cmake-lua/.github/workflows/build-osx-cxx.yml
2022-05-12 20:55:13 -04:00

49 lines
1.8 KiB
YAML

name: Build OSX as C++
on: [push, pull_request]
env:
# Customize the CMake build type here (Release, Debug, RelWithDebInfo, etc.)
BUILD_TYPE: Release
jobs:
build:
# The CMake configure and build commands are platform agnostic and should work equally
# well on Windows or Mac. You can convert this to a matrix build if you need
# cross-platform coverage.
# See: https://docs.github.com/en/free-pro-team@latest/actions/learn-github-actions/managing-complex-workflows#using-a-build-matrix
strategy:
fail-fast: false
matrix:
os: [ macos-latest ]
runs-on: ${{ matrix.os }}
name: build-${{ matrix.os }}
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: Create Build Environment
# Some projects don't allow in-source building, so create a separate build directory
# We'll use this as our working directory for all subsequent commands
run: cmake -E make_directory ${{github.workspace}}/build
- name: Configure CMake
# Use a bash shell so we can use the same syntax for environment variable
# access regardless of the host operating system
shell: bash
working-directory: ${{github.workspace}}/build
# Note the current convention is to use the -S and -B options here to specify source
# and build directories, but this is only available with CMake 3.13 and higher.
# The CMake binaries on the Github Actions machines are (as of this writing) 3.12
run: cmake $GITHUB_WORKSPACE -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=$BUILD_TYPE -DLUA_BUILD_AS_CXX=ON
- name: Build
working-directory: ${{github.workspace}}/build
shell: bash
# Execute the build. You can specify a specific target with "--target <NAME>"
run: cmake --build . --config $BUILD_TYPE
- name: Test
working-directory: ${{github.workspace}}/build
shell: bash
run: ctest -V