--- /dev/null
+*~
+*.pyc
+*.pyo
--- /dev/null
+ GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
+ Version 2, June 1991
+
+ Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
+ 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
+ Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
+ of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
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+consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the
+library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General
+Public License instead of this License.
--- /dev/null
+patchq is an email patch processing service which can monitor mailing
+list(s) for single patches or a series of patches, run tests on them
+("does it compile", "does it pass the test suite"), and then sends a
+follow up email with the results.
+
+It requires:
+
+ - Python 2
+ (because we need to run on RHEL 6 which doesn't have python3-pika)
+
+ - python-pika (https://pypi.python.org/pypi/pika)
+
+ - A RabbitMQ server running somewhere on your network.
+ You have to open port 5672 on the server, and provide the
+ hostname of the server in ‘config.py’.
+
+ - Procmail or similar to feed email into the system.
+
+To understand how patchq works, please read these blog posts:
+
+ - XXX
+
+Installation:
+
+ - There is no Makefile and nothing to build or install. You can run
+ everything from the local directory.
+
+ - Edit ‘config.py’ to configure a few things.
+
+ - Write some tests! For every test listed in the ‘config.tests’
+ list, you will need to write a corresponding ‘test-name.sh’. Don't
+ forget to make it executable. See also: ‘perform-tests.py’.
+
+ - Run ‘./create-queues.py’ to set up the RabbitMQ exchanges, queues
+ and other objects. All RabbitMQ objects are prefixed by
+ ‘patchq_...’, so to reverse this script you just have to delete
+ everything in RabbitMQ with that prefix.
+
+ - If you want, you can manually test that everything works:
+
+ * Run ‘rabbitmqctl list_queues‘ => All queues should have 0 messages.
+
+ * Save some patch series into an mbox and inject them:
+ ./inject-mbox.py mbox
+
+ * ‘rabbitmqctl list_queues’ should show the number of injected
+ emails in the ‘patchq_input’ queue.
+
+ * Run ‘./threader.py’ which should combine single emails into
+ threads and move all the patches to ‘patchq_test_*’. If you
+ check again with ‘rabbitmqctl list_queues’ you should see one
+ message per patch series in every test queue.
+
+ * Run ‘./perform-tests.py’ which should start testing.
+
+ * Modify ‘config.py’ so that ‘reply_override’ is set to your own
+ email address and run ‘./send-reports.py’. This should send
+ out report emails to you containing the results of the tests.
+ Once you are happy that report emails are correct, you can set
+ ‘reply_override’ to ‘None’ for production use.
+
+ * Run ‘./drain-queues.py’ to drop any messages remaining in all
+ the queues, if you need to.
+
+ * Note because of the wonders of message brokers, you can run
+ email, threader and testing on different hosts or a single
+ host.
+
+ - Set up cron jobs:
+
+ * Set up a cron job to run ‘./threader.py’ periodically. At
+ least once every hour for light usage, and more often for
+ mailing lists with heavy traffic.
+
+ * Set up a cron job to run ‘./perform-tests.py’ on your test
+ system(s). You can run different tests on different machines
+ if you want. Read the script to see how it works.
+
+ * Set up a cron job to run ‘./send-reports.py’ periodically.
+
+ - Set up procmail (or equivalent) to pick up emails sent to the
+ mailing list and inject them into patchq. See ‘procmail-example’
+ for some ideas.
+
+This code is released under the GNU General Public License v2 or any
+later version. See ‘COPYING’ for details.
+
+Development:
+
+ - Written by Richard W.M. Jones
+
+ - Send patches to the virt-tools mailing list:
+ https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/virt-tools-list
+
+To do:
+
+ - Handle multiple mailing lists and projects.
+
+ - Allow dependencies between tests (ie. test if the code compiles
+ first before running other tests).
+
+Similar projects:
+
+ - The 0-day test service is a very comprehensive set of tests
+ which are run on kernel trees and patches posted to LKML
+ https://01.org/lkp/documentation/0-day-test-service
--- /dev/null
+#!/bin/bash -
+
+echo check-release called: $@
--- /dev/null
+#!/bin/bash -
+
+echo check-syntax called: $@
+exit 1
--- /dev/null
+# patchq configuration.
+
+# Address of the RabbitMQ server. Port 5672 must be open on the
+# server's firewall.
+mq_server = "mq.home.annexia.org"
+
+# These are the test jobs that we run in parallel on each patch series.
+tests = [
+ "check-syntax", # runs make check-syntax
+ "check-release" # compiles and runs all of the release tests
+]
+
+# How long to wait (in seconds) for all emails in a thread to appear.
+assembly_time = 86400
+
+# If not None [for testing], then replies are only sent to this email
+# address.
+#
+# If this is None [for production], then we do a "group reply".
+#reply_override = None
+reply_override = ("Richard Jones", "rjones@redhat.com")
+
+# The address where report emails come from.
+# Set this to your own (name, email).
+from_address = ("Richard Jones", "rjones@redhat.com")
+
+# The SMTP server to send through.
+smtp_server = "smtp.corp.redhat.com"
--- /dev/null
+#!/usr/bin/python
+# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
+
+# Create all the exchanges, queues and other objects in RabbitMQ.
+#
+# You must configure the hostname of the RabbitMQ server in
+# ‘config.py’ first.
+#
+# You only have to run this once, but you must run it before running
+# any other part of patchq.
+#
+# All RabbitMQ objects created are prefixed by ‘patchq_...’. To
+# reverse the effects of this script, delete those objects (using
+# rabbitmqadmin or similar).
+
+import pika
+import config
+
+connection = pika.BlockingConnection(pika.ConnectionParameters(
+ host = config.mq_server))
+channel = connection.channel()
+
+# Create the input exchange and queue which take raw emails in any
+# order and queues them so they can be later threaded and ordered (by
+# ‘threader.py’).
+channel.exchange_declare(exchange = 'patchq_input',
+ exchange_type = 'fanout',
+ durable = True)
+q = channel.queue_declare(queue = 'patchq_input',
+ durable = True)
+channel.queue_bind(exchange = 'patchq_input',
+ queue = q.method.queue)
+
+# Create the exchange and queue(s) which take fully threaded and
+# ordered patch series and passes them to the tests.
+channel.exchange_declare (exchange = 'patchq_thread',
+ exchange_type = 'fanout',
+ durable = True)
+for t in config.tests:
+ qname = "patchq_test_%s" % t
+ q = channel.queue_declare(queue = qname,
+ durable = True)
+ channel.queue_bind(exchange = 'patchq_thread',
+ queue = q.method.queue)
+
+# Create the email results queue.
+channel.exchange_declare(exchange = 'patchq_reports',
+ exchange_type = 'fanout',
+ durable = True)
+q = channel.queue_declare(queue = 'patchq_reports',
+ durable = True)
+channel.queue_bind(exchange = 'patchq_reports',
+ queue = q.method.queue)
+
+print "All done."
+print
+print "You might want to look at the queues and exchanges by running"
+print "‘rabbitmqctl list_queues’ and ‘rabbitmqctl list_exchanges’."
+print
+print "If you want to see the queue contents in more detail, then use"
+print "rabbitmqadmin, see:"
+print " https://www.rabbitmq.com/management-cli.html"
+print " https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10709533/is-it-possible-to-view-rabbitmq-message-contents-directly-from-the-command-line"
--- /dev/null
+#!/usr/bin/python
+# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
+
+# This program drains all the queues, throwing away all the messages.
+# Note that messages which are being processed are not and cannot be
+# drained.
+
+import pika
+import config
+
+connection = pika.BlockingConnection(pika.ConnectionParameters(
+ host = config.mq_server))
+channel = connection.channel()
+
+while True:
+ method, _, _ = channel.basic_get(queue = 'patchq_input', no_ack = True)
+ if not method: break
+
+for t in config.tests:
+ qname = "patchq_test_%s" % t
+ while True:
+ method, _, _ = channel.basic_get(queue = qname, no_ack = True)
+ if not method: break
+
+while True:
+ method, _, _ = channel.basic_get(queue = 'patchq_reports', no_ack = True)
+ if not method: break
+
+print "All queues drained."
--- /dev/null
+#!/usr/bin/python
+# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
+
+# Inject one or more mbox of email, or a single email into the system.
+#
+# ./inject-mbox.py mbox [mbox ...]
+# ./inject-mbox.py < single_email
+#
+# Note that if you inject the same message or message threads twice,
+# then they are processed twice. patchq does not deduplicate.
+#
+# This script will inject anything that looks similar enough to an
+# email, even non-patches, cover letters, etc. The ‘threader.py’
+# script filters out non-patches.
+
+import email
+import mailbox
+import pika
+import sys
+import config
+
+connection = pika.BlockingConnection(pika.ConnectionParameters(
+ host = config.mq_server))
+channel = connection.channel()
+
+processed = 0
+
+def inject(m):
+ global processed
+
+ print("Injecting %s" % m['Subject'])
+
+ channel.basic_publish(exchange = 'patchq_input',
+ routing_key = '',
+ body = m.as_string())
+ processed = processed+1
+
+# Read from mboxes passed on the command line, or read a single
+# email from stdin.
+if len(sys.argv) > 1:
+ for arg in sys.argv[1:]:
+ mbox = mailbox.mbox(arg)
+ for m in mbox:
+ inject(m)
+else:
+ m = email.message_from_file(sys.stdin)
+ inject(m)
+
+print ("Processed %d email(s)." % processed)
--- /dev/null
+#!/usr/bin/python
+# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
+
+# This task takes patch series messages off one of the ‘patchq_test_*’
+# queues and tests the patch series.
+#
+# If you run it without arguments, it will pick up patches from each
+# test queue in turn and test them (but not in parallel). You can
+# also list one or more tests on the command line, in which case only
+# that test or tests are considered.
+#
+# This script does not perform tests in parallel, but doesn't care if
+# other instances of the script are running (even across machines).
+# Because of the message broker each patch series is only tested once.
+
+import email
+import json
+import mailbox
+import os
+import pika
+import shutil
+import subprocess
+import sys
+import tempfile
+
+import config
+
+connection = pika.BlockingConnection(pika.ConnectionParameters(
+ host = config.mq_server))
+channel = connection.channel()
+
+def ack(method):
+ channel.basic_ack(delivery_tag = method.delivery_tag)
+
+# Which tests to run?
+if len(sys.argv) <= 1:
+ tests = config.tests
+else:
+ tests = []
+ for arg in sys.argv[1:]:
+ if arg not in config.tests:
+ sys.exit("%s is not listed in config.tests" % arg)
+ tests.append(arg)
+
+pwd = os.getcwd()
+
+for t in tests:
+ qname = "patchq_test_%s" % t
+ while True:
+ method, _, body = channel.basic_get(queue = qname, no_ack = False)
+ if not method: break
+
+ # Parse the ordered list of messages forming the patch series.
+ msgs = json.loads(body)
+ msgs = [email.message_from_string(m) for m in msgs]
+
+ # This should never happen, but the rest of the code
+ # below assumes number of msgs > 0, so ...
+ if len(msgs) == 0:
+ ack(method)
+ continue
+
+ print ("%s: Running test:" % t)
+
+ # Save them to a temporary directory.
+ dir = tempfile.mkdtemp()
+ os.chdir(dir)
+
+ # Save the patches to files.
+ i = 0
+ args = []
+ args.append("%s/%s.sh" % (pwd, t))
+ last_msg = None
+ for m in msgs:
+ i = i+1
+ filename = ("%05d" % i)
+ args.append(filename)
+ print ("%05d %s" % (i, m['Subject']))
+ with open(filename, "w") as file:
+ file.write(m.as_string())
+ last_msg = m
+
+ # Run the test.
+ with open("output", "w") as out:
+ r = subprocess.call(args, stdout=out, stderr=out)
+
+ if r == 77:
+ print ("%s: Test skipped" % t)
+ else:
+ # Do a "group reply" to the last email.
+ tos = last_msg.get_all('to', [])
+ ccs = last_msg.get_all('cc', [])
+ from_ = last_msg['From']
+ to = email.utils.getaddresses(tos + ccs + [from_])
+ ref = last_msg['Message-Id']
+ if r == 0:
+ status = "success"
+ else:
+ status = "FAILED"
+ subject = "%s %s (was: Re: %s)" % (t, status, last_msg['Subject'])
+ with open("output", "r") as file:
+ content = file.read()
+
+ body = json.dumps((to, subject, ref, content))
+ channel.basic_publish(exchange = 'patchq_reports',
+ routing_key = '',
+ body = body)
+
+ # Ack the input message since we have processed it.
+ ack(method)
+
+ shutil.rmtree(dir, ignore_errors = True)
--- /dev/null
+#!/usr/bin/python
+# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
+
+# This script sends out the report emails.
+#
+# Important: When testing, edit ‘config.py’ and set ‘reply_override’
+# to your own email address. For production use, set it to ‘None’.
+
+import email
+from email.mime.text import MIMEText
+import json
+import pika
+import smtplib
+
+import config
+
+connection = pika.BlockingConnection(pika.ConnectionParameters(
+ host = config.mq_server))
+channel = connection.channel()
+
+smtp = smtplib.SMTP(config.smtp_server)
+emails = 0
+
+def ack(method):
+ channel.basic_ack(delivery_tag = method.delivery_tag)
+
+while True:
+ method, _, body = channel.basic_get(queue = 'patchq_reports',
+ no_ack = False)
+ if not method: break
+
+ to, subject, ref, content = json.loads(body)
+
+ if config.reply_override is not None:
+ to = [config.reply_override]
+
+ # Construct an email of type text/plain with the body of the
+ # message.
+ msg = MIMEText(content)
+ msg['Subject'] = subject
+ msg['From'] = email.utils.formataddr(config.from_address)
+ msg['To'] = ",".join([email.utils.formataddr(t) for t in to])
+ msg['In-Reply-To'] = ref
+ msg['References'] = ref
+
+ # Send the email.
+ smtp.sendmail(config.from_address[1],
+ [email.utils.formataddr(t) for t in to],
+ msg.as_string())
+ emails = emails+1
+
+ # We've sent the reply, so ack the message.
+ ack(method)
+
+smtp.quit()
+
+print ("Sent %d emails." % emails)
--- /dev/null
+#!/usr/bin/python
+# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
+
+# This task takes messages off ‘patchq_input’ queue in any order and
+# tries to assemble properly ordered threads containing a complete,
+# self-contained series of patches). If it succeeds, it puts the
+# single thread objects into the ‘patchq_thread’ exchange from where
+# they get distributed to queues ready for testing.
+#
+# Incomplete patch sets are dealt with in two ways:
+#
+# (1) If the emails are not too old, then they stay in ‘patchq_input’
+# until a later run of this script.
+#
+# (2) If they are too old, they are dropped. We assume in this case
+# that a patch series was sent and either some emails were dropped or
+# not all the emails were sent.
+#
+# Emails which are not patches or parts of a patch set are filtered
+# out and dropped by this script. Note it is possible for a single
+# email to contain a self-contained patch, in which case it is dealt
+# with as a special case of a thread as above.
+
+import calendar
+import email
+import email.utils
+import hashlib
+import json
+import mailbox
+import pika
+import re
+import sys
+import time
+
+import config
+
+connection = pika.BlockingConnection(pika.ConnectionParameters(
+ host = config.mq_server))
+channel = connection.channel()
+
+re_diff = re.compile('^diff ', flags = re.MULTILINE)
+
+# This is where we try to construct threads of messages.
+threads = dict()
+
+def ack(method):
+ channel.basic_ack(delivery_tag = method.delivery_tag)
+
+# Process a single part patch. We can add it immediately to the
+# outgoing queue and acknowledge it.
+def single_patch(m, method):
+ # The receiver expects a list of messages, so we have to encode a
+ # message list here, not the single message.
+ body = json.dumps([m.as_string()])
+ channel.basic_publish(exchange = 'patchq_thread',
+ routing_key = '',
+ body = body)
+ ack(method)
+
+# Process a single email which we know is part of a patch series. We
+# add it to the threads hash based on the parent ID, and we'll deal
+# with it at the end.
+def thread_patch(m, method, parent_id, part, n):
+ if parent_id in threads:
+ msg_dict = threads[parent_id]
+ else:
+ msg_dict = dict()
+ msg_dict[part] = [m, method, part, n]
+ threads[parent_id] = msg_dict
+
+# Process an email which looks like a patch.
+# m = the email
+# title = the '...' in '[PATCH...]'
+# part, n = patch part number out of n
+def process_patch(m, method, title, part, n):
+ # If it's a single patch (0/0 or 1/1) then handle that.
+ if n == 0 or n == 1:
+ single_patch(m, method)
+ return
+
+ # Hopefully the patch series was posted using ‘git send-email
+ # --thread’, in which case all messages should contain an
+ # In-Reply-To header and we can thread them easily.
+ parent_id = m['In-Reply-To']
+ if parent_id:
+ # Ignore the 'title' field.
+ thread_patch(m, method, parent_id, part, n)
+ return
+
+ # Otherwise we have to do some horrible heuristics. Make up a
+ # pseudo parent message ID composed of the From and To fields,
+ # title and number of patches in the series, and hope for the
+ # best.
+ h = hashlib.md5()
+ h.update(m['From'])
+ h.update(m['To'])
+ h.update(title)
+ h.update(string(n))
+ parent_id = h.hexdigest()
+ thread_patch(m, method, parent_id, part, n)
+
+# Process a single email. This deals with filtering non-patches.
+def process(m, method):
+ subj = m['Subject']
+ print ("Processing %s" % subj)
+
+ # Filter out and drop non-patches.
+ m1 = re.search('\[PATCH(.*)\]', subj)
+ if not m1:
+ print "... dropped: doesn't have [PATCH] in the subject line"
+ # Drop the non-patch by acknowledging it.
+ ack(method)
+ return
+
+ # Is it part of a series?
+ m2 = re.search('(\d+)/(\d+)$', m1.group(1))
+ part = 0
+ n = 0
+ if m2:
+ part = int(m2.group(1))
+ n = int(m2.group(2))
+ # Is it a cover letter? That is part 0, drop it.
+ if part == 0:
+ print "... dropped: cover letter"
+ ack(method)
+ return
+
+ # The message must be singlepart and must contain "^diff" somewhere.
+ if m.is_multipart():
+ print "... dropped: multipart message"
+ ack(method)
+ return
+
+ if not re.search(re_diff, m.get_payload(decode = True)):
+ print "... dropped: does not contain a 'diff' line"
+ ack(method)
+ return
+
+ # It looks sufficiently like a patch to continue.
+ process_patch(m, method, m1.group(1), part, n)
+
+# Read all messages from ‘patchq_input’ but DO NOT ACKNOWLEDGE THEM (yet).
+while True:
+ method, _, body = channel.basic_get(queue = 'patchq_input', no_ack = False)
+ if not method: break
+ m = email.message_from_string(body) # the email
+ process(m, method)
+
+# Once we've processed all the incoming messages, look at the threads
+# dictionary to see if we've got any completed threads and send those.
+for parent_id in threads.keys():
+ msg_dict = threads[parent_id]
+
+ # If we didn't get part 1/n, it must be incomplete.
+ if 1 not in msg_dict:
+ continue
+ n = msg_dict[1][3]
+
+ # Check if we got all parts.
+ incomplete = False
+ msgs = []
+ for i in range(1, n+1):
+ if i in msg_dict:
+ msgs.append(msg_dict[i][0].as_string())
+ else:
+ incomplete = True
+ if incomplete:
+ continue
+
+ # It looks like we got a full set, so we can send it.
+ body = json.dumps(msgs)
+ channel.basic_publish(exchange = 'patchq_thread',
+ routing_key = '',
+ body = body)
+
+ # Acknowledge each message so they are dropped from the
+ # incoming queue.
+ for i in range(1, n+1):
+ ack(msg_dict[i][1])
+
+ del threads[parent_id]
+
+# Check for incomplete threads. If they consist only of old messages
+# then we drop them, otherwise we leave them for the next run.
+for parent_id in threads.keys():
+ msg_dict = threads[parent_id]
+
+ old = True
+ for msg in msg_dict.itervalues():
+ t = None
+ date_tuple = email.utils.parsedate_tz(msg[0]['Date'])
+ if date_tuple:
+ t = email.utils.mktime_tz(date_tuple)
+ now = calendar.timegm(time.gmtime())
+ #print ("t = %d, now = %d, now-t = %d" % (t, now, now-t))
+ if t and now - t < config.assembly_time:
+ old = False
+
+ # If they're too old, drop.
+ if old:
+ for msg in msg_dict.itervalues():
+ print "... dropped: incomplete thread too old"
+ ack(msg[1])