Summary:
Fixes T7938.
- Primarily, users can currently shoot themselves in the foot by putting `../../etc/passwd` and other similar nonsense in these fields (this is not dangerous, but also does not work). Require sensible names.
- Enforce uniqueness so these names can be used in URIs and as identifiers in the future.
- (This doesn't start actually using them for anything fancy yet.)
Test Plan:
- Gave several repositories clone names: a valid name, two duplicate names, an invalid, name, some with no names.
- Ran migrations.
- Got clean conversion for valid names, appropriate errors for invalid/duplicate names.
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T7938
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14986
Summary:
Ref T10010. Ref T5819. General alignment of the stars:
- There were some hacks in Conduit around stripping `fa-...` off icons when reading and writing that I wanted to get rid of.
- We probably have room for a subtitle in the new heavy nav, and using the icon name is a good starting point (and maybe good enough on its own?)
- The project list was real bad looking with redundant tag/names, now it is very slightly less bad looking with non-redundant types?
- Some installs will want to call Milestones something else, and this gets us a big part of the way there.
- This may slightly help to reinforce "tag" vs "policy" vs "group" stuff?
---
I'm letting installs have enough rope to shoot themselves in the foot (e.g., define 100 icons). It isn't the end of the world if they reuse icons, and is clearly their fault.
I think the cases where 100 icons will break down are:
- Icon selector dialog may get very unwieldy.
- Query UI will be pretty iffy/huge with 100 icons.
We could improve these fairly easily if an install comes up with a reasonable use case for having 100 icons.
---
The UI on the icon itself in the list views is a little iffy -- mostly, it's too saturated/bold.
I'd ideally like to try either:
- rendering a "shade" version (i.e. lighter, less-saturated color); or
- rendering a "shade" tag with just the icon in it.
However, there didn't seem to be a way to do the first one right now (`fa-example sh-blue` doesn't work) and the second one had weird margins/padding, so I left it like this for now. I figure we can clean it up once we build the thick nav, since that will probably also want an identical element.
(I don't want to render a full tag with the icon + name since I think that's confusing -- it looks like a project/object tag, but is not.)
Test Plan:
{F1049905}
{F1049906}
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Subscribers: 20after4, Luke081515.2
Maniphest Tasks: T5819, T10010
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14918
Summary:
Ref T10010. This will allow us to find superprojects with `withMemberPHIDs(...)` queries.
- Copy all the current real member edges to materialized member edges.
- Redirect all reads to look at materialized members.
- This table is already kept in sync by earlier work with indexing.
Basically, flow is:
- Writes (joining, leaving, adding/removing members) write to the real member edge type.
- After a project's members change, they're copied to the materialized member edge type for that project and all of its superprojects.
- Reads look at materialized members, so "Parent" sees the members of "Child" and "Grandchild" as its own members, but we still have the "real members" edge type to keep track of "natural" or "direct" members.
Test Plan:
- Ran migration.
- Ran unit tests.
- Saw the same projects as projects I was a member of.
- Added some `var_dump()` stuff to verify the Owners changed.
- Used `grep` to look for other readers of this edge type.
- Made some project updates.
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T10010
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14893
Summary:
Ref T9994.
- Allow errors to be dismissed.
- Tailor messaging for closed/abandoned revisions.
- Reduce scare messaging on land dialog, since it's not really that scary anymore.
Test Plan:
- Dismissed errors.
- Hit new warnings.
- Wasn't as scared when landing.
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T9994
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14886
Summary:
Ref T10010. This adds infrastructure for querying projects by type, depth, parent and ancestor.
I needed to revise the "extended policy check" cycle detection rules. When, e.g., querying a grandchild, they incorrectly detected a cycle because both the child and grandchild needed to check the policy of the grandparent.
Instead, simplify it to just do a basic runaway calldepth check. There are many other safety mechanisms to make it so this can't ever occur.
(Cycle detection does have existing test coverage, and those tests still pass, it just takes a little longer to detect the cycle internally.)
There is still no way to create subprojects in the UI.
Test Plan: Added and executed unit tests.
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T10010
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14862
Summary:
Ref T10010. This implements technical groundwork for subprojects. Specifically, it implements policy rules like Phriction:
- to see a project, you must be able to see all of its parents (and the project itself).
- you can edit a project if you can edit any of its parents (or the project itself).
To facilitiate this, we load all project ancestors when querying projects so we can do the view/edit checks.
This does NOT yet implement:
- proper membership rules for these projects (up next);
- any kind of UI to let users create subprojects.
Test Plan:
- Added unit tests.
- Executed unit tests.
- Browsed Projects (no change in behavior is expected).
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T10010
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14861
Summary:
Ref T9979. This uses ngrams (specifically, trigrams) to build a reasonably efficient index for substring matching. Specifically, for a package like "Example", with ID 123, we store rows like this:
```
< ex, 123>
<exa, 123>
<xam, 123>
<amp, 123>
<mpl, 123>
<ple, 123>
<le , 123>
```
When the user searches for `exam`, we join this table for packages with tokens `exa` and `xam`. MySQL can do this a lot more efficiently than it can process a `LIKE "%exam%"` query against a huge table.
When the user searches for a one-letter or two-letter string, we only search the beginnings of words. This is probably what they want, the only thing we can do quickly, and a reasonable/expected behavior for typeaheads.
Test Plan:
- Ran storage upgrades and search indexer.
- Searched for stuff with "name contains".
- Used typehaead and got sensible results.
- Searched for `aabbccddeeffgghhiijjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz` and saw only 16 joins.
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T9979
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14846
Summary:
Fixes T9890. This allows IndexExtensions to emit an object version.
Before we build indexes, we check if the indexed version is the same as the current version. If it is, we just don't call that extension.
T9890 has a case where this is useful: a script went crazy and posted thousands of comments to a single task.
Without versioning, that results in the same comments being indexed over and over again. With versioning, most of the queue could just exit without doing any work.
Test Plan:
- Added a `sleep(1)` to the actual indexing, used `bin/search index --background` to queue up a lot of tasks, ran them with `bin/phd debug task`, saw them complete very quickly with only one actual index operation performed.
- Used `bin/search index --trace` and `bin/search index --trace --background` to observe the behavior of queries against the index version store, which looked sensible.
- Made comments/transactions, saw versions update.
- Used `bin/remove destroy`, verified index versions were purged.
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T9890
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14845
Summary: Ref T9967
Test Plan:
Ran migrations.
Verified database populated properly with PHIDs (SELECT * FROM auth_sshkey;).
Ran auth.querypublickeys conduit method to see phids show up
Ran bin/remove destroy <phid>.
Viewed the test key was gone.
Reviewers: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Reviewed By: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T9967
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14823
Summary:
Ref T10010. This does some cleanups on the schema:
- `viewPolicy`, `editPolicy` and `joinPolicy` were nullable, but should never be `null`. Set them to defaults if they're null, then make the column non-nullable.
- Rename `phrictionSlug` to `primarySlug` and stop adding and removing trailing slashes from it.
- Add new columns to support milestones and non-milestone subprojects.
- Drop very old subprojectPHIDs column. This hasn't done anything in the UI for years and years, and isn't particularly realistic to migrate forward.
The new columns aren't reachable from the UI.
Test Plan:
- Applied patches.
- Grepped for `phrictionSlug`.
- Grepped for `subprojectPHIDs`.
- Created tasks.
- Edited tasks.
- Verified existing tasks still had primary slugs.
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T10010
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14825
Summary:
Fixes T9995. I think letting users customize slugs is not a hugely compelling as a product feature, and this fixes the issue with slugs that have "/" characters in them and makes the move to EditEngine easier since I don't have to deal with the weird JS thing.
Instead, just generate slugs automatically. No more JS, no more separate field, things automatically update if you rename a blog, and now that URIs have IDs in them the old URI will still work after a rename.
Test Plan:
- Applied migration.
- Created new posts.
- Edited existing posts.
- Visited various posts.
- Created a post with a bunch of "/" in the title, things still worked fine.
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T9995
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14792
Summary: Ref T9952. See discussion there. This change is primarily aimed at letting me build a typeahead of branches in a repository so that we can land to arbitrary branches a few diffs from now.
Test Plan:
- Ran migrations.
- Verified database populated properly with PHIDs (`SELECT * FROM repository_refcursor;`).
- Ran `bin/repository update`.
- Viewed a Git repository in Diffusion.
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T9952
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14731
Summary:
Ref T9908. Simplify some of the policies here:
- If you can edit an application (currently, always "Administrators"), you can view and edit all of its forms.
- You must be able to edit an application to create new forms.
- Improve some error messages.
- Get about halfway through letting users reorder forms in the "Create" menu if they want to sort by something weird since it'll need schema changes and I can do them all in one go here.
Test Plan:
- Tried to create and edit forms as an unprivileged user.
- Created and edited forms as an administrator.
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T9908
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14700
Summary:
Ref T9132. Fixes T5031. This approximately implements the plan described in T5031#67988:
When we recieve a preview request, don't write a draft if the form is from a version of the object before the last update the viewer made.
This should fix the race-related (?) zombie draft comments that sometimes show up.
I just added a new object for this stuff to make it easier to do stacked actions (or whatever we end up with) a little later, since I needed to do some schema adjustments anyway.
Test Plan:
- Typed some text.
- Reloaded page.
- Draft stayed there.
- Tried real hard to get it to ghost by submitting stuff in multiple windows and typing a lot and couldn't, although I didn't bother specifically narrowing down the race condition.
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T5031, T9132
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14640
Summary: Will use these more in the upcoming unbeta design of PhameBlog, likely. Also curious how this works.
Test Plan: Add an image to a blog, remove an image from a blog.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14587
Summary: Removes "delete" and uses "archive/activate" instead for Phame Blogs. Ref T9756
Test Plan: Archive a blog, see in search, activate blog, see in other search.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: joshuaspence, Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T9756
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14465
Summary:
Ref T9787. To fix this, I want to change how file PHIDs are extracted slightly: specifically, I'm going to extract them later in the editing process.
Before doing this, clean up a couple of bad implementations:
- Owners extracts its description as a file PHID. This is an error.
- Extract the description as a remarkup block instead.
- Add an edge table so stuff like file attachment works properly.
- Differential has a no-op extract method. This is presumably just a copy/paste issue from long ago.
Test Plan:
- Edited a revision in Differential.
- Dropped a file into the description of an Owners package.
- Before change: this did not attach the file.
- After change: the file now attaches properly and shows up as "Attached" in the file details.
Reviewers: chad, joshuaspence
Reviewed By: joshuaspence
Subscribers: joshuaspence
Maniphest Tasks: T9787
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14493
Summary: Fixes T9757.
Test Plan: Created a Herald rule and then subscribed to it with a different account.
Reviewers: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Reviewed By: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T9757
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14468
Summary: Rename the XHPAST database from `{$NAMESPACE}_xpastview` to `{$NAMESPACE}_xhpast`.
Test Plan: Ran `./bin/storage --namespace test upgrade --no-quickstart`.
Reviewers: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Reviewed By: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14442
Summary: Ref T7053. Remove the `envHash` and `envInfo` fields, which are no longer used now that the daemons restart automagically. Depends on D14458.
Test Plan: Saw no more setup issues.
Reviewers: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Reviewed By: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Subscribers: tycho.tatitscheff, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T7053
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14446
Summary:
Ref T9132. This diff doesn't do anything interesting, it just lays the groundwork for more interesting future diffs.
Broadly, the idea here is to let you create multiple views of each edit form. For example, we might create several different "Create Task" forms, like:
- "New Bug Report"
- "New Feature Request"
These would be views of the "Create Task" form, but with various adjustments:
- A form might have additional instructions ("how to file a good bug report").
- A form might have prefilled values for some fields (like particular projects, subscribers, or policies).
- A form might have some fields locked (so they can not be edited) or hidden.
- A form might have a different field order.
- A form might have a limited visibility policy, so only some users can access it.
This diff adds a new storage object (`EditEngineConfiguration`) to keep track of all those customizations and represent "a form which has been configured to look and work a certain way".
This doesn't let these configurations do anything useful/interesting, and you can't access them directly yet, it's just all the boring plumbing to enable more interesting behavior in the future.
Test Plan:
ApplicationEditor forms now let you manage available forms and edit the current form:
{F959025}
There's a new (bare bones) list of all available engines:
{F959030}
And if you jump into an engine, you can see all the forms for it:
{F959038}
The actual form configurations have standard detail/edit pages. The edit pages are themselves driven by ApplicationEditor, of course, so you can edit the form for editing forms.
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T9132
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14453
Summary: Adds commenting to Phame Posts, also testing a new "document comment style". Unsure about it but Phame is a prototype so good place to explore.
Test Plan: Leave some comments, see some comments, test show/hide.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T9746
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14451
Summary:
This diff adds a new mode argument to the Diffusion Conduit API with two options:
- "overwrite": the default, maintains the current behavior of deleting all coverage
in the specified branch before uploading the new coverage
- "update": does not delete old coverage, but will overwrite previous
coverage information if it's for the same file and commit
`DiffusionRequest::loadCoverage` already loads a file's coverage from the
latest available commit, so uploading coverage for different files in different
commits with "update" will result in seeing the latest uploaded coverage in
Diffusion.
Test Plan: manual local verification
Reviewers: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Reviewed By: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Subscribers: Korvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14428
Summary: Drops Join Policy, uses Edit Policy where needed. Allows anyone with Blog Edit permissions to post and edit any post on that blog. Fixes T5371
Test Plan: Draft Post as chad, see post, log in with notchad, edit that post and publish it.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T5371
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14444
Summary: Currently, a bunch of developers are using #xhpast for writing custom linter rules. As such, we end up with a fair few `XHPASTSyntaxErrorException` in our PHP error logs. I think that throwing an exception is not quite correct in this case because it is somewhat expected that invalid PHP may be entered. Instead, catch the exception and show the user a helpful message.
Test Plan: This doesn't quite work yet... the stream and tree views render as blank but the exceptions still propogate to the error logs. Mostly, I'm not sure how the exception should be rendered for display.
Reviewers: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Reviewed By: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Subscribers: Korvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14028
Summary: Add some mailkeys, allow feed stories to be published.
Test Plan: New Blog, Edit Blog
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14434
Summary: Allows feed stories and mail for new Phame Posts.
Test Plan: Write Post, Get Mail
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14426
Summary:
Fix T9662.
Record who initiated the build, and allow this information as a parameter.
In this implementation, a 're-run' keeps the original initiator, which we maybe not desired?
Test Plan:
Make a HTTP step with initiator.phid, trigger manually, via HM, via ./bin/harbormaster build.
Look at requests made.
Reviewers: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Reviewed By: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Subscribers: Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T9662
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14380
Summary: We haven't seen any issues here, remove the table and schema spec.
Test Plan: Not yet tested.
Reviewers: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Reviewed By: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Subscribers: Korvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14067
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
Summary:
It's hard for us to predict how long patches and migrations will take in the general case since it varies a lot from install to install, but we can give installs some kind of rough heads up about longer patches. I'm planning to just put a sort of hint for things in the changelog, something like this:
{F905579}
To make this easier, start storing how long stuff took. I'll write a little script to dump this into a table for the changelog.
Test Plan:
Ran `bin/storage status`:
{F905580}
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14320
Summary:
Ref T182. This doesn't do anything interesting yet and is mostly scaffolding, but here's roughly the workflow. From previous revision, you can configure "Repository Automation" for a repository:
{F875741}
If it's configured, a new "Land Revision" button shows up:
{F875743}
Once you click it you get a big warning dialog that it won't work, and then this shows up at the top of the revision (completely temporary/placeholder UI, some day a nice progress bar or whatever):
{F875747}
If you're lucky, the operation eventually sort of works:
{F875750}
It only runs `git show` right now, doesn't actually do any writes or anything.
Test Plan:
- Clicked "Land Revision".
- Watched `phd debug task`.
- Saw it log `git show` to output.
- Verified operation success in UI (by fiddling URL, no way to get there normally yet).
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Subscribers: revi
Maniphest Tasks: T182
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14266
Summary:
Ref T9551. We currently use the same logic for generating project hashtags and Phriction slugs, but should be a little more conservative with project hashtags.
Stop them from generating with stuff that won't parse in a "Reviewers:" field or generally in commments (commas, colons, etc).
Test Plan:
Created a bunch of projects with nonsense in them and saw them generate pretty reasonable hashtags.
{F873456}
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T9551
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14261
Summary:
Ref T9519. When acquiring leases on resources:
- Only consider resources created by authorized blueprints.
- Only consider authorized blueprints when creating new resources.
- Fail with a tailored error if no blueprints are allowed.
- Fail with a tailored error if missing authorizations are causing acquisition failure.
One somewhat-substantial issue with this is that it's pretty hard to figure out from the Harbormaster side. Specifically, the Build step UI does not show field value anywhere, so the presence of unapproved blueprints is not communicated. This is much more clear in Drydock. I'll plan to address this in future changes to Harbormaster, since there are other related/similar issues anyway.
Test Plan: {F872527}
Reviewers: hach-que, chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T9519
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14254
Summary:
Ref T9519. This is like 80% of the way there and doesn't fully work yet, but roughly shows the shape of things to come. Here's how it works:
First, there's a new custom field type for blueprints which works like a normal typeahead but has some extra logic. It's implemented this way to make it easy to add to Blueprints in Drydock and Build Plans in Harbormaster. Here, I've added a "Use Blueprints" field to the "WorkingCopy" blueprint, so you can control which hosts the working copies are permitted to allocate on:
{F869865}
This control has a bit of custom rendering logic. Instead of rendering a normal list of PHIDs, it renders an annotated list with icons:
{F869866}
These icons show whether the blueprint on the other size of the authorization has approved this object. Once you have a green checkmark, you're good to go.
On the blueprint side, things look like this:
{F869867}
This table shows all the objects which have asked for access to this blueprint. In this case it's showing that one object is approved to use the blueprint since I already approved it, but by default new requests come in here as "Authorization Requested" and someone has to go approve them.
You approve them from within the authorization detail screen:
{F869868}
You can use the "Approve" or "Decline" buttons to allow or prevent use of the blueprint.
This doesn't actually do anything yet -- objects don't need to be authorized in order to use blueprints quite yet. That will come in the next diff, I just wanted to get the UI in reasonable shape first.
The authorization also has a second piece of state, which is whether the request from the object is active or inactive. We use this to keep track of the authorization if the blueprint is (maybe temporarily) deleted.
For example, you might have a Build Plan that uses Blueprints A and B. For a couple days, you only want to use A, so you remove B from the "Use Blueprints: ..." field. Later, you can add B back and it will connect to its old authorization again, so you don't need to go re-approve things (and if you're declined, you stay declined instead of being able to request authorization over and over again). This should make working with authorizations a little easier and less labor intensive.
Stuff not in this diff:
- Actually preventing any allocations (next diff).
- Probably should have transactions for approve/decline, at least, at some point, so there's a log of who did approvals and when.
- Maybe should have a more clear/loud error state when no blueprints are approved?
- Should probably restrict the typeahead to specific blueprint types.
Test Plan:
- Added the field.
- Typed some stuff into it.
- Saw the UI update properly.
- Approved an authorization.
- Declined an authorization.
- Saw active authorizations on a blueprint page.
- Didn't see any inactive authroizations there.
- Clicked "View All Authorizations", saw all authorizations.
Reviewers: chad, hach-que
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T9519
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14251
Summary:
Fixes T9500. All the code is fine in D13836, but the value of the constant got updated (from "open" to "active") and the migration still used the old value.
Correct any affected dashboards to use the proper constant.
This only affected old dashboards: newly created ones use the right constant.
Test Plan: Ran migration, verified that all active dashboards appeared on "Active Dashboards".
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T9500
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14223
Summary: Ref T9352. See D13635. Build targets can have variables already, but let builds have them too. This mostly enables future use cases (sub-builds, more sophisticated build triggers).
Test Plan: With a custom Herald rule + action like the one in T9352, updated a revision and saw it generate multiple builds with varying parameters.
Reviewers: chad, hach-que
Reviewed By: hach-que
Maniphest Tasks: T9352
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14222
Summary:
Ref T9252. Long ago you sometimes manually created resources, so they had human-enterable names. However, users never make resources manually any more, so this field isn't really useful any more.
In particular, it means we write a lot of untranslatable strings like "Working Copy" to the database in the default locale. Instead, do the call at runtime so resource names are translatable.
Also clean up a few minor things I hit while kicking the tires here.
It's possible we might eventually want to introduce a human-choosable label so you can rename your favorite resources and this would just be a default name. I don't really have much of a use case for that yet, though, and I'm not sure there will ever be one.
Test Plan:
- Restarted a Harbormaster build, got a clean build.
- Released all leases/resources, restarted build, got a clean build with proper resource names.
Reviewers: hach-que, chad
Reviewed By: hach-que, chad
Maniphest Tasks: T9252
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14213
Summary:
Ref T9252. Several general changes here:
- Moves logs to use PHIDs instead of IDs. This generally improves flexibility (for example, it's a lot easier to render handles).
- Adds `blueprintPHID` to logs. Although you can usually figure this out from the leasePHID or resourcePHID, it lets us query relevant logs on Blueprint views.
- Instead of making logs a top-level object, make them strictly a sub-object of Blueprints, Resources and Leases. So you go Drydock > Lease > Logs, etc., to get to logs.
- I might restore the "everything" view eventually, but it doesn't interact well with policies and I'm not sure it's very useful. A policy-violating `bin/drydock log` might be cleaner.
- Policy-wise, we always show you that logs exist, we just don't show you log content if it's about something you can't see. This is similar to seeing restricted handles in other applications.
- Instead of just having a message, give logs "type" + "data". This will let logs be more structured and translatable. This is similar to recent changes to Herald which seem to have worked well.
Test Plan:
Added some placeholder log writes, viewed those logs in the UI.
{F855199}
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T9252
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14196
Summary: I haven't regenerated this for a while and it makes instances and unit tests a little faster.
Test Plan:
- Manually reviewed changes for sanity.
- Ran `arc unit --everything`.
- Observed runtime drop from ~15-16 seconds to ~12-13 seconds.
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14192
Summary:
Fixes T6569. This implements an expiry mechanism for Drydock resources which parallels the mechanism for leases.
A few things are missing that we'll probably need in the future:
- An "EXPIRES" command to update the expiration time. This would let resources be permanent while leased, then expire after, say, 24 hours without any leases.
- A callback like `shouldActuallyExpireRightNow()` for resources and leases that lets them decide not to expire at the last second.
- A callback like `didAcquireLease()` for resource blueprints, to parallel `didReleaseLease()`, letting them clear or extend their timer.
However, this stuff would mostly just let us tune behaviors, not really open up new capabilities.
Test Plan: Changed host resources to expire after 60 seconds, leased one, saw it vanish 60 seconds later.
Reviewers: hach-que, chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T6569
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14176
Summary: Ref T9252. If you have a blueprint and you do not like that blueprint very much, you can disable it.
Test Plan: Disabled / enabled some blueprints.
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T9252
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14156
Summary:
Ref T9252. Drydock currently uses integer statuses, but there's no reason for this (they don't need to be ordered) and it makes debugging them, working with them, future APIs, etc., more cumbersome.
Switch to string instead.
Also rename `STATUS_OPEN` to `STATUS_ACTIVE` and `STATUS_CLOSED` to `STATUS_RELEASED` for consistency. This makes resources and leases have more similar states, and gives resource states more accurate names.
Test Plan: Browsed web UI, grepped for changed constants, applied patch, inspected database.
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T9252
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14153
Summary:
Ref T9252. Leases currently have a `resourceID`, but this is a bit nonstandard and generally less flexible than giving them a `resourcePHID`.
In particular, a `resourcePHID` is easier to use when rendering interfaces, since you can get handles out of a PHID.
Add a PHID column, copy over all the PHIDs that correspond to existing IDs, then drop the ID column.
Test Plan:
- Browsed web UIs.
- Inspected database during/after migration.
- Grepped for `resourceID`.
- Allocated a new lease with `bin/drydock lease`.
Reviewers: chad, hach-que
Reviewed By: hach-que
Maniphest Tasks: T9252
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14151
Summary:
Ref T9464. If an ancient transaction doesn't have array values for whatever reason, we fail here.
Instead, just recover as gracefully as we can. We may get the transaction "wrong" in some sense, but this only impacts what is rendered in the transaction log.
Test Plan: This is nearly a year old and there's no real way to test it.
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T9464
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14149
Summary:
Ref T9252. This simplifies some Drydock code.
Most of this code relates to the old notion of Drydock being able to enumerate all the tasks it needs to complete in order to acquire a lease. The code has stepped back from this, since it's unnecessary, the queue is more powerful than it used to be, and it would be a lot of work to keep track of.
The ~only thing that should ever wait for leases in modern code is `bin/drydock lease`, and it's fine for it to just sit there sleeping, so this just does that.
This reduces the granularity of logging, but I'll address that separately in future logging-focused changes.
Test Plan: Used `bin/drydock lease` to acquire a lease, saw it acquire cleanly.
Reviewers: hach-que, chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T9252
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14147
Summary:
Ref T9252. Broadly, Drydock currently races on releasing objects from the "active" state. To reproduce this:
- Scatter some sleep()s pretty much anywhere in the release code.
- Release several times from web UI or CLI in quick succession.
Resources or leases will execute some release code twice or otherwise do inconsistent things.
(I didn't chase down a detailed reproduction scenario for this since inspection of the code makes it clear that there are no meaningful locks or mechanisms preventing this.)
Instead, add a Harbormaster-style command queue to resources and leases. When something wants to do a release, it adds a command to the queue and schedules a worker. The workers acquire a lock, then try to consume commands from the queue.
This guarantees that only one process is responsible for writes to active resource/leases.
This is the last major step to giving resources and leases a single writer during all states:
- Resource, Unsaved: AllocatorWorker
- Resource, Pending: ResourceWorker (Possible rename to "Allocated?")
- Resource, Open: This diff, ResourceUpdateWorker. (Likely rename to "Active").
- Resource, Closed/Broken: Future destruction worker. (Likely rename to "Released" / "Broken"; maybe remove "Broken").
- Resource, Destroyed: No writes.
- Lease, Unsaved: Whatever wants the lease.
- Lease, Pending: AllocatorWorker
- Lease, Acquired: LeaseWorker
- Lease, Active: This diff, LeaseUpdateWorker.
- Lease, Released/Broken: Future destruction worker (Maybe remove "Broken"?)
- Lease, Expired: No writes. (Likely rename to "Destroyed").
In most phases, we can already guarantee that there is a single writer without doing any extra work. This is more complicated in the "Active" case because the release buttons on the web UI, the release tools on the CLI, the lease requestor itself, the garbage collector, and any other release process cleaning up related objects may try to effect a release. All of these could race one another (and, in many cases, race other processes from other phases because all of these get to act immediately) as this code is currently written. Using a queue here lets us make sure there's only a single writer in this phase.
One thing which is notable is that whatever acquires a lease **can not write to it**! It is never the writer once it queues the lease for activation. It can not write to any resources, either. And, likewise, Blueprints can not write to resources while acquiring or releasing leases.
We may need to provide a mechinism so that blueprints and/or resource/lease holders get to attach some storage to resources/leases for bookkeeping. For example, a blueprint might need to keep some kind of cache on a resource to help it manage state. But I think we can cross that bridge when we come to it, and nothing else would need to write to this storage so it's technically straightforward to introduce such a mechanism if we need one.
Test Plan:
- Viewed buttons in web UI, checked enabled/disabled states.
- Clicked the buttons.
- Saw commands show up in the command queue.
- Saw some daemon stuff get scheduled.
- Ran CLI tools, saw commands get consumed and resources/leases release.
Reviewers: hach-que, chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T9252
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14143
Summary:
See discussion in D10304. There's a lot of context there, but the general idea is:
- Blueprints should manage locks in a granular way during the actual allocation/acquisition phase.
- Optimistic "slot locks" might a pretty good primitive to make that easy to implement and reason about in most cases.
The way these locks work is that you just pick some name for the lock (like the PHID of a resource) and say that it needs to be acquired for the allocation/acquisition to work:
```
...
->needSlotLock("mylock(PHID-XYZQ-...)")
...
```
When you fire off the acquisition or allocation, it fails unless it could acquire the slot with that name. This is really simple (no explicit lock management) and a pretty good fit for most of the locking that blueprints and leases need to do.
If you need to do limit-based locks (e.g., maximum of 3 locks) you could acquire a lock like this:
```
mylock(whatever).slot(2)
```
Blueprints generally only contend with themselves, so it's normally OK for them to pick whatever strategy works best for them in naming locks.
This may not work as well if you have a huge number of slots (e.g., 100TB you want to give out in 1MB chunks), or other complex needs for locks (like you have to synchronize access to some external resource), but slot locks don't need to be the only mechanism that blueprints use. If they run into a problem that slot locks aren't a good fit for, they can use something else instead. For now, slot locks seem like a good fit for the problems we currently face and most of the problems I anticipate facing.
(The release workflows have other race issues which I'm not addressing here. They work fine if nothing races, but aren't race-safe.)
Test Plan:
To create a race where the same binding is allocated as a resource twice:
- Add `sleep(10)` near the beginning of `allocateResource()`, after the free bindings are loaded but before resources are allocated.
- (Comment out slot lock acquisition if you have this patch.)
- Run `bin/drydock lease ...` in two windows, within 10 seconds of one another.
This will reliably double-allocate the binding because both blueprints see a view of the world where the binding is free.
To verify the lock works, un-comment it (or apply this patch) and run the same test again. Now, the lock fails in one process and only one resource is allocated.
Reviewers: hach-que, chad
Reviewed By: hach-que, chad
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14118
Summary: Fixes T9351. This is straightforward since this application is now relatively modern and doesn't have any bizarre craziness.
Test Plan:
{F787981}
{F787982}
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Maniphest Tasks: T9351
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14093