Summary: I needed to figure out how to do this, and it took a couple of minutes.
Test Plan: ran that command on my Ubuntu 12.04 system
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran, Korvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D3479
Summary:
- Merge CommitTask daemon into PullLocal daemon. This is another artifact of past instability (and order-dependent parsers). We still publish to the timeline, although this was the last consumer. Long term we'll probably delete timeline and move to webhooks, since everyone who has asked about this stuff has been eager to trade away the durability and ordering of the timeline for the ease of use of webhooks. There's also no reason to timeline this anymore since parsing is no longer order-dependent.
- Add `phd start` to start all the daemons you need. Add `phd restart` to restart all the daemons you need. So cool~
- Simplify and improve phd and Diffusion daemon documentation.
Test Plan:
- Ran `phd start`.
- Ran `phd restart`.
- Generated/read documentation.
- Imported some stuff, got clean parses.
Reviewers: btrahan, csilvers
Reviewed By: csilvers
CC: aran, jungejason, nh
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2433
Summary:
This addresses three issues with the current patch management system:
# Two people developing at the same time often pick the same SQL patch number, and then have to go rename it. The system catches this, but it's silly.
# Second/third-party developers can't use the same system to manage auxiliary storage they may want to add.
# There's no way to build mock databases for unit tests that need to do reads.
To resolve these things, you can now name your patches whatever you want and conflicts are just merge conflicts, which are less of a pain to fix than filename conflicts.
Dependencies are now a DAG, with implicit dependencies created on the prior patch if no dependencies are specified. Developers can add new concrete subclasses of `PhabricatorSQLPatchList` to add storage management, and define the dependency branchpoint of their patches so they apply in the correct order (although, generally, they should not depend on the mainline patches, presumably).
The commands `storage upgrade --namespace test1234` and `storage destroy --namespace test1234` will allow unit tests to build and destroy MySQL storage.
A "quickstart" mode allows an upgrade from scratch in ~1200ms. Destruction takes about 200ms. These seem like fairily reasonable costs to actually use in tests. Building from scratch patch-by-patch takes about 6000ms.
Test Plan:
- Created new databases from scratch with and without quickstart in a separate test namespace. Pointed the webapp at the test namespaces, browsed around, everything looked good.
- Compared quickstart and no-quickstart dump states, they're identical except for mysqldump timestamps and a few similar things.
- Upgraded a legacy database to the new storage format.
- Destroyed / dumped storage.
Reviewers: edward, vrana, btrahan, jungejason
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, nh
Maniphest Tasks: T140, T345
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2323
Summary:
- Run "phd stop" before stopping apache. This is essentially a smoke test for
PHABRICATOR_ENV being set.
- Run documentation generation after everything else. Between the pull and the
restart we have some minor exposure to APC issues with deleted files and
out-of-date module definitions, and this limits that.
- Pull commands out of (x && y) stuff, this prevents "set -e" from working
correctly.
Test Plan: Ran upgrade script locally.
Reviewers: btrahan, jungejason
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1419
Summary:
make sure all symboles can be loaded to avoid issues like missing
methods in descendants of abstract base class.
Test Plan:
ran it and verified it passes; remove a method in a descendant class
and verified that the test failed.
Reviewers: epriestley, nh
Reviewed By: nh
CC: aran, nh, jungejason
Differential Revision: 1023
Summary:
Phabricator generates a bunch of data that we don't need to keep around forever,
add a GC daemon to get rid of it with some basic configuration options.
This needs a couple more diffs to get some of the details but I think this is a
reasonable start.
I also fixed a couple of UI things related to this, e.g. the daemon logs page
going crazy when a daemon gets stuck in a loop and dumps tons of data to stdout.
Test Plan:
- Ran gc daemon in 'phd debug' mode and saw it delete stuff, then sleep once
it had cleaned everything up.
- Mucked around with TTLs and verified they work correctly.
- Viewed gc'd transcripts in the web interface and made sure they displayed
okay.
- Viewed daemon logs before/after garbage collection.
- Running some run-at / run-for tests now, I'll update if the daemon doesn't
shut off in ~10-15 minutes. :P
Reviewed By: tuomaspelkonen
Reviewers: jungejason, tuomaspelkonen, aran
CC: aran, tuomaspelkonen, epriestley
Differential Revision: 583
Summary: We don't currently install this component, but should.
Test Plan: iiam
Reviewed By: codeblock
Reviewers: codeblock
CC: aran, codeblock
Differential Revision: 560
Summary:
- Make the instructional text generally more useful.
- Show the current configured adapter.
- When the configuration prevents outbound email from being delivered, show a
warning.
- Detect 'curl' extension during setup since it's more-or-less required
- Add curl extension to the install scripts
codeblock: can you verify the rhel-derivs changes are correct?
Test Plan:
Set adapter to test, verified warning; entered setup mode and verified curl. Ran
apt-get on an ubuntu box. Ran yum on an amazon linux box.
Reviewed By: toulouse
Reviewers: toulouse, codeblock
Commenters: codeblock
CC: aran, jungejason, tuomaspelkonen, codeblock, epriestley, toulouse
Differential Revision: 438
Summary:
Simple script to install dependencies on Ubuntu.
There's probably lots of room for improvement here.
Test Plan:
Imaged a clean Ubuntu box in EC2 and ran this script, it appeared to work?
Reviewed By: tuomaspelkonen
Reviewers: kevinwallace, jungejason, tuomaspelkonen, aran
Commenters: aran
CC: moskov, aran, tuomaspelkonen, epriestley
Differential Revision: 384