Daan De Meyer e213ecd484 test: Make it possible to run the integration tests standalone (#36868)
Currently, to run the integration tests, it's still necessary to
install various other build tools besides meson: A compiler, gperf,
libcap, ... which we want to avoid in CI systems where we receive
prebuilt systemd packages and only want to test them. Examples are
Debian's autopkgtest CI and Fedora CI. Let's make it possible for
these systems to run the integration tests without having to install
any other build dependency besides meson by extracting the logic
required to run the integration tests with meson into a separate
subdirectory and adding a standalone top-level meson.build file which
can be used to configure a meson tree with as its only purpose running
the integration tests.

Practically, we do the following:
- all the integration test directories and integration-test-wrapper.py
  are moved from test/ to test/integration-tests/.
- All the installation logic is kept out of test/integration-tests/ or
  any of its subdirectories and moved into test/meson.build instead.
- We add test/integration-tests/standalone/meson.build to run the
  integration tests standalone. This meson file includes
  test/integration-tests via a cute symlink hack to trick meson into
  including a parent directory with subdir().
- Documentation is included on how to use the new standalone mode.
2025-03-27 21:38:00 +01:00
2025-03-07 17:27:20 +01:00
2025-03-21 13:41:56 +00:00
2025-03-26 14:40:14 +01:00
2025-03-18 22:46:10 +01:00

Systemd

System and Service Manager

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Most documentation is available on systemd's web site.

Assorted, older, general information about systemd can be found in the systemd Wiki.

Information about build requirements is provided in the README file.

Consult our NEWS file for information about what's new in the most recent systemd versions.

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