Files
mosh/macosx/osx-xcode.sh
John Hood 73b4ab21ad OS X package build on Travis
This builds an OS X package and deploys it to a GitHub release when a
tag is pushed.  It also generates a tarball reporting the build
environment and configuration.  The build log is still separate.

This is not yet final, it deploys to cgull/mosh and not
mobile-shell/mosh.

It should not affect Linux or OS X CI builds (other than the change to
the Travis Xcode 7.1 image).

Included changes:

The Travis Xcode 7 image seems to have added tmux while we were gone,
breaking our Homebrew setup.

There seems to be no clean reliable way to determine whether a
Homebrew package is installed or needs updating.  Reinstalling is less
efficient but seems to work reliably.

The OS X build is now split between four files:

.travis.yml contains Travis-specific CI/release build configuration.

macosx/brew.sh contains Homebrew-specific package manager installs and
reporting.

macosx/osx-xcode.sh contains Apple-specific OS/X and Xcode reporting.

macosx/build.sh does the actual package build.
2016-11-12 19:57:50 -05:00

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#!/bin/sh
#
# OS X and Xcode support script.
#
#
# Describe the OS X and Xcode installation, patches, etc as best as possible.
#
# Beware: System Profiler dumps significant private and security information.
#
describe()
{
# Most of the XML in this report is plist files, which can be read more easily with plutil -p
pkgutil --pkgs-plist > packages-plist.xml
mkdir package-info-plist/
for i in $(pkgutil --pkgs); do pkgutil --pkg-info-plist=$i > package-info-plist/$i.xml; done
xcodebuild -version > xcodebuild-version.txt
# CLT info can be found in package-info-plist/com.apple.pkg.CLTools_Executables.xml
xcode-select --print-path > xcode-path.txt
# System Profiler's XML can be read more easily with plutil -p, or
# opened with the System Profiler GUI.
system_profiler -xml -detailLevel full > system-profile.spx 2>/dev/null
}
#
# Do something.
#
set -e
"$@"