
This adds support for live log streaming on Windows hosts. The daemon is written in C#, but is structured exactly like the Python daemon for Posix, so that any changes to one can be easily translated to the other. Like the Python/Posix version, it is necessary to vendor some Powershell and C# code from Ansible and the ansible.windows collection. Minimal changes were made to these (in fact, much more minimal than the changes to the command.py module for the Posix version). All changes involve the word "Zuul" for easy identification. Most of the work to write out the console log files is in a new file, Ansible.Zuul.Win.Common.cs which appears only in Zuul. Becasue it's possible to run the Posix log streaming daemon in WSL, and it's also possible to run both "win_command" and "command" tasks on the same host, outside and inside of WSL, the Windows log streaming daemon (win_zuul_console) runs on a different port, so that both may be running on the same host at the same time. This is more straightforward than trying to have both daemons be aware of the file paths of the other. I did make an attempt to create a test environment with wine, dotnet, and powershell all running under linux that we could use in the gate, however something about how Ansible links the C# modules is different enough to render that nonfunctional. Perhaps someday it will work; until then, we will have to use our best efforts to maintain this and manually test with a Windows VM. The procedure for running the remote tests is the same for Windows as it is for Posix. A copy of the "command" remote streaming test is added for windows, but disabled in the gate due to test resources. Change-Id: I35c220c1774b1943165075c3730236c78b95b18d
Zuul
Zuul is a project gating system.
The latest documentation for the current version of Zuul is published at: https://zuul-ci.org/docs/zuul/
If you are looking for the Edge routing service named Zuul that is related to Netflix, it can be found here: https://github.com/Netflix/zuul
If you are looking for the Javascript testing tool named Zuul, its archive can be found here: https://github.com/defunctzombie/zuul
Getting Help
There are two Zuul-related mailing lists:
- zuul-announce
-
A low-traffic announcement-only list to which every Zuul operator or power-user should subscribe.
- zuul-discuss
-
General discussion about Zuul, including questions about how to use it, and future development.
You will also find Zuul developers on Matrix <https://matrix.to/#/#zuul:opendev.org>.
Contributing
To browse the latest code, see: https://opendev.org/zuul/zuul To clone the latest code, use git clone https://opendev.org/zuul/zuul
Bugs are handled at: https://storyboard.openstack.org/#!/project/zuul/zuul
Suspected security vulnerabilities are most appreciated if first reported privately following any of the supported mechanisms described at https://zuul-ci.org/docs/zuul/latest/vulnerabilities.html
Code reviews are handled by gerrit at https://review.opendev.org
After creating a Gerrit account, use git review to submit patches. Example:
# Do your commits
$ git review
# Enter your username if prompted
Join us on Matrix to discuss development or usage.
License
Zuul is free software. Most of Zuul is licensed under the Apache License, version 2.0. Some parts of Zuul are licensed under the General Public License, version 3.0. Please see the license headers at the tops of individual source files.
Python Version Support
Zuul requires Python 3. It does not support Python 2.
Since Zuul uses Ansible to drive CI jobs, Zuul can run tests anywhere Ansible can, including Python 2 environments.