mungegithub

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Published: Jul 27, 2016 License: Apache-2.0 Imports: 11 Imported by: 0

README

Overview

Mungegithub provides a number of tools intended to automate github processes. While mainly for the kubernetes community, some thought is put into making it generic. Mungegithub is built as a single binary, but is run in 3 different ways for 3 different purposes.

  1. submit-queue: This looks at open PRs and attempts to help automate the process getting PRs from open to merged.
  2. cherrypick: This looks at open and closed PRs with the cherry-pick-candidate label and attempts to help the branch managers deal with the cherry-pick process.
  3. shame-mailer: This looks at open issues and e-mails assignees who have not closed their issues rapidly.

One can see the specifics of how the submit-queue and cherrypick options are executed by looking at the deployment definition in their respective subdirectories.

One may also look in the example-one-off directory for a small skeleton program which prints the number of all open PRs. It is an excellent place to start if you need to write a 'one-off' automation across a large number of PRs.

Building and running

Executing make help inside the mungegithub directory should inform you about the functions provided by the Makefile. A common pattern for me when developing is to run something like:

make mungegithub && ./mungegithub --dry-run --token-file=/path/to/token --once --www=submit-queue/www --kube-dir=$GOPATH/src/k8s.io/kubernetes --pr-mungers=submit-queue --min-pr-number=25000 --max-pr-number=25500

I typically have both a test and a prod cluster. However there is no reason a test/prod instance couldn't be done on the same cluster in 2 namespaces. It's just how your kubeconfig is set up. You will need a github oauth, even in readonly/test mode. Obviously for production you will want a token with write access to the repo in question. https://help.github.com/articles/creating-an-access-token-for-command-line-use/ should discuss how to get an oauth token. These tokens will need to be loaded into kubernetes secrets for use by the submit and/or cherry-pick queue. It is extremely easy to use up the 5,000 API calls per hour so the production token should not be re-used for tests.

After successfully running the local binary I will typically build, test, and deploy in readonly mode to a real kube cluster. To do so you must make sure your kubeconfig file is set up for the test/read-only cluster by running any necessary kubectl config commands by hand. After which it is as simple as something like:

REPO=docker.io/eparis APP=submit-queue KUBECONFIG=/path/to/kubeconfig make deploy

After this has successfully deployed to the test cluster in read-only mode running in production required running any required kubectl config commands and then running

REPO=docker.io/eparis APP=submit-queue KUBECONFIG=/path/to/kubeconfig READONLY=false make deploy

About the mungers

A small amount of information about some of the individual mungers inside each of the 3 varieties are listed below:

submit-queue

  • block-paths - add do-not-merge label to PRs which change files which should not be changed (mainly old docs moved to kubernetes.github.io)
  • blunderbuss - assigned PRs to individuals based on the contents of OWNERS files in the main repo
  • cherrypick-auto-approve - adds cherrypick-approved to PRs in a release branch if the 'parent' pr in master was approved
  • cherrypick-label-unapproved - adds do-not-merge label to PRs against a release-* branch which do not have cherrypick-approved
  • comment-deleter - deletes comments created by the k8s-merge-robot which are no longer relevant. Such as comments about a rebase being required if it has been rebased.
  • comment-deleter-jenkins - deleted comments create by the k8s-bot jenkins bot which are no longer relevant. Such as old test results.
  • lgtm-after-commit - removes lgtm label if a PR is changed after the label was added
  • needs-rebase - adds and removes a needs-rebase label if a PR needs to be rebased before it can be applied.
  • path-label - adds labels, such as kind/new-api based on if ANY file which matches changed
  • rebuild-request - Looks for requests to retest a PR but which did not reference a flake.
  • release-note-label - Manages the addition/removal of release-note-label-required and all of the rest of the release-note-* labels.
  • size - Adds the xs/s/m/l/xl labels and comments to PRs
  • stale-green-ci - Reruns the CI tests every X hours (96?) for PRs which passed. So PRs which sit around for a long time will notice failures sooner.
  • stale-pending-ci - Reruns the CI tests if they have been 'in progress'/'pending' for 24 hours.
  • submit-queue - This is the brains that actually tracks and merges PRs. It also provides the web site interface.

cherrypick

  • cherrypick-clear-after-merge - This watches for PRs against release branches which merged and removes the cherrypick-candidate label from the PR on master.
  • cherrypick-must-have-milestone - This complains on any PR against a release branch which does not have a vX.Y milestone.
  • cherrypick-queue - This is the web display of all PRs with the cherrypick-candidate label which a branch owner is likely to want to pay attention to.

Documentation

The Go Gopher

There is no documentation for this package.

Directories

Path Synopsis
Package admin exists so all administrative actions have a place to install themselves.
Package admin exists so all administrative actions have a place to install themselves.
Package mungers deals with munging of github pull requests
Package mungers deals with munging of github pull requests
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