Adds the following to install instructions:
Tip
If you are only editing Python files, follow instructions for Building Ray (Python Only) to avoid long build times.
If you already followed the instructions in Building Ray (Python Only) and want to switch to the Full build in this section, you will need to first delete the symlinks and uninstall Ray.
The existing docs didn't work for me and these updates did. 🤷♀️ I selectively pulled this stuff out of the CI (which ideally would just be runnable locally).
This is a small update for the structure of the docs about building Ray from source.
My idea was to isolate steps that are shared and then steps required per platform/system. Also consolidating the instructions to clone with git, install, directory structure, etc.
I'm still figuring out the building steps (installing the dependencies for docs in an M1), but I wanted to start the draft right away.
Clean up the ci/ directory. This means getting rid of the travis/ path completely and moving the files into sensible subdirectories.
Details:
- Moves everything under ci/travis into subdirectories, e.g. ci/build, ci/lint, etc.
- Minor adjustments to some scripts (variable renames)
- Removes the outdated (unused) asan tests
This PR consolidates both #21667 and #21759 (look there for features), but improves on them in the following way:
- [x] we reverted renaming of existing projects `tune`, `rllib`, `train`, `cluster`, `serve`, `raysgd` and `data` so that links won't break. I think my consolidation efforts with the `ray-` prefix were a little overeager in that regard. It's better like this. Only the creation of `ray-core` was a necessity, and some files moved into the `rllib` folder, so that should be relatively benign.
- [x] Additionally, we added Algolia `docsearch`, screenshot below. This is _much_ better than our current search. Caveat: there's a sphinx dependency that needs to be replaced (`sphinx-tabs`) by another, newer one (`sphinx-panels`), as the former prevents loading of the `algolia.js` library. Will follow-up in the next PR (hoping this one doesn't get re-re-re-re-reverted).