mirror of https://github.com/zulip/zulip.git
117 lines
5.1 KiB
Markdown
117 lines
5.1 KiB
Markdown
# Travis CI
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The Zulip server uses [Travis CI](https://travis-ci.org/) for its
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continuous integration. This page documents useful tools and tips to
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know about when using Travis CI and debugging issues with it.
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## Goals
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The overall goal of our Travis CI setup is to avoid regressions and
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minimize the total time spent debugging Zulip. We do that by trying
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to catch as many possible future bugs as possible, while minimizing
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both latency and false positives, both of which can waste a lot of
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developer time. There are a few implications of this overall goal:
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* If a test is failing nondeterministically in Travis CI, we consider
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that to 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 Travis CI configuration
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itself, a developer should never have to repeatedly wait 10 minutes
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for a full Travis run to iteratively debug something.
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## Configuration
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The main Travis configuration file is
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[.travis.yml](https://github.com/zulip/zulip/blob/master/.travis.yml).
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The specific test suites we have are listed in the `matrix` section,
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which has a matrix of Python versions and test suites (`$TEST_SUITE`).
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We've configured it to use a few helper scripts for each job:
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* `tools/travis/setup-$TEST_SUITE`: The script that sets up the test
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environment for that suite (E.g., installing dependencies).
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* For the backend and frontend suites, this is a thin wrapper around
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`tools/provision`, aka the development environment provision script.
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* For the production suite, this is a more complicated process
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because of all the packages Travis installs. See the comments in
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`tools/travis/setup-production` for details.
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* `tools/travis/$TEST_SUITE`: The script that runs the actual test
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suite.
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The main purpose of the distinction between the two is that if the
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`setup-backend` job fails, Travis CI will report it as the suite
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having "Errored" (grey in their emails), whereas if the `backend` job
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fails, it'll be reported as "Failed" failure (red in their emails).
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Note that Travis CI's web UI seems to make no visual distinction
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between these.
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An important detail is that Travis CI will by default hide most phases
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other than the actual test; you can see this easily by looking at the
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line numbers in the Travis CI output. There are actually a bunch of
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phases (e.g. the project's setup job, downloading caches near the
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beginning, uploading caches at the end, etc.), and if you're debugging
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our configuration, you'll want to look at these closely.
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## Useful debugging tips and tools
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* Zulip uses the `ts` tool to log the current time on every line of
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the output in our Travis CI scripts. You can use this output to
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determine which steps are actually consuming a lot of time.
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* For performance issues,
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[this statistics tool](https://scribu.github.io/travis-stats/#zulip/zulip/master)
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can give you test runtime history data that can help with
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determining when a performance issue was introduced and whether it
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was fixed. Note you need to click the "Run" button for it to do
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anything.
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* You can [sign up your personal repo for Travis CI][travis-fork] so
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that every remote branch you push will be tested, which can be
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helpful when debugging something complicated.
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[travis-fork]: ../git/cloning.html#step-3-configure-travis-ci-continuous-integration
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## Performance optimizations
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### Caching
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An important element of making Travis CI perform effectively is
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caching the provisioning of a Zulip development environment. In
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particular, we cache the following across jobs:
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* Python virtualenvs
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* node_modules directories
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* Built/downloaded emoji sprite sheets and data
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This has a huge impact on the performance of running tests in Travis
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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, so Zulip should always be
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using the same version of dependencies it would have used had the
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cache not existed. In practice, bugs are always possible, so be
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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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### Uninstalling packages
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In the production suite, we run `apt-get upgrade` at some point
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(effectively, because the Zulip installer does). This carries a huge
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performance cost in Travis CI, because (1) they don't keep their test
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systems up to date and (2) literally everything is installed in their
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build workers (e.g. several copies of Postgres, Java, MySQL, etc.).
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In order to make Zulip's tests performance reasonably well, we
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uninstall (or mark with `apt-mark hold`) many of these dependencies
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that are irrelevant to Zulip in
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[`tools/travis/setup-production`][setup-production].
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[setup-production]: https://github.com/zulip/zulip/blob/master/tools/travis/setup-production
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