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by GeneralMayhem
182 days ago
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I worked on building this at $PREV_EMPLOYER. We used a single repo for many services, so that you could run tests on all affected binaries/downstream libraries when a library changed. We used Bazel to maintain the dependency tree, and then triggered builds based on a custom Github Actions hook that would use `bazel query` to find the transitive closure of affected targets. Then, if anything in a directory was affected, we'd trigger the set of tests defined in a config file in that directory (defaulting to :...), each as its own workflow run that would block PR submission. That worked really well, with the only real limiting factor being the ultimate upper limit of a repo in Github, but of course took a fair amount (a few SWE-months) to build all the tooling. |
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This, and if you want build + deploy that’s faster than doing it manually from your dev machine, you pay $$$ for either something like Depot, or a beefy VM to host CI.
A bit more work on those dependency corner cases, along with an auto-sleeping VM, should let us achieve nirvana. But it’s not like we have a lot of spare time on our small team.