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108 lines
4.5 KiB
Markdown
108 lines
4.5 KiB
Markdown
## Job Branch Override
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_Background:_ Projects specify the branch, tag, or reference to use from source control
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in the `scm_branch` field.
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This "Branch Override" feature allows project admins to delegate branch selection to
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admins of Job Templates that use that project (requiring only project
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`use_role`). Admins of Job Templates can further
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delegate that ability to users executing the Job Template
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(requiring only Job Template `execute_role`) by enabling
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`ask_scm_branch_on_launch` on the Job Template.
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### Source Tree Copy Behavior
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_Background:_ Every job run has its own private data directory.
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This folder is temporary, cleaned up at the end of the job run.
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This directory contains a copy of the project source tree for the given
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`scm_branch` while the job is running.
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A new shallow copy is made for every job run.
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Jobs are free to make changes to the project folder and make use of those
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changes while it is still running.
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#### Use Cases That No Long Work
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With the introduction of this feature, the function of `scm_clean` is watered
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down. It will still be possible to enable this function, and it will be
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passed through as a parameter to the playbook as a tool for troubleshooting.
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Two notable cases that lose support are documented below:
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1) Setting `scm_clean` to `true` will no longer persist changes between job runs.
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This means that jobs that rely on content which is not committed to source
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control may fail now.
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2) Because it is a shallow copy, this folder will not contain the full
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git history for git project types.
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### Project Revision Concerns
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_Background:_
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The revision of the default branch (specified as `scm_branch` of the project)
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is stored when updated, and jobs using that project will employ this revision.
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Providing a non-default `scm_branch` in a job comes with some restrictions,
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which are unlike the normal update behavior.
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If `scm_branch` is a branch identifier (not a commit hash or tag), then
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the newest revision is pulled from the source control remote immediately
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before the job starts.
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This revision is shown in the `scm_revision` field of the
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job and its respective project update.
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This means that offline job runs are impossible for non-default branches.
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To be sure that a job is running a static version from source control,
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use tags or commit hashes.
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Project updates do not save the revision of all branches, only the
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project default branch.
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The `scm_branch` field is not validated, so the project must update
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to assure it is valid.
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If `scm_branch` is provided or prompted for, the `playbook` field of
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Job Templates will not be validated, and users will have to launch
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the Job Template in order to verify presence of the expected playbook.
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### Git Refspec
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The field `scm_refspec` has been added to projects. This is provided by
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the user or left blank.
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A non-blank `scm_refspec` field will cause project updates (of any type)
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to pass the `refspec` field when running the Ansible
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git module inside of the `project_update.yml` playbook. When the git module
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is provided with this field, it performs an extra `git fetch` command
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to pull that refspec from the remote.
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The refspec specifies what references the update will download from the remote.
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Examples:
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- `refs/*:refs/remotes/origin/*`
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This will fetch all references, including even remotes of the remote
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- `refs/pull/*:refs/remotes/origin/pull/*`
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Github-specific, this will fetch all refs for all pull requests
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- `refs/pull/62/head:refs/remotes/origin/pull/62/head`
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This will fetch the ref for that one github pull request
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For large projects, users should consider performance when
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using the first or second examples here.
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This parameter affects availability of the project branch, and can allow
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access to references not otherwise available. For example, the third example
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will allow the user to supply `pull/62/head` for `scm_branch`, which would
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not be possible without the refspec field.
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The Ansible git module always fetches `refs/heads/*`. It will do this
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whether or not a custom refspec is provided. This means that a project's
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branches and tags (and commit hashes therein) can be used as `scm_branch`
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no matter what is used for `scm_refspec`.
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The `scm_refspec` will affect which `scm_branch` fields can be used as overrides.
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For example, you could set up a project that allows branch override with the
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first or second refspec example, then use this in a Job Template
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that prompts for `scm_branch`, then a client could launch the Job Template when
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a new pull request is created, providing the branch `pull/N/head`,
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then the Job Template would run against the provided GitHub pull request reference.
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