From 4109d3e3ee4f26808c51fb433dbc7fbb05dc32f3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Pierre Tardy Date: Wed, 5 Oct 2016 15:23:56 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] initial commit --- master.cfg | 108 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 108 insertions(+) create mode 100644 master.cfg diff --git a/master.cfg b/master.cfg new file mode 100644 index 0000000..259b07b --- /dev/null +++ b/master.cfg @@ -0,0 +1,108 @@ +# -*- python -*- +# ex: set filetype=python: + +import os + +from buildbot.plugins import * + +# This is a sample buildmaster config file. It must be installed as +# 'master.cfg' in your buildmaster's base directory. + +# This is the dictionary that the buildmaster pays attention to. We also use +# a shorter alias to save typing. +c = BuildmasterConfig = {} + +####### WORKERS + +# The 'workers' list defines the set of recognized workers. Each element is +# a Worker object, specifying a unique worker name and password. The same +# worker name and password must be configured on the worker. + +# here we configure a localworker, which will run in the same process as the master +c['workers'] = [worker.LocalWorker("example-localworker")] + +# 'protocols' contains information about protocols which master will use for +# communicating with workers. You must define at least 'port' option that workers +# could connect to your master with this protocol. +# 'port' must match the value configured into the workers (with their +# --master option) +c['protocols'] = {'pb': {'port': os.environ.get("BUILDBOT_WORKER_PORT", 9989)}} + +####### CHANGESOURCES + +# the 'change_source' setting tells the buildmaster how it should find out +# about source code changes. Here we point to the buildbot clone of pyflakes. + +c['change_source'] = [] +c['change_source'].append(changes.GitPoller( + 'git://github.com/buildbot/pyflakes.git', + workdir='gitpoller-workdir', branch='master', + pollinterval=300)) + +####### SCHEDULERS + +# Configure the Schedulers, which decide how to react to incoming changes. In this +# case, just kick off a 'runtests' build + +c['schedulers'] = [] +c['schedulers'].append(schedulers.SingleBranchScheduler( + name="all", + change_filter=util.ChangeFilter(branch='master'), + treeStableTimer=None, + builderNames=["runtests"])) +c['schedulers'].append(schedulers.ForceScheduler( + name="force", + builderNames=["runtests"])) + +####### BUILDERS + +# The 'builders' list defines the Builders, which tell Buildbot how to perform a build: +# what steps, and which workers can execute them. Note that any particular build will +# only take place on one worker. + +factory = util.BuildFactory() +# check out the source +factory.addStep(steps.Git(repourl='git://github.com/buildbot/pyflakes.git', mode='incremental')) +# run the tests (note that this will require that 'trial' is installed) +factory.addStep(steps.ShellCommand(command=["trial", "pyflakes"])) + +c['builders'] = [] +c['builders'].append( + util.BuilderConfig(name="runtests", + workernames=["example-worker"], + factory=factory)) + +####### 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, +# like IRC bots. + +c['status'] = [] + +####### PROJECT IDENTITY + +# the 'title' string will appear at the top of this buildbot installation's +# home pages (linked to the 'titleURL'). + +c['title'] = "Pyflakes" +c['titleURL'] = "https://launchpad.net/pyflakes" + +# the 'buildbotURL' string should point to the location where the buildbot's +# internal web server is visible. This typically uses the port number set in +# the 'www' entry below, but with an externally-visible host name which the +# buildbot cannot figure out without some help. + +c['buildbotURL'] = os.environ.get("BUILDBOT_WEB_URL", "http://localhost:8010/") + +# minimalistic config to activate new web UI +c['www'] = dict(port=os.environ.get("BUILDBOT_WEB_PORT", 8010), + plugins=dict(waterfall_view={}, console_view={})) + +####### DB URL + +c['db'] = { + # This specifies what database buildbot uses to store its state. You can leave + # this at its default for all but the largest installations. + 'db_url' : os.environ.get("BUILDBOT_DB_URL", "sqlite://"), +}