Summary:
- We currently write every PHID we generate to a table. This was motivated by two concerns:
- **Understanding Data**: At Facebook, the data was sometimes kind of a mess. You could look at a random user in the ID tool and see 9000 assocs with random binary data attached to them, pointing at a zillion other objects with no idea how any of it got there. I originally created this table to have a canonical source of truth about PHID basics, at least. In practice, our data model has been really tidy and consistent, and we don't use any of the auxiliary data in this table (or even write it). The handle abstraction is powerful and covers essentially all of the useful data in the app, and we have human-readable types in the keys. So I don't think we have a real need here, and this table isn't serving it if we do.
- **Uniqueness**: With a unique key, we can be sure they're unique, even if we get astronomically unlucky and get a collision. But every table we use them in has a unique key anyway. So we actually get pretty much nothing here, except maybe some vague guarantee that we won't reallocate a key later if the original object is deleted. But it's hard to imagine any install will ever have a collision, given that the key space is 36^20 per object type.
- We also currently use PHIDs and Users in tests sometimes. This is silly and can break (see D2461).
- Drop the PHID database.
- Introduce a "Harbormaster" database (the eventual CI tool, after Drydock).
- Add a scratch table to the Harbormaster database for doing unit test meta-tests.
- Now, PHID generation does no writes, and unit tests are isolated from the application.
- @csilvers: This should slightly improve the performance of the large query-bound tail in D2457.
Test Plan: Ran unit tests. Ran storage upgrade.
Reviewers: btrahan, vrana, jungejason
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: csilvers, aran, nh, edward
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2466
Summary:
- Move email to a separate table.
- Migrate existing email to new storage.
- Allow users to add and remove email addresses.
- Allow users to verify email addresses.
- Allow users to change their primary email address.
- Convert all the registration/reset/login code to understand these changes.
- There are a few security considerations here but I think I've addressed them. Principally, it is important to never let a user acquire a verified email address they don't actually own. We ensure this by tightening the scoping of token generation rules to be (user, email) specific.
- This should have essentially zero impact on Facebook, but may require some minor changes in the registration code -- I don't exactly remember how it is set up.
Not included here (next steps):
- Allow configuration to restrict email to certain domains.
- Allow configuration to require validated email.
Test Plan:
This is a fairly extensive, difficult-to-test change.
- From "Email Addresses" interface:
- Added new email (verified email verifications sent).
- Changed primary email (verified old/new notificactions sent).
- Resent verification emails (verified they sent).
- Removed email.
- Tried to add already-owned email.
- Created new users with "accountadmin". Edited existing users with "accountadmin".
- Created new users with "add_user.php".
- Created new users with web interface.
- Clicked welcome email link, verified it verified email.
- Reset password.
- Linked/unlinked oauth accounts.
- Logged in with oauth account.
- Logged in with email.
- Registered with Oauth account.
- Tried to register with OAuth account with duplicate email.
- Verified errors for email verification with bad tokens, etc.
Reviewers: btrahan, vrana, jungejason
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T1184
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2393
Summary:
I will use it for highlighting users which are not currently available.
Maybe I will also use it in the nagging tool.
I don't plan creating a UI for it as API is currently enough for us.
Maybe I will visualize it at /calendar/ later.
I plan creating `user.deletestatus` method when this one will be done.
Test Plan:
`storage upgrade`
Call Conduit `user.addstatus`.
Verify DB.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran, Koolvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2382
Summary:
We will need it for two purposes:
- Status tool.
- Nagging tool - @aran suggested using "3 business days" and I don't want it to fall on New Year's Eve or such.
I don't plan working on any interface for editing this as this kind of data should be always imported.
Test Plan:
`bin/storage upgrade`
`scripts/calendar/import_us_holidays.php`
/calendar/
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran, Koolvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2375
Summary:
Splits out the SQL changes. These are most of the changes, but primarily mechanical:
- Moved "initialize.sql" to "0000.legacy.sql" and partially reverted to an older version, such that patches 0000 + 000 + 001 + ... + 137 put us in the right state when applied sequentially.
- Removed "create database" commands from all SQL. These are handled by separate DB patches now, so we have the data to do operations like "storage databases" (list databases) and "storage destroy" (drop databases).
- Removed "phabricator_" namespace from all SQL, and replaced with "{$NAMESPACE}_" token so we can namespace databases.
- Shortened some column lengths so patches apply correctly if originally created as InnoDB; also a few similar tweaks elsewhere.
Test Plan: See D2323 for discussion and test plan.
Reviewers: edward, vrana, btrahan, jungejason
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T140, T345
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2329
Test Plan:
Added CC's/Auditors, clicked the form elements, and saw correct
behaviour. Verified that metadata was present in the detail table.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran, epriestley, 20after4, Koolvin
Maniphest Tasks: T904
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2002
Summary:
We will need it for intl.
I've put it to User instead of UserProfile to be easier accessible.
Test Plan:
Apply SQL patch.
Change sex to Male.
Change sex to Unknown.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran, Koolvin
Maniphest Tasks: T1139
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2287
Summary:
This is slightly more complicated for this reason:
- We don't set `dateCommitted` for normal commits, only for markcommitted.
-- We need to add this date to old revisions now.
Test Plan:
Reparse a revision - commit date was set.
Conduit `markcommitted` - commit date was set.
Run SQL script.
Display closed revision.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran, Koolvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2282
Summary:
Searching for empty query kills us because whole `search_document` table is read in this case.
This diff adds an index just for this query.
Other solution would be to disable searching for empty string. But it can be actually useful (listing newest documents of any type).
Test Plan:
lang=sql
EXPLAIN SELECT document.phid, document.documentType, document.documentTitle, document.documentCreated
FROM `search_document` document
GROUP BY document.phid
ORDER BY documentCreated DESC
LIMIT 0, 21;
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: jungejason, aran, Koolvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2277
Summary:
Couple of small improvements:
- Delete `randomon` macro.
- Make name unique (deleting current conflicts randomly).
- Image macro must be alone on the line.
- Filter by name.
Test Plan:
Run SQL.
/file/macro/
/file/macro/?name=imagemacro
Try to create conflicting name.
Write this comment:
Test imagemacro.
imagemacro
Reviewers: aran, epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: epriestley, Koolvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2230
Summary:
The old version of this loads all differential revisions at once, but that much
can't all be loaded into memory when there are close to 500,000 revisions. This
diff splits up loading the revisions.
Test Plan: Ran this to run the migration in our install
Reviewers: jungejason, epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2243
Summary:
'cuz we need to be phamous!
V1 feature set
- posts
-- standard thing you'd expect - a title and a remarkup-powered body and...
-- "phame" title - a short string that can be used to reference the story. this gets auto-updated when you mess with the title.
-- configuration - for now, do you want Facebook, Disqus or no comments? this is a per-post thing but feeds from an instance-wide configuration
Please do toss out any must have features or changes.
Test Plan: played around with this bad boy like whoa
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran, vrana
Maniphest Tasks: T1111
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2202
Summary:
- We currently post-filter by branches, but should do this in SQL. See T799.
- We currently identify branch-name-matches as being in the working copy even if they belong to a different project (e.g., two different projects with commits on the branch "master"). See T1100.
- Denormalize branch and project information into DifferentialRevision.
- Expose project information in the API.
Test Plan: Ran conduit API queries with branches and arc project IDs, got reasonable results.
Reviewers: btrahan, vrana, jungejason
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T1100, T799
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2190
Summary:
There have been a couple of requests for this since bookmarks are "out this year like woah" and "totally uncool dude".
Allow users to save named custom queries and make them the /maniphest/ default if they so desire.
A little messy. :/
Test Plan: Saved, edited, deleted custom queries. Made custom query default; made 'no default' default. Verified default behavior. Issued a modified search from a custom query.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, epriestley, 20after4
Maniphest Tasks: T923, T1034
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1964
Summary:
`116.utf8.sql` throws this under MySQL 5.5:
> Column length too big for column 'keyBody' (max = 21845); use BLOB or TEXT instead
I guess that's because MySQL 5.5 changed maximum length of UTF-8 character from 3 bytes to 4.
I've updated also `116.utf8.sql` for people with new installs.
Test Plan:
upgrade_schema.php
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2117
Summary:
We have a lot of cases where we store object relationships, but it's all kind of messy and custom. Some particular problems:
- We go to great lengths to enforce order stability in Differential revisions, but the implementation is complex and inelegant.
- Some relationships are stored on-object, so we can't pull the inverses easily. For example, Maniphest shows child tasks but not parent tasks.
- I want to add more of these and don't want to continue building custom stuff.
- UIs like the "attach stuff to other stuff" UI need custom branches for each object type.
- Stuff like "allow commits to close tasks" is notrivial because of nonstandard metadata storage.
Provide an association-like "edge" framework to fix these problems. This is nearly identical to associations, with a few differences:
- I put edge metadata in a separate table and don't load it by default, to keep edge rows small and allow large metadata if necessary. The on-edge metadata seemed to get abused a lot at Facebook.
- I put a 'seq' column on the edges to ensure they have an explicit, stable ordering within a source and type.
This isn't actually used anywhere yet, but my first target is attaching commits to tasks for T904.
Test Plan: Made a mock page that used Editor and Query. Verified adding and removing edges, overwriting edges, writing and loading edge data, sequence number generation.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, 20after4
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2088
Summary:
Like the title says, similar to Facebook Tasks.
Not sure how I really feel about this, but I guess it's kind of OK? I never used
this feature in Facebook Tasks but I think some people like it.
The drag-and-drop to repri across priorities feels okayish.
Because subpriority is a double and we just split the difference when
reprioritizing, you lose ~a bit of precision every time you repri two tasks
against each other and so you can break it by swapping the priorities of two
tasks ~50 times. This case is pretty silly and pathological. We can add some
code to deal with this at some point if necessary.
I think this also fixes the whacky task layout widths once and for all.
(There are a couple of minor UI glitches like headers not vanishing and header
counts not updating that I'm not fixing because I am lazy.)
Test Plan: Dragged and dropped tasks around.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, epriestley, mgummelt
Maniphest Tasks: T859
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1731
Summary:
**Who can delete global rules?**: I discussed this with @jungejason. The current behavior is that the rule author or any administrator can delete a global rule, but this
isn't consistent with who can edit a rule (anyone) and doesn't really make much sense (it's an artifact of the global/personal split). I proposed that anyone can delete a
rule but we don't actually delete them, and log the deletion. However, when it came time to actually write the code for this I backed off a bit and continued actually
deleting the rules -- I think this does a reasonable job of balancing accountability with complexity. So the new impelmentation is:
- Personal rules can be deleted only by their owners.
- Global rules can be deleted by any user.
- All deletes are logged.
- Logs are more detailed.
- All logged actions can be viewed in aggregate.
**Minor Cleanup**
- Merged `HomeController` and `AllController`.
- Moved most queries to Query classes.
- Use AphrontFormSelectControl::renderSelectTag() where appropriate (this is a fairly recent addition).
- Use an AphrontErrorView to render the dry run notice (this didn't exist when I ported).
- Reenable some transaction code (this works again now).
- Removed the ability for admins to change rule authors (this was a little buggy, messy, and doesn't make tons of sense after the personal/global rule split).
- Rules which depend on other rules now display the right options (all global rules, all your personal rules for personal rules).
- Fix a bug in AphrontTableView where the "no data" cell would be rendered too wide if some columns are not visible.
- Allow selectFilter() in AphrontNavFilterView to be called without a 'default' argument.
Test Plan:
- Browsed, created, edited, deleted personal and gules.
- Verified generated logs.
- Did some dry runs.
- Verified transcript list and transcript details.
- Created/edited all/any rules; created/edited once/every time rules.
- Filtered admin views by users.
Reviewers: jungejason, btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2040
Summary:
Flags are a personal collection of things you want to take a look at later. You can use several different colors and add notes.
Not really sure if this is actually a good idea or not but it was easy to build.
Planned features:
- Allow Herald rules to add flags.
- In the "edit flag" dialog, have a "[x] Subscribe Me" checkbox that CCs you.
- Support Diffusion.
- Support Phriction.
- Always show flags on an object if you have them (in every view)?
- Edit dialog feels a little heavy?
- More filtering in /flag/ tool.
- Add a top-level links somewhere?
Test Plan: Added, edited and removed flags from things. Viewed flags in flag view.
Reviewers: aran, btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, epriestley, Koolvin
Maniphest Tasks: T1041
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2024
Summary:
- Still really really rough.
- Adds a full synchronous mode for debugging.
- Adds some logging.
- It can now allocate EC2 machines and put webroots on them in a hacky, terrible way.
- Adds a base query class.
Test Plan: oh hey look a test page? http://ec2-50-18-65-151.us-west-1.compute.amazonaws.com:2011/
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T1049
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2026
Summary:
This is in preparation for getting the "View Options" dropdown working on audits.
- Use Files to serve raw data so we get all the security benefits of the alternate file domain. Although the difficulty of exploiting this is high (you need commit access to the repo) there's no reason to leave it dangling.
- Add a "contentHash" to Files so we can lookup files by content rather than adding some weird linker table. We can do other things with this later, potentially.
- Don't use 'data' URIs since they're crazy and we can just link to the file URI.
- When showing a binary file or an image, don't give options like "show highlighted text with blame" or "edit in external editor" since they don't make any sense.
- Use the existing infrastructure to figure out if things are images or binaries instead of an ad-hoc thing in this class.
Test Plan: Looked at text, image and binary files in Diffusion. Verified we reuse existing files if we've already generated them.
Reviewers: btrahan, vrana
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T904
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1899
Summary:
- Add inline comments to Audits, like Differential.
- Creates new storage for the comments in the Audits database.
- Creates a new PhabricatorAuditInlineComment class, similar to DifferentialInlineComment.
- Defines an Interface which Differential and Audit comments conform to.
- Makes consumers of DifferentialInlineComments consume objects which implement that interface instead.
- Adds save
NOTE: Some features are still missing! Wanted to cut this off before it got crazy:
- Inline comments aren't shown in the main comment list.
- Inline comments aren't shown in the emails.
- Inline comments aren't previewed.
I'll followup with those but this was getting pretty big.
@vrana, does the SQL change look correct?
Test Plan:
- Created, edited, deleted, replied to, reloaded and saved inline comments in Diffusion, on the left and right side of diffs.
- Created, edited, deleted, replied to, reloaded and saved inline comments in Differentila, on the left and right side of primary and diff-versus-diff diffs.
Reviewers: btrahan, vrana
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T904
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1898
Summary: This is the script used for conversion: P319
Test Plan:
Update diff with UTF-8 characters in description.
`sql/upgrade_schema.php`
Verify data in DB and that it looks good on web.
Reviewers: epriestley, nh
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T327
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1830
Summary:
Adds a macro handler that spams your channel with macros. Config is:
- macro.size: scale macros to this size before rasterizing
- macro.sleep: sleep this many seconds between lines (evade flood protection)
Test Plan: derpderp
Reviewers: kdeggelman, btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1838
Summary:
- Move table to Repository, since we have no Owners joins in the application anymore but would like to do a Repository join.
- Rename "packagePHID" to "auditorPHID", since this column may contain package, project, or user PHIDs.
Test Plan:
- Browsed Owners, Audit, and Differential interfaces to the Audit tool.
- Made comments and state changes.
- Ran "reparse.php --herald --owners" on several commits.
Reviewers: btrahan, jungejason
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, epriestley, nh, vrana
Maniphest Tasks: T904
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1787
Summary:
This diff makes the OAuthServer more compliant with the spec by
- making it return well-formatted error codes with error types from the spec.
- making it respect the "state" variable, which is a transparent variable the
client passes and the server passes back
- making it be super, duper compliant with respect to redirect uris
-- if specified in authorization step, check if its valid relative to the client
registered URI and if so save it
-- if specified in authorization step, check if its been specified in the access
step and error if it doesn't match or doesn't exist
-- note we don't make any use of it in the access step which seems strange but
hey, that's what the spec says!
This diff makes the OAuthServer suck less by
- making the "cancel" button do something in the user authorization flow
- making the client list view and client edit view be a bit more usable around
client secrets
- fixing a few bugs I managed to introduce along the way
Test Plan:
- create a test phabricator client, updated my conf, and then linked and
unlinked phabricator to itself
- wrote some tests for PhabricatorOAuthServer -- they pass!
-- these validate the various validate URI checks
- tried a few important authorization calls
--
http://phabricator.dev/oauthserver/auth/?client_id=X&state=test&redirect_uri=http://www.evil.com
--- verified error'd from mismatching redirect uri's
--- verified state parameter in response
--- verified did not redirect to client redirect uri
-- http://phabricator.dev/oauthserver/auth/?client_id=X w/ existing
authorization
--- got redirected to proper client url with error that response_type not
specified
-- http://phabricator.dev/oauthserver/auth/?client_id=X&response_type=code w/
existing authorization
--- got redirected to proper client url with pertinent code!
- tried a few important access calls
-- verified appropriate errors if missing any required parameters
-- verified good access code with appropriate other variables resulted in an
access token
- verified that if redirect_uri set correctly in authorization required for
access and errors if differs at all / only succeeds if exactly the same
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran, epriestley, ajtrichards
Maniphest Tasks: T889, T906, T897
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1727
Summary:
- Add a proper mailKey field to make these things mailable. Backfill all
existing objects.
- Denormalize authorPHID to the commit object so we can query by it
efficiently in a future diff. We currently use the search engine to drive
"commits by author" but that's not so good for audit, which needs more
constraints.
- Add an overall audit status field so we can efficiently query "commits that
needs your attention".
- Add enough code to convince myself that these fields are basically
reasonable and work correctly.
Test Plan:
- Ran schema upgrades. Checked database state afterward.
- Ran "reparse.php --owners --herald" to verify worker changes.
- Looked at a commit, altered aggregate status via audits / reparse.php,
verified it responded correctly.
Reviewers: btrahan, jungejason
Reviewed By: jungejason
CC: aran, epriestley, nh
Maniphest Tasks: T904
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1706
Summary:
beyond the title, this diff tweaks the test console to have a bit more
functionality. also makes a small change to CSS for AphrontFormControlMarkup,
which IMO fixes a display issue on
https://secure.phabricator.com/settings/page/profile/ where the Profile URI is
all up in the air and whatnot
I think this is missing pagination. I am getting tired of the size though and
will add later. See T905.
Test Plan:
viewed, updated and deleted client authorizations. viewed, created,
updated and deleted clients
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T849, T850, T848
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1683
Summary:
Added "What's new?" to the ircbot
====Matches
```What is new?
What's new?
Whats new```
Test Plan:
<`Korvin> what is new?
<korvinbot-local> Derpen created D1: Herped the derp - http://phabricator.net/D1
It shows five.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: epriestley, aran
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1666
for scope
Summary:
this patch makes the access token response "complete" relative to spec by
returning when it expires AND that the token_type is in fact 'Bearer'.
This patch also lays the groundwork for scope by fixing the underlying data
model and adding the first scope checks for "offline_access" relative to expires
and the "whoami" method. Further, conduit is augmented to open up individual
methods for access via OAuth generally to enable "whoami" access. There's also
a tidy little scope class to keep track of all the various scopes we plan to
have as well as strings for display (T849 - work undone)
Somewhat of a hack but Conduit methods by default have SCOPE_NOT_ACCESSIBLE. We
then don't even bother with the OAuth stuff within conduit if we're not supposed
to be accessing the method via Conduit. Felt relatively clean to me in terms
of additional code complexity, etc.
Next up ends up being T848 (scope in OAuth) and T849 (let user's authorize
clients for specific scopes which kinds of needs T850). There's also a bunch of
work that needs to be done to return the appropriate, well-formatted error
codes. All in due time...!
Test Plan:
verified that an access_token with no scope doesn't let me see
anything anymore. :( verified that access_tokens made awhile ago expire. :(
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T888, T848
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1657
Summary:
adds a Phabricator OAuth server, which has three big commands:
- auth - allows $user to authorize a given client or application. if $user has already authorized, it hands an authoization code back to $redirect_uri
- token - given a valid authorization code, this command returns an authorization token
- whoami - Conduit.whoami, all nice and purdy relative to the oauth server.
Also has a "test" handler, which I used to create some test data. T850 will
delete this as it adds the ability to create this data in the Phabricator
product.
This diff also adds the corresponding client in Phabricator for the Phabricator
OAuth Server. (Note that clients are known as "providers" in the Phabricator
codebase but client makes more sense relative to the server nomenclature)
Also, related to make this work well
- clean up the diagnostics page by variabilizing the provider-specific
information and extending the provider classes as appropriate.
- augment Conduit.whoami for more full-featured OAuth support, at least where
the Phabricator client is concerned
What's missing here... See T844, T848, T849, T850, and T852.
Test Plan:
- created a dummy client via the test handler. setup development.conf to have
have proper variables for this dummy client. went through authorization and
de-authorization flows
- viewed the diagnostics page for all known oauth providers and saw
provider-specific debugging information
Reviewers: epriestley
CC: aran, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T44, T797
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1595
Summary:
This is pretty simple and unpolished, but it's getting pretty big and it seems
like a reasonable starting point.
- Log chat in various "channels".
- Conduit record and query methods.
- IRCBot integration for IRC logging
Major TODO:
- Web UI is really unpolished and has no search, paging, anchor-linking, etc.
Basically all presentation stuff, though.
- I think the bot should have a map of channels to log with channel aliases?
- The "channels" should probably be in a separate table.
- The "authors" should probably be correlated to Phabricator accounts somehow,
where possible.
Test Plan: Used phabotlocal to log #phabricator.
Reviewers: kdeggelman, btrahan, Koolvin
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T837
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1625
Summary: See patch comment, which explains the situation.
Test Plan: Ran upgrade, verified mimeType field is \n-free in database.
Reviewers: davidreuss, btrahan
Reviewed By: davidreuss
CC: aran, epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1624
Summary:
I accidentally added two "104" patches. This actually works OK for the most part
but is fundamentally bad and wrong.
Merge the patches (installs applied both as "104", so we can't move one to
"105") and add a safeguard.
Test Plan: Ran upgrade_schema.php with two "104" patches, got error'd. Ran
without, got successs.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1614
Summary:
This was a sort of speculative feature added by a contributor some time ago and
just serves as a label; for now, simplify it into "active" and "archived" and
remove "archived" projects from the "active" list.
- Fix a bug where we'd publish a "renamed from X to X" transaction that had no
effect.
- Publish stories about status changes.
- Remove the "edit affiliation" controller, which has no links in the UI
(effectively replaced by join/leave links).
- Add query/conduit support.
Test Plan: Edited the status of several projects.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T681
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1573
Summary:
We save search information and then redirect to a "/search/<query_id>/" URI in
order to make search URIs short and bookmarkable, and save query data for
analysis/improvement of search results.
Currently, there's a vague object enumeration security issue with using
sequential IDs to identify searches, where non-admins can see searches other
users have performed. This isn't really too concerning but we lose nothing by
using random keys from a large ID space instead.
- Drop 'authorPHID', which was unused anyway, so searches can not be
personally identified, even by admins.
- Identify searches by random hash keys, not sequential IDs.
- Map old queries' keys to their IDs so we don't break any existing bookmarked
URIs.
Test Plan: Ran several searches, got redirected to URIs with random hashes from
a large ID space rather than sequential integers.
Reviewers: arice, btrahan
Reviewed By: arice
CC: aran, epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1587
Summary:
Add a very basic edit history table to herald rules. This table is updated
whenever saving a herald rule. The contents of the save are not examined, and
the edit history contains no information about the rule itself *yet*. Edit
history can be viewed by anyone through /herald/history/<rule id>/.
Task ID: #
Blame Rev:
Test Plan:
Made a test rule, saved some stuff.
Revert Plan:
Tags:
Reviewers: epriestley, jungejason
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: zizzy, aran, xela, epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1387
Summary:
- Only write the <ruleID, phid> row if the rule is a one-time rule.
- Delete all the rows for rules which aren't one-time.
NOTE: This is probably like several million rows for Facebook and could take a
while.
Test Plan:
Added some one-time and every-time rules, ran them against objects, verified
only relevant rows were inserted.
Ran upgrade script against a database with one-time and every-time "ruleapplied"
rows, got the irrelevant rows removed.
Reviewers: nh, btrahan, jungejason
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1484
Summary:
Herald rules may be marked as "one-time". We track this by writing a row with
<ruleID, phid> when we apply a rule.
However, the current test for rule application involves loading every <ruleID,
*> pair. We also always write this row even for rules which are not one-time, so
if there are 100 rules, we'll load 1,000,000 rows after processing 10,000
objects.
Instead, load only the <phid, *> pairs, which are guaranteed to be bounded to at
most the number of rules.
I'll follow up with a diff that causes us to write rows only for one-time rules,
and deletes all historic rows which are not associated with one-time rules.
Test Plan:
Grepped for callsites to loadAllByContentTypeWithFullData(). Ran
rules in test console.
Reviewers: nh, btrahan, jungejason
Reviewed By: nh
CC: aran, epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1483
Summary:
- Make some editing operations transaction-oriented, like Maniphest. (This
seems to be a good model, particularly for extensibility.) I'll move the rest of
the editing operations to transactions in future diffs.
- Make transaction-oriented operations publish feed stories.
Test Plan:
- Created a new project.
- Edited an existing project.
- Created a new project via quick create flow from Maniphest.
- Verified feed stories publish correctly.
Reviewers: btrahan, jungejason
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T681
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1477
Summary:
Rough cut of Drydock. This is very basic and doesn't do much of use yet (it
//does// allocate EC2 machines as host resources and expose interfaces to them),
but I think the overall structure is more or less reasonable.
== Interfaces
Vision: Applications interact with Drydock resources through DrydockInterfaces,
like **command**, **filesystem** and **httpd** interfaces. Each interface allows
applications to perform some kind of operation on the resource, like executing
commands, reading/writing files, or configuring a web server. Interfaces have a
concrete, specific API:
// Filesystem Interface
$fs = $lease->getInterface('filesystem'); // Constants, some day?
$fs->writeFile('index.html', 'hello world!');
// Command Interface
$cmd = $lease->getInterface('command');
echo $cmd->execx('uptime');
// HTTPD Interface
$httpd = $lease->getInterface('httpd');
$httpd->restart();
Interfaces are mostly just stock, although installs might add new interfaces if
they expose different ways to interact with resources (for instance, a resource
might want to expose a new 'MongoDB' interface or whatever).
Currently: We have like part of a command interface.
== Leases
Vision: Leases keep track of which resources are in use, and what they're being
used for. They allow us to know when we need to allocate more resources (too
many sandcastles on the existing hosts, e.g.) and when we can release resources
(because they are no longer being used). They also give applications something
to hold while resources are being allocated.
// EXAMPLE: How this should work some day.
$allocator = new DrydockAllocator();
$allocator->setResourceType('sandcastle');
$allocator->setAttributes(
array(
'diffID' => $diff->getID(),
));
$lease = $allocator->allocate();
$diff->setSandcastleLeaseID($lease->getID());
// ...
if ($lease->getStatus() == DrydockLeaseStatus::STATUS_ACTIVE) {
$sandcastle_link = $lease->getInterface('httpd')->getURI('/');
} else {
$sandcastle_link = 'Still building your sandcastle...';
}
echo "Sandcastle for this diff: ".$sandcastle_link;
// EXAMPLE: How this actually works now.
$allocator = new DrydockAllocator();
$allocator->setResourceType('host');
// NOTE: Allocation is currently synchronous but will be task-driven soon.
$lease = $allocator->allocate();
Leases are completely stock, installs will not define new lease types.
Currently: Leases exist and work but are very very basic.
== Resources
Vision: Resources represent some actual thing we've put somewhere, whether it's
a host, a block of storage, a webroot, or whatever else. Applications interact
through resources by acquiring leases to them, and then getting interfaces
through these leases. The lease acquisition process has a side effect of
allocating new resources if a lease can't be acquired on existing resources
(e.g., the application wants storage but all storage resources are full) and
things are configured to autoscale.
Resources may themselves acquire leases in order to allocate. For instance, a
storage resource might first acquire a lease to a host resource. A 'test
scaffold' resource might lease a storage resource and a mysql resource.
Not all resources are auto-allocate: the entry-level version of Drydock is that
you manually allocate a couple boxes and configure them through the web console.
Then, e.g., 'storage' / 'webroot' resources allocate on top of them, but the
host pool itself does not autoscale.
Resources are completely stock, they are abstract shells representing any
arbitrary thing.
Currently: Resource exist ('host' only) but are very very basic.
== Blueprints
Vision: Blueprints contain instructions for building interfaces to, (possibly)
allocating, updating, managing, and destroying a specific type of resource in a
specific location. One way to think of them is that they are scripts for
creating and deleting resources. For example, the LocalHost, RemoteHost and
EC2Host blueprints can all manage 'host' resources.
Eventually, we will support more types of resources (storage, webroot,
sandcastle, test scaffold, phacility deployment) and more providers for resource
types, some of which will be in the Phabricator mainline and some of which will
be custom.
Blueprints are very custom and specific to application types, so installs will
define new blueprints if they are making significant use of Drydock.
Currently: They exist but have few capabilities. The stock blueprints do nearly
nothing useful. There is a technically functional blueprint for host allocation
in EC2.
== Allocator
This is just the actual code to execute the lease acquisition process.
Test Plan: Ran "drydock_control.php" script, it allocated a machine in EC2,
acquired a lease on it, interfaced with it, and then released the lease. Ran it
again, got a fresh lease on the existing resource.
Reviewers: btrahan, jungejason
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1454