* Add workflow_call event
* Add tests-daily-run.yml
* Remove workflow version
* Update input value
* Remove secrets from caller workflow
* Rename job
* Check context
* Check context
* Check workflow_call inputs
* Override github.event_name with inputs.trigger
* Fix input name
* Add config for daily e2e tests with Gutenberg
* Update env commands for Gutenberg run
* Add disableHpos env variable in ci-utils
* Revert the trigger to push
* Revert the env variable setting in ci-jobs
* Revert the env variable setting in ci-jobs
* Rebuild utils
* Update test env start command
* Define the Gutenberg Playwright project
* Use path relative to workspace root
* Update events for test projects
* Update events for test projects
* Add changelogs
* Remove the e2e tests with Gutenberg tests from daily runs
* Set the schedule and workflow_dispatch triggers
* Add --project default flag to only run the default tests in CI
* Renamed snapshots to match the new Playwright project name
This bumps the version to 0.14.3 so that we can take advantage of some
upstream improvements. It also makes some changes to the way our
builds and watches work to minimize the number of unnecessary
Node processes involved in the execution.
This adds support for using the `pnpm utils ci-jobs` command in our `ci.yml` file. One of the bigger benefits to this change too is that we're now distributing a bundled version of the utils tool. This lets us run it without actually having to install the repo and will let us speed up any workflows that currently do.
* Add @wordpress/core-data dependency
* Update lock file
* Implement useLayoutTemplate
* Changelog
* Allow layoutTemplateId param to be undefined
* Only enable useEntityRecord when layoutTemplateId is set
* Workaround for query made when layoutTemplateID is not set
* Use getEntityConfig instead of getEntity
* Update comment with core-data version
* Add doc for useLayoutTemplate
Similarly to `build:project`, a new `watch:build:project`
script will watch individual projects for changes. The
`watch:build` script has been updated so that it does
a deep watch in the same vein as `build`. We have also
hooked up tool-level watching for faster performance.
Having an explicit `"files"` definition will allow us to fingerprint
dependencies in `wireit` more granularly. This avoids problems
that can be caused by different source files and directories that
trigger a rebuild in a dependee before a dependent finishes.
We're adding this to _every_ package since they have their own
configuration and scripts to run. This also keeps them
isolated so that they can operate independently.