commit | dba2fdb231b3150145fc8e67e7636329760eb187 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Sam Clegg <sbc@chromium.org> | Fri Apr 14 18:16:52 2017 |
committer | GitHub <noreply@github.com> | Fri Apr 14 18:16:52 2017 |
tree | b82c575569fe2e0dd328490a80b93ecabcf22f2a | |
parent | 23fedbd94b6d494fd6934a88884708924a24138f [diff] |
Switch to pulling llvm from github.com directly until llvm mirror is fixed. (#189)
Luckily, this repository has some tests:
This repository holds the code which make the WebAssembly waterfall‘s heart beat. You may want to see the waterfall in action, and if you don’t like what you see you may even want to contribute.
WebAssembly has many moving parts and no central owner. Some of these interact closely, some implement the same thing. A build and test waterfall allows us to:
We should keep process to a minimum, try things out, see what works.