fuelup
adopts a simplified version of rustup
channels . Currently, the latest
, nightly
, and beta
channels are published and serve as a source of distribution of Fuel toolchain binaries.
Channel | Source | Integration Tested | Update Frequency | Available |
---|---|---|---|---|
latest | published bins | ✔️ | checked every 30 minutes | ✔️ |
nightly | master branch | ➖ | nightly (1:00 AM UTC) | ✔️ |
beta-3 | published bins | ➖ | only when necessary | ✔️ |
beta-3
channel The beta-3
channel is a published TOML file describing the toolchain that is compatible with our beta-3 testnet . This toolchain should be used to interact with and build on the testnet. The components to be installed can be found here .
nightly
channel The nightly
channel is a published TOML file describing successful builds of the master
branch of forc
and fuel-core
for the day.
These builds are released in the sway-nightly-binaries repository and the workflows in that repo start building them every day at 00:00 UTC.
The nightly
channel within fuelup
is updated by a scheduled GitHub workflow that runs every day at 01:00 UTC, after builds have finished.
Note that nightlies might fail to build, in which case it is possible that the nightly
toolchain may not be available for that day.
You should use nightly
if you want the latest changes to master
that have not been officially released yet.
Keep in mind that compatibility between forc
and fuel-core
is not guaranteed here, and you should expect unstable features to break.
latest
channel The latest
channel is updated by a scheduled GitHub workflow that runs every 30 minutes and checks for new, compatible releases of forc
and fuel-core
.
The latest
channel is fuelup
's default channel. It provides access to the latest compatible, published releases of forc
and fuel-core
.
When installing the latest
channel, fuelup will refer to the channel-fuel-latest.toml
file published within the fuelup repository in the gh-pages branch to determine the set of forc
and fuel-core
versions to retrieve. The versions in this file are updated by a scheduled GitHub workflow that runs once every 30 minutes and performs the following steps:
latest
workflow Note
Reading the information below is only really necessary if you wish to contribute to the workflows or want a deeper understanding on how channels are updated.
The entrypoint of the scheduled workflow is within index-versions.yml
. We run the Rust script compare-versions
to collect versions of forc
and fuel-core
to be tested. These versions are filtered for incompatible versions prior to being used as a JSON string input to test-toolchain-compatibility.yml
, where the testing occurs.
In test-toolchain-compatibility.yml
, The versions JSON string input is used to init a matrix using the fromJSON expression. We checkout the Sway repo at the given forc
version and pull the fuel-core
Docker image at the given fuel-core
version and run integration tests found in the Sway CI for them.
Note that we only mark versions as incompatible specifically if tests fail, and not if other prior steps fail (eg. we do not want to mark versions as incompatible if there were errors pulling the Docker image)
The upload-artifact action is used to collect the test results from the matrix to be used later in a download-artifact step.
If tests were not skipped and are now done, we finally get to the index-versions
job. We download the artifacts that were previously uploaded to be used here. This job will:
upload incompatible versions to gh-pages. These incompatible versions are named in the format incompatible-forc-<FORC_VERSION>@fuel-core-<FUEL_CORE_VERSION>
.
update the channel by filtering for the latest versions of forc
and fuel-core
that passed tests within the matrix by running index-versions.sh
. These are named in the format compatible-forc-<FORC_VERSION>@fuel-core-<FUEL_CORE_VERSION>
. Note that these files are not saved or uploaded onto gh-pages - they are only a way for the test-toolchain-compatibility
job to share test results with this job.
If you're contributing to the workflows, it might be a good idea to fork the repo and test any changes you've made on a personal repo first.
Some changes you might want to make to allow for easier testing:
You may want to use the push or workflow_dispatch triggers to make testing easier.
You can also exit with 0 or 1 in jobs or steps where you want it to pass/fail.
You may also use nektos/act to run the workflow(s) locally.