We're no longer using either Travis CI or the Jenkins-based CentOS CI, but we have started using Cirrus CI. Mention the libvirt-ci subproject as well, as a pointer for those who might want to learn more about our CI infrastructure. Signed-off-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@xxxxxxxxxx> --- docs/ci.rst | 12 ++++++++---- 1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/docs/ci.rst b/docs/ci.rst index 2e88e06b1b..b321a67bd9 100644 --- a/docs/ci.rst +++ b/docs/ci.rst @@ -4,10 +4,14 @@ Libvirt Continuous Integration .. contents:: -The libvirt project primarily uses GitLab CI for automated testing of Linux -builds, and cross-compiled Windows builds. `Travis <https://travis-ci.org/libvirt/libvirt>`_ -is used for validating macOS builds, and `Jenkins <https://ci.centos.org/view/libvirt>`_ -is temporarily used for validating FreeBSD builds. +The libvirt project uses GitLab CI for automated testing. + +Linux builds and cross-compiled Windows builds happen on GitLab CI's shared +runners, while FreeBSD and macOS coverage is achieved by triggering `Cirrus CI +<https://cirrus-ci.com/>`_ jobs behind the scenes. + +Most of the tooling used to build CI pipelines is maintained as part of the +`libvirt-ci <https://gitlab.com/libvirt/libvirt-ci>`_ subproject. GitLab CI Dashboard =================== -- 2.25.4