The initial motivation is to remove the flush when a log_counter is
written. This flush was initially usefull when the limit was in a
psql trigger, but finally add a side effect to flush everything before
starting the docker. This was limiting concurrent update after starting
the docker, but we still have no garantee that the transaction is
commited after starting the docker. The use case where the docker is
started but the transaction is not commited was not handled well and was
leading to an infinite loop of trying to start a docker (while the
docker was already started)
This refactoring returns the docker to the scheduler so that the
schedulter can commit before starting the docker.
To achieve this, it is ideal to have only one method that could return
a callable in the _scheduler loop. This is done by removing the run_job
from the init_pending method. All satellite method like make result
are also modified and adapted to make direct write: the old way was
technical debt, useless optimization from pre-v13.
Other piece of code are moved arround to prepare for future changes,
mainly to make the last commit easier to revert if needed.
[FIX] runbot: adapt tests to previous refactoring
Runbot initial architechture was working for a single odoo repo, and was
adapted to build enterprise. Addition of upgrade repo and test began
to make result less intuitive revealing more weakness of the system.
Adding to the oddities of duplicate detection and branch matching,
there was some room for improvement in the runbot models.
This (small) commit introduce the runbot v5.0, designed for a closer
match of odoo's development flows, and hopefully improving devs
experience and making runbot configuration more flexible.
**Remotes:** remote intoduction helps to detect duplicate between odoo and
odoo-dev repos: a commit is now on a repo, a repo having multiple remote.
If a hash is in odoo-dev, we consider that it is the same in odoo.
Note: github seems to manage commit kind of the same way. It is possible
to send a status on a commit on odoo when the commit only exists in
odoo-dev.
This change also allows to remove some repo duplicate configuration
between a repo and his dev corresponding repo.
(modules, server files, manifests, ...)
**Trigger:** before v5.0, only one build per repo was created, making it
difficult to tweak what test to execute in what case. The example use
case was for upgrade. We want to test upgrade to master when pushing on
odoo. But we also want to test upgrade the same way when pushing on
upgrade. We introduce a build that should be ran on pushing on either
repo when each repo already have specific tests.
The trigger allows to specify a build to create with a specific config.
The trigger is executed when any repo of the trigger repo is pushed.
The trigger can define depedencies: only build enterprise when pushing
enterprise, but enterprise needs odoo. Test upgrade to master when pushing
either odoo or upgrade.
Trigger will also allows to extract some build like cla that where
executed on both enterprise and odoo, and hidden in a subbuild.
**Bundle:** Cross repo branches/pr branches matching was hidden in build
creation and can be confusing. A build can be detected as a duplicate
of a pr, but not always if naming is wrong or traget is invalid/changes.
This was mainly because of how a community ref will be found. This was
making ci on pr undeterministic if duplicate matching fails. This was
also creating two build, with one pointing to the other when duplicate
detection was working, but the visual result can be confusing.
Associtaions of remotes and bundles fix this by adding all pr and
related branches from all repo in a bundle. First of all this helps to
visualise what the runbot consider has branch matching and that should
be considered as part of the same task, giving a place where to warn
devs of some possible inconsistencies. Associate whith repo/remote, we
can consider branches in the same repo in a bundle as expected to have
the same head. Only one build is created since trigger considers repo,
not remotes.
**Batch:** A batch is a group of build, a batch on a bundle can be
compared to a build on a branch in previous version. When a branch
is pushed, the corresponding bundle creates a new batch, and wait for
new commit. Once no new update are detected in the batch for 60 seconds,
All the trigger are executed if elligible. The created build are added
to the batch in a batch_slot. It is also possible that an corresponding
build exists (duplicate) and is added to the slot instead of creating a
new build.
Co-authored-by d-fence <moc@odoo.com>
When a build is done, various numerical informations could be extracted
from log files. e.g.: global query count or tests query count ...
The extraction regular expression could be hard-coded in a custom step
but there is no place holder where to store the retrieved information.
In order to compare results, we need to store it.
With this commit, a new model `runbot.build.stat` is used to store
key/values pair linked to a build/config_step. That way, extracted
values can be stored.
Also, another `runbot.build.stat.regex` is used to store regular
expressions that can be used to grep log files and extract values.
The regular expression must contain a named group like this:
`(?P<value>.+)`
The text catched by this group MUST be castable into a float.
Optionally, another named group can be used in the regular expresion
like this:
`(?P<key>.+)`
This `key` group will then be used to augment the key name in the
database.
Example:
Consider a log line like this one:
`odoo.addons.website_blog.tests.test_ui tested in 10.35s`
A regular expression like this, named `test_duration`:
`odoo.addons.(?P<key>.+) tested in (?P<value>\d+\.\d+)s`
Should store the following key:value:
`{
'key': 'test_duration.website_blog.tests.test_ui',
'value': 10.35
}`
A `generic` boolean field is present on the build.stat.regex object,
meaning that when no regex are linked to a make_stats config step, then,
all the generic regex will be applied.
A wizard is added to help the creation the regular expressions, allowing
to test if they work against a user provided example.
A _make_stats method is added to the ConfigStep model which is called
during the _schedule of a build, just before calling the next step.
The regex search is only apllied in steps that have the `make_stats`
boolean field set to true. Also, the build branch have to be flagged
`make_stats` too or the build can have a key `make_stats` in its
config_data field.
The `make_stats` field on the branch is a compute stored field.
That way, sticky branches are automaticaly set `make_stats' true.
Finally, an SQL view is used to facilitate the stats visualisation.
This commit add the possibility to add custom checks to python steps,
as well as ignoring triggered result if log of level error/warning
is not considered as a problem.
Creating multi builds configs can be tedious. One must create 2 build
configs and 2 build config steps in the right order.
With this commit, a simple wizard is added that creates those 4
configurations by simply filling 4 fields.
Also, a new field, group, is added in order to be able to gather
config's and config steps into groups. The group is a Many2one on a
config.
While at it, the runbot menu has been a bit rearranged with everything
about config's in a parent menu named Configs.
Config's and config's steps tree views have been enhanced to show the
config group and add some filters in the search views.
In a create config, a parent result is computed based on children
results
In some situations, it could be handy to ignore the result of some
sub-builds.
Example: the nightly tests are just the children of one nightly build
with a create config. The external tests are failing randomly and as a
consequence, the nightly result is always red. On the other hand,
keeping the test running, just to have logs is a good idea.
With this commit, a config_step of type create can be marked as
orphan_result, that way, the result is not taken into account in the
parent build result.
This commit aims to replace static jobs by fully configurable build config.
Each build has a config (custom or inherited from repo or branch).
Each config has a list of steps.
For now, a step can test/run odoo or create a new child build. A python job is
also available.
The mimic the previous behaviour of runbot, a default config is available with
three steps, an install of base, an install+test of all modules, and a last step
for run.
Multibuilds are replace by a config containing cretaion steps.
The created builds are not displayed in main views, but are available
on parent build log page. The result of a parent takes the result of
all children into account.
This new mechanics will help to create some custom behaviours for specifics
use cases, and latter help to parallelise work.