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5 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Dmitri Iouchtchenko
5897294fa9 Add spelling TODOs
Summary: Ref T13005. Added reminders not to copy/paste.

Test Plan: None.

Reviewers: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley

Reviewed By: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley

Subscribers: epriestley, PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam

Maniphest Tasks: T13005

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18695
2017-10-09 11:56:53 -07:00
epriestley
5ee4a1a306 Give Harbormaster Build Plans real policies
Summary:
Ref T9614. Currently, a lot of Build Plan behavior is covered by a global "can manage" policy.

One install in particular is experiencing difficulty with warring factions within engineering aborting one another's builds.

As a first step to remedy this, and also generally make Harbormaster more flexible and bring it in line with other applications in terms of policy power:

  - Give Build Plans normal view/edit policies.
  - Require "Can Edit" to run a plan manually.

Having "Can View" on plans may be a little weird in some cases (the status of a Buildable might be bad because of a build you can't see) but we can cross that bridge when we come to it.

Next change here will require "Can Edit" to abort a build. This will reasonably allow installs to reserve pause/abort for administrators/adults. (I might let anyone restart a plan, though?)

Test Plan:
  - Created a new build plan.
  - Verified defaults were inherited from application defaults (swapped them around, too).
  - Saved build plan.
  - Edited policies.
  - Verified autoplans get the right policies.
  - Verified old plans got migrated properly.
  - Tried to run a plan I couldn't edit (denied).
  - Ran a plan from CLI with `bin/harbormaster`.
  - Tried to create a plan with an unprivileged user.

Reviewers: chad

Reviewed By: chad

Maniphest Tasks: T9614

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14321
2015-10-26 12:38:21 -07:00
Joshua Spence
b4d7a9de39 Simplify the implementation of PhabricatorPolicyCapability subclasses
Summary: Instead of implementing the `getCapabilityKey` method in all subclasses of `PhabricatorPolicyCapability`, provide a `final` implementation in the base class which uses reflection. See D9837 and D9985 for similar implementations.

Test Plan: N/A

Reviewers: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers

Reviewed By: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers

Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin, hach-que

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10039
2014-07-25 08:25:42 +10:00
Joshua Spence
c34de83619 Rename policy capabilities
Summary: Ref T5655. Rename `PhabricatorPolicyCapability` subclasses for consistency.

Test Plan: Browsed a few applications, nothing seemed broken.

Reviewers: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley

Reviewed By: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley

Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin, hach-que

Maniphest Tasks: T5655

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10037
2014-07-25 08:20:39 +10:00
epriestley
b5a009337f Harbormaster v(-2)
Summary:
Ref T1049. I don't really want to sink too much time into this right now, but a seemingly reasonable architecture came to me in a dream. Here's a high-level overview of how things fit together:

  - **"Build"**: In Harbormaster, "build" means any process we want to run against a working copy. It might actually be building an executable, but it might also be running lint, running unit tests, generating documentation, generating symbols, running a deploy, setting up a sandcastle, etc.
  - `HarbormasterBuildable`: A "buildable" is some piece of code which build operations can run on. Generally, this is either a Differential diff or a Diffusion commit. The Buildable class just wraps those objects and provides a layer of abstraction. Currently, you can manually create a buildable from a commit. In the future, this will be done automatically.
  - `HarbormasterBuildStep`: A "build step" is an individual build operation, like "run lint", "run unit", "build docs", etc. The step defines how to perform the operation (for example, "run unit tests by executing 'arc unit'"). In this diff, this barely exists.
  - `HarbormasterBuildPlan`: This glues together build steps into groups or sequences. For example, you might want to "run unit", and then "deploy" if the tests pass. You can create a build plan which says "run step "unit tests", then run step "deploy" on success" or whatever. In the future, these will also contain triggers/conditions ("Automatically run this build plan against every commit") and probably be able to define failure actions ("If this plan fails, send someone an email"). Because build plans will run commands, only administrators can manage them.
  - `HarbormasterBuild`: This is the concrete result of running a `BuildPlan` against a `Buildable`. It tracks the build status and collects results, so you can see if the build is running/successful/failed. A `Buildable` may have several `Build`s, because you can execute more than one `BuildPlan` against it. For example, you might have a "documentation" build plan which you run continuously against HEAD, but a "unit" build plan which you want to run against every commit.
  - `HarbormasterBuildTarget`: This is the concrete result of running a `BuildStep` against a `Buildable`. These are children of `Build`. A step might be able to produce multiple targets, but generally this is something like "Unit Tests" or "Lint" and has an overall status, so you can see at a glance that unit tests were fine but lint had some issues.
  - `HarbormasterBuildItem`: An optional subitem for a target. For lint, this might be an individual file. For unit tests, an individual test. For normal builds, an executable. For deploys, a server. For documentation generation, there might just not be subitems.
  - `HarbormasterBuildLog`: Provides extra information, like command/execution transcripts. This is where stdout/stderr will get dumped, and general details and other messages.
  - `HarbormasterBuildArtifact`: Stores side effects or results from build steps. For example, something which builds a binary might put the binary in "Files" and then put its PHID here. Unit tests might put coverage information here. Generally, any build step which produces some high-level output object can use this table to record its existence.

This diff implements almost nothing and does nothing useful, but puts most of these object relationships in place. The two major things you can't easily do with these objects are:

  1) Run arbitrary cron jobs. Jenkins does this, but it feels tacked on and I don't know of anyone using it for that. We could create fake Buildables to get a similar effect, but if we need to do this I'd rather do it elsewhere in general. Build and cron/service/monitoring feel like pretty different problems to me.
  2) Run parameterized/matrix steps (maybe?). Bamboo has this plan/stage/task/job breakdown where a build step can generate a zillion actual jobs, like "build client on x86", "build server on x86", "build client on ARM", "build server on ARM", etc. We can sort of do this by having a Step map to multiple Targets, but I haven't really thought about it too much and it may end up being not-great. I'd guess we have like an 80% chance of getting a clean implementation if/when we get there. I suspect no one actually needs this, or when they do they'll just implement a custom Step and it can be parameterized at that level. I'm not too worried about this overall.

The major difference between this and Jenkins/Bamboo/TravisCI is that all three of those are **plan-centric**: the primary object in the system is a build plan, and the dashboard shows you all your build plans and the current status. I don't think this is the right model. One disadvantage is that you basically end up with top-level messaging that says "Trunk is broken", not "Trunk was broken by commit af32f392f". Harbormaster is **buildable-centric**: the primary object in the system is stuff you can run build operations against (commits/branches/revisions), and actual build plans are secondary. The main view will be "recent commits on this branch, and whether they're good or not" -- which I think is what's most important in a larger/more complex product -- not the pass/fail status of all jobs. This also makes it easier and more natural to integrate with Differential and Diffusion, which both care about the overall status of the commit/revision, not the current status of jobs.

Test Plan: Poked around, but this doesn't really do anything yet.

Reviewers: btrahan

Reviewed By: btrahan

CC: zeeg, chad, aran, seporaitis

Maniphest Tasks: T1049

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D7368
2013-10-22 15:01:06 -07:00