4e8630791a
* Introduces a start method to prover * Moves backend creation into start method * sets up three paths for backend initialization * Extracts backend initialization to backend-factory * Implements loading backend from cli files or previously downloaded local files * Wires up downloading and unzipping * functional implementation * Fixes testprover.nim * Sets up tests for backendfactory * includes libzip-dev * pulls in updated contracts * removes integration cli tests for r1cs, wasm, and zkey file arguments. * Fixes issue where inner-scope values are lost before returning * sets local proof verification for dist-test images * Adds two traces and bumps nim-ethers * Adds separate path for circuit files * Create circuit dir if not exists * fix: make sure requestStorage is mined * fix: correct place to plug confirm * test: fixing contracts tests * Restores gitmodules * restores nim-datastore reference * Sets up downloader exe * sets up tool skeleton * implements getting of circuit hash * Implements downloader tool * sets up test skeleton * Implements test for cirdl * includes testTools in testAll * Cleanup building.md * cleans up previous downloader implementation * cleans up testbackendfactory * moves start of prover into node.nim * Fills in arguments in example command * Initializes backend in prover constructor * Restores tests * Restores tests for cli instructions * Review comments by Dmitriy, part 1 * Quotes path in download instruction. * replaces curl with chronos http session * Moves cirdl build output to 'build' folder. * Fixes chronicles log output * Add cirdl support to the codex Dockerfile Signed-off-by: Slava <20563034+veaceslavdoina@users.noreply.github.com> * Add cirdl support to the docker entrypoint Signed-off-by: Slava <20563034+veaceslavdoina@users.noreply.github.com> * Add cirdl support to the release workflow Signed-off-by: Slava <20563034+veaceslavdoina@users.noreply.github.com> * Disable verify_circuit flag for releases Signed-off-by: Slava <20563034+veaceslavdoina@users.noreply.github.com> * Removes backendFactory placeholder type * wip * Replaces zip library with status-im/zippy library (which supports zip and tar) * Updates cirdl to not change circuitdir folder * Switches from zip to tar.gz * Review comments by Dmitriy * updates codex-contracts-eth * Adds testTools to CI * Adds check for access to config.circuitdir * Update fixture circuit zkey * Update matrix to run tools tests on Windows * Adds 'deps' dependency for cirdl * Adjust docker-entrypoint.sh to use CODEX_CIRCUIT_DIR env var * Review comments by Giuliano --------- Signed-off-by: Slava <20563034+veaceslavdoina@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: Adam Uhlíř <adam@uhlir.dev> Co-authored-by: Veaceslav Doina <20563034+veaceslavdoina@users.noreply.github.com> |
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Readme.md | ||
ci-reusable.yml | ||
ci.yml | ||
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docs.yml | ||
nim-matrix.yml | ||
release.yml |
Readme.md
Tips for shorter build times
Runner availability
Currently, the biggest bottleneck when optimizing workflows is the availability of Windows and macOS runners. Therefore, anything that reduces the time spent in Windows or macOS jobs will have a positive impact on the time waiting for runners to become available. The usage limits for Github Actions are described here. You can see a breakdown of runner usage for your jobs in the Github Actions tab (example).
Windows is slow
Performing git operations and compilation are both slow on Windows. This can easily mean that a Windows job takes twice as long as a Linux job. Therefore it makes sense to use a Windows runner only for testing Windows compatibility, and nothing else. Testing compatibility with other versions of Nim, code coverage analysis, etc. are therefore better performed on a Linux runner.
Parallelization
Breaking up a long build job into several jobs that you run in parallel can have a positive impact on the wall clock time that a workflow runs. For instance, you might consider running unit tests and integration tests in parallel. Keep in mind however that availability of macOS and Windows runners is the biggest bottleneck. If you split a Windows job into two jobs, you now need to wait for two Windows runners to become available! Therefore parallelization often only makes sense for Linux jobs.
Refactoring
As with any code, complex workflows are hard to read and change. You can use composite actions and reusable workflows to refactor complex workflows.
Steps for measuring time
Breaking up steps allows you to see the time spent in each part. For instance, instead of having one step where all tests are performed, you might consider having separate steps for e.g. unit tests and integration tests, so that you can see how much time is spent in each.
Fix slow tests
Try to avoid slow unit tests. They not only slow down continuous integration, but also local development. If you encounter slow tests you can consider reworking them to stub out the slow parts that are not under test, or use smaller data structures for the test.
You can use unittest2 together with the environment variable
NIMTEST_TIMING=true
to show how much time is spent in every test
(reference).
Caching
Ensure that caches are updated over time. For instance if you cache the latest version of the Nim compiler, then you want to update the cache when a new version of the compiler is released. See also the documentation for the cache action.
Fail fast
By default a workflow fails fast: if one job fails, the rest are cancelled. This might seem inconvenient, because when you're debugging an issue you often want to know whether you introduced a failure on all platforms, or only on a single one. You might be tempted to disable fail-fast, but keep in mind that this keeps runners busy for longer on a workflow that you know is going to fail anyway. Consequent runs will therefore take longer to start. Fail fast is most likely better for overall development speed.