Historically, `needs` specifies the jobs which need to complete
successfully and `dependencies` specifies the jobs which provide
artifacts which should be used. Modern GitLab discourages using both as
`needs` now supports an `artifacts` key to say "depend on but do not use
artifacts", so remove `dependencies` and use `needs:artifacts` where
necessary.
See: https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/ci/yaml/#needsartifacts
For Intel versions from 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, and 2020, cover only the
latest update from each year. This will reduce the size of the nightly
pipeline.
Improves the handling of CUDA layouts where we have multiple include
and library directories listed in the output of `nvcc -v`. This
updates both when the CUDA language is enabled or not.
Fixes: #24915
Some jobs will run in a build directory other than
$CI_PROJECT_DIR/build, and will produce artifacts in a different
directory. Add a variable specifying where to find the artifacts, and
set it to build/ by default.
Update the centos base image from centos 6 to centos 7. The latter is
the minimum version supported by libuv 1.45. The resulting binaries
require GLIBC 2.17.
The Fedora `rocm-hip-devel` package organizes the `hip-lang` cmake package
differently from the official ROCm base images. Cover it separately.
Issue: #25050
The Debian package for `hipcc` organizes the `hip-lang` cmake package
differently from the official ROCm base images. Cover it separately.
Issue: #24562
In commit 4c7c66dcf5 (gitlab-ci: Add jobs to make Windows x86_64 and
i386 packages, 2022-05-19, v3.24.0-rc1~112^2) we used a separate Windows
packaging job in nightly packaging pipelines. It did not run in release
pipelines, where we need to run the final packaging step manually with
signing. Simplify nightly packaging pipelines by running `cpack` at the
end of the build job as we do for other platforms.
For release packaging pipelines, create an archive of the files needed
to build a package, and present this as the built "package" on Windows.