This script is designed for developer and contributor use. This tool mimics the actions of gpuCI on your local machine. This allows you to test and even debug your code inside a gpuCI base container before pushing your code as a GitHub commit. The script can be helpful in locally triaging and debugging RAPIDS continuous integration failures.
nvidia-docker
bash build.sh [-h] [-H] [-s] [-r <repo_dir>] [-i <image_name>]
Build and test your local repository using a base gpuCI Docker image
where:
-H Show this help text
-r Path to repository (defaults to working directory)
-i Use Docker image (default is gpuci/rapidsai-base:cuda10.0-ubuntu16.04-gcc5-py3.6)
-s Skip building and testing and start an interactive shell in a container of the Docker image
Example Usage:
bash build.sh -r ~/rapids/cugraph -i gpuci/rapidsai-base:cuda9.2-ubuntu16.04-gcc5-py3.6
For a full list of available gpuCI docker images, visit our DockerHub page.
Style Check:
$ bash ci/local/build.sh -r ~/rapids/cugraph -s
$ source activate gdf #Activate gpuCI conda environment
$ cd rapids
$ flake8 python
There are some caveats to be aware of when using this script, especially if you plan on developing from within the container itself.
The docker image will generate build artifacts in a folder on your machine located in the root
directory of the repository you passed to the script. For the above example, the directory is named ~/rapids/cugraph/build_rapidsai-base_cuda9.2-ubuntu16.04-gcc5-py3.6/
. Feel free to remove this directory after the script is finished.
Note: The script will not override your local build repository. Your local environment stays in tact.
The script will build your repository and run all tests. If any tests fail, it dumps the user into the docker container itself to allow you to debug from within the container. If all the tests pass as expected the container exits and is automatically removed. Remember to exit the container if tests fail and you do not wish to debug within the container itself.
Your repository will be located in the /rapids/
folder of the container. This folder is volume mounted from the local machine. Any changes to the code in this repository are replicated onto the local machine. The cpp/build
and python/build
directories within your repository is on a separate mount to avoid conflicting with your local build artifacts.