commit | e710d9f9d15449aa8d71322cd07414d9e5b5265f | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Luca Milanesio <luca.milanesio@gmail.com> | Mon Dec 28 21:19:41 2020 +0000 |
committer | Luca Milanesio <luca.milanesio@gmail.com> | Mon Dec 28 21:22:15 2020 +0000 |
tree | 77a28e4e69047b7857030daeae0239a5d79d3ce4 | |
parent | 489c373f5e5fe9a772456bc985c41a83d7fd9da8 [diff] |
Ignore change deletion events for owners-autoassign There is no value in processing the deletion of changes from an owners-autoassign perspective: trying to find a deleted change would only result in displaying a misleading warning on the Gerrit error_log. Fix the regression introduced by Change-Id: Ie8f960b00e where a deleted change was incorrectly managed as a null check rather than just ignoring the event altogether. Bug: Issue 13869 Change-Id: Ia8f93f66f67bc40052b672fb3a54fedac07093d7
This plugin provides some Prolog predicates that can be used to add customized validation checks based on the approval of ‘path owners’ of a particular folder in the project.
That allows creating a single big project including multiple components and users have different roles depending on the particular path where changes are being proposed. A user can be “owner” in a specific directory, and thus influencing the approvals of changes there, but cannot do the same in others paths, so assuring a kind of dynamic subproject access rights.
There are currently two main prolog public verbs:
add_owner_approval/3
(UserList, InList, OutList) appends label('Owner-Approval', need(_))
to InList building OutList if UserList has no users contained in the defined owners of this path change.
In other words, the predicate just copies InList to OutList if at least one of the elements in UserList is an owner.
add_owner_approval/2
(InList, OutList) appends label('Owner-Approval', need(_))
to InList building OutList if no owners has given a Code-Review +2 to this path change.
This predicate is similar to the first one but generates a UserList with an hardcoded policy.
Since add_owner_approval/3 is not using hard coded policies, it can be suitable for complex customizations.
There is a second plugin, gerrit-owners-autoassign which depends on gerrit-owners. It will automatically assign all of the owners to review a change when it's created or updated.
This plugin is built with Bazel and two build modes are supported:
To build the plugin, issue the following command:
bazel build :all
The output is created in
bazel-genfiles/owners/owners.jar bazel-genfiles/owners-autoassign/owners-autoassign.jar
To execute the tests run:
bazel test //...
This project can be imported into the Eclipse IDE:
./tools/eclipse/project.sh
Create symbolic links of the owners and owners-autoassign folders and of the external_plugin_deps.bzl file to the Gerrit source code /plugins directory.
Create a symbolic link of the owners-common plugin to the Gerrit source code directory.
Then build the owners and owners-autoassign plugins with the usual Gerrit plugin compile command.
Example:
$ git clone https://gerrit.googlesource.com/plugins/owners $ git clone https://gerrit.googlesource.com/gerrit $ cd gerrit/plugins $ ln -s ../../owners/owners . $ ln -s ../../owners/owners-autoassign . $ ln -sf ../../owners/external_plugin_deps.bzl . $ cd .. $ ln -s ../owners/owners-common . $ bazel build plugins/owners plugins/owners-autoassign
NOTE: the owners-common folder is producing shared artifacts for the two plugins and does not need to be built separately being a direct dependency of the build process. Its resulting .jar must not be installed in gerrit plugins directory.
The output is created in
bazel-genfiles/plugins/owners/owners.jar bazel-genfiles/plugins/owners-autoassign/owners-autoassign.jar
To execute the tests run:
bazel test owners-common:test
This project can be imported into the Eclipse IDE:
Add the plugin name to the CUSTOM_PLUGINS
in Gerrit core in tools/bzl/plugins.bzl
file and run:
./tools/eclipse/project.py