======= Plugins ======= Following plugins are available in default koji installation. Runroot ======= Plugin for running any command in buildroot. It has three parts as most of the others (hub, builder and CLI). Builder ------- You enable plugin by editing ``/etc/kojid.conf`` by adding ``plugin = runroot`` there. Plugin itself has separate configuration file on each builder located at ``/etc/kojid/plugins/runroot.conf`` There is a sample configuration file with option descriptions installed. Hub --- On the hub side ``Plugins = runroot_hub`` needs to be added to ``/etc/koji-hub/hub.conf``. Note, that by default policy runroot tasks are assigned to ``runroot`` channel. As this is a plugin, we don't create it automatically. There are three options - create channel when adding first builder there via ``koji add-host-to-channel --new hostname runroot`` or by changing the default channel policy according to :doc:`defining_hub_policies`. Last option is to use ``--channel-override`` option in CLI to drive task to channel of choice. CLI --- CLI is looking for available plugins every run, so it if it is installed, you'll see new command ``runroot`` with options described in its help. No config options are needed to enable it. Save Failed Tree ================ In some cases developers want to investigate exact environment in which their build failed. Reconstructing this environment via mock needn't end with exactly same structure (due to builder settings, etc.). In such case this plugin can be used to retrieve tarball with complete mock tree. Additional feature is that some paths from buildroot can be left out from tarball. Feature can be configured via `/etc/kojid/plugins/save_failed_tree.conf` file. Currently only field filters.paths is used and it consists of globs (standard python's fnmatch is used) separated by whitespaces. .. code-block:: ini [filters] paths = /etc/*.keytab /tmp/secret_data .. warning:: For security reasons, currently all ``/tmp/krb5cc*`` and ``/etc/*.keytab`` files are removed from tarball. If we found some other dangerous pieces, they can be added to this blacklist. Special task method is created for achieving this which is called ``SaveFailedTree``. This task can be created via CLI: ``koji save-failed-tree ``. Additional options are: .. option:: --full directs koji to create tarball with complete tree. .. option:: --nowait exit immediately after creating task .. option:: --quiet don't print any information to output After task finishes, one can find the tarball on relevant task web page (URL will be printed to stdout until ``--quiet`` is used. Plugin allow to save trees only for tasks defined in config ``/etc/koji-hub/plugins/save_failed_tree.conf``. Option ``allowed_methods`` contains list of comma-delimited names of tasks. Default configuration contains line: ``allowed_methods = buildArch``. Anybody is allowed to create this type of task (and download tarball). .. warning:: Don't forget that this type of task can generate huge amount of data, so use it wisely. TODO ---- * Separate volume/directory on hub * garbage collector + policy for retaining generated tarballs Sidetag ======= Sidetag plugin is originally work of Mikolaj Izdebski and was pulled into base koji due to easier integration with rest of the code. It is used for managing `sidetags` which are light-weight short-lived build tags for developer's use. Sidetag creation is governed by hub's policy. Hub --- Example for `/etc/koji-hub/hub.conf`: .. code-block:: ini PluginPath = /usr/lib/koji-hub-plugins Plugins = sidetag_hub [policy] sidetag = # allow maximum of 10 sidetags per user for f30-build tag tag f30-build && compare number_of_tags <= 10 :: allow # forbid everything else all :: deny package_list = # allow blocking for owners in their sidetags match action block && is_sidetag_owner :: allow all :: deny There are two special policy tests `is_sidetag` and `is_sidetag_owner` with expectable behaviour. Now Sidetag Koji plugin should be installed. To verify that, run `koji list-api` command -- it should now display `createSideTag` as one of available API calls. Plugin has also its own configuration file ``/etc/koji-hub/plugins/sidetag.conf`` which for now contains the only boolean option ``remove_empty``. If it is set, sidetag is automatically deleted when last package is untagged from there. CLI --- For convenient handling, also CLI part is provided. Typical session would look like: .. code-block:: shell $ koji add-sidetag f30-build --wait f30-build-side-123456 Successfully waited 1:36 for a new f30-build-side-123456 repo $ koji remove-sidetag f30-build-side-123456 API --- And in scripts, you can use following calls: .. code-block:: python import koji ks = koji.ClientSession('https://koji.fedoraproject.org/kojihub') ks.gssapi_login() ks.createSideTag('f30-build') .. _protonmsg-config: Proton messaging ================ The ``protonmsg`` plugin for the hub will, if enabled, send a wide range of messages about Koji activity to the configured amqps message brokers. Most callback events on the hub are translated into messages. In order to enable this plugin, you must: * add ``protonmsg`` to the ``Plugins`` setting in ``/etc/koji-hub/hub.conf`` * provide a configuration file for the plugin at ``/etc/koji-hub/plugins/protonmsg.conf`` The configuration file is ini-style format with three sections: broker, queue and message. The ``[broker]`` section defines how the plugin connects to the message bus. The following fields are understood: * ``urls`` -- a space separated list of amqps urls. Additional urls are treated as fallbacks. The plugin will send to the first one that accepts the message * ``cert`` -- the client cert file for authentication * ``cacert`` -- the ca cert to validate the server * ``topic_prefix`` -- this string will be used as a prefix for all message topics * ``connect_timeout`` -- the number of seconds to wait for a connection before timing out * ``send_timeout`` -- the number of seconds to wait while sending a message before timing out The ``[message]`` section sets parameters for how messages are formed. Currently only one field is understood: * ``extra_limit`` -- the maximum allowed size for ``build.extra`` fields that appear in messages. If the ``build.extra`` field is longer (in terms of json-encoded length), then it will be omitted. The default value is ``0`` which means no limit. The ``[queue]`` section controls how (or if) the plugin will use the database to queue messages when they cannot be immediately sent. The following fields are understood: * ``enabled`` -- if true, then the feature is enabled * ``batch_size`` -- the maximum number of queued messages to send at one time * ``max_age`` -- the age (in hours) at which old messages in the queue are discarded It is important to note that the database queue is only a fallback mechanism. The plugin will always attempt to send messages as they are issued. Messages are only placed in the database queue when they cannot be immediately sent on the bus (e.g. if the amqps server is offline). Admins should consider the balance between the ``batch_size`` and ``extra_limit`` options, as both can affect the total amount of data that the plugin could attempt to send during a single call.