Reputation: 16250
Using Travis-CI, is it possible to trigger a rebuild without pushing a new commit to GitHub?
Use case: A build fails due to an externality. The source is actually correct. It would build OK and pass if simply re-run.
For instance, an apt-get
fails due to a package server being down, but the server is back up again. However the build status is "stuck" at "failed" until a new commit is pushed.
Is there some way to nudge Travis-CI to do another build, other than pushing a "dummy" commit?
Upvotes: 432
Views: 109774
Reputation: 31799
If you have write access to the repo: On the build's detail screen, there is a button ↻ Restart Build. Also under "More Options" there is a trigger build menu item.
Note: Browser extensions like Ghostery may prevent the restart button from being displayed. Try disabling the extension or white-listing Travis CI.
Note2: If .travis.yml
configuration has changed in the upstream, clicking rebuild button will run travis with old configuration. To apply upstream changes for travis configuration one has to add commit to PR or to close / reopen it.
If you've sent a pull request: You can close the PR then open it again. This will trigger a new build.
Restart Build:
Trigger Build:
Upvotes: 477
Reputation: 375
sometimes it happens that server do made some mistakes. try log out/sign in and everything might be right then. (Yes it happened this afternoon to me.)
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1294
Please make sure to Log In to Travis first. The rebuild button doesn't appear until you're logged in. I know this is obvious, but someone just tripped on it as well ;-)
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 2529
Here's what worked for me to trigger a rebuild on a PR that Dependabot had opened, but failed due to errors in .travis.yml
:
dependabot/cargo/tempfile-3.0.4
).Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 7746
I have found another way of forcing re-run CI builds and other triggers:
git commit --amend --no-edit
without any changes. This will recreate the last commit in the current branch.git push --force-with-lease origin pr-branch
.Upvotes: 37
Reputation: 22610
Travis now offers a way to trigger a "custom" build from their web UI. Look for the "More Options" menu button on the right side near the top of your project's page.
You'll then be presented with a dialog box in which you can choose the branch and customize the configuration:
At the time I'm writing this it is in beta, and appears to be slightly buggy (but I expect they'll get the problems ironed out soon).
Upvotes: 12
Reputation: 515
Simlpy close and re-open the PR if you do not have the write access.
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 2663
I should mention here that we now have a means of triggering a new build on the web. See https://blog.travis-ci.com/2017-08-24-trigger-custom-build for details.
TL;DR Click on "More options", and choose "Trigger build".
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 3196
If you open the Settings tab for the repository on GitHub, click on Integrations & services, find Travis CI and click Edit, you should see a Test Service button. This will trigger a build.
Upvotes: 208
Reputation: 1154
I just triggered the tests on a pull request to be re-run by clicking 'update branch' here:
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 2950
You can do this using the Travis CLI. As described in the documentation, first install the CLI tool, then:
travis login --org --auto
travis token
You can keep this token in an environment variable TRAVIS_TOKEN
, as long as the file you keep it in is not version-controlled somewhere public.
I use this function to submit triggers:
function travis_trigger() {
local org=$1 && shift
local repo=$1 && shift
local branch=${1:-master} && shift
body="{
\"request\": {
\"branch\": \"${branch}\"
}
}"
curl -s -X POST \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-H "Accept: application/json" \
-H "Travis-API-Version: 3" \
-H "Authorization: token $TRAVIS_TOKEN" \
-d "$body" \
"https://api.travis-ci.org/repo/${org}%2F${repo}/requests"
}
Upvotes: 16
Reputation: 12174
If the build never occurred (perhaps you didn't get the Pull-Request build switch set to on in time), you can mark the Pull Request on Github as closed then mark it as opened and a new build will be triggered.
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 1503
If you have new project on GitHub which has .travis.yml, but was never tested, you can run tests without commit this way:
Upvotes: 20
Reputation: 15697
If you install the Travis CI Client you can use travis restart <job#>
to manually re-run a build from the console. You can find the last job# for a branch using travis show <branch>
travis show master
travis restart 48 #use Job number without .1
travis logs master
UPDATE: Sadly it looks like this doesn't start a new build using the latest commit, but instead just restarts a previous build using the previous state of the repo.
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 1278
I know you said without pushing a commit, but something that is handy, if you are working on a branch other than master, is to commit an empty commit.
git commit --allow-empty -m "Trigger"
You can rebase in the end and remove squash/remove the empty commits and works across all git hooks :)
Upvotes: 91