- [Playbooks](#playbooks) * [Testing scripts locally](#testing-scripts-locally) * [Testing changes before merging](#testing-changes-before-merging) * [Deployment to a clean infrastructure](#deployment-to-a-clean-infrastructure) * [Creating docker containers on Windows](#creating-docker-containers-on-windows) * [Spawning a new windows agent](#spawning-a-new-windows-agent) + [Buildkite](#buildkite) * [Custom environment variables](#custom-environment-variables) * [Update HTTP auth credentials](#update-http-auth-credentials) # Playbooks ## Development environment You need will need recent python 3 installed, e.g. follow this [installation guide](https://cloud.google.com/python/docs/setup?hl=en). To install required packages run: ```shell script pip install -r ./scripts/requirements.txt ``` optional: ```shell script pip install jupyterlab pandas seaborn # for jupyter labs. ``` ## Testing scripts locally Build and run agent docker image `sudo ./containers/build_run.sh buildkite-premerge-debian /bin/bash`. Set `CONDUIT_TOKEN` with your personal one from `https://reviews.llvm.org/settings/user//page/apitokens/`. ## Testing changes before merging It's recommended to test even smallest changes before committing them to the `main` branch. 1. Create a pull request here. 1. Manually create a buildkite build in the pipeline you are updating and specify environment variable `ph_scripts_refspec="pull/123/head"`. Replace `123` with your PR number. If you don't have access to create buildkite builds, please ask a reviewer to do that. To test "premerge-tests" pipeline pick an existing build and copy "ph_" parameters from it, omitting "ph_target_phid" to skip updating an existing review. See also [custom environment variables](#custom-environment-variables). 1. Wait for build to complete and maybe attach a link to it to your PR. To test changes for the pipeline "setup" step please experiment on a copy first. ## Deployment to a clean infrastructure General remarks: * GCP does not route any traffic to your services unless the service is "healthy". It might take a few minutes after startup before the services is classified as healthy. Until then, you will only see some generic error message. These are the steps to set up the build server on a clean infrastructure: 1. Configure the tools on your local machine: ```bash ./local_setup.sh ``` If you not running docker under your user, you might need to `sudo gcloud auth login --no-launch-browser && sudo gcloud auth configure-docker` before running other commands under sudo. 1. Delete the old cluster, if it still exists: ```bash cd kubernetes/cluster ./cluster_delete.sh ``` 1. Create the cluster: ```bash cd kubernetes/cluster ./cluster_create.sh ``` 1. Push the docker images to gcr.io: ```bash cd containers #for each subfolder: ./build_deploy.sh ``` 1. Deploy the stack: ```bash cd kubernetes ./deploy.sh ``` 1. Configure it ## Running Docker containers `./containers/build_run.sh` provides a good way to run a container once to check that it builds and contains good package versions. To work with a container and persist it state do (taking 'base-debian' as example): ``` cd ./containers/base-debian sudo docker build -t base-debian . sudo docker run -it base-debian /bin/bash ``` to resume it from where you left ``` sudo docker start -a -i $(sudo docker ps -a -f ancestor=base-debian -q -l) ``` ## Creating docker containers on Windows If you want to build/update/test docker container for Windows, you need to do this on a Windows machine. **Note**: There is an existing *windows-development* machine that you can resume and use for development. Please stop it after use. To setup new machine in GCP: 1. Pick a GCP Windows image with Desktop Support. * pick a "persistent SSD" as boot Disk. This is much faster. * make sure that you give enough permissions in "Identity and API access" to be able to e.g. push new docker images to GCR. 1. Format the local SSD partition and use it as workspace. 1. install [Chocolately](https://chocolatey.org/docs/installation): ```powershell iex ((new-object net.webclient).DownloadString('https://chocolatey.org/install.ps1')) ``` 1. Install development tools: `choco install -y git googlechrome vscode` 1. (optionally) If you want to be able to push changes to github, you need to set up your github SSH keys and user name: ```powershell ssh-keygen git config --global user.name git config --global user.email ``` 1. Clone premerge checks sources: ```powershell cd c:\ git clone https://github.com/google/llvm-premerge-checks ``` 1. Install [Docker Enterprise](https://docs.docker.com/ee/docker-ee/windows/docker-ee/) and reboot: ```powershell Install-Module DockerMsftProvider -Force Install-Package Docker -ProviderName DockerMsftProvider -Force Restart-Computer ``` 1. Configure the Docker credentials for GCP: ```powershell gcloud init # set options according to ./k8s_config here gcloud components install docker-credential-gcr docker-credential-gcr configure-docker ``` ## Build / test docker for Windows. 1. To build and run a dockerfile: ```powershell cd llvm-premerge-checks\containers .\build_deploy.ps1 agent-windows-buildkite 1. To deploy container: ```powershell cd llvm-premerge-checks\containers .\build_deploy.ps1 agent-windows-buildkite ``` or ```powershell cd llvm-premerge-checks\containers .\build_run.ps1 agent-windows-buildkite cmd ``` Test this newly uploaded image: ```powershell c:\llvm-premerge-check\scripts\windows_agent_start_buildkite.ps1 ``` ## Spawning a new windows agent To spawn a new Windows agent: 1. Go to the [GCP page](https://pantheon.corp.google.com/compute/instances?project=llvm-premerge-checks&instancessize=50). 1. Add new windows machine wih OS "Windows Server" and version with "desktop experience" (so you can RDP) and boot disk size ~500 Gb. There is a "windows-agent-template" that might not be up to date. 1. Go to the [GCP page](https://pantheon.corp.google.com/compute/instances?project=llvm-premerge-checks&instancessize=50) again 1. Login to the new machine via RDP (you will need a RDP client, e.g. Chrome app). 1. (optional, quality of life) Add a powershell shortcut at desktop with "run as admin" flag. Create a folder with machine name (e.g "w16c2-2") somewhere and click "add new toolbar" on windows toolbar: this way it will be easier to identify which machine you are working with later. 1. Run these commands in the power shell under admin to bootstrap the Windows machine: ```powershell Invoke-WebRequest -uri 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/google/llvm-premerge-checks/main/scripts/windows_agent_bootstrap.ps1' -OutFile c:\windows_agent_bootstrap.ps1 c:/windows_agent_bootstrap.ps1 ``` VM will be restarted after a prompt. To start agent manually: ```powershell C:\llvm-premerge-checks\scripts\windows_agent_start_buildkite.ps1 [-workdir D:\] [-testing] [-version latest] ``` ## Custom environment variables Buildkite pipelines have a number of custom environment variables one can set to change their behavior. That is useful to debug issues or test changes. They are mostly used by pipleine generators, e.g. [pipeline_main](../scripts/pipeline_main.py), please refer to the source code for the details. These variables have `ph_` prefix and can be set with URL parameters in Harbormaster build. Most commonly used are: - `ph_scripts_refspec`: ("main" by default): refspec branch of llvm-premerge-checks to use. This variable is also used in pipeline "bootstrap" in Buildkite interface. Use "branch-name" for branches and "pull/123/head" for Pull Requests. - `ph_dry_run_report`: do not report any results back to Phabricator. - `ph_no_cache`: (if set to any value) clear compilation cache before the build. - `ph_projects`: which projects to use (semicolon separated), "detect" will look on diff to infer the projects, "default" selects all projects. - `ph_notify_email`: comma-separated list of email addresses to be notified when build is complete. - `ph_log_level` ("DEBUG", "INFO", "WARNING" (default) or "ERROR"): log level for build scripts. - `ph_linux_agents`, `ph_windows_agents`: custom JSON constraints on agents. For example, you might put one machine to a custom queue if it's errornous and send jobs to it with `ph_windows_agents={"queue": "custom"}`. - `ph_skip_linux`, `ph_skip_windows` (if set to any value): skip build on this OS. - `ph_skip_generated`: don't run custom steps generated from within llvm-project. While trying a new patch for premerge scripts it's typical to start a new build by copying "ph_" env variables from one of the recent builds and appending ```shell ph_dry_run_report=yes ph_skip_windows=yes ph_skip_generated=yes ph_scripts_refspec="" ph_log_level=DEBUG ``` ## Update HTTP auth credentials To update e.g. buildkite http-auth: ```shell script kubectl get secret http-auth -n buildkite -o yaml # base64 decode it's data to 'auth'. echo | base64 --decode > auth # add / update passwords htpasswd -b auth # update secret kubectl delete secret http-auth -n buildkite kubectl create secret generic http-auth -n buildkite --from-file=./auth ``` ## Update github-ssh secret This Kubernetes stores github ssh access files for llvm.premerge.tests@gmail.com user. To access it run `kubectl get secret github-ssh -n buildkite -o yaml | tee github-ssh.yam`. It has 3 entries: "id_rsa", "id_rsa.pub", "known_hosts". If you need to updated it, edit resulting yaml above with updated base 64 values. To updated "known_hosts" run `ssh-keyscan github.com` and store base64 encoded output in "known_hosts". Then run `kubectl apply -f github-ssh.yaml`. To create this secret from scratch run `kubectl create secret generic github-ssh --namespace buildkite --from-file ./id_rsa --from-file ./id_rsa.pub --from-file ./known_hosts` providing all files needed. Note that containers have to be restarted as ssh settings are copied at startup (entrypoint.sh).