| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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The canMerge check is executed whenever zuul tests if a change can
enter a gate pipeline. This is part of the critical path in the event
handling of the scheduler and therefore must be as fast as
possible. Currently this takes five requests for doing its work and
also transfers large amounts of data that is unneeded:
* get pull request
* get branch protection settings
* get commits
* get status of latest commit
* get check runs of latest commit
Especially when Github is busy this can slow down zuul's event
processing considerably. This can be optimized using graphql to only
query the data we need with a single request. This reduces requests
and load on Github and speeds up event processing in the scheduler.
Since this is the first usage of graphql this also sets up needed
testing infrastructure using graphene to mock the github api with real
test data.
Change-Id: I77be4f16cf7eb5c8035ce0312f792f4e8d4c3e10
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This change ensure the ansible plugins and the ansible-config.conf file
are installed with Zuul.
Change-Id: I321e52b29f1ca34d224c4e6fe33c60d5ac42590f
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This reverts commit 3dba813c643ec8f4b3323c2a09c6aecf8ad4d338.
Change-Id: I233797a9b4e3485491c49675da2c2efbdba59449
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Revert "Fix publish-openstack-javascript-content"
This reverts commit ca199eb9dbb64e25490ee5803e4f18c91f34681d.
This reverts commit 1082faae958bffa719ab333c3f5ae9776a8b26d7.
This appears to remove the tarball publishing system that we rely on.
Change-Id: Id746fb826dfc01b157c5b772adc1d2991ddcd93a
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This change rewrites the web interface using React:
http://lists.zuul-ci.org/pipermail/zuul-discuss/2018-August/000528.html
Depends-On: https://review.openstack.org/591964
Change-Id: Ic6c33102ac3da69ebd0b8e9c6c8b431d51f3cfd4
Co-Authored-By: Monty Taylor <mordred@inaugust.com>
Co-Authored-By: James E. Blair <jeblair@redhat.com>
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yarn drives package and dependency management. webpack handles
bundling, minification and transpiling down to browser-acceptable
javascript but allows for more modern javascript like import statements.
There are some really neat things in the webpack dev server. CSS
changes, for instance, get applied immediately without a refresh. Other
things, like the jquery plugin do need a refresh, but it's handled just
on a file changing.
As a followup, we can also consider turning the majority of the status page
into a webpack library that other people can depend on as a mechanism
for direct use. Things like that haven't been touched because allowing
folks to poke at the existing known status page without too many changes
using the tools seems like a good way for people to learn/understand the
stack.
Move things so that the built content gets put
into zuul/web/static so that the built-in static serving from zuul-web
will/can serve the files.
Update MANIFEST.in so that if npm run build:dist is run before the
python setup.py sdist, the built html/javascript content will be
included in the source tarball.
Add a pbr hook so that if yarn is installed, javascript content will be
built before the tarball.
Add a zuul job with a success url that contains a source_url
pointing to the live v3 data.
This adds a framework for verifying that we can serve the web app
urls and their dependencies for all of the various ways we want to
support folks hosting zuul-web.
It includes a very simple reverse proxy server for approximating
what we do in openstack to "white label" the Zuul service -- that
is, hide the multitenancy aspect and present the single tenant
at the site root.
We can run similar tests without the proxy to ensure the default,
multi-tenant view works as well.
Add babel transpiling enabling use of ES6 features
ECMAScript6 has a bunch of nice things, like block scoped variables,
const, template strings and classes. Babel is a javascript transpiler
which webpack can use to allow us to write using modern javascript but
the resulting code to still work on older browsers.
Use the babel-plugin-angularjs-annotate so that angular's dependency
injection doesn't get borked by babel's transpiling things (which causes
variables to otherwise be renamed in a way that causes angular to not
find them)
While we're at it, replace our use of var with let (let is the new
block-scoped version of var) and toss in some use of const and template
strings for good measure.
Add StandardJS eslint config for linting
JavaScript Standard Style is a code style similar to pep8/flake8. It's
being added here not because of the pep8 part, but because the pyflakes
equivalent can catch real errors. This uses the babel-eslint parser
since we're using Babel to transpile already.
This auto-formats the existing code with:
npm run format
Rather than using StandardJS directly through the 'standard' package,
use the standardjs eslint plugin so that we can ignore the camelCase
rule (and any other rule that might emerge in the future)
Many of under_score/camelCase were fixed in a previous version of the patch.
Since the prevailing zuul style is camelCase methods anyway, those fixes
were left. That warning has now been disabled.
Other things, such as == vs. === and ensuring template
strings are in backticks are fixed.
Ignore indentation errors for now - we'll fix them at the end of this
stack and then remove the exclusion.
Add a 'format' npm run target that will run the eslint command with
--fix for ease of fixing reported issues.
Add a 'lint' npm run target and a 'lint' environment that runs with
linting turned to errors. The next patch makes the lint environment more
broadly useful.
When we run lint, also run the BundleAnalyzerPlugin and set the
success-url to the report.
Add an angular controller for status and stream page
Wrap the status and stream page construction with an angular controller
so that all the javascripts can be bundled in a single file.
Building the files locally is wonderful and all, but what we really want
is to make a tarball that has the built code so that it can be deployed.
Put it in the root source dir so that it can be used with the zuul
fetch-javascript-tarball role.
Also, replace the custom npm job with the new build-javascript-content
job which naturally grabs the content we want.
Make a 'main.js' file that imports the other three so that we just have
a single bundle. Then, add a 'vendor' entry in the common webpack file
and use the CommonsChunkPlugin to extract dependencies into their own
bundle. A second CommonsChunkPlugin entry pulls out a little bit of
metadata that would otherwise cause the main and vendor chunks to change
even with no source change. Then add chunkhash into the filename. This
way the files themselves can be aggressively cached.
This all follows recommendations from https://webpack.js.org/guides/caching/
https://webpack.js.org/guides/code-splitting/ and
https://webpack.js.org/guides/output-management/
Change-Id: I2e1230783fe57f1bc3b7818460463df1e659936b
Co-Authored-By: Tristan Cacqueray <tdecacqu@redhat.com>
Co-Authored-By: James E. Blair <jeblair@redhat.com>
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Change-Id: I734f0f8237fb603ee41a39f06e63c007e79825a9
Reviewed-on: https://review.openstack.org/33350
Reviewed-by: James E. Blair <corvus@inaugust.com>
Reviewed-by: Doug Hellmann <doug.hellmann@dreamhost.com>
Approved: James E. Blair <corvus@inaugust.com>
Tested-by: Jenkins
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After successfully adding openstack versioning to jenkins-job-builder
this add the same support for zuul.
Change-Id: Ia5baab2b0d9392c1b3c70bf890eaf7c6a2ea5c29
Signed-off-by: Paul Belanger <paul.belanger@polybeacon.com>
Reviewed-on: https://review.openstack.org/16219
Reviewed-by: James E. Blair <corvus@inaugust.com>
Approved: Monty Taylor <mordred@inaugust.com>
Reviewed-by: Monty Taylor <mordred@inaugust.com>
Tested-by: Jenkins
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