Summary:
@rguerin ran into an issue in his install where Phabricator appears to have
discovered commits which no longer exist, and thus is failing to proceed with
its repository import.
It's not clear how we got into this state. Previously, it was possible by, e.g.,
parsing a different repository's working copy and then switching them back, but
there are now safeguards against that.
I'm taking a three-pronged approach to try to sort this out:
- Provide a script to get out of this state (this script) and reconcile
Phabricator's view of a repository with an authoritative copy of it. This
basically "un-discovers" any discovered commits which don't actually exist (any
queued tasks to parse them will fail permanently when they fail to load the
commit object).
- Add more logging to the discovery daemon so we can figure out where commits
came from.
- Improve Diffusion's UI when stuff is partially discovered (T776).
(This script should also clean up some nonsense on secure.phabricator.com from a
botched Diviner import.)
Test Plan: Ran "reconcile.php" with bogus commits and bogus differential/commit
links, had them expunged. Will work with @rguerin to see if this resolves
things.
Reviewers: btrahan, rguerin
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1552
Summary: Run the actual resource allocation for Drydock out-of-process via the
task queue.
Test Plan: Ran "drydock_control.php", saw it insert a task and wait for task
completion. Ran "phd debug taskmaster" and saw it run the task.
Reviewers: btrahan, jungejason
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1470
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
Summary: We purge the cache for primary comments only right now, not inline
comments.
Test Plan: Ran "purge_cache.php --differential".
Reviewers: btrahan, jungejason
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T683
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1451
Summary: Revisit of D1254. Don't require lowercase, just standardize the logic.
The current implementation has nonuniform logic -- PeopleEditController forbids
uppercase.
Test Plan: Ran unit tests, see also D1254.
Reviewers: btrahan, jungejason, aran
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1415
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: ..."ssh" is in quotes 'cuz this is step 1 and there's no ssh in sight
at the moment.
Test Plan:
ran api.php PHID-USER-xee4ju2teq7mflitwfcs differential.query a few times...
- tried valid input, it worked!
- tried bad input, it worked in that it failed and told me so!
ran api.php crap_user differential.query a few times...
- verified error message with respect to crap_user
ran api.php PHID-USER-xee4ju2teq7mflitwfcs crap_method a few times...
- verified error message with respect to crap_method
visited http://phabricator.dev/conduit/method/differential.query a few times...
- tried valid input, it worked!
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran, btrahan, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T550
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1357
Summary:
add support in purge_cache.php. We might want to add support
for maniphest comments and differential comments later.
Test Plan:
- purging all worked
- purging individual changeset worked
- when input is not integer, correct error message reported
Reviewers: epriestley, btrahan, nh
Reviewed By: nh
CC: nh, aran, jungejason, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T683
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1372
Summary: Make it a little easier to create a bunch of accounts if your company
has more than like 5 employees.
Test Plan: Ran "add_user.php" to create new users. Created new users from the
web console.
Reviewers: btrahan, jungejason, rguerin
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, btrahan, rguerin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1336
Summary: Some day we might have a fancy daemon for this, but for now at least
provide some instructions on using the existing importers, etc., to index
project symbols.
Test Plan:
- Generated documentation, read over the result.
- Ran the example code.
Reviewers: btrahan, jungejason, davidreuss
Reviewed By: jungejason
CC: aran, jungejason
Maniphest Tasks: T315
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1262
Summary:
- Update Javelin to HEAD -- this doesn't pick up anything in particular, but
lets us smoke test some stuff like {D1217}.
- Do a little more packaging since we've picked up a handful of 10-line
behaviors and such for various UI tweaks.
Test Plan:
- Generally, this should be very low-risk.
- Browed Maniphest, Differential, Diffusion and tried to hit all the JS
interactions.
- Looked over the Javelin changes we're pulling in to see if I forgot
anything. The only API change I caught was removal of "JX.defer()", but that was
already cleared in Phabricator in D803.
Reviewers: aran, btrahan, jungejason
Reviewed By: aran
CC: aran
Differential Revision: 1240
Summary: See task; installs occasionally need to do this themselves, and a
script is much better than me telling them to truncate tables.
Test Plan:
Ran various flavors of this command:
- purge_cache.php
- purge_cache.php derp
- purge_cache.php --help
- purge_cache.php --all
- purge_cache.php --differential
- purge_cache.php --differential --maniphest
Then I verified the actual behavior:
- Visited a Differential revision with comments, observed cache update in
'Services' tab.
- Visited a Maniphest task with comments, observed cache update in 'Services'
tab.
- Reloaded a diff standalone view, got a cache update.
Reviewers: Makinde, btrahan, jungejason
Reviewed By: jungejason
CC: aran, jungejason
Maniphest Tasks: T676
Differential Revision: 1214
Summary:
For each commit, find the affected packages, and provide a way to
search by package.
Test Plan:
create commits that touch and don't touch two packages, and verify
that they display correctly in all the UI pages.
Reviewers: epriestley, blair, nh, tuomaspelkonen
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: benmathews, aran, epriestley, btrahan, jungejason, mpodobnik, prithvi
Maniphest Tasks: T83
Differential Revision: 1208
Summary:
If mails are not sent in UTF-8 we cannot just it verbatim, so we have to
encode it into UTF-8 if it is not the case. Mime headers use different
encodings like "quoted-printable", which we have to handle.
It looks like "Subject: =?iso-8859-1?Q?opr=E6t_s=E5_den_task?=", and can
be decoded by ##iconv_mime_decode##.
Furthermore the body of the email might be in various encodings as well,
which we attempt to pull from the content-type header of the plain text
part of the mail.
Test Plan:
Attempted receiving mails in a variety of flavors. These could be
converted to test-cases once i know if this is a sane solution. Got
expected results from mails sent with Windows-1252 and ISO-8859-1.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran, epriestley, davidreuss
Differential Revision: 1093
Summary: by default it was looking for php to be in /usr/bin/php on some systems
this is incorrect. It should be using /usr/bin/env php for calling php with the
correct path.
Test Plan: patch and try to run.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: svemir, aran, epriestley
Differential Revision: 1136
Summary: create CelerityResourceGraph, which extends AbstractDirectedGraph.
since we've done a bunch of work already to load the resource graph into memory
CelerityResourceGraph simply stores a copy and makes loadEdges work off that
stored copy.
Test Plan:
made phabricator-prefab require herald-rule-editor
~/code/phabricator> ./scripts/celerity_mapper.php webroot
Finding static resources...
Processing 154
files..........................................................................................................................................................
[2011-11-22 11:28:29] EXCEPTION: (Exception) Cycle detected in resource graph:
phabricator-prefab => herald-rule-editor => phabricator-prefab at
[/Users/btrahan/Dropbox/code/phabricator/scripts/celerity_mapper.php:173]
fixed phabricator-prefab requiring herald-rule-editor. re-ran celerity_mapper
and no errors!
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran, btrahan, epriestley
Differential Revision: 1132
Summary:
This makes debugging issues a lot easier, since any exceptions thrown
gets logged and can be seen at /mail/received/, for inspection.
Test Plan:
Created a task via the public-author functionality, and saw no errors
without this patch applied. Even worse, the exception was never shown at
command line either. Not sure what's up with that. Output buffering, or
whatever?
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran, epriestley, davidreuss
Differential Revision: 1042
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: There are currently two files, but all scripts require both of them,
which is clearly silly. In the longer term I want to rewrite all of this init
stuff to be more structured (e.g., merge webroot/index.php and __init_script__
better) but this reduces the surface area of the ad-hoc "include files" API we
have now, at least.
Test Plan:
- Grepped for __init_env__.php (no hits)
- Ran a unit test (to test unit changes)
- Ran a daemon (to test daemon changes)
Reviewers: jungejason, nh, tuomaspelkonen, aran
Reviewed By: jungejason
CC: aran, jungejason
Differential Revision: 976
Summary:
This is a pretty bad, but working implmentation of a way to kill one particular PID that
is controlled by Phabricator. Also remove the second 'stop' from the ##phd help## list.
Test Plan:
[ricky@rhelpad01 phabricator] (phd-stop-twice)$ ./bin/phd status
PID Started Daemon
30154 Oct 1 2011, 2:38:08 AM PhabricatorMetaMTADaemon
30172 Oct 1 2011, 2:38:09 AM PhabricatorMetaMTADaemon
30190 Oct 1 2011, 2:38:09 AM PhabricatorMetaMTADaemon
30210 Oct 1 2011, 2:38:09 AM PhabricatorMetaMTADaemon
[ricky@rhelpad01 phabricator] (phd-stop-twice)$ ./bin/phd stop 30190
Stopping daemon 'PhabricatorMetaMTADaemon' (30190)...
Daemon 30190 exited normally.
[ricky@rhelpad01 phabricator] (phd-stop-twice)$ ./bin/phd stop 123456
123456 is not controlled by Phabricator. Not killing.
[ricky@rhelpad01 phabricator] (phd-stop-twice)$ ./bin/phd stop
Stopping daemon 'PhabricatorMetaMTADaemon' (30154)...
Stopping daemon 'PhabricatorMetaMTADaemon' (30172)...
Stopping daemon 'PhabricatorMetaMTADaemon' (30210)...
Daemon 30210 exited normally.
Daemon 30154 exited normally.
Daemon 30172 exited normally.
Reviewers: epriestley
CC:
Differential Revision: 975
Summary:
This is an attempt to satisfy a lot of the one-off requests a little more
generally, by providing a relatively generic piece of event architecture.
Allow the registation of event listeners which can react to various application
events (currently, task editing).
I'll doc this a bit better but I wanted to see if anyone had massive objections
to doing this or the broad approach. The specific problem I want to address is
that one client wants to do a bunch of routing for tasks via email, so it's
either build a hook, or have them override most of ManiphestReplyHandler, or
something slightly more general like this.
Test Plan: Wrote a silly listener that adds "Quack!" to a task every time it is
edited and edited some tasks. I was justly rewarded.
Reviewers: nh, jungejason, tuomaspelkonen, aran
Reviewed By: aran
CC: aran, epriestley
Differential Revision: 881
Summary:
Splitting up D960 a bit, see that for context.
We currently have two scripts, "parse_one_commit.php" and
"reparse_all_commit_messages.php", but they're sort of silly and you can't do
certain things with them. Replace them with one script which is more flexible
and can do specific reparse steps on individual commits or entire repos.
I left the old scripts as stubs since I think there are some FB wiki docs and
stuff that mention them. I'll delete them in a month or whenever I remember or
something.
Test Plan: Ran "reparse.php" with various arguments, including vs-one-commit,
vs-repository, with --trace, and against different types of repos.
Reviewers: Makinde, jungejason, nh, tuomaspelkonen, aran
Reviewed By: jungejason
CC: aran, jungejason
Differential Revision: 964
Summary:
We currently rely on "remote_hooks_enabled" in .arcconfig to determine whether
commands like "arc amend" and "arc merge" should imply "arc mark-committed".
However, this is a historical artifact that is now bad for a bunch of reasons:
- The option name is confusing, it really means 'repository is tracked'.
- The option is hard to discover and generally sucks.
- We can empirically determine the right answer since we now know if a project
is in a tracked repository.
Add a call which arcanist can make on these workflows to figure out if it is
interacting with a project in a tracked repository or not.
Also added an "isTracked()" convenience method to reduce the number of magic
strings all over the place.
Test Plan: Ran "arcanist.projectinfo" for nonexistent, untracked and tracked
projects.
Reviewers: Makinde, jungejason, nh, tuomaspelkonen, aran
Reviewed By: Makinde
CC: aran, epriestley, Makinde
Differential Revision: 945
Summary:
Repository import has three major steps:
- Commit discovery (serial)
- Message parsing (parallel, mostly VCS independent)
- Change parsing (parallel, highly VCS dependent)
This implements commit discovery for Mercurial, similar to git's parsing:
- List the heads of all the branches.
- If we haven't already discovered them, follow them back to their roots (or
the first commit we have discovered).
- Import all the newly discovered commits, oldest first.
This is a little complicated but it ensures we discover commits in depth order,
so the discovery process is robust against interruption/failure. If we just
inserted commits as we went, we might read the tip, insert it, and then crash.
When we ran again, we'd think we had already discovered commits older than HEAD.
This also allows later stages to rely on being able to find Phabricator commit
IDs which correspond to parent commits.
NOTE: This importer is fairly slow because "hg" has a large startup time
(compare "hg --version" to "git --version" and "svn --version"; on my machine,
hg has 60ms of overhead for any command) and we need to run many commands (see
the whole "hg id" mess). You can expect something like 10,000 per hour, which
means you may need to run overnight to discover a large repository (IIRC, the
svn/git discovery processes are both about an order of magnitude faster). We
could improve this with batching, but I want to keep it as simple as possible
for now.
Test Plan: Discovered all the commits in the main Mercurial repository,
http://selenic.com/repo/hg.
Reviewers: Makinde, jungejason, nh, tuomaspelkonen, aran
Reviewed By: Makinde
CC: aran, Makinde
Differential Revision: 943
Summary:
Move toward storing credentials in configuration so it's easier to get the
daemons working. This should eventually solve all the key juggling junk you have
to do right now.
This only gets us part of the way to actually using these credentials in the
daemons since I have to go swap everything for $repository->execBlah().
I tried to write a web "Test Connection" button but it was too much of a mess to
get git to work since git doesn't give you access to its SSH command and SSH has
a bunch of interactive prompts which you can't really do anything about without
it or a bunch of ~/.ssh/config editing. This is what Git recommends:
https://git.wiki.kernel.org/index.php/GitFaq#How_do_I_specify_what_ssh_key_git_should_use.3F
..but it's not a great match for this use case.
Test Plan:
- Only partial.
- Ran "test_connection.php" on a Git repo with and without SSH, and with and
without valid credentials. This part works properly.
- Ran "test_connection.php" on a public SVN repo, but I don't have private or
WEBDAV repos set up at the moment.
- Mercurial doesn't work yet.
- Daemons haven't been converted yet.
Reviewers: jungejason, tuomaspelkonen, aran
Reviewed By: jungejason
CC: aran, abdul, nmalcolm, epriestley, jungejason
Differential Revision: 888
Summary: We already detect this in setup but double-check just in case, see
gmail thread.
Test Plan: Rebuilt PHP without pcntl and tried to run phd, got an error.
Reviewed By: aran
Reviewers: aran, jungejason, tuomaspelkonen
CC: aran
Differential Revision: 819
Summary:
Provide a catchall mechanism to find unprotected writes.
- Depends on D758.
- Similar to WriteOnHTTPGet stuff from Facebook's stack.
- Since we have a small number of storage mechanisms and highly structured
read/write pathways, we can explicitly answer the question "is this page
performing a write?".
- Never allow writes without CSRF checks.
- This will probably break some things. That's fine: they're CSRF
vulnerabilities or weird edge cases that we can fix. But don't push to Facebook
for a few days unless you're prepared to deal with this.
- **>>> MEGADERP: All Conduit write APIs are currently vulnerable to CSRF!
<<<**
Test Plan:
- Ran some scripts that perform writes (scripts/search indexers), no issues.
- Performed normal CSRF submits.
- Added writes to an un-CSRF'd page, got an exception.
- Executed conduit methods.
- Did login/logout (this works because the logged-out user validates the
logged-out csrf "token").
- Did OAuth login.
- Did OAuth registration.
Reviewers: pedram, andrewjcg, erling, jungejason, tuomaspelkonen, aran,
codeblock
Commenters: pedram
CC: aran, epriestley, pedram
Differential Revision: 777
Summary:
A bunch of the .sql patch files don't explicitly specify the table engine, but
we should always use InnoDB with the exception of one table which needs MyISAM
for FULLTEXT.
MySQL doesn't no-op an ALTER TABLE statment that changes the engine back to
itself and converting large tables can be time consuming, so convert only the
required tables.
Test Plan: Ran on secure.phabricator.com and my local box, it fixed all the
issues in about 3 seconds on secure.phabricator.com and <<1 second on my local.
Reviewed By: codeblock
Reviewers: codeblock, tuomaspelkonen, jungejason, aran
CC: aran, epriestley, codeblock
Differential Revision: 641
Summary:
People want to see all the tasks they have subscribed to in one
view. A new table was added for this to make queries faster.
Test Plan:
Tested that the view was initially empty. After running the
reindex_maniphest.php script, I saw the correct tasks there. Added
myself as a subscriber to one task and made sure the view was
updated. Removed myself as a subscriber from one task and made sure
the view was updated again.
Reviewed By: epriestley
Reviewers: epriestley, jungejason, codeblock
CC: aran, rm, epriestley
Differential Revision: 603
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:
Major things taking place here:
- A new table for storing <task, project> relationships.
- Moved all task query logic into a dedicated class.
- Added a "projects" filter to the UI.
I was originally going to try to drive this off the main search index but the
perf benefits of a custom schema make an overwhelming argument in favor of doing
it this way.
Test Plan:
Filtered tasks by author and owner and zero, one, and more than one project.
Exercised all the group/sort options. Ran the index script over my 100k task
corpus. Edited task-project membership and verified the index updated.
Reviewed By: cadamo
Reviewers: gc3, jungejason, cadamo, tuomaspelkonen, aran
CC: aran, cadamo, epriestley
Differential Revision: 556
Summary:
Currently we send logs to the logfile in 'phd debug', but we should send them to
the console instead.
Also fixed some %C stuff which could theoretically cause problems if a user had
percentage symbols in their paths (heaven forbid).
fratrik, this or D535 might have been involved in frustrating your efforts to
debug the "sudo" stuff.
Test Plan:
Ran "phd debug irc derpderp" and "phd launch irc derpderp". In the former case,
the exception appeared in the console. In the latter, it appeared in the log.
Reviewed By: codeblock
Reviewers: codeblock, jungejason, tuomaspelkonen, aran, fratrik
CC: aran, codeblock
Differential Revision: 536
Summary:
create the indexer for commit
Test Plan:
run the reindex_one_commit.php against one existing commit
and it is returned in search result on the webpage; run parse_one_commit
against another commit; modified reindex_everything.php to let it only
parse one commit after loading all commits.
Reviewed By: epriestley
Reviewers: epriestley, aran
CC: aran, jungejason, epriestley, debow
Differential Revision: 490
Summary:
Add users to the search results. I need to follow this up with a patch to make
the search results stop being terrible. I'll do that.
Test Plan:
Searched for users, ran "reindex_all_users.php"
Reviewed By: jungejason
Reviewers: tomo, jungejason, aran
CC: aran, jungejason
Differential Revision: 508
Summary:
remove accessing the db config info directly. Use
DatabaseConfigurationProvider instead. Also fixed a minor issue where
different number of newlines are output in PhabricatorSetup.php's output.
Test Plan:
executed upgrade_schema.php; executed PhabricatorSetup.php by
setting 'phabricator.setup' to true.
Reviewed By: epriestley
Reviewers: epriestley
CC: aran, jungejason, epriestley
Differential Revision: 443
Summary:
Make it easier to find obvious problems in daemons by letting them run
undaemonized in the console without requiring the user to know the magical
incantations for loading libraries, etc.
Test Plan:
Ran "phd debug nice", simulated some failures (e.g., bringing down Phabricator,
daemon fatal) and got useful error messages.
Reviewed By: jungejason
Reviewers: toulouse, jungejason, tuomaspelkonen, aran
CC: aran, jungejason
Differential Revision: 448
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
error message if that doesn't work
Summary:
This workflow is needlessly bad right now, make it not terrible.
Also removed some related, unused code.
Test Plan:
Ran 'phd launch nice' with no directory and with a failing mkdir command.
Reviewed By: toulouse
Reviewers: hsb, toulouse, codeblock
CC: aran, toulouse
Differential Revision: 440