When building GTK through the CI infrastructure, it would help to have
some ways of testing it; for instance, if we want to verify that theme
changes are useful, or if we want to run the result without necessarily
build it locally.
This is where flatpak comes in handy. By having the CI build a flatpak
buundle, and storing it as an artifact, of the GTK demos, we can easily
point developers and designers to an installable binary that won't break
their system, nor will require development tools and environments to
run.
The GitLab cache is kept across jobs, whether they succeeded or not:
this means that if a compiler check fails during the Meson
configuration, the small compiler program gets cached and restored the
next time the job is run, thus failing again.
I've rebuilt the new Docker image we use for CI to include GStreamer in
the dependencies.
We really need to have the Docker registry hosted on gnome.org, to avoid
pointing people at Dockerhub.
The CI runner is pretty slow to set up (takes about 6 minutes to get
through the system dependencies needed to build GTK), and does not work
with dependencies as subprojects.
Until we figure out how to make it work, and make it work a bit faster,
we should drop CI and rely on Continuous for a while longer.
We can revert this commit as soon as we find out how to make things
work.