mirror of https://github.com/zulip/zulip.git
127 lines
5.4 KiB
Markdown
127 lines
5.4 KiB
Markdown
# Continuous integration (CI)
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The Zulip server uses [GitHub Actions](https://docs.github.com/en/actions) for continuous
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integration. GitHub Actions runs frontend, backend and end-to-end production
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installer tests. This page documents useful tools and tips when using
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GitHub Actions and debugging issues with it.
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## Goals
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The overall goal of our CI is to avoid regressions and minimize the
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total time spent debugging Zulip. We do that by trying to catch as
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many possible future bugs as possible, while minimizing both latency
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and false positives, both of which can waste a lot of developer time.
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There are a few implications of this overall goal:
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* If a test is failing nondeterministically in CI, we consider that to
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be an urgent problem.
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* If the tests become a lot slower, that is also an urgent problem.
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* Everything we do in CI should also have a way to run it quickly
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(under 1 minute, preferably under 3 seconds), in order to iterate fast
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in development. Except when working on the CI configuration itself, a
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developer should never have to repeatedly wait 10 minutes for a full CI
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run to iteratively debug something.
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## GitHub Actions
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### Useful debugging tips and tools
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* GitHub Actions stores timestamps for every line in the logs. They
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are hidden by default; you can see them by toggling the `Show
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timestamps` option in the menu on any job's log page. (You can get
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this sort of timestamp in a development environment by piping output
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to `ts`).
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* GitHub Actions runs on every branch you push on your Zulip fork.
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This is helpful when debugging something complicated.
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* You can also ssh into a container to debug failures. SSHing into
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the containers can be helpful, especially in rare cases where the
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tests are passing in your computer but failing in the CI. There are
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various
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[Actions](https://github.com/marketplace?type=actions&query=debug+ssh)
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available on GitHub Marketplace to help you SSH into a container. Use
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whichever you find easiest to set up.
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### Suites
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We run multiple jobs during a GitHub Actions build to efficiently run
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Zulip's various test suites, some of them multiple times because we
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support multiple versions of the base OS. See the [Actions
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tabs](https://github.com/zulip/zulip/actions) for full list of Actions
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that we run.
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Files which define GitHub workflows live in `.github/workflows` directory.
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`zulip-ci.yml` is the main file where most of the tests are run.
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`production-suite.yml` builds a Zulip release tarball, which is
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then installed in a fresh container. Various Nagios and other
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checks are run to confirm the installation worked.
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`zulip-ci.yml` is designed to run our main test suites on all of our
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supported platforms. Out of them, only one of them runs the frontend
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tests, since `puppeteer` is slow and unlikely to catch issues that
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depend on the version of the base OS and/or Python.
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Our code for running the tests in CI lives under `tools/ci`; but that
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logic is mostly thin wrappers around [Zulip's test
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suites](../testing/testing.md) or production installer.
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The `Legacy OS` tests are designed to ensure we give good error
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messages when trying to upgrade Zulip servers running on very old base
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OS versions with EOL Python versions that Zulip no longer supports.
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### Configuration
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The remaining details in this section are primarily relevant for doing
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development on our CI system and/or provisioning process.
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The first key of the job section is `docker`. The docker key specifies
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the image GitHub Actions should get from [Docker Hub][docker-hub] for running
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the job. Once GitHub Actions fetches the image from Docker Hub, it will spin
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up a docker container. See [images](#images) section to know more about
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the images we use in GitHub Actions for testing.
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After booting the container from the configured image, GitHub Actions will
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create the directory mentioned in `working_directory` and all the
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steps are be run from here.
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The `steps` section describes describes everything: fetching the Zulip
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code, provisioning, fetching caught data, running tests and uploading
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coverage reports. The steps with prefix `*` reference aliases, which
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are defined in the `aliases` section at the top of the file.
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### Images
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GitHub Actions tests are run in containers that are spun off from the
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images maintained by Zulip team. The Docker images can be generated by
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running `tools/ci/build-docker-images`; see instructions at the top of
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`tools/ci/Dockerfile` for more information.
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### Performance optimizations
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#### Caching
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An important element of making GitHub Actions perform effectively is caching
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between jobs the various caches that live under `/srv/` in a Zulip
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development or production environment. In particular, we cache the
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following:
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* Python virtualenvs
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* node_modules directories
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This has a huge impact on the performance of running tests in GitHub Actions
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CI; without these caches, the average test time would be several times
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longer.
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We have designed these caches carefully (they are also used in
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production and the Zulip development environment) to ensure that each
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is named by a hash of its dependencies and ubuntu distribution name,
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so Zulip should always be using the same version of dependencies it
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would have used had the cache not existed. In practice, bugs are
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always possible, so be mindful of this possibility.
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A consequence of this caching is that test jobs for branches which
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modify `package.json`, `requirements/`, and other key dependencies
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will be significantly slower than normal, because they won't get to
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benefit from the cache.
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