The increasingly inaccurately named -ptl groups are causing some confusion. Rename them to -release instead to match current usage. Update docs to match. Immediately before this change merges, the following commands should be run: gerrit rename-group aviator-ptl aviator-release gerrit rename-group barbican-ptl barbican-release gerrit rename-group bashate-ptl bashate-release gerrit rename-group blazar-ptl blazar-release gerrit rename-group cachemonkey-ptl cachemonkey-release gerrit rename-group ceilometer-ptl ceilometer-release gerrit rename-group cinder-ptl cinder-release gerrit rename-group cliff-ptl cliff-release gerrit rename-group cli-powershell-ptl cli-powershell-release gerrit rename-group cloudkitty-ptl cloudkitty-release gerrit rename-group compass-ptl compass-release gerrit rename-group congress-ptl congress-release gerrit rename-group designate-ptl designate-release gerrit rename-group devstack-ptl devstack-release gerrit rename-group doc8-ptl doc8-release gerrit rename-group dotnet-sdk-ptl dotnet-sdk-release gerrit rename-group driverlog-ptl driverlog-release gerrit rename-group ec2-api-ptl ec2-api-release gerrit rename-group elastic-recheck-ptl elastic-recheck-release gerrit rename-group freezer-ptl freezer-release gerrit rename-group gerrit-dash-creator-ptl gerrit-dash-creator-release gerrit rename-group gerrit-powered-agenda-ptl gerrit-powered-agenda-release gerrit rename-group gertty-ptl gertty-release gerrit rename-group git-upstream-ptl git-upstream-release gerrit rename-group glance-ptl glance-release gerrit rename-group gnocchi-ptl gnocchi-release gerrit rename-group golang-client-ptl golang-client-release gerrit rename-group graffiti-ptl graffiti-release gerrit rename-group grenade-ptl grenade-release gerrit rename-group groups-static-pages-ptl groups-static-pages-release gerrit rename-group hacking-ptl hacking-release gerrit rename-group heat-ptl heat-release gerrit rename-group heat-translator-ptl heat-translator-release gerrit rename-group horizon-ptl horizon-release gerrit rename-group infra-manual-ptl infra-manual-release gerrit rename-group ironic-ptl ironic-release gerrit rename-group jenkins-job-builder-ptl jenkins-job-builder-release gerrit rename-group keystone-ptl keystone-release gerrit rename-group kickstack-ptl kickstack-release gerrit rename-group logaas-ptl logaas-release gerrit rename-group magnetodb-ptl magnetodb-release gerrit rename-group manila-ptl manila-release gerrit rename-group monasca-ptl monasca-release gerrit rename-group neutron-ptl neutron-release gerrit rename-group nova-ptl nova-release gerrit rename-group nova-solver-scheduler-ptl nova-solver-scheduler-release gerrit rename-group octavia-ptl octavia-release gerrit rename-group olso-messaging-ptl olso-messaging-release gerrit rename-group openstack-doc-ptl openstack-doc-release gerrit rename-group openstackdroid-ptl openstackdroid-release gerrit rename-group openstackid-ptl openstackid-release gerrit rename-group openstack-training-guides-ptl openstack-training-guides-release gerrit rename-group oslo-concurrency-ptl oslo-concurrency-release gerrit rename-group oslo-config-ptl oslo-config-release gerrit rename-group oslo-db-ptl oslo-db-release gerrit rename-group oslo-i18n-ptl oslo-i18n-release gerrit rename-group oslo-middleware-ptl oslo-middleware-release gerrit rename-group oslo-ptl oslo-release gerrit rename-group oslo-rootwrap-ptl oslo-rootwrap-release gerrit rename-group oslo-vmware-ptl oslo-vmware-release gerrit rename-group ospurge-ptl ospurge-release gerrit rename-group pbr-ptl pbr-release gerrit rename-group pecan-ptl pecan-release gerrit rename-group php-sdk-ptl php-sdk-release gerrit rename-group poppy-ptl poppy-release gerrit rename-group powervc-driver-ptl powervc-driver-release gerrit rename-group puppet-n1k-vsm-ptl puppet-n1k-vsm-release gerrit rename-group pycadf-ptl pycadf-release gerrit rename-group python-jenkins-ptl python-jenkins-release gerrit rename-group python-openstacksdk-ptl python-openstacksdk-release gerrit rename-group rack-ptl rack-release gerrit rename-group refstack-ptl refstack-release gerrit rename-group requests-mock-ptl requests-mock-release gerrit rename-group rubick-ptl rubick-release gerrit rename-group sahara-ptl sahara-release gerrit rename-group satori-ptl satori-release gerrit rename-group solum-ptl solum-release gerrit rename-group stacktach-ptl stacktach-release gerrit rename-group stevedore-ptl stevedore-release gerrit rename-group subunit2sql-ptl subunit2sql-release gerrit rename-group swift3-ptl swift3-release gerrit rename-group swift-ceph-backend-ptl swift-ceph-backend-release gerrit rename-group swiftpolicy-ptl swiftpolicy-release gerrit rename-group swift-ptl swift-release gerrit rename-group tacker-ptl tacker-release gerrit rename-group taskflow-ptl taskflow-release gerrit rename-group tempest-ptl tempest-release gerrit rename-group tripleo-ptl tripleo-release gerrit rename-group trove-ptl trove-release gerrit rename-group tuskar-ui-extras-ptl tuskar-ui-extras-release gerrit rename-group vinz-ptl vinz-release gerrit rename-group warm-ptl warm-release gerrit rename-group wsme-ptl wsme-release gerrit rename-group xenapi-os-testing-ptl xenapi-os-testing-release gerrit rename-group xstatic-ptl xstatic-release gerrit rename-group zaqar-ptl zaqar-release Change-Id: Idf4ee7a1b437c1cf93f89140b5133b6804d0a4e1
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StackForge
StackForge
StackForge is the way that OpenStack related projects can consume and make use of the OpenStack project infrastructure. This includes Gerrit code review, Jenkins continuous integration, GitHub repository mirroring, and various small things like IRC bots, pypi uploads, RTFD updates. Projects should make use of StackForge if they want to run their project with Gerrit code review and have a trunk gated by Jenkins.
StackForge projects are expected to be self sufficient when it comes to configuring Gerrit/Jenkins/Zuul etc. The openstack-infra team can provide assistance as resources allow, but should not be relied on.
What StackForge is not:
- Official endorsement of a project by OpenStack.
- Access to a GitHub organization (StackForge projects are mirrored to GitHub, this is all the GitHub org is used for).
- A guarantee of eventual OpenStack incubation (Though it is a good first step in that process as it exposes the project to the OpenStack way of doing things).
Audience
The focus of StackForge is to provide a place for OpenStack contributors to maintain related unofficial projects using the same tools and procedures as they employ when working on official OpenStack projects, to make it easier for other OpenStack developers to contribute effort to those projects and in some cases to ease a project's path to incubation and official integration. As such, the target audience for this document is current OpenStack developers who are assumed to already be familiar with how changes are uploaded and reviewed within OpenStack projects. As an introduction to OpenStack contribution, it is recommend to first read https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/How_To_Contribute and in particular the https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/Gerrit_Workflow article linked from it.
Add a Project to StackForge
Create a new StackForge Project with Puppet
OpenStack uses Puppet and a management script to create Gerrit
projects with simple changes to the openstack-infra/config repository.
To start make sure you have cloned the openstack-infra/config repository
git clone https://git.openstack.org/openstack-infra/config
.
First you need to add your StackForge project to the master project
list. Edit
modules/openstack_project/files/review.projects.yaml
and
add a new section for your project in alphabetical order within the
file. It should look something like:
- project: stackforge/project-name
description: Latest and greatest cloud stuff.
upstream: git://github.com/awesumsauce/project-name.git
The description will set the project description on the GitHub StackForge mirror, and the upstream should point at an existing repository which can be used to preseed Gerrit with an initial commit history. Both of these are optional. Note that the current tools assume that the upstream repo will have a master branch.
Note: Ensure the source repo has been evaluated and only required branches and tags remain when it seeds the stackforge repo. Cleaning up a repo of unnecessary branches and tags after the merge requires an openstack-infra core member to do so.
The next step is to add a Gerrit ACL config file. Edit
modules/openstack_project/files/gerrit/acls/stackforge/project-name.config
and make it look like:
[access "refs/heads/*"]
abandon = group project-name-core
label-Code-Review = -2..+2 group project-name-core
label-Workflow = -1..+1 group project-name-core
[access "refs/tags/*"]
pushSignedTag = group project-name-release
[receive]
requireChangeId = true
requireContributorAgreement = true
[submit]
mergeContent = true
The access sections in the example ACL grant the project's core group approval privileges and the ability so set/un-set Workflow status on changes, as well as the ability to push tags. The other sections set some required options for Gerrit to function normally (enforcing presence of a Change-Id in commits and allowing changes to be merged). This example also expects contributors to agree to a standard OpenStack CLA, join the OpenStack Foundation and submit contact information (this feature can be disabled by setting requireContributorAgreement to false).
That is all that is necessary to add a StackForge project to Gerrit; however, this project isn't very useful until we setup Jenkins jobs for it and configure Zuul to run those jobs. Continue reading to configure these additional tools.
Add Jenkins Jobs to StackForge Projects
In the same openstack-infra/config repository (and in the same change if you like) we need to edit additional files to setup Jenkins jobs and Zuul for the new StackForge project.
If you are interested in using the standard python Jenkins jobs
(docs, pep8, python 2.6 and 2.7 unittests, and coverage), edit
modules/openstack_project/files/jenkins_job_builder/config/projects.yaml
and add a new section for your project in alphabetical order in the
file. It should look something like:
- project:
name: project-name
node: bare-trusty
tarball-site: tarballs.openstack.org
jobs:
- python-jobs
List of jobs included to the python-jobs
jobs group is
located in
modules/openstack_project/files/jenkins_job_builder/config/python-jobs.yaml
.
For document publication there's also a publisher job template for the
popular Read the Docs
documentation hosting service, which can be used by adding the
hook-{name}-rtfd
template to the jobs list:
- project:
name: project-name
node: bare-trusty
tarball-site: tarballs.openstack.org
jobs:
- python-jobs
- hook-{name}-rtfd
If you aren't ready to run any gate tests or other project-specific
jobs yet, you don't need to edit projects.yaml
.
Now that we have Jenkins jobs we need to tell Zuul to run them when
appropriate. Edit
modules/openstack_project/files/zuul/layout.yaml
and add a
new section for your project in alphabetical order within the file. It
should look something like:
- name: stackforge/project-name
template:
- name: merge-check
check:
- gate-project-name-docs
- gate-project-name-pep8
- gate-project-name-python26
- gate-project-name-python27
- gate-project-name-python33
gate:
- gate-project-name-docs
- gate-project-name-pep8
- gate-project-name-python26
- gate-project-name-python27
- gate-project-name-python33
post:
- project-name-coverage
If you aren't ready to run any gate tests yet and did not configure python-jobs in projects.yaml, it should look like this instead:
- name: stackforge/project-name
template:
- name: merge-check
check:
- noop
gate:
- noop
That concludes the bare minimum openstack-infra/config changes necessary to add a project to StackForge. You can commit these changes and submit them to review.openstack.org at this point, or you can wait a little longer and add your project to GerritBot first.
Request an Initial Gerrit Core Group Member
StackForge uses Gerrit for group management. After the change to
create your StackForge project has merged, request an initial member for
the Gerrit group configured in your ACL (probably something like
your-project-name-core
). Members of this team will have
permissions to approve code changes to your project as defined in your
ACL, and to add other Gerrit users to the group.
You can request an initial Gerrit group member by opening a bug at https://bugs.launchpad.net/openstack-ci/+filebug (make sure to mention the Gerrit full name or E-mail address of your initial member). See https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/Project_Group_Management for details on project group management.
Configure StackForge Project to use GerritBot
To have GerritBot send Gerrit events for your project to a Freenode
IRC channel edit
modules/gerritbot/files/gerritbot_channel_config.yaml
. If
you want to configure GerritBot to leave alerts in a channel GerritBot
has always joined just add your project to the project list for that
channel:
stackforge-dev:
events:
- patchset-created
- change-merged
- x-vrif-minus-2
projects:
- stackforge/foo
- stackforge/python-fooclient
- stackforge/project-name
branches:
- master
If you want to join GerritBot to a new channel add a new section to the end of this file that looks like:
project-name-dev:
events:
- patchset-created
- change-merged
- x-vrif-minus-2
projects:
- stackforge/project-name
branches:
- master
If you are defining a new channel, add it also in
modules/openstack_project/files/accessbot/channels.yaml
file, optionally defining also its mask. The mask will be used to define
the access level for IRC users who are not listed in that file in the
global
section or otherwise listed for the channel.
For instance:
- name: new_project mask: full_mask
For more information about channel requirements and IRC services
provided by the infrastructure team, visit irc
And that's it. At this point you will want to submit these edits as a
change to review.openstack.org. When you do so, please use the
new-project
topic. You can do that using the
-t
option to git review
.
$ git review -t new-project
Add .gitreview file to project
If the new project you have added has a specified upstream you will
need to add a .gitreview
file to the project once it has
been created. This new file will allow you to use
git review
.
The basic process is clone from stackforge, add file, push to Gerrit, review and approve.:
git clone https://git.openstack.org/stackforge/project-name
cd project-name
git checkout -b add-gitreview
cat > .gitreview <<EOF
[gerrit]
host=review.openstack.org
port=29418
project=stackforge/project-name.git
EOF
git review -s
git add .gitreview
git commit -m 'Add .gitreview file.'
git review