Previously, runbot_merge assumed github would return commits in
topological order (from base to head of PR). However as in the UI
github sorts commits using the author's date field, so depending on
rebasing/cherrypick/... it's possible to have the head of the commit
be "younger" than the rest. In that case robodoo will try to merge
it *first*, then attempt to merge the rest on top of it (-ish, it'd
probably make a hash of it if that worked), at which point github
replies with a 204 (nothing to merge) because the PR head has already
included everything which topologically precedes it.
Fix: re-sort commits topologically when fetching the PR's log. That
way they're rebased in the proper order and correctly linked to one
another.
Example problematic PR: odoo/enterprise#2794, the commits are
773aef03a59d50b33221d7cdcdf54cd0cbe0c914
author.date: 2018-10-01T14:58:38Z
879547c8dd37e7f413a97393a82f92377785b50b (parent: 773aef03)
author.date: 2018-10-01T12:02:08Z
Because 879547c8 is "older" than 773aef03, github returns it first,
both in the UI and via the API.
Also fixed up support for committer & author metadata in fake_github
so the local tests would both expose the issue properly and allow
fixing it.
The webhook used the "sender" of the event as comment author, however
if the comment is edited by a maintainer github sends a
"issue_comment" event with that maintainer as sender.
This means a random user could create a comment with a robodoo
command, and if a registered reviewer happened to edit the comment the
command would suddenly be taken in account. This was not the intention.
I just spent 10mn trying to find out why staging 28 was cancelled
(a p=0 comment). Add a common prefix to all staging cancels to make
them easier to find.
A limitation to 50 commits PRs was put in place to avoid rebasing
huge PRs (as a rebase means 1 merge + 1 commit *per source commit*),
however the way it was done would also limit regular merges, and the
way the limitation was implemented was not clear.
* explicitly check that limit in the rebase case
* make error message on PR sizes (rebase 50 or merge 250) clearer
* remove limit from commits-fetching (check it beforehand)
* add a test to merge >50 commits PRs
* fix the local implementation of pulls/:number/commits to properly
paginate
Staging 13 tried merging 3 PRs (27085, 27083 and 27071) and supposedly
succeeded *but* only merged one of the 3 PRs despite marking all three
as merged. I tried building a few tests constructing multi-PR graphs
and checking them, but the only thing they exposed was the local
github implementation not correctly updating merge targets.
So fixed that, which is good.
Doesn't tell me why the staging didn't work right though.
a0063f9df0 slightly improved the error
message on non-PR ci failure (e.g. a community PR makes enterprise
break) by adding the failed commit, but that's still not exactly clear,
even for technical users (plus it requires having access to all the
repos which is not the case for everyone).
This commit further improves the situation by storing the target_url
and description fields of the commit statuses, and printing out the
target_url on failure if it's present.
That way the PR comment denoting build failure should now have a link to
the relevant failed build on runbot, as that's the target_url it
provides.
The change is nontrivial as it tries to be compatible with both old and
new statuses storage format, such that there is no migration to perform.
rebase-and-merge (or squash-merge if pr.commits == 1) remains default,
but there are use cases like forward ports (merge branch X into branch
X+1 so that fixes to X are available in X+1) where we really really
don't want to rebase the source.
This commits implements two alternative merge methods:
If the PR and its target are ~disjoint, perform a straight merge (same
as old default mode).
However if the head of the PR has two parents *and* one of these
parents is a commit of the target, assume this is a merge commit to
fix a conflict (common during forward ports as X+1 will have changed
independently from and incompatibly with X in some ways).
In that case, merge by copying the PR's head atop the
target (basically rebase just that commit, only updating the link to
the parent which is part of target so that it points to the head of
target instead of whatever it was previously).
After discussion with al & rco, conclusion was default PR merging method
should be rebase-and-merge for cleaner history.
Add test for that scenario (w/ test for final DAG) and implement this
change.
The old "sync pr" thing is turning out to be a bust, while it
originally worked fine these days it's a catastrophe as the v4 API
performances seem to have significantly degraded, to the point that
fetching all 15k PRs by pages of 100 simply blows up after a few
hundreds/thousands.
Instead, add a table of PRs to sync: if we get notified of a
"compatible" PR (enabled repo & target) which we don't know of, create
an entry in a "fetch jobs" table, then a cron will handle fetching the
PR then fetching/applying all relevant metadata (statuses,
review-comments and reviews).
Also change indexation of Commit(sha) and PR(head) to hash, as btree
indexes are not really sensible for such content (the ordering is
unhelpful and the index locality is awful by design/definition).
If we want a dashboard with a history of stagings, maybe not deleting
them would be a good idea.
A replacement for the headless stagings would probably be a good idea:
currently they're created when splitting a failed staging containing
more than one batch, but their only purpose is as splits of existing
batches to be deactivated/deleted to be re-staged (new batches &
stagings are created then as e.g. some of the batches may not be
merge-able anymore) and that's a bit weird.
Remote's labels are not entirely under our control as the part before
":" is the *owner* of the source repo => introduce additional "owned"
fixture to handle this case, as it may diverge from the "user" role if
running the tests against an organisation.
Can't really assume we can get the github logins "user" or "reviewer"
to run the test suite remotely, so add an indirection and backronym
those to *roles* instead. The local test suite has identical roles &
logins, but the remote version does not.
Also use the "other" role for any random user, and don't create its
partner up-front.
Also renamed the self-reviewer user to self_reviewer, that's a bit
less weird when dealing with e.g. ini files.
This is the preparation of an attempt to make these tests work with
both a local github mock (in-memory) and a remote actual github.
Move a bunch of fixtures relying on the specific github
implementation (and odoo-as-library access) to the "local" plugin,
including splitting the "repo" fixture.
The specific fixtures will likely have to be adjusted as the
remote endpoint is fleshed out.
Reviews are interpreted like comments and can contain any number of
commands, with the difference that APPROVED and REQUEST_CHANGES are
interpreted as (respectively) r+ and r- prefixes.