Add a document describing Gerrit's high level design
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <sop@google.com>
This commit is contained in:
		
							
								
								
									
										630
									
								
								Documentation/dev-design.txt
									
									
									
									
									
										Normal file
									
								
							
							
						
						
									
										630
									
								
								Documentation/dev-design.txt
									
									
									
									
									
										Normal file
									
								
							@@ -0,0 +1,630 @@
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit2 - System Design
 | 
			
		||||
=======================
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Objective
 | 
			
		||||
---------
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit is a web based code review system, facilitating online code
 | 
			
		||||
reviews for projects using the Git version control system.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit makes reviews easier by showing changes in a side-by-side
 | 
			
		||||
display, and allowing inline comments to be added by any reviewer.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit simplifies Git based project maintainership by permitting
 | 
			
		||||
any authorized user to submit changes to the master Git repository,
 | 
			
		||||
rather than requiring all approved changes to be merged in by
 | 
			
		||||
hand by the project maintainer.  This functionality enables a more
 | 
			
		||||
centralized usage of Git.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Background
 | 
			
		||||
----------
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Google developed Mondrian, a Perforce based code review tool to
 | 
			
		||||
facilitate peer-review of changes prior to submission to the central
 | 
			
		||||
code repository.  Mondrian is not open source, as it is tied to the
 | 
			
		||||
use of Perforce and to many Google-only services, such as Bigtable.
 | 
			
		||||
Google employees have often described how useful Mondrian and its
 | 
			
		||||
peer-review process is to their day-to-day work.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Guido van Rossum open sourced portions of Mondrian within Rietveld,
 | 
			
		||||
a similar code review tool running on Google App Engine, but for
 | 
			
		||||
use with Subversion rather than Perforce.  Rietveld is in common
 | 
			
		||||
use by many open source projects, facilitating their peer reviews
 | 
			
		||||
much as Mondrian does for Google employees.  Unlike Mondrian and
 | 
			
		||||
the Google Perforce triggers, Rietveld is strictly advisory and
 | 
			
		||||
does not enforce peer-review prior to submission.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Git is a distributed version control system, wherein each repository
 | 
			
		||||
is assumed to be owned/maintained by a single user.  There are no
 | 
			
		||||
inherit security controls built into Git, so the ability to read
 | 
			
		||||
from or write to a repository is controlled entirely by the host's
 | 
			
		||||
filesystem access controls.  When multiple maintainers collaborate
 | 
			
		||||
on a single shared repository a high degree of trust is required,
 | 
			
		||||
as any collaborator with write access can alter the repository.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gitosis provides tools to secure centralized Git repositories,
 | 
			
		||||
permitting multiple maintainers to manage the same project at once,
 | 
			
		||||
by restricting the access to only over a secure network protocol,
 | 
			
		||||
much like Perforce secures a repository by only permitting access
 | 
			
		||||
over its network port.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
The Android Open Source Project (AOSP) was founded by Google by the
 | 
			
		||||
open source releasing of the Android operating system.  AOSP has
 | 
			
		||||
selected Git as its primary version control tool.  As many of the
 | 
			
		||||
engineers have a background of working with Mondrian at Google,
 | 
			
		||||
there is a strong desire to have the same (or better) feature set
 | 
			
		||||
available for Git and AOSP.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
* link:http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-8502904076440714866[Mondrian Code Review On The Web]
 | 
			
		||||
* link:http://code.google.com/p/rietveld/[Rietveld - Code Review for Subversion]
 | 
			
		||||
* link:http://eagain.net/gitweb/?p=gitosis.git;a=blob;f=README.rst;hb=HEAD[Gitosis README]
 | 
			
		||||
* link:http://source.android.com/[Android Open Source Project]
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Overview
 | 
			
		||||
--------
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Developers create one or more changes on their local desktop system,
 | 
			
		||||
then upload them for review to Gerrit using the standard `git push`
 | 
			
		||||
command line program, or any GUI which can invoke `git push` on
 | 
			
		||||
behalf of the user.  Authentication and data transfer are handled
 | 
			
		||||
through SSH.  Users are authenticated by username and public/private
 | 
			
		||||
key pair, and all data transfer is protected by the SSH connection
 | 
			
		||||
and Git's own data integrity checks.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Each Git commit created on the client desktop system is converted
 | 
			
		||||
into a unique change record which can be reviewed independently.
 | 
			
		||||
Change records are stored in PostgreSQL, where they can be queried to
 | 
			
		||||
present customized user dashboards, enumerating any pending changes.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
A summary of each newly uploaded change is automatically emailed
 | 
			
		||||
to reviewers, so they receive a direct hyperlink to review the
 | 
			
		||||
change on the web.  Reviewer email addresses can be specified on the
 | 
			
		||||
`git push` command line, but typically reviewers are automatically
 | 
			
		||||
selected by Gerrit by identifying users who have change approval
 | 
			
		||||
permissions in the project.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Reviewers use the web interface to read the side-by-side or unified
 | 
			
		||||
diff of a change, and insert draft inline comments where appropriate.
 | 
			
		||||
A draft comment is visible only to the reviewer, until they publish
 | 
			
		||||
those comments.  Published comments are automatically emailed to
 | 
			
		||||
the change author by Gerrit, and are CC'd to all other reviewers
 | 
			
		||||
who have already commented on the change.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
When publishing comments reviewers are also given the opportunity
 | 
			
		||||
to score the change, indicating whether they feel the change is
 | 
			
		||||
ready for inclusion in the project, needs more work, or should be
 | 
			
		||||
rejected outright.  These scores provide direct feedback to Gerrit's
 | 
			
		||||
change submit function.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
After a change has been scored positively by reviewers, Gerrit
 | 
			
		||||
enables a submit button on the web interface.  Authorized users
 | 
			
		||||
can push the submit button to have the change enter the project
 | 
			
		||||
repository.  The equivilant in Subversion or Perforce would be
 | 
			
		||||
that Gerrit is invoking `svn commit` or `p4 submit` on behalf of
 | 
			
		||||
the web user pressing the button.  Due to the way Git audit trails
 | 
			
		||||
are maintained, the user pressing the submit button does not need
 | 
			
		||||
to be the author of the change.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Infrastructure
 | 
			
		||||
--------------
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
End-user web browsers make HTTP requests directly to Gerrit's
 | 
			
		||||
HTTP server.  As nearly all of the user interface is implemented
 | 
			
		||||
through Google Web Toolkit (GWT), the majority of these requests
 | 
			
		||||
are transmitting compressed JSON payloads, with all HTML being
 | 
			
		||||
generated within the browser.  Most responses are under 1 KB.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit's HTTP server side component is implemented as a standard
 | 
			
		||||
Java servlet, and thus runs within any J2EE servlet container.
 | 
			
		||||
Popular choices for deployments would be Tomcat or Jetty, as these
 | 
			
		||||
are high-quality open-source servlet containers that are readily
 | 
			
		||||
available for download.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
End-user uploads are performed over SSH, so Gerrit's servlets also
 | 
			
		||||
start up a background thread to receive SSH connections through
 | 
			
		||||
an independent SSH port.  SSH clients communicate directly with
 | 
			
		||||
this port, bypassing the HTTP server used by browsers.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Server side data storage for Gerrit is broken down into two different
 | 
			
		||||
categories:
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
* Git repository data
 | 
			
		||||
* Gerrit metadata
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
The Git repository data is the Git object database used to store
 | 
			
		||||
already submitted revisions, as well as all uploaded (proposed)
 | 
			
		||||
changes.  Gerrit uses the standard Git repository format, and
 | 
			
		||||
therefore requires direct filesystem access to the repositories.
 | 
			
		||||
All repository data is stored in the filesystem and accessed through
 | 
			
		||||
the JGit library.  Repository data can be stored on remote servers
 | 
			
		||||
accessible through NFS or SMB, but the remote directory must
 | 
			
		||||
be mounted on the Gerrit server as part of the local filesystem
 | 
			
		||||
namespace.  Remote filesystems are likely to perform worse than
 | 
			
		||||
local ones, due to Git disk IO behavior not being optimized for
 | 
			
		||||
remote access.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
The Gerrit metadata contains a summary of the available changes,
 | 
			
		||||
all comments (published and drafts), and individual user account
 | 
			
		||||
information.  The metadata is housed in a PostgreSQL database,
 | 
			
		||||
which can be located either on the same server as Gerrit, or on
 | 
			
		||||
a different (but nearby) server.  Most installations would opt to
 | 
			
		||||
install both Gerrit and PostgreSQL on the same server, to reduce
 | 
			
		||||
administration overheads.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
User authentication is handled by OpenID, and therefore Gerrit
 | 
			
		||||
requires that the OpenID provider selected by a user must be
 | 
			
		||||
online and operating in order to authenticate that user.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
* link:http://code.google.com/webtoolkit/[Google Web Toolkit (GWT)]
 | 
			
		||||
* link:http://www.kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/gitrepository-layout.html[Git Repository Format]
 | 
			
		||||
* link:http://www.postgresql.org/about/[About PostgreSQL]
 | 
			
		||||
* link:http://openid.net/developers/specs/[OpenID Specifications]
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Project Information
 | 
			
		||||
-------------------
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit is developed as a self-hosting open source project:
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
* link:http://code.google.com/p/gerrit/[Project Homepage]
 | 
			
		||||
* link:http://code.google.com/p/gerrit/downloads/list[Release Versions]
 | 
			
		||||
* link:http://code.google.com/p/gerrit/wiki/Source?tm=4[Source]
 | 
			
		||||
* link:http://code.google.com/p/gerrit/wiki/Issues?tm=3[Issue Tracking]
 | 
			
		||||
* link:http://review.source.android.com/[Change Review]
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Internationalization and Localization
 | 
			
		||||
-------------------------------------
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
As a source code review system for open source projects, where the
 | 
			
		||||
commonly preferred language for communication is typically English,
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit does not make internationalization or localization a priority.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
The majority of Gerrit's users will be writing change descriptions
 | 
			
		||||
and comments in English, and therefore an English user interface
 | 
			
		||||
is usable by the target user base.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit uses GWT's i18n support to externalize all constant strings
 | 
			
		||||
and messages shown to the user, so that in the future someone who
 | 
			
		||||
really needed a translated version of the UI could contribute new
 | 
			
		||||
string files for their locale(s).
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Right-to-left (RTL) support is only barely considered within the
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit code base.  Some portions of the code have tried to take
 | 
			
		||||
RTL into consideration, while others probably need to be modified
 | 
			
		||||
before translating the UI to an RTL language.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
* link:i18n-readme.html[Gerrit's i18n Support]
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Accessibility Considerations
 | 
			
		||||
----------------------------
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Whenever possible Gerrit displays raw text rather than image icons,
 | 
			
		||||
so screen readers should still be able to provide useful information
 | 
			
		||||
to blind persons accessing Gerrit sites.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Standard HTML hyperlinks are used rather than HTML div or span tags
 | 
			
		||||
with click listeners.  This provides two benefits to the end-user.
 | 
			
		||||
The first benefit is that screen readers are optimized to locating
 | 
			
		||||
standard hyperlink anchors and presenting them to the end-user as
 | 
			
		||||
a navigation action.  The second benefit is that users can use
 | 
			
		||||
the 'open in new tab/window' feature of their browser whenever
 | 
			
		||||
they choose.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
When possible, Gerrit uses the ARIA properties on DOM widgets to
 | 
			
		||||
provide hints to screen readers.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Browser Compatibility
 | 
			
		||||
---------------------
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Supporting non-JavaScript enabled browsers is a non-goal for Gerrit.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
As Gerrit is a pure-GWT application with no server side rendering
 | 
			
		||||
fallbacks, the browser must support modern JavaScript semantics in
 | 
			
		||||
order to access the Gerrit web application.  Dumb clients such as
 | 
			
		||||
`lynx`, `wget`, `curl`, or even many search engine spiders are not
 | 
			
		||||
able to access Gerrit content.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
As Google Web Toolkit (GWT) is used to generate the browser
 | 
			
		||||
specific versions of the client-side JavaScript code, Gerrit works
 | 
			
		||||
on any JavaScript enabled browser which GWT can produce code for.
 | 
			
		||||
This covers the majority of the popular browsers.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
The Gerrit project wants to offer offline support via the HTML 5
 | 
			
		||||
standard and/or Google Gears plugin, both of which would require
 | 
			
		||||
the UI to be rendered in JavaScript on the client side.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
The Gerrit project does not have the development resources necessary
 | 
			
		||||
to support two parallel UI implementations (GWT based JavaScript
 | 
			
		||||
and server-side rendering).  Consequently only one is implemented.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
There are number of web browsers available with full JavaScript
 | 
			
		||||
support, and nearly every operating system (including any PDA-like
 | 
			
		||||
mobile phone) comes with one standard.  Users who are committed
 | 
			
		||||
to developing changes for a Gerrit managed project can be expected
 | 
			
		||||
to be able to run a JavaScript enabled browser, as they also would
 | 
			
		||||
need to be running Git in order to contribute.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
There are a number of open source browsers available, including
 | 
			
		||||
Firefox and Chromium.  Users have some degree of choice in their
 | 
			
		||||
browser selection, including being able to build and audit their
 | 
			
		||||
browser from source.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
The majority of the content stored within Gerrit is also available
 | 
			
		||||
through other means, such as gitweb or the `git://` protocol.
 | 
			
		||||
Any existing search engine spider can crawl the server-side HTML
 | 
			
		||||
produced by gitweb, and thus can index the majority of the changes
 | 
			
		||||
which might appear in Gerrit.  Some engines may even choose to
 | 
			
		||||
crawl the native version control database, such as ohloh.net does.
 | 
			
		||||
Therefore the lack of support for most search engine spiders is a
 | 
			
		||||
non-issue for most Gerrit deployments.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Product Integration
 | 
			
		||||
-------------------
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit integrates with an existing gitweb installation by optionally
 | 
			
		||||
creating hyperlinks to reference changes on the gitweb server.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit integrates with an existing git-daemon installation by
 | 
			
		||||
optionally displaying `git://` URLs for users to download a
 | 
			
		||||
change through the native Git protocol. 
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit integrates with any OpenID provider for user authentication,
 | 
			
		||||
making it easier for users to join a Gerrit site and manage their
 | 
			
		||||
authentication credentials to it.  To make use of Google Accounts
 | 
			
		||||
as an OpenID provider easier, Gerrit has a shorthand "Sign in with
 | 
			
		||||
a Google Account" link on its sign-in screen.  Gerrit also supports
 | 
			
		||||
a shorthand sign in link for Yahoo!.  Other providers may also be
 | 
			
		||||
supported more directly in the future.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit integrates with some types of corporate single-sign-on (SSO)
 | 
			
		||||
solutions, typically by having the SSO authentication be performed
 | 
			
		||||
in a reverse proxy web server and then blindly trusting that all
 | 
			
		||||
incoming connections have been authenticated by that reverse proxy.
 | 
			
		||||
When configured to use this form of authentication, Gerrit does
 | 
			
		||||
not integrate with OpenID providers.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
When installing Gerrit, administrators may optionally include an
 | 
			
		||||
HTML header or footer snippet which may include user tracking code,
 | 
			
		||||
such as that used by Google Analytics.  This is a per-instance
 | 
			
		||||
configuration that must be done by hand, and is not supported
 | 
			
		||||
out of the box.  Other site trackers instead of Google Analytics
 | 
			
		||||
can be used, as the administrator can supply any HTML/JavaScript
 | 
			
		||||
they choose.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit does not integrate with any Google service, or any other
 | 
			
		||||
services other than those listed above.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Standards / Developer APIs
 | 
			
		||||
--------------------------
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit uses an XSRF protected variant of JSON-RPC 1.1 to communicate
 | 
			
		||||
between the browser client and the server.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
As the protocol is not the GWT-RPC protocol, but is instead a
 | 
			
		||||
self-describing standard JSON format it is easily implemented by
 | 
			
		||||
any 3rd party client application, provided the client has a JSON
 | 
			
		||||
parser and HTTP client library available.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
As the entire command set necessary for the standard web browser
 | 
			
		||||
based UI is exposed through JSON-RPC over HTTP, there are no other
 | 
			
		||||
data feeds or command interfaces to the server.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Commands requiring user authentication may require the user agent to
 | 
			
		||||
complete a sign-in cycle through the user's OpenID provider in order
 | 
			
		||||
to establish the HTTP cookie Gerrit uses to track user identity.
 | 
			
		||||
Automating this sign-in process for non-web browser agents is
 | 
			
		||||
outside of the scope of Gerrit, as each OpenID provider uses its own
 | 
			
		||||
sign-in sequence.  Use of OpenID providers which have difficult to
 | 
			
		||||
automate interfaces may make it impossible for non-browser agents
 | 
			
		||||
to be used with the JSON-RPC interface.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
* link:http://json-rpc.org/wd/JSON-RPC-1-1-WD-20060807.html[JSON-RPC 1.1]
 | 
			
		||||
* link:http://android.git.kernel.org/?p=tools/gwtjsonrpc.git;a=blob;f=README;hb=HEAD[XSRF JSON-RPC]
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Privacy Considerations
 | 
			
		||||
----------------------
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit stores the following information per user account:
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
* Full Name
 | 
			
		||||
* Preferred Email Address
 | 
			
		||||
* Mailing Address '(Optional)'
 | 
			
		||||
* Country '(Optional)'
 | 
			
		||||
* Phone Number '(Optional)'
 | 
			
		||||
* Fax Number '(Optional)'
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
The full name and preferred email address fields are shown to any
 | 
			
		||||
site visitor viewing a page containing a change uploaded by the
 | 
			
		||||
account owner, or containing a published comment written by the
 | 
			
		||||
account owner.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Showing the full name and preferred email is approximately the same
 | 
			
		||||
risk as the `From` header of an email posted to a public mailing
 | 
			
		||||
list that maintains archives, and Gerrit treats these fields in
 | 
			
		||||
much the same way that a mailing list archive might handle them.
 | 
			
		||||
Users who don't want to expose this information should either not
 | 
			
		||||
participate in a Gerrit based online community, or open a new email
 | 
			
		||||
address dedicated for this use.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
As the Gerrit UI data is only available through XSRF protected
 | 
			
		||||
JSON-RPC calls, "screen-scraping" for email addresses is difficult,
 | 
			
		||||
but not impossible.  It is unlikely a spammer will go through the
 | 
			
		||||
effort required to code a custom scraping application necessary
 | 
			
		||||
to cull email addresses from published Gerrit comments.  In most
 | 
			
		||||
cases these same addresses would be more easily obtained from the
 | 
			
		||||
project's mailing list archives.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
The snail-mail mailing address, country, and phone and fax numbers
 | 
			
		||||
are gathered to help project leads contact the user should there
 | 
			
		||||
be a legal question regarding any change they have uploaded.
 | 
			
		||||
This data is only visible to the account owner and to the Gerrit
 | 
			
		||||
site administrator.  It is expected that the information would only
 | 
			
		||||
be revealed with a valid court subpoena, but this is really left
 | 
			
		||||
to the discretion of the Gerrit site administrator as to when it
 | 
			
		||||
is reasonable to reveal this information to a 3rd party.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
All user account information is stored unencrypted in the Gerrit
 | 
			
		||||
metadata store, typically a PostgreSQL database.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Spam and Abuse Considerations
 | 
			
		||||
-----------------------------
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit makes no attempt to detect spam changes or comments.  The
 | 
			
		||||
somewhat high barrier to entry makes it unlikely that a spammer
 | 
			
		||||
will target Gerrit.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
To upload a change, the client must speak the native Git protocol
 | 
			
		||||
embedded in SSH, with some custom Gerrit semantics added on top.
 | 
			
		||||
The client must have their public key already stored in the Gerrit
 | 
			
		||||
database, which can only be done through the XSRF protected
 | 
			
		||||
JSON-RPC interface.  The level of effort required to construct
 | 
			
		||||
the necessary tools to upload a well-formatted change that isn't
 | 
			
		||||
rejected outright by the Git and Gerrit checksum validations is
 | 
			
		||||
too high to for a spammer to get any meaningful return.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
To post and publish a comment a client must sign in with an OpenID
 | 
			
		||||
provider and then use the XSRF protected JSON-RPC interface to
 | 
			
		||||
publish the draft on an existing change record.  Again, the level of
 | 
			
		||||
effort required to implement the Gerrit specific XSRF protections
 | 
			
		||||
and the JSON-RPC payload format necessary to post a draft and then
 | 
			
		||||
publish that draft is simply too high for a spammer to bother with.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Both of these assumptions are also based upon the idea that Gerrit
 | 
			
		||||
will be a lot less popular than blog software, and thus will be
 | 
			
		||||
running on a lot less websites.  Spammers therefore have very little
 | 
			
		||||
returned benefit for getting over the protocol hurdles.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
These assumptions may need to be revisited in the future if any
 | 
			
		||||
public Gerrit site actually notices spam.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Latency
 | 
			
		||||
-------
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit targets for sub-250 ms per page request, mostly by using
 | 
			
		||||
very compact JSON payloads bewteen client and server.  However, as
 | 
			
		||||
most of the serving stack (network, hardware, PostgreSQL metadata
 | 
			
		||||
database) is out of control of the Gerrit developers, no real
 | 
			
		||||
guarantees can be made about latency.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Scalability
 | 
			
		||||
-----------
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit is designed for an open source project.  Roughly this
 | 
			
		||||
amounts to parameters such as the following:
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
.Design Parameters
 | 
			
		||||
[grid="all"]
 | 
			
		||||
`-----------------'----------------
 | 
			
		||||
Parameter         Estimated Maximum
 | 
			
		||||
-----------------------------------
 | 
			
		||||
Projects            500
 | 
			
		||||
Contributors      2,000
 | 
			
		||||
Changes/Day         400
 | 
			
		||||
Revisions/Change    2.0
 | 
			
		||||
Files/Change        4
 | 
			
		||||
Comments/File       2
 | 
			
		||||
Reviewers/Change    1.0
 | 
			
		||||
-----------------------------------
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
CPU Usage
 | 
			
		||||
~~~~~~~~~
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Very few, if any open source projects have more than a handful of
 | 
			
		||||
Git repositories associated with them.  Since Gerrit treats one
 | 
			
		||||
Git repository as a project, an assumed limit of 500 projects
 | 
			
		||||
is reasonable.  Only an operating system distribution project
 | 
			
		||||
would really need to be tracking more than a handful of discrete
 | 
			
		||||
Git repositories.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Almost no open source project has 2,000 contributors over all time,
 | 
			
		||||
let alone on a daily basis.  This figure of 2,000 was WAG'd by
 | 
			
		||||
looking at PR statements published by cell phone companies picking
 | 
			
		||||
up the Android operating system.  If all of the stated employees in
 | 
			
		||||
those PR statements were working on *only* the open source Android
 | 
			
		||||
repositories, we might reach the 2,000 estimate listed here.  Knowing
 | 
			
		||||
these companies as being very closed-source minded in the past, it
 | 
			
		||||
is very unlikely all of their Android engineers will be working on
 | 
			
		||||
the open source repository, and thus 2,000 is a very high estimate.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
The estimate of 400 changes per day was WAG'd off some estimates
 | 
			
		||||
originally obtained from Android's development history.  Writing a
 | 
			
		||||
good change that will be accepted through a peer-review process
 | 
			
		||||
takes time.  The average engineer may need 4-6 hours per change just
 | 
			
		||||
to write the code and unit tests.  Proper design consideration and
 | 
			
		||||
additional but equally important tasks such as meetings, interviews,
 | 
			
		||||
training, and eating lunch will often pad the engineer's day out
 | 
			
		||||
such that suitable changes are only posted once a day, or once
 | 
			
		||||
every other day.  For reference, the entire Linux kernel has an
 | 
			
		||||
average of only 79 changes/day.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
The estimate of 2 revisions/change means that on average any
 | 
			
		||||
given change will need to be modified once to address peer review
 | 
			
		||||
comments before the final revision can be accepted by the project.
 | 
			
		||||
Executing these revisions also eats into the contributor's time,
 | 
			
		||||
and is another factor limiting the number of changes/day accepted
 | 
			
		||||
by the Gerrit instance.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
The estimate of 1 reviewer/change means that on average only one
 | 
			
		||||
person will comment on a change.  Usually this would be the project
 | 
			
		||||
lead, or someone who is familiar with the code being modified.
 | 
			
		||||
The time required to comment further reduces the time available
 | 
			
		||||
for writing one's own changes.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit's web UI would require on average `4+F+F*C` HTTP requests to
 | 
			
		||||
review a change and post comments.  Here `F` is the number of files
 | 
			
		||||
modified by the change, and `C` is the number of inline comments left
 | 
			
		||||
by the reviewer per file.  The constant 4 accounts for the request
 | 
			
		||||
to load the reviewer's dashboard, to load the change detail page,
 | 
			
		||||
to publish the review comments, and to reload the change detail
 | 
			
		||||
page after comments are published.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
This WAG'd estimate boils down to <12,800 HTTP requests per day
 | 
			
		||||
(QPD). Assuming these are evenly distributed over an 8 hour work day
 | 
			
		||||
in a single time zone, we are looking at approximately 26 queries
 | 
			
		||||
per second (QPS).
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
----
 | 
			
		||||
  QPD = Changes_Day * Revisions_Change * Reviewers_Change * (4 + F + F * C)
 | 
			
		||||
      = 400         * 2.0              * 1.0              * (4 + 4 + 4 * 2)
 | 
			
		||||
      = 12,800
 | 
			
		||||
  QPS = QPD / 8_Hours / 60_Seconds
 | 
			
		||||
      = 26
 | 
			
		||||
----
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit serves most requests in under 60 ms when using the loopback
 | 
			
		||||
interface and a single processor.  On a single CPU system there is
 | 
			
		||||
sufficient capacity for 16 QPS.  A dual processor system should be
 | 
			
		||||
sufficient for a site with the estimated load described above.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Given a more realistic estimate of 79 changes per day (from the
 | 
			
		||||
Linux kernel) suggests only 2,528 queries per day, and a much lower
 | 
			
		||||
5.2 QPS when spread out over an 8 hour work day.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Disk Usage
 | 
			
		||||
~~~~~~~~~~
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
The average size of a revision in the Linux kernel once compressed
 | 
			
		||||
by Git is 2,327 bytes, or roughly 2 KB.  Over the course of a year
 | 
			
		||||
a Gerrit server running with the parameters above might see an
 | 
			
		||||
introduction of 570 MB over the total set of 500 projects hosted in
 | 
			
		||||
that server.  This figure assumes the majorty of the content is human
 | 
			
		||||
written source code, and not large binary blobs such as disk images.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Redundancy & Reliability
 | 
			
		||||
------------------------
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit largely assumes that the local filesystem where Git repository
 | 
			
		||||
data is stored is always available.  Important data written to disk
 | 
			
		||||
is also forced to the platter with an `fsync()` once it has been
 | 
			
		||||
fully written.  If the local filesystem fails to respond to reads
 | 
			
		||||
or becomes corrupt, Gerrit has no provisions to fallback or retry
 | 
			
		||||
and errors will be returned to clients.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit largely assumes that the metadata PostgreSQL database is
 | 
			
		||||
online and answering both read and write queries.  Query failures
 | 
			
		||||
immediately result in the operation aborting and errors being
 | 
			
		||||
returned to the client, with no retry or fallback provisions.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Due to the relatively small scale described above, it is very likely
 | 
			
		||||
that the Git filesystem and PostgreSQL based metadata database
 | 
			
		||||
are all housed on the same server that is running Gerrit.  If any
 | 
			
		||||
failure arises in one of these components, it is likely to manifest
 | 
			
		||||
in the others too.  It is also likely that the administrator cannot
 | 
			
		||||
be bothered to deploy a cluster of load-balanced server hardware,
 | 
			
		||||
as the scale and expected load does not justify the hardware or
 | 
			
		||||
management costs.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Most deployments caring about reliability will setup a warm-spare
 | 
			
		||||
standby system and use a manual fail-over process to switch from the
 | 
			
		||||
failed system to the warm-spare.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
As Git is a distributed version control system, and open source
 | 
			
		||||
projects tend to have contributors from all over the world, most
 | 
			
		||||
contributors will be able to tolerate a Gerrit down time of several
 | 
			
		||||
hours while the administrator is notified, signs on, and brings the
 | 
			
		||||
warm-spare up.  Pending changes are likely to need at least 24 hours
 | 
			
		||||
of time on the Gerrit site anyway in order to ensure any interested
 | 
			
		||||
parties around the world have had a chance to comment.  This expected
 | 
			
		||||
lag largely allows for some downtime in a disaster scenario.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Backups
 | 
			
		||||
~~~~~~~
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
PostgreSQL can be configured to save its write-ahead-log (WAL)
 | 
			
		||||
and ship these logs to other systems, where they are applied to
 | 
			
		||||
a warm-standby backup in real time.  Gerrit instances which care
 | 
			
		||||
about reduduncy will setup this feature of PostgreSQL to ensure
 | 
			
		||||
the warm-standby is reasonably current should the master go offline.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit can be configured to replicate changes made to the local
 | 
			
		||||
Git repositories over any standard Git transports.  This can be
 | 
			
		||||
configured in `'site_path'/replication.conf` to send copies of
 | 
			
		||||
all changes over SSH to other servers, or to the Amazon S3 blob
 | 
			
		||||
storage service.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Logging Plan
 | 
			
		||||
------------
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit does not maintain logs on its own.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Published comments contain a publication date, so users can judge
 | 
			
		||||
when the comment was posted and decide if it was "recent" or not.
 | 
			
		||||
Only the timestamp is stored in the database, the IP address of
 | 
			
		||||
the comment author is not stored.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Changes uploaded over the SSH daemon from `git push` have the
 | 
			
		||||
standard Git reflog updated with the date and time that the upload
 | 
			
		||||
occurred, and the Gerrit account identity of who did the upload.
 | 
			
		||||
Changes submitted and merged into a branch also update the
 | 
			
		||||
Git reflog.  These logs are available only to the Gerrit site
 | 
			
		||||
administrator, and they are not replicated through the automatic
 | 
			
		||||
replication noted earlier.  These logs are primarly recorded for an
 | 
			
		||||
"oh s**t" moment where the administrator has to rewind data.  In most
 | 
			
		||||
installations they are a waste of disk space.  Future versions of
 | 
			
		||||
JGit may allow disabling these logs, and Gerrit may take advantage
 | 
			
		||||
of that feature to stop writing these logs.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
A web server positioned in front of Gerrit (such as a reverse proxy)
 | 
			
		||||
or the hosting servlet container may record access logs, and these
 | 
			
		||||
logs may be mined for usage information.  This is outside of the
 | 
			
		||||
scope of Gerrit.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Testing Plan
 | 
			
		||||
------------
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit is currently manually tested through its web UI.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
JGit has a fairly extensive automated unit test suite.  Most new
 | 
			
		||||
changes to JGit are rejected unless corresponding automated unit
 | 
			
		||||
tests are included.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Caveats
 | 
			
		||||
-------
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Reitveld can't be used as it does not provide the "submit over the
 | 
			
		||||
web" feature that Gerrit provides for Git.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gitosis can't be used as it does not provide any code review
 | 
			
		||||
features, but it does provide basic access controls.
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Email based code review does not scale to a project as large and
 | 
			
		||||
complex as Android.  Most contributors at least need some sort of
 | 
			
		||||
dashboard to keep track of any pending reviews, and some way to
 | 
			
		||||
correlate updated revisions back to the comments written on prior
 | 
			
		||||
revisions of the same logical change.
 | 
			
		||||
@@ -33,6 +33,7 @@ Developer Documentation
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
* link:dev-readme.html[Developer Setup]
 | 
			
		||||
* link:dev-eclipse.html[Eclipse Setup]
 | 
			
		||||
* link:dev-design.html[System Design]
 | 
			
		||||
* link:i18n-readme.html[i18n Support]
 | 
			
		||||
 | 
			
		||||
Gerrit resources:
 | 
			
		||||
 
 | 
			
		||||
		Reference in New Issue
	
	Block a user