Our self hosted runners are limited in quantity so we should preserve
them for workflows that actually require the additional resources
instead of tying them up on workflows that do not benefit from the
additional resources.
docker.io rate limits _should_ be addressed now. Switch back to
`debian-12` runners.
This is now a conditional within the `tests` workflow as we evaluate the
migration.
This reverts commit a99e2c62e6.
The self-hosted Github runners have been provisioned, and we can switch
to using them for evaluation.
To prefer Github-hosted runners, you can safely revert this commit.
See: t/123181.
This will bring significant improvements to install speed & storage requirements. For information on how it may affect you, see https://meta.discourse.org/t/324521
This commit:
- removes the `yarn.lock` and replaces with `pnpm-lock.yaml`
- updates workspaces to pnpm format
- adjusts package dependencies to work with pnpm's stricter resolution strategy
- updates Rails app to load modules from more specific node_modules directories
- adds a `.pnpmfile` which automatically cleans up old yarn-managed `node_modules` directories
- updates various scripts to call `pnpm` instead of `yarn`
- updates patches to use pnpm's native patch system instead of patch-package
- adds a patch for licensee to support pnpm
Before this commit, we had a yarn package set up in the root directory and also in `app/assets/javascripts`. That meant two `yarn install` calls and two `node_modules` directories. This commit merges them both into the root location, and updates references to node_modules.
A previous attempt can be found at https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/21172. This commit re-uses that script to merge the `yarn.lock` files.
Co-authored-by: Jarek Radosz <jradosz@gmail.com>
We added `always()` on some steps so that they run even if previous steps fail. That helps give us a picture of all failures in one run, rather than having to re-run the workflow after fixing the first failure.
However, when we explicitly cancel a job, we should skip running these steps. `!cancelled()` is a better substitute for `always()` in this case.