We've migrated this project to storyboard, I'm updating the documentation links. Change-Id: Id92552b7be7cd43ca6a3ec91c2c4f330078490b6
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IRC Services
IRC Services
The infrastructure team runs a number of IRC bots that are active on OpenStack related channels.
At a Glance
- Hosts
- Puppet
-
modules/meetbot
modules/statusbot
modules/gerritbot
modules/openstack_project/manifests/eavesdrop.pp
modules/openstack_project/manifests/review.pp
- Configuration
-
gerritbot/channels.yaml
- Projects
- Bugs
Channel Requirements
In general, discussion for OpenStack projects is preferred in #openstack-dev, but there are many reasons why a team would like to have their own channel.
Access
Register the channel with ChanServ and give the infrastructure team account founder access to the channel with:
/msg chanserv access #channel add openstackinfra +AFRfiorstv
This is good practice project-wide to make sure we keep channels under control and is a requirement if you want any of the project bots in your channel.
Join #openstack-infra if you have any trouble with any of these commands.
Meetbot
The OpenStack Infrastructure team run a slightly modified Meetbot to log IRC channel activity and meeting minutes. Meetbot is a plugin for Supybot which adds meeting support features to the Supybot IRC bot.
Supybot
In order to run Meetbot you will need to get Supybot. You can find
the latest release here. Once you
have extracted the release you will want to read the
INSTALL
and doc/GETTING_STARTED
files. Those
two files should have enough information to get you going, but there are
other goodies in doc/
.
Once you have Supybot installed you will need to configure a bot. The
supybot-wizard
command can get you started with a basic
config, or you can have the OpenStack meetbot puppet module do the heavy
lifting.
One important config setting is
supybot.reply.whenAddressedBy.chars
, which sets the prefix
character for this bot. This should be set to something other than
#
as #
will conflict with Meetbot (you can
leave the setting blank if you don't want a prefix character).
Meetbot
The OpenStack Infrastructure Meetbot fork can be found at https://git.openstack.org/cgit/openstack-infra/meetbot. Manual installation of the Meetbot plugin is straightforward and documented in that repository's README. OpenStack Infrastructure installs and configures Meetbot through Puppet.
Voting
The OpenStack Infrastructure Meetbot fork adds simple voting
features. After a meeting has been started a meeting chair can begin a
voting block with the #startvote
command. The command takes
two arguments, a question posed to voters (ending with a
?
), and the valid voting options. If the second argument is
missing the default options are "Yes" and "No". For example:
#startvote Should we vote now? Yes, No, Maybe
Meeting participants vote using the #vote
command. This
command takes a single argument, which should be one of the options
listed for voting by the #startvote
command. For
example:
#vote Yes
Note that you can vote multiple times, but only your last vote will count.
One can check the current vote tallies useing the
#showvote
command, which takes no arguments. This will list
the number of votes and voters for each item that has votes.
When the meeting chair(s) are ready to stop the voting process they
can issue the #endvote
command, which takes no arguments.
Doing so will report the voting results and log these results in the
meeting minutes.
A somewhat contrived voting example:
foo | #startvote Should we vote now? Yes, No, Maybe
meetbot | Begin voting on: Should we vote now? Valid vote options are Yes, No, Maybe.
meetbot | Vote using '#vote OPTION'. Only your last vote counts.
foo | #vote Yes
bar | #vote Absolutely
meetbot | bar: Absolutely is not a valid option. Valid options are Yes, No, Maybe.
bar | #vote Yes
bar | #showvote
meetbot | Yes (2): foo, bar
foo | #vote No
foo | #showvote
meetbot | Yes (1): bar
meetbot | No (1): foo
foo | #endvote
meetbot | Voted on "Should we vote now?" Results are
meetbot | Yes (1): bar
meetbot | No (1): foo
Logging
Meetings are automatically logged and published at http://eavesdrop.openstack.org/meetings/
The bot also has the ability to sit in a channel for the sole purpose of logging channel activity, not just meetings. Standard channel logs are sent to http://eavesdrop.openstack.org/irclogs/
The configuration for specific channel logging can be found in modules/openstack_project/manifests/eavesdrop.pp
.
Statusbot
Statusbot is used to distribute urgent information from the Infrastructure team to OpenStack channels. It updates the Infrastructure Status wiki page. It supports the following public message commands when issued by authenticated and whitelisted users from the channels the bot is listening to, including #openstack-infra:
- #status log MESSAGE
-
Log a message to the wiki page.
- #status notice MESSAGE
-
Broadcast a message to all OpenStack channels, and log to the wiki page.
- #status alert MESSAGE
-
Broadcast a message to all OpenStack channels and change their topics, log to the wiki page, and set an alert box on the wiki page (eventually include this alert box on status.openstack.org pages).
- #status ok [MESSAGE]
-
Remove alert box and restore channel topics, optionally announcing and logging an "okay" message.
Gerritbot
Gerritbot watches the Gerrit event stream (using the "stream-events" Gerrit command) and announces events (such as patchset-created, or change-merged) to relevant IRC channels.
Gerritbot's configuration is in gerritbot/channels.yaml
Teams can add their channel and go through the standard code review process to get the bot added to their channel. The configuration is organized by channel, with each project that a channel is interested in listed under the channel.