80 lines
3.8 KiB
Markdown
80 lines
3.8 KiB
Markdown
# gerrit-queue
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This daemon automatically rebases and submits changesets from a Gerrit
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instance, ensuring they still pass CI.
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In a usual gerrit setup with a linear master history, different developers
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await CI feedback on a rebased changeset, then one clicks submit, and
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effectively makes everybody else rebase again. `gerrit-queue` is meant to
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remove these races to master.
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Developers can add a specific tag `submit_me` to all changesets in a series,
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and if all preconditions on are met ("submittable" in gerrit speech, this
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usually means passing CI and passing Code Review), `gerrit-queue` takes care of
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rebasing and submitting it to master
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## How it works
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Gerrit only knows about Changesets (and some relations to other changesets),
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but usually developers think in terms of multiple changesets.
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### Fetching changesets
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`gerrit-queue` fetches all changesets from gerrit, and tries to identify these
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chains of changesets. We call them `Series`. All changesets need to have strict
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parent/child relationships to be detected (so if only half of the stack gets
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rebased by the Gerrit Web interface, these are considered individual series.
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Series are sorted by the number of changesets in them. This ensures longer
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series are merged faster, and less rebases are triggered. In the future, this
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might be extended to other metrics.
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### Submitting changesets
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The submitqueue has a Trigger() function, which gets periodically executed.
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It can keep a reference to one single serie across multiple runs. This is
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necessary if it previously rebased one serie to current HEAD and needs to wait
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some time until CI feedback is there. If it wouldn't keep that state, it would
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pick another series (with +1 from CI) and trigger a rebase on that one, so
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depending on CI run times and trigger intervals, if not keepig this information
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it'd end up rebasing all unrebased changesets on the same HEAD, and then just
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pick one, instead of waiting for the one to finish.
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The Trigger() function first instructs the gerrit client to fetch changesets
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and assemble series.
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If there is a `wipSerie` from a previous run, we check if it can still be found
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in the newly assembled list of series (it still needs to contain the same
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number of series. Commit IDs may differ, because the code doesn't reassemble a
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`wipSerie` after scheduling a rebase.
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If the `wipSerie` could be refreshed, we update the pointer with the newly
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assembled series. If we couldn't find it, we drop it.
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Now, we enter the main for loop. The first half of the loop checks various
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conditions of the current `wipSerie`, and if successful, does the submit
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("Submit phase"), the second half will pick a suitable new `wipSerie`, and
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potentially do a rebase ("Pick phase").
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#### Submit phase
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We check if there is an existing `wipSerie`. If there isn't, we immediately go to
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the "pick" phase.
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The `wipSerie` still needs to be rebased on `HEAD` (otherwise, the submit queue
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advanced outside of gerrit), and should not fail CI (logical merge conflict) -
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otherwise we discard it, and continue with the picking phase.
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If the `wipSerie` still contains a changeset awaiting CI feedback, we `return`
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from the `Trigger()` function (and go back to sleep).
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If the changeset is "submittable" in gerrit speech, and has the necessary
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submit queue tag set, we submit it.
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#### Pick phase
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The pick phase finds a new `wipSerie`. It'll first try to find one that already
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is rebased on the current `HEAD` (so the loop can just continue, and the next
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submit phase simply submit), and otherwise fall back to a not-yet-rebased
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serie. Because the rebase mandates waiting for CI, the code `return`s the
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`Trigger()` function, so it'll be called again after waiting some time.
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## Compile and Run
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```sh
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go generate
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GERRIT_PASSWORD=mypassword go run main.go --url https://gerrit.mydomain.com --username myuser --project myproject
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```
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