46fe8fb8b4
This has a couple benefits: - we now use a .bazelversion file rather than package.json to pin the version of bazel we want. This means even if you install bazel on your computer rather than via yarn, you'll still get a warning if your bazel version is wrong. - you no longer end up downloading three copies of bazel due to bugs in both npm and yarn where they download all tarballs before checking the metadata to see which are usable on the local platform. - bazelisk correctly handles the tools/bazel trick for wrapping functionality, which we want to use to instrument developer build latencies PR Close #36078 |
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.. | ||
README.md | ||
bazel.common.rc | ||
bazel.linux.rc | ||
bazel.windows.rc | ||
config.yml | ||
env-helpers.inc.sh | ||
env.sh | ||
gcp_token | ||
github_token | ||
setup_cache.sh | ||
trigger-webhook.js | ||
windows-env.ps1 |
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