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Writing error logs to an ILogger instead of Console, adding an event for Unsupported Events #175

Writing error logs to an ILogger instead of Console, adding an event for Unsupported Events

Writing error logs to an ILogger instead of Console, adding an event for Unsupported Events #175

# This workflow uses actions that are not certified by GitHub.
# They are provided by a third-party and are governed by
# separate terms of service, privacy policy, and support
# documentation.
# This workflow will build, test, sign and package a WPF or Windows Forms desktop application
# built on .NET Core.
# To learn how to migrate your existing application to .NET Core,
# refer to https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/desktop-wpf/migration/convert-project-from-net-framework
#
# To configure this workflow:
#
# 1. Configure environment variables
# GitHub sets default environment variables for every workflow run.
# Replace the variables relative to your project in the "env" section below.
#
# 2. Signing
# Generate a signing certificate in the Windows Application
# Packaging Project or add an existing signing certificate to the project.
# Next, use PowerShell to encode the .pfx file using Base64 encoding
# by running the following Powershell script to generate the output string:
#
# $pfx_cert = Get-Content '.\SigningCertificate.pfx' -Encoding Byte
# [System.Convert]::ToBase64String($pfx_cert) | Out-File 'SigningCertificate_Encoded.txt'
#
# Open the output file, SigningCertificate_Encoded.txt, and copy the
# string inside. Then, add the string to the repo as a GitHub secret
# and name it "Base64_Encoded_Pfx."
# For more information on how to configure your signing certificate for
# this workflow, refer to https://github.com/microsoft/github-actions-for-desktop-apps#signing
#
# Finally, add the signing certificate password to the repo as a secret and name it "Pfx_Key".
# See "Build the Windows Application Packaging project" below to see how the secret is used.
#
# For more information on GitHub Actions, refer to https://github.com/features/actions
# For a complete CI/CD sample to get started with GitHub Action workflows for Desktop Applications,
# refer to https://github.com/microsoft/github-actions-for-desktop-apps
name: obs-websocket-dotnet Tests
on:
push:
branches: [ master ]
pull_request:
branches: [ master ]
jobs:
build:
strategy:
matrix:
configuration: [ Release ]
runs-on: windows-latest # For a list of available runner types, refer to
# https://help.github.com/en/actions/reference/workflow-syntax-for-github-actions#jobsjob_idruns-on
env:
Solution_Name: obs-websocket-dotnet.sln # Replace with your solution name, i.e. MyWpfApp.sln.
Test_Project_Path: obs-websocket-dotnet-tests\obs-websocket-dotnet-tests.csproj # Replace with the path to your test project, i.e. MyWpfApp.Tests\MyWpfApp.Tests.csproj.
#Wap_Project_Directory: your-wap-project-directory-name # Replace with the Wap project directory relative to the solution, i.e. MyWpfApp.Package.
#Wap_Project_Path: your-wap-project-path # Replace with the path to your Wap project, i.e. MyWpf.App.Package\MyWpfApp.Package.wapproj.
steps:
- name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v2
with:
fetch-depth: 0
# Install the .NET Core workload
- name: Install .NET Core
uses: actions/setup-dotnet@v1
with:
dotnet-version: 3.1.101
# Add MSBuild to the PATH: https://github.com/microsoft/setup-msbuild
- name: Setup MSBuild.exe
uses: microsoft/[email protected]
# Execute all unit tests in the solution
- name: Execute unit tests
run: dotnet test
# Restore the application to populate the obj folder with RuntimeIdentifiers
- name: Restore the application
run: msbuild $env:Solution_Name /t:Restore /p:Configuration=$env:Configuration
env:
Configuration: ${{ matrix.configuration }}