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A utility for managing module tags in Koji's tag inheritance

Project description

Ursa-Major

PyPI PyPI - License PyPI - Python Version

Ursa-Major is a utility to help managing module’s koji tags in koji’s inheritance. It reads configuration for tags from a tag config file, then update koji’s inheritance accordingly.

Tag Config File

The tag config file used by Ursa-Major is in json format, the top level keys are koji tags which we should add module tags into their inheritance. For each tag, it contains a list of modules, owners can also be set for a tag.

An example tag config file is:

{
    "fedora-30-buildroot-modules": {
        "modules": [
            {
                "name": "httpd",
                "priority": 10,
                "buildrequires": {
                    "platform": "f30"
                },
                "requires": {
                    "platform": "f30"
                },
                "stream": "2.4"
            },
            {
                "name": "ruby",
                "priority": 40,
                "requires": {
                    "platform": "f30"
                },
                "stream": "2.5"
            }
        ],
        "owners": [
            "foo@example.com"
        ]
    },
    "fedora-30-test-build": {
        "modules": [
            {
                "name": "testmodule",
                "priority": 150,
                "stream": "f30"
            }
        ],
        "owners": [
            "bar@example.com"
        ]
    }
}

A valid module config should contains:

  • name (required): module name

  • stream (required): module stream

  • priority (required): add module’s tag to tag inheritance with this priority

  • requires (optional): module’s runtime dependencies.

  • buildrequires (optional): module’s build time dependencies.

For each tag, owners can be set with email addresses.

The default tag config file used by Ursa-Major is ursa-major.json in current working directory. You can change it with --tag-config-file.

Koji and MBS

Tags in tag config file are koji tags, Ursa-Major connects to koji hub and update tag inheritance per config, and connects to MBS to query module’s information, especially the modulemd data.

Koji and MBS servers are set in Ursa-Major’s config files, the global config file is /etc/ursa-major/ursa-major by default, and can be changed by --config argument. The user config file is ~/.config/ursa-major/ursa-major.conf, and can be changed by --user-config. User config file is optional, and values in global config file will be overrided by user config file.

An example config file:

$ cat /etc/ursa-major/ursa-major.conf

[main]
# See https://docs.python.org/3/library/logging.html#logging-levels
log_level = info

[koji]
profile = koji

[mbs]
server_url = https://mbs.fedoraproject.org/

[mail]
mail_processing = true
mail_log_level = info
mail_server = smtp.example.com
mail_from = ursa-major@example.com
mail_replyto = ursa-major@example.com
# email addresses seperated by ','
mail_always_cc = ursa-major-admin@example.com
mail_always_bcc =
mail_subject_prefix = [ursa-major]

Sub Commands

Global arguments of ursa-major:

  • --debug (optional): print debug messages

  • --dry-run (optional): run in dry-run mode, not do any real change

  • --config (optional): default if /etc/ursa-major/ursa-major.conf

  • --user-config (optional): default is ~/.config/ursa-major/ursa-major.conf

  • --tag-config-file (optional): default is $PWD/ursa-major.json

show-config

This just show the content of tag config file, or the content of a specified tag.

Arguments:

  • --tag (optional): only show config content under this tag

Example:

$ ursa-major show-config --tag-config-file ~/fedora-prod-ursa-major.json --tag fedora-30-test-build

check-config

Check the tag config file to detect any invalid configuration:

$ ursa-major check-config --tag-config-file ~/fedora-prod-ursa-major.json

Checks include:

  • name, stream and priority are required for a module

  • priority value should not conflict with other parent tags which not belong to this module in tag’s inheritance

remove-module

Remove a module from the tag config file, and if any tag in the specified tag’s inheritance belong to this module, also remove those tags from inheritance.

Arguments:

  • --tag (required): remove module from this tag

  • --name (required): module name

  • --stream (required): module stream

  • --require (optional): module’s runtime requires, can be specified multiple times

  • --buildrequire (optional): module’s buildrequires, can be specified multiple times

Example:

$ ursa-major remove-module --tag fedora-30-test-build --name testmodule --stream f30

This will remove the module of testmodule:f30 from tag config file if it’s s present under tag fedora-30-test-build. And if there are some tags belong to testmodule:f30 exist in fedora-30-test-build’s inheritance, those tags are also removed from inheritance.

add-module

Add a module to tag config file under the specified tag, and add the latest module build’s tag of that module to tag inheritance accordingly.

Arguments:

  • --tag (required): add module to this tag

  • --name (required): module name

  • --stream (required): module stream

  • --priority (required): priority value when add tag to inheritance

  • --require (optional): module’s runtime requires, can be specified multiple times

  • --buildrequire (optional): module’s buildrequires, can be specified multiple times

  • --force (optional): allow to add module that doesn’t have a build in MBS yet

  • --wait-regen-repo (optional): wait for regen-repo task to finish

  • --update-config-only (optinal): only update tag config file, not update tag inheritance

  • --update-inheritance-only (optional): only update tag inheritance, not update tag config file

Example:

$ ursa-major add-module --tag fedora-30-test-build --name testmodule --stream f30 --priority 100

If the specified module with that name and stream already exists in tag config file, Ursa-Major will check whether requires or priority is different from the value specified in command line, if true, the tag config file will be updated to use the values specified. Tag inheritance will be updated to remove tags belong to the old module, and add the latest module build’s koji tag of the new module (by querying MBS) to tag inheritance.

The specified module in command line should has at least one built module (state name is ‘ready’) in MBS, so Ursa-Major can get the latest module build’s koji tag, if you want to specify a un-built module, you can run add-module with --force.

You can run the command with --update-inheritance-only if you want to update the tag inheritance only. And run with --update-config-only if want to update tag config file only, this is just similiar to change the tag config file directly, but do some checks for you at the some time.

When any tag is added to tag inheritance, Ursa-Major also submit regen-repo tasks for the build tags in inheritance data. If the specified tag is a build tag, it’s the only one build tag Ursa-Major will regen-repo for. Or Ursa-Major will check the tag’s inheritance data, if it reaches the first build tag in each inheritant path, it returns that build tag. And it stops at any tag that name starts with ‘module-‘.

For example, if we have tag inheritance data as below (tags with ‘*’ marks are build tags):

Example #1:

my-example-tag
  └─product-foo-temp-override
     └─product-foo-override
        └─product-foo-build (*)
           ├─tmp-product-foo-build (*)
           └─alt-product-foo-build (*)

In this case, there is one build tag found for ‘my-example-tag’, it is: product-foo-build. Ursa-Major stops at ‘product-foo-build’, so ‘tmp-product-foo-build’ and ‘alt-product-foo-build’ are not checked at all.

Example #2:

my-example-tag
  ├─module-345678-build
  ├─module-234567-build
  ├─module-123456-build
  │  └─product-foo-module-hotfix
  │     └─product-foo-module-hotfix-build (*)
  ├─tmp-product-foo-python-candidate
  │  └─tmp-product-foo-python-override
  │     └─tmp-product-foo-python-build (*)
  ├─product-foo-container-build (*)
  └─product-foo-temp-override
     └─product-foo-override
        └─product-foo-build (*)
           ├─tmp-product-foo-build (*)
           └─alt-product-foo-build (*)

In this case, there are 3 build tags found for my-example-tag, they are: tmp-product-foo-python-build, product-foo-container-build and product-foo-build. product-foo-module-hotfix-build is a build tag, but Ursa-Major doesn’t count it in, because it stops at tag ‘module-123456-build’ which name starts with ‘module-‘.

add-tag

Reads module state change message from an environment variable and then add the module’s koji tag tag inheritance according to tag config file if the module build state is ‘ready’, and remove old tags of the module at the same time. The module’s state change message is generated by MBS.

Arguments:

  • --module-from-env (optional): the environment variable Ursa-Major read the module state change message from, by default it’s CI_MESSAGE

  • --wait-regen-repo (optinal): wait for regen-repo tasks to finish, default is False

  • --send-mail (optional): send mail to tag owners, default is False

Example:

$ cat $CI_MESSAGE
{
  "state_reason": null,
  "component_builds": [
    108146,
    108145
  ],
  "name": "testmodule",
  "stream": "master",
  "time_submitted": "2018-10-26T16:59:06Z",
  "version": "20181026165847",
  "time_modified": "2018-10-26T16:59:27Z",
  "state_name": "ready",
  "scmurl": "https://src.fedoraproject.org/modules/testmodule.git?#3f262deef9d79160ea229142aeb51eedcc956929",
  "state": 5,
  "time_completed": "2018-10-26T16:59:15Z",
  "koji_tag": "module-testmodule-master-20181026165847-a5b0195c",
  "context": "a5b0195c",
  "owner": "foobar",
  "siblings": [],
  "id": 2321,
  "rebuild_strategy": "only-changed"
}

$ cat $PWD/ursa-major.json
{
    "fedora-30-test-build": {
        "modules": [
            {
                "name": "testmodule",
                "priority": 150,
                "stream": "master"
            }
        ],
        "owners": [
            "foobar@example.com"
        ]
    }
}

$ ursa-major add-tag --wait-regen-repo --send-mail

In this example, Ursa-Major reads the module state change message from enviroment variable CI_MESSAGE, the module build state name is “ready” and module is present under a tag “fedora-30-test-build” in tag config file. Ursa-Major will add the koji tag “module-testmodule-master-20181026165847-a5b0195c” into “fedora-30-test-build“‘s inheritance, and then regen-repo for build tags in “fedora-30-test-build“‘s inheritance (refer to add-module for details of how to find build tags).

Ursa-Major will send mail to tag owners if run with “–send-mail”, mail configuration can be configured in global config file or user config file, under the section of “mail”.

Change Logs

v0.2.0 (2019-03-20)

  • Add tests for AddModuleHandler methods (Chenxiong Qi)

  • Avoid long modulemd embedded into fake data for tests (Chenxiong Qi)

  • Fixes according to review comments (Chenxiong Qi)

  • Command check-config supports filtering modules on buildrequires (Chenxiong Qi)

  • Command add-module supports buildrequires now (Chenxiong Qi)

  • Command remove-module supports filtering modules on buildrequires (Chenxiong Qi)

  • Allow passing buildrequires to MBS.get_modules_with_requires (Chenxiong Qi)

  • Reword remove-module help and –tag option help text (Chenxiong Qi)

  • Allow filtering on buildrequires (Chenxiong Qi)

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