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feat: fix max-parallel:1 #17

feat: fix max-parallel:1

feat: fix max-parallel:1 #17

# This workflow uses actions that are not certified by GitHub.
# They are provided by a third-party and are governed by
# separate terms of service, privacy policy, and support
# documentation.
# This workflow will build, test, sign and package a WPF or Windows Forms desktop application
# built on .NET Core.
# To learn how to migrate your existing application to .NET Core,
# refer to https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/desktop-wpf/migration/convert-project-from-net-framework
#
# To configure this workflow:
#
# 1. Configure environment variables
# GitHub sets default environment variables for every workflow run.
# Replace the variables relative to your project in the "env" section below.
#
# 2. Signing
# Generate a signing certificate in the Windows Application
# Packaging Project or add an existing signing certificate to the project.
# Next, use PowerShell to encode the .pfx file using Base64 encoding
# by running the following Powershell script to generate the output string:
#
# $pfx_cert = Get-Content '.\SigningCertificate.pfx' -Encoding Byte
# [System.Convert]::ToBase64String($pfx_cert) | Out-File 'SigningCertificate_Encoded.txt'
#
# Open the output file, SigningCertificate_Encoded.txt, and copy the
# string inside. Then, add the string to the repo as a GitHub secret
# and name it "Base64_Encoded_Pfx."
# For more information on how to configure your signing certificate for
# this workflow, refer to https://github.com/microsoft/github-actions-for-desktop-apps#signing
#
# Finally, add the signing certificate password to the repo as a secret and name it "Pfx_Key".
# See "Build the Windows Application Packaging project" below to see how the secret is used.
#
# For more information on GitHub Actions, refer to https://github.com/features/actions
# For a complete CI/CD sample to get started with GitHub Action workflows for Desktop Applications,
# refer to https://github.com/microsoft/github-actions-for-desktop-apps
name: Test with code coverage
on:
push:
branches:
- '**'
env:
DOTNET_INSTALL_DIR: "./.dotnet"
jobs:
test:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
strategy:
max-parallel: 1
permissions:
pull-requests: write
contents: write
services:
elasticsearch:
image: elasticsearch:7.17.0
ports:
- 9200:9200
options: -e="discovery.type=single-node" -e="xpack.security.enabled=false" --health-cmd="curl http://localhost:9200/_cluster/health" --health-interval=10s --health-timeout=5s --health-retries=10
steps:
- name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Setup dotnet
uses: actions/setup-dotnet@v4
with:
dotnet-version: '7.0'
#- name: Verify Elasticsearch connection
# env:
# ELASTIC_SEARCH_URL: http://127.0.0.1:${{ job.services.elasticsearch.ports[9200] }}
# run: |
# echo $ELASTIC_SEARCH_URL
# curl -fsSL "$ELASTIC_SEARCH_URL/_cat/health?h=status"
- name: Install dependencies
run: dotnet restore --verbosity quiet
- name: Build
run: dotnet build --no-restore /clp:ErrorsOnly /p:GeneratePackageOnBuild=false --verbosity quiet
- name: Test
run: |
for name in `ls ./test/*.Tests/*.csproj | awk '{print $NF}'`;
do
dotnet test ${name} --no-restore --no-build --logger trx --settings CodeCoverage.runsettings --results-directory coverage --collect:"XPlat Code Coverage"
done
- name: Upload coverage reports to Codecov
uses: codecov/codecov-action@v4
with:
fail_ci_if_error: true
files: coverage/*/coverage.cobertura.xml
env:
CODECOV_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.CODECOV_TOKEN }}