rust == 'nightly'
- run: cross test --verbose --target=${{ matrix.target }} --manifest-path=derive/Cargo.toml --all-features
if: matrix.rust == 'nightly'
miri-test:
name: Test with miri
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: hecrj/setup-rust-action@v1
with:
rust-version: nightly
components: miri
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
# Note(Lokathor): We got some cached json errors, and so we cargo clean for this run.
- run: rm -fr target
- run: cargo miri test --verbose --no-default-features
- run: cargo miri test --verbose --all-features
- run: cd derive && rm -fr target && cargo miri test --verbose --all-features
sanitizer-test:
name: Test with -Zsanitizer=${{ matrix.sanitizer }}
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
strategy:
fail-fast: false
matrix:
sanitizer: [address, memory, leak]
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- uses: hecrj/setup-rust-action@v1
with:
rust-version: nightly
components: rust-src
- name: Test with sanitizer
env:
RUSTFLAGS: -Zsanitizer=${{ matrix.sanitizer }}
RUSTDOCFLAGS: -Zsanitizer=${{ matrix.sanitizer }}
ASAN_OPTIONS: detect_stack_use_after_return=1
# Asan's leak detection occasionally complains about some small leaks if
# backtraces are captured.
RUST_BACKTRACE: 0
# We don't run `derive`'s unit tests here the way we do elsewhere (for
# example, in `miri-test` above), as at the moment we can't easily build
# the `proc_macro` runtime with sanitizers on. IIUC doing this would
# require a custom rustc build, and... lol nope.
#
# This would mean only part of the code running under the sanitizer would
# actually include the sanitizer's checks, which is a recipe for false
# positives, so we just skip it, the generated code is what we care
# about anyway.
run: |
cargo test -Zbuild-std --verbose --target=x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu --no-default-features
cargo test -Zbuild-std --verbose --target=x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu --all-features