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llvm-premerge-checks/docs/playbooks.md
2020-02-26 15:46:15 +01:00

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Playbooks

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:
    ./local_setup.sh
    
    If you not running docker under your user, you might need to sudo gcloud auth login --no-launch-browser && gcloud auth configure-docker before running other commands under sudo.
  2. Delete the old cluster, if it still exists:
    cd kubernetes/cluster
    ./cluster_delete.sh
    
  3. Create the cluster:
    cd kubernetes/cluster
    ./cluster_create.sh
    
  4. Create the disk storage, if it does not yet exist:
    cd kubernetes/cluster
    ./disk_create.sh
    
  5. SSH into the VM instance mounting the volume, find the mount point and then set
    # go to the mount point of the volume
    cd  /var/lib/kubelet/plugins/kubernetes.io/gce-pd/mounts/jenkins-home
    # change the permissions
    sudo chmod a+rwx
    
  6. Push the docker images to gcr.io:
    cd containers
    #for each subfolder:
    ./build_deploy.sh <foldername>
    
  7. Deploy the stack:
    cd kubernetes
    ./deploy.sh
    
  8. Configure it

creating basic authentication for reverse proxy

  1. create auth file, based on ingress-nginx documentation
    cd kubernetes/reverse-proxy
    htpasswd -c auth <username>
    # enter password at prompt
    # add more users as required
    kubectl create secret generic proxy-auth --from-file=auth --namespace=jenkins
    

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. Here are the instructions to set up such a machine on GCP.

  1. Pick a GCP Windows image with Desktop Support.
    • pick a "persistent SSD" as boot Disk. This is much faster
    • Add a "local scratch SSD" and use it as you workspace. This is much faster.
  2. Format the local SSD partition and use it as workspace.
  3. install Chocolately:
@"%SystemRoot%\System32\WindowsPowerShell\v1.0\powershell.exe" -NoProfile -InputFormat None -ExecutionPolicy Bypass -Command "iex ((New-Object System.Net.WebClient).DownloadString('https://chocolatey.org/install.ps1'))" && SET "PATH=%PATH%;%ALLUSERSPROFILE%\chocolatey\bin"
  1. Install git: choco install -y git
  2. Install Docker Enterprise and reboot:
Install-Module DockerMsftProvider -Force
Install-Package Docker -ProviderName DockerMsftProvider -Force
Restart-Computer
  1. optional: install apps to help you work in the machine:
choco install -y googlechrome vscode
  1. Log out of the machine and log back in.
  2. Repeat until success:
    1. Start "Docker Desktop" and let it install it's dependencies. Then reboot manually, when the error message pops up.
    2. If you have trouble with the machine name: try to shorten it to 16 chars.
  3. Configure the Docker credentials for GCP:
gcloud components install docker-credential-gcr
docker-credential-gcr configure-docker
  1. To build and run the current agent run:
git clone https://github.com/google/llvm-premerge-checks
cd llvm-premerge-checks\containers
powershell .\build_run.ps1 agent-windows-jenkins
  1. If you want to be able to push changes to github, you need to set up your github SSH keys and user name:
ssh-keygen
git config --global user.name <your name>
git config --global user.email <your email>

To push push a new container run in containers:

powershell .\build_deploy.ps1 <container-folder>

Spawning a new windows agent

To spawn a new windows agent:

  1. Go to the GCP page and pick a new number for the agent.
  2. Update the machine name in kubernetes/windows_agent_create.sh.
  3. Run kubernetes/windows_agent_create.sh
  4. Go to the GCP page again
  5. login to the new machine via RDP (you probably need to set the i).
  6. In the RDP session: run these commands in the CMD window to start the docker container:
powershell 
Invoke-WebRequest -uri 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/google/llvm-premerge-checks/master/scripts/windows_agent_bootstrap.ps1' -OutFile windows_agent_bootstrap.ps1
.\windows_agent_bootstrap.ps1
  1. Wait for the machine to reboot, then login again and store the gsutil credentials in build-agent-results_key. TODO: add documentation on how to create these.
  2. run this script to start containers:
powershell Invoke-WebRequest -uri 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/google/llvm-premerge-checks/master/scripts/windows_agent_bootstrap.ps1' -OutFile windows_agent_bootstrap.ps1

.\windows_agent_bootstrap.ps1

Testing scripts locally

Build and run agent docker image sudo ./containers/build_run.sh agent-debian-testing-ssd /bin/bash.

Within a container set environment variables similar to pipeline.

Additionally set WORKSPACE, PHID and DIFF_ID parameters. Set CONDUIT_TOKEN with your personal one from https://reviews.llvm.org/settings/user/<USERNAME>/page/apitokens/.

Phabricator integration

The general flow for builds on Phabricator is:

  1. A user uploads a Diff (=patch) to a Revision (set of Diffs with comments and buildstatus, ... ).
  2. A Herald checks if one of the rules matches this event.
  3. You can use the rules to trigger a Build in Harbormaster.
  4. Harbor sends an HTTP request to the Jenkins server.
  5. Jenkins executes the build. In the last step of the build, a script is uploading the results to Phabricator.
  6. Phabricator sets the build status and displays the results.

Herald

We currently have these Herald rules to configure the builds:

  • Triggering builds for everyone:
    • H576 This will only trigger for non-beta testers.
  • Triggering the beta-test builds:
    • H511 or the beta testers, this is for testing new features.
    • H552 for all changes to MLIR (archived)
    • H527 for all changes to clang-extra-tools (archived)

You can archive a rule to disable it.

Harbormaster

We have these build plans in Harbormaster:

You can disable a build plan to stop it from building.

Per user Opt in/out

You can also on a per-user bases opt in/out to premerge testing.

These projects are checked in the Herald rules above.