This plugin will post to the build status system in BitBucket. In order
to use it you need to add to ExtraConfig
<bitbucket>
username = bitbucket_username
password = bitbucket_password
</bitbucket>
You can use an application password https://blog.bitbucket.org/2016/06/06/app-passwords-bitbucket-cloud/
This can be used with declarative projects to build PRs.
The github_authorization section should contain verbatim Authorization header contents keyed by repo owner for private repos
1. From the hydra configuration file.
The configuration is loaded from the "git-input" block.
Currently only the "timeout" variable is been looked up in the file.
<git-input>
# general timeout
timeout = 400
<input-name>
# specific timeout for a particular input name
timeout = 400
</input-name>
# use quotes when the input name has spaces
<"foot with spaces">
# specific timeout for a particular input name
timeout = 400
</"foo with spaces">
</git-input>
2. As an argument in the input value after the repo url and branch (and after the deepClone if is defined)
"timeout=<value>"
The preference on which value is used:
1. input value
2. Block with the name of the input in the <git-input> block
3. "timeout" inside the <git-input> block
4. Default value of 600 seconds. (original hard-coded value)
The code is generalized for more values to be configured, it might be too much
for a single value on a single plugin.
* The "Jobset" page now shows when evaluations are in progress (rather
than just pending).
* Restored the ability to do a single evaluation from the command line
by doing "hydra-evaluator <project> <jobset>".
* Fix some consistency issues between jobset status in PostgreSQL and
in hydra-evaluator. In particular, "lastCheckedTime" was never
updated internally.
Setting
xxx-jobset-repeats = patchelf:master:2
will cause Hydra to perform every build step in the specified jobset 2
additional times (i.e. 3 times in total). Non-determinism is not fatal
unless the derivation has the attribute "isDeterministic = true"; we
just note the lack of determinism in the Hydra database. This will
allow us to get stats about the (lack of) reproducibility of all of
Nixpkgs.
Without this, if (failed or aborted) derivations have been
garbage-collected, there is no way to restart them, which is very
annoying. Now we set a forceEval flag in the jobset to cause it to be
re-evaluated even if none of the inputs have changed.
Some Hydra API requests were vulnerable to XSRF attacks, e.g. you
could have a form on another website using http://hydra/logout as the
form action. So we now require POST requests to come from the same
origin.
Reported by Hans-Christian Esperer.
Dashboards can now be marked as publically visible in the user
preferences. The dashboard URL has changed from /user/<name>/dashboard
to /dashboard/<name> because /user/<name> requires being logged in as
<name> or as an admin.
This allows fully declarative project specifications. This is best
illustrated by example:
* I create a new project, setting the declarative spec file to
"spec.json" and the declarative input to a git repo pointing
at git://github.com/shlevy/declarative-hydra-example.git
* hydra creates a special ".jobsets" jobset alongside the project
* Just before evaluating the ".jobsets" jobset, hydra fetches
declarative-hydra-example.git, reads spec.json as a jobset spec,
and updates the jobset's configuration accordingly:
{
"enabled": 1,
"hidden": false,
"description": "Jobsets",
"nixexprinput": "src",
"nixexprpath": "default.nix",
"checkinterval": 300,
"schedulingshares": 100,
"enableemail": false,
"emailoverride": "",
"keepnr": 3,
"inputs": {
"src": { "type": "git", "value": "git://github.com/shlevy/declarative-hydra-example.git", "emailresponsible": false },
"nixpkgs": { "type": "git", "value": "git://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs.git release-16.03", "emailresponsible": false }
}
}
* When the "jobsets" job of the ".jobsets" jobset completes, hydra
reads its output as a JSON representation of a dictionary of
jobset specs and creates a jobset named "master" configured
accordingly (In this example, this is the same configuration as
.jobsets itself, except using release.nix instead of default.nix):
{
"enabled": 1,
"hidden": false,
"description": "js",
"nixexprinput": "src",
"nixexprpath": "release.nix",
"checkinterval": 300,
"schedulingshares": 100,
"enableemail": false,
"emailoverride": "",
"keepnr": 3,
"inputs": {
"src": { "type": "git", "value": "git://github.com/shlevy/declarative-hydra-example.git", "emailresponsible": false },
"nixpkgs": { "type": "git", "value": "git://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs.git release-16.03", "emailresponsible": false }
}
}
Mutliple <githubstatus> sections are possible:
* jobs: regexp for jobs to match
* inputs: the input which corresponds to the github repo/rev whose
status we want to report. Can be repeated
* authorization: Verbatim contents of the Authorization header. See
https://developer.github.com/v3/#authentication.
Otherwise, the browser may mix up HTML and JSON responses if it has
requested both. For example, hitting the back button to return to a
job metric page will show a JSON response, because that was the last
thing the browser fetched for that URL.
This requires Catalyst::Action::Rest >= 1.20.
The previous query
select count(*) from builds b left join buildsteps s on s.build = b.id where busy = 1 and finished = 0
is suddenly taking several minutes. Probably PostgreSQL decided to use
a suboptimal query plan.
The old page didn't scale very well if you have 150K builds in the
queue, in fact it tended to make browsers hang. The new one just
shows, for each jobset, the number of queued builds. The actual builds
can be seen by going to the corresponding jobset page and looking at
the evals.
Respects <slack> blocks in the hydra config, with attributes:
* jobs: a regexp matching the job name (in the format project:jobset:job)
* url: The URL to a slack incoming webhook
* force: If true, always send messages. Otherwise, only when the build status changes
Multiple <slack> blocks are allowed
The queue runner no longer uses this field, and it doesn't provide
very interesting historical data (mostly SSH failures), but it takes
up a lot of space. Also, it contained some bad UTF-8 which was
preventing an upgrade to Postgres 9.5, so a good occasion to get rid
of it.
The required configuration in hydra.conf:
enable_google_login = 1
google_client_id = 238429sdjkds....apps.googleusercontent.com
and optionally persona_allowed_domains to restrict to one or more
domains.
This is necessary given the current size of the Nixpkgs/NixOS
jobsets. Once we have a Nix store + Postgres on SSD, we can reduce
this again.
Should really make this configurable...
The uid split a while back caused the web interface to create GC roots
in /nix/var/nix/gcroots/per-user/hydra-www, where they wouldn't be
purged by hydra-update-gc-roots. Thus restarted builds would
accumulate forever. The fix is to keep the roots in a shared directory
with gid=hydra.
Regression introduced by 1fdc258de0.
The commit introduced a channel/custom PathPart which uses the new
custom channel expressions, but I forgot to remove CaptureArgs, so the
URL really is channel/latest/ignored-value.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Reported-by: Peter Simons <simons@cryp.to>