angular-docs-cn/.circleci
Xin Gao 9abf114fbb feat(bazel): use rbe_autoconfig() and new container. (#29336)
After this PR is merged, maintainers no longer need to update .bazelrc
file, toolchain and platform related flags for RBE builds and tests
(unless there is a breaking change in Bazel related to those flags).

Maintainers just need to update the pin of @bazel-toolchains repo
regularly in the packages/bazel/package.bzl file according to
https://releases.bazel.build/bazel-toolchains.html to include the
latest checked-in toolchain configs. If rbe_autoconfig() cannot find
appropriate toolchain configs for the version of Bazel in the version of
@bazel_toolchains repo that is currently used by this project, it will pull
down the container and generate the configs on the fly as the beginning
of the build/test.

PR Close #29336
2019-05-09 14:58:34 -07:00
..
README.md
bazel.rc
config.yml feat(bazel): use rbe_autoconfig() and new container. (#29336) 2019-05-09 14:58:34 -07:00
env-helpers.inc.sh ci(docs-infra): use the tests from the stable branch in `aio_monitoring_stable` CircleCI job (#30110) 2019-04-26 16:33:45 -07:00
env.sh ci(docs-infra): use the tests from the stable branch in `aio_monitoring_stable` CircleCI job (#30110) 2019-04-26 16:33:45 -07:00
gcp_token
get-commit-range.js ci: correctly detect status 400 as failure in `get-commit-range` (#29839) 2019-04-11 08:20:25 -07:00
github_token
setup_cache.sh
trigger-webhook.js

README.md

Encryption

Based on https://github.com/circleci/encrypted-files

In the CircleCI web UI, we have a secret variable called KEY https://circleci.com/gh/angular/angular/edit#env-vars which is only exposed to non-fork builds (see "Pass secrets to builds from forked pull requests" under https://circleci.com/gh/angular/angular/edit#advanced-settings)

We use this as a symmetric AES encryption key to encrypt tokens like a GitHub token that enables publishing snapshots.

To create the github_token file, we take this approach:

  • Find the angular-builds:token in http://valentine
  • Go inside the CircleCI default docker image so you use the same version of openssl as we will at runtime: docker run --rm -it circleci/node:10.12
  • echo "https://[token]:@github.com" > credentials
  • openssl aes-256-cbc -e -in credentials -out .circleci/github_token -k $KEY
  • If needed, base64-encode the result so you can copy-paste it out of docker: base64 github_token