This is just a maintenance upgrade to keep us close to the latest release.
No known bugs are being fixed by this upgrade.
I also removed the npm override in .travis.yaml since node 4 ships with a recent version of npm
and usually this version is preferred (it might contain custom patches).
Closes#4939
Originally we ran gulp enforce-format at the beginning of the build.
This was annoying because you came back from lunch to find that no tests
ran so you have to start your PR over.
Then we changed it to run the linters at the end. This is annoying because
you might be ready to merge to master, and could have fixed the lint
issues immediately, but now much wait for another PR.
The solution is to run the lint checks in another build. This marks
your PR red very early, but you still get the feedback of whether the
tests are passing.
We discussed last week that our build has been steadily getting longer.
We should track the time so we can easily notice that it went up and
find the culprit.
This hooks us up to https://buildtimetrend.herokuapp.com/ which seems
capable and very quick to setup. We can easily gather the data and
then evaluate the dashboard.
Note that we want to have two different webhooks, and only notify gitter
on transitions, but we want to have timing for all builds, since a
series of passing builds might have a big jump in build time in the middle.
I don't see how to do this with travis.yml so I've overnotified gitter.
second attempt after rollback of https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/2946
After each successful build in the dart stable variant, this uploads just enough of the dart
artifacts to mirror what we would push to pub.
By uploading the files instead of a zip, this lets dart users depend on an unreleased snapshot
of angular2, and lets us easily fetch the dart artifacts for sync into google3
without having to re-build (potentially in a subtly different environment).
This doesn't upload anything for pull requests.
Travis is currently stalling, presumably it takes too long to upload this many files.
Also it picks up the dart directory when deploying js, which looks like a bug
with multiple gcs providers, so just do dart for now.
This copies the dist/ folder for each successful travis run
to a google cloud storage bucket, under the SHA of the commit.
We only upload for submitted changes, not PRs.
We can use this to fetch the dart sources for each SHA
without having to re-build them, which is hard to reproduce
since the environment might differ (eg. different Dart SDK)
Since we are currently stuck on node 0.10 (see #1396), this will at least help us avoid
some of the npm bugs present in older version that comes with 0.10.