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February 5, 2010 04:10
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# -*- python -*- | |
# ex: set syntax=python: | |
# This is a sample buildmaster config file. It must be installed as | |
# 'master.cfg' in your buildmaster's base directory (although the filename | |
# can be changed with the --basedir option to 'mktap buildbot master'). | |
# It has one job: define a dictionary named BuildmasterConfig. This | |
# dictionary has a variety of keys to control different aspects of the | |
# buildmaster. They are documented in docs/config.xhtml . | |
# This is the dictionary that the buildmaster pays attention to. We also use | |
# a shorter alias to save typing. | |
c = BuildmasterConfig = {} | |
####### BUILDSLAVES | |
# the 'slaves' list defines the set of allowable buildslaves. Each element is | |
# a BuildSlave object, which is created with bot-name, bot-password. These | |
# correspond to values given to the buildslave's mktap invocation. | |
from buildbot.buildslave import BuildSlave | |
c['slaves'] = [BuildSlave("bot1name", "bot1passwd")] | |
# to limit to two concurrent builds on a slave, use | |
# c['slaves'] = [BuildSlave("bot1name", "bot1passwd", max_builds=2)] | |
# 'slavePortnum' defines the TCP port to listen on. This must match the value | |
# configured into the buildslaves (with their --master option) | |
c['slavePortnum'] = 9989 | |
####### CHANGESOURCES | |
# the 'change_source' setting tells the buildmaster how it should find out | |
# about source code changes. Any class which implements IChangeSource can be | |
# put here: there are several in buildbot/changes/*.py to choose from. | |
from buildbot.changes.pb import PBChangeSource | |
c['change_source'] = PBChangeSource() | |
# For example, if you had CVSToys installed on your repository, and your | |
# CVSROOT/freshcfg file had an entry like this: | |
#pb = ConfigurationSet([ | |
# (None, None, None, PBService(userpass=('foo', 'bar'), port=4519)), | |
# ]) | |
# then you could use the following buildmaster Change Source to subscribe to | |
# the FreshCVS daemon and be notified on every commit: | |
# | |
#from buildbot.changes.freshcvs import FreshCVSSource | |
#fc_source = FreshCVSSource("cvs.example.com", 4519, "foo", "bar") | |
#c['change_source'] = fc_source | |
# or, use a PBChangeSource, and then have your repository's commit script run | |
# 'buildbot sendchange', or use contrib/svn_buildbot.py, or | |
# contrib/arch_buildbot.py : | |
# | |
#from buildbot.changes.pb import PBChangeSource | |
#c['change_source'] = PBChangeSource() | |
# If you wat to use SVNPoller, it might look something like | |
# # Where to get source code changes | |
# from buildbot.changes.svnpoller import SVNPoller | |
# source_code_svn_url='https://svn.myproject.org/bluejay/trunk' | |
# svn_poller = SVNPoller( | |
# svnurl=source_code_svn_url, | |
# pollinterval=60*60, # seconds | |
# histmax=10, | |
# svnbin='/usr/bin/svn', | |
## ) | |
# c['sources'] = [ svn_poller ] | |
####### SCHEDULERS | |
## configure the Schedulers | |
from buildbot.scheduler import Scheduler | |
c['schedulers'] = [] | |
c['schedulers'].append(Scheduler(name="all", branch=None, | |
treeStableTimer=2*60, | |
builderNames=["node.js-full"])) | |
####### BUILDERS | |
# the 'builders' list defines the Builders. Each one is configured with a | |
# dictionary, using the following keys: | |
# name (required): the name used to describe this builder | |
# slavename (required): which slave to use (must appear in c['bots']) | |
# builddir (required): which subdirectory to run the builder in | |
# factory (required): a BuildFactory to define how the build is run | |
# periodicBuildTime (optional): if set, force a build every N seconds | |
# buildbot/process/factory.py provides several BuildFactory classes you can | |
# start with, which implement build processes for common targets (GNU | |
# autoconf projects, CPAN perl modules, etc). The factory.BuildFactory is the | |
# base class, and is configured with a series of BuildSteps. When the build | |
# is run, the appropriate buildslave is told to execute each Step in turn. | |
# the first BuildStep is typically responsible for obtaining a copy of the | |
# sources. There are source-obtaining Steps in buildbot/steps/source.py for | |
# CVS, SVN, and others. | |
gitrepourl = "git://github.com/ry/node.git" | |
from buildbot.process import factory | |
from buildbot.steps import source, shell | |
build_steps = [ | |
source.Git(repourl=gitrepourl, mode="copy"), | |
shell.ShellCommand(command="./configure"), | |
shell.ShellCommand(command="make"), | |
shell.ShellCommand(command=["make", "install"]), | |
shell.ShellCommand(command=["make", "test"]), | |
] | |
f1 = factory.BuildFactory() | |
f1.addSteps(build_steps) | |
b1 = { | |
'name': "node.js-full", | |
'slavename': "bot1name", | |
'builddir': "full", | |
'factory': f1, | |
} | |
c['builders'] = [b1] | |
####### STATUS TARGETS | |
# 'status' is a list of Status Targets. The results of each build will be | |
# pushed to these targets. buildbot/status/*.py has a variety to choose from, | |
# including web pages, email senders, and IRC bots. | |
c['status'] = [] | |
# Use allowForce=True (boolean, not a string. ie: not 'True') to allow | |
# Forcing Builds in the Web User Interface. The default is False. | |
from buildbot.status import html | |
c['status'].append(html.WebStatus(http_port=8010,allowForce=True)) | |
# from buildbot.status import html | |
# c['status'].append(html.WebStatus(http_port=8010)) | |
# from buildbot.status import mail | |
# c['status'].append(mail.MailNotifier(fromaddr="buildbot@localhost", | |
# extraRecipients=["[email protected]"], | |
# sendToInterestedUsers=False)) | |
# | |
# from buildbot.status import words | |
# c['status'].append(words.IRC(host="irc.example.com", nick="bb", | |
# channels=["#example"])) | |
# | |
# from buildbot.status import client | |
# c['status'].append(client.PBListener(9988)) | |
####### DEBUGGING OPTIONS | |
# if you set 'debugPassword', then you can connect to the buildmaster with | |
# the diagnostic tool in contrib/debugclient.py . From this tool, you can | |
# manually force builds and inject changes, which may be useful for testing | |
# your buildmaster without actually committing changes to your repository (or | |
# before you have a functioning 'sources' set up). The debug tool uses the | |
# same port number as the slaves do: 'slavePortnum'. | |
#c['debugPassword'] = "debugpassword" | |
# if you set 'manhole', you can ssh into the buildmaster and get an | |
# interactive python shell, which may be useful for debugging buildbot | |
# internals. It is probably only useful for buildbot developers. You can also | |
# use an authorized_keys file, or plain telnet. | |
#from buildbot import manhole | |
#c['manhole'] = manhole.PasswordManhole("tcp:9999:interface=127.0.0.1", | |
# "admin", "password") | |
####### PROJECT IDENTITY | |
# the 'projectName' string will be used to describe the project that this | |
# buildbot is working on. For example, it is used as the title of the | |
# waterfall HTML page. The 'projectURL' string will be used to provide a link | |
# from buildbot HTML pages to your project's home page. | |
c['projectName'] = "node.js" | |
c['projectURL'] = "http://nodejs.org/" | |
# the 'buildbotURL' string should point to the location where the buildbot's | |
# internal web server (usually the html.Waterfall page) is visible. This | |
# typically uses the port number set in the Waterfall 'status' entry, but | |
# with an externally-visible host name which the buildbot cannot figure out | |
# without some help. | |
c['buildbotURL'] = "http://localhost:8010/" |
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