# grahamcofborg ## Guidelines 1. make sure you've reviewed the code before you trigger it on a PR that isn't your own 2. be gentle, preferably don't run mass rebuilds / massive builds like chromium on it ## Commands 1. To trigger the bot, the comment _must_ start with a case insensitive version of `@GrahamcOfBorg`. 2. To use multiple commands, insert a bit of whitespace and then your new command. Commands: ### test (added: 2017-11-24) ``` @grahamcofborg test list of tests ``` This will run `nix-build ./nixos/release.nix -A tests.list -A tests.of -A tests.attrs` in the nixpkgs checkout. Note: this will only run on x86_64-linux machines. ### eval ``` @grahamcofborg eval ``` Note: Every PR automatically evaluates when it is opened and when the commits change. There is no reason to run eval on a PR unless the evaluation has failed for weird reasons, or because master was broken before. ### build ``` @grahamcofborg build list of attrs ``` This will run `nix-build ./default.nix -A list -A of -A attrs` in the nixpkgs checkout. --- Multiple Commands: ``` @grahamcofborg build list of attrs @grahamcofborg eval ``` or even: ``` @grahamcofborg build list of attrs @grahamcofborg eval ``` This will _not_ work: ``` looks good to me! @grahamcofborg build list of attrs ``` Also this is bad: ``` @grahamcofborg build list of attrs looks good to me! ``` as it'll try to build `list` `of` `attrs` `looks` `good` `to` `me!`. # arch 1. All github events go in to web/index.php, which sends the event to an exchange named for the full name of the repo (ex: nixos/nixpkgs) in lower case. The exchange is set to "fanout" 2. build-filter.php creates a queue called build-inputs and binds it to the nixos/nixpkgs exchange. It also creates an exchange, build-jobs, set to fan out. It listens for messages on the build-inputs queue. Issue comments from authorized users on PRs get tokenized and turned in to build instructions. These jobs are then written to the build-jobs exchange. 3. builder.php creates a queue called `build-inputs-x86_64-linux`, and binds it to the build-jobs exchange. It then listens for build instructions on the `build-inputs-x86_64-linux` queue. For each job, it uses nix-build to run the build instructions. The status result (pass/fail) and the last ten lines of output are then placed in to the `build-results` queue. 4. poster.php declares the build-results queue, and listens for messages on it. It posts the build status and text output on the PR the build is from. ## Getting Started - you'll need to create the `WORKING_DIR` - nix-shell - composer install - php builder.php The conspicuously missing config.php looks like: ```php true, 'verify_peer_name' => true, 'peer_name' => 'events.nix.gsc.io', 'verify_depth' => 10, 'ca_file' => '/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt' ) ); return $connection; } /* # Only leader machines (ie: graham's) need this: function gh_client() { $client = new \Github\Client(); $client->authenticate('githubusername', 'githubpassword', Github\Client::AUTH_HTTP_PASSWORD); return $client; } */ ``` ## Getting started on the rust one... ``` nix-shell ./shell.nix -A rustEnv $ cd ofborg $ cargo build ``` ``` cargo build ``` then copy config.example.json to config.json and edit its vars. Set `nix.remote` to an empty string if you're not using the daemon. Run ``` ./target/debug/builder ./config.json ```