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Comments (16)

jdeering avatar jdeering commented on June 24, 2024

There is an example of usage in this project's appveyor.yml file. I will make sure to update this project with other usage examples as well. Thanks.

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ferventcoder avatar ferventcoder commented on June 24, 2024

Sweet! Got something working, however I'm not sure how well it is going to work on Mono/Ubuntu (Travis CI) - not your fault, OpenCover seems to have issues over there.

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kbilsted avatar kbilsted commented on June 24, 2024

The readme should point to some example. It's really unclear how to get started. Partly also due to the lack of information on https://coveralls.io/ they basically just point to your nuget repo.

So the idea is to:

  • Have a nuget dependency to your project from ones test project
  • Include a .yml file with configuration
  • Build the project using appveyor
  • your tool then submits data to coverall.net which then publishes?

or how far off am I?

Also, how to best deal with security tokens now that coverall.net advices not to add the token to the .yml file?

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ferventcoder avatar ferventcoder commented on June 24, 2024

Appveyor has a tool for putting an enctypted token in the yaml file. You
can see an example in this project's yaml file.

On Sunday, February 8, 2015, Kasper B. Graversen [email protected]
wrote:

The readme should point to some example. It's really unclear how to get
started. Partly also due to the lack of information on
https://coveralls.io/ they basically just point to your nuget repo.

So the idea is to

  • Have a nuget dependency to your project from ones test project
  • Include a .yml file with configuration
  • Build the project using appveyor
  • your tool then submits data to coverall.net which then publishes?

how to best deal with security tokens now that coverall.net advices not
to add the token to the .yml file?


Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub
https://github.com/jdeering/coveralls.net/issues/5#issuecomment-73399885
.

Rob
"Be passionate in all you do"

http://devlicio.us/blogs/rob_reynolds
http://ferventcoder.com
http://twitter.com/ferventcoder

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kbilsted avatar kbilsted commented on June 24, 2024

Yeah I found it after much searching https://ci.appveyor.com/tools/encrypt

do you want a pullrequest with an updated README.MD detailing how to get started?

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jdeering avatar jdeering commented on June 24, 2024

I definitely won't say no to help offered. I'm open to any and all contributions via pull requests if they help advance the tool and/or its usage.

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ferventcoder avatar ferventcoder commented on June 24, 2024

Here's how I implemented it in Chocolatey using UppercuT:

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kbilsted avatar kbilsted commented on June 24, 2024

@ferventcoder how do you like my latest changes to the readme.md ?

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ferventcoder avatar ferventcoder commented on June 24, 2024

Ship it. :shipit: 👍

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kbilsted avatar kbilsted commented on June 24, 2024

What do you mean @ferventcoder ? it has already been merged. Do you mean close this issue?

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ferventcoder avatar ferventcoder commented on June 24, 2024

Sorry. It's a saying meant to mean good to go.

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jdeering avatar jdeering commented on June 24, 2024

Thoughts on placing the Getting Started in wiki instead of README.md? I understand the benefit of it being right on the front page, but we're making assumptions about build environments as well as enforcing a specific project layout via the instructions used. I'd rather see a few Getting Started options, especially a quick, local build and run option that doesn't require a CI service. And I would personally prefer the quick start/local option to the Appveyor option as the default in README.md.

I figured I would ask instead of dictate as you both seem to be using this a lot more than I am at the moment. Although hopefully I'll be a little more active in the coming weeks.

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ferventcoder avatar ferventcoder commented on June 24, 2024

Wiki works for me. :)

On Monday, February 16, 2015, Jason Deering [email protected]
wrote:

Thoughts on placing the Getting Started in wiki instead of README.md? I
understand the benefit of it being right on the front page, but we're
making assumptions about build environments as well as enforcing a specific
project layout via the instructions used. I'd rather see a few Getting
Started
options, especially a quick, local build and run option that
doesn't require a CI service. And I would personally prefer the quick
start/local option to the Appveyor option as the default in README.md.

I figured I would ask instead of dictate as you both seem to be using this
a lot more than I am at the moment. Although hopefully I'll be a little
more active in the coming weeks.


Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub
https://github.com/jdeering/coveralls.net/issues/5#issuecomment-74520044
.

Rob
"Be passionate in all you do"

http://devlicio.us/blogs/rob_reynolds
http://ferventcoder.com
http://twitter.com/ferventcoder

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kbilsted avatar kbilsted commented on June 24, 2024

Fine with me too. As long as the readme points to the wiki:)

How do you version the wiki? Wondered myself about documentation. My stateprinter project uses a doc folder instead and has the readme point into the doc folder. This project and mine are for programmers so I'm not sure you will see more edits on the wiki.

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kbilsted avatar kbilsted commented on June 24, 2024

https://github.com/kbilsted/StatePrinter

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jdeering avatar jdeering commented on June 24, 2024

I've started wiki pages for documentation of usage. If anyone wants to help contribute, let me know and I'll add the relevant permissions.

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