This project is under development.
Zeus is a frontend and analytics provider for CI solutions. It is inspired by the work done at Dropbox on Changes.
Currently Zeus publicly supports GitHub.com as well as easy integration with Travis CI.
To add a new project:
- Add a repository (via settings).
- Go to the repository's settings and generate a new Hook.
- Bind ZEUS_HOOK_BASE as a secret environment variable in Travis.
- Update your .travis.yml to include the Zeus webhook.
- (Optional) Update your .travis.yml to include artifact upload.
- (Optional, not yet recommended) Update your .travis.yml to disable Travis' native email notifications.
Once you've added a project Zeus will automatically update with details from any builds you've run.
Some quick caveats:
- The project is still pretty early on, and may break/change without warning.
- travis-ci.com and GitHub Enterprise are not yet supported.
- Notifications will only be triggered for users which have authenticated against Zeus.
If you want to use Zeus with a build system that's not currently supported, see the details on "Hooks" in the documentation.
While you can upload any kind of Artifact to zeus (e.g. .html
output), the platform has knowledge of certain types
and will grant additional functionality if they're present.
The recommended way to support artifacts is to configure a post-build step (on both failure and success) to do something similar to the following:
npm install -g @zeus-ci/cli
$(npm bin -g)/zeus upload -t "application/x-junit+xml" jest.junit.xml
$(npm bin -g)/zeus upload -t "application/x-cobertura+xml" coverage.xml
- application/x-clover+xml
- application/x-cobertura+xml
- application/x-bitten+xml
- application/x-junit+xml
- application/x-xunit+xml
- application/x-checkstyle+xml
- text/x-pep8
- text/x-pycodestyle
- test/x-pylint
Webpack stats can be generated with:
webpack --profile --json > webpack-stats.json
They should be submitted with the application/x-webpack-stats+json
type.
- Python 3.8
- Node (and Volta)
- Postgres 9.4+
Note: If you're using pyenv for Python and macOS Mojave and having issues installing 3.7.1, take a look here:
# install poetry
curl -sSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/sdispater/poetry/0.12.10/get-poetry.py | python
# load dependencies
make
# initialize config
poetry run zeus init
Note, before running any future Python commands (including zeus
), you'll
need to activate the environment:
poetry shell
You can also setup direnv to automatically activate the environment.
Once dependencies are resolved, bootstrap the database (see Makefile
for details):
make db
Finally, launch the webserver:
zeus devserver
# or alternatively, with workers:
zeus devserver --workers
$ zeus repos add https://github.com/getsentry/zeus.git
Once you've authenticated, give yourself access to the repository:
$ zeus repos access add https://github.com/getsentry/zeus.git [[email protected]]
Additionally, you can generate some mock data:
$ zeus mocks load-all
zeus
├── setup.py // server dependencies
├── zeus // server code
| ├── artifacts // artifact handlers
| ├── api
| | ├── resources // api endpoints/resources
| | └── schemas // api serializer/schemas
| ├── cli // command line utilities
| ├── models // database schema
| ├── storage // file storage implementations
| ├── tasks // async task definitions
| ├── vcs // version control system implementations
| └── web // server-rendered web views
├── templates // server-rendered templates
├── public // general static assets
├── package.json // web client dependencies
└── webapp // web client
├── actions // redux actions
├── components // react components
├── reducers // redux reducers
├── routes.js // routes (react-router)
└── pages.js // react components (pages)
- Most models contain a GUID (UUID) primary key.
- Some generalized models (such as
ItemStat
) are keyed by GUID, and do not contain backrefs or constraints. - Access is controlled at the repository level, and is generally enforced if you use the
{ModelClass}.query
utilities. - Refs are unresolved (pointers to shas). They are often resolved asynchronously. Models containing a sha will also often contain a parallel ref field.
zeus
├── ApiToken
| └── ApiTokenRepositoryAccess
├── Hook
├── Repository
| ├── RepositoryAccess
| ├── ItemOption
| ├── Build
| | ├── ItemStat
| | ├── Source
| | ├── FileCoverage
| | └── Job
| | ├── Artifact
| | ├── ItemStat
| | └── TestCase
| | ├── Artifact
| | └── ItemStat
| ├── ChangeRequest
| | └── Revision
| └── Source
| ├── Author
| ├── Patch
| └── Revision
| └── Author
└── User
├── Email
└── Identity
A subset of APIs are exposed using simple hook credentials. These credentials are coupled to a provider (e.g. travis-ci
) and a single repository.
To create a new hook:
zeus hooks add https://github.com/getsentry/zeus.git travis-ci
Using the subpath, you'll be able to access several endpoints:
{prefix}/builds/{build-external-id}
{prefix}/builds/{build-external-id}/jobs/{job-external-id}
{prefix}/builds/{build-external-id}/jobs/{job-external-id}/artifacts
The prefix will be generated for you as part of the new hook, and is made up of the Hook's GUID and it's signature:
http://example.com/hooks/{hook-id}/{hook-signature}/{path}
Each endpoint takes an external ID, which is used as a unique query parameter. The constraints are coupled to the parent object. For example, to create or patch a build:
POST http://example.com/hooks/{hook-id}/{hook-signature}/builds/abc
This will look for a Build object with the following characteristics:
provider={Hook.provider}
external_id=abc
repository_id={Hook.repository_id}
If a match is found, it will be updated with the given API parameters. If it isn't found, it will be created. All of these operations are treated like a standard UPSERT (UPDATE IF EXISTS or INSERT).
The process for publishing data generally looks like this:
- if applicable, upsert a change request and its source association
- upsert the build's basic parameters
- upsert the detailed job parameters
- publish artifacts
These actions can be also performed manually (without using the native webhooks) with zeus-cli
(recommended) or curl
.
More information (installation instructions, documentation) about zeus-cli
can be found on its project's page: https://github.com/getsentry/zeus-cli
zeus-cli
is a command line tool that facilitates interaction with Zeus API for actions such as updating jobs or uploading artifacts.
The following command creates a build and a job for a given git
revision:
zeus job update -b $MY_BUILD_ID -j $MY_JOB_ID --ref=$MY_REF_ID
And here's how you upload an artifact:
zeus upload -b $MY_BUILD_ID -j $MY_JOB_ID -t 'text/xml+coverage' coverage.xml
Here's an example of how you can publish job details without the native webhooks with curl
from Travis:
#!/bin/bash -eu
if [[ "$TRAVIS_PULL_REQUEST" != "false" ]]; then
BUILD_LABEL="PR #${TRAVIS_PULL_REQUEST}"
else
BUILD_LABEL=""
fi
# ensure the build exists
curl $ZEUS_HOOK_BASE/builds/$TRAVIS_BUILD_NUMBER \
-X POST \
-H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
-d "{\"label\": \"${BUILD_LABEL}\", \"ref\": \"$TRAVIS_COMMIT\", \"url\": \"https://travis-ci.org/${TRAVIS_REPO_SLUG}/builds/${TRAVIS_BUILD_ID}\"}"
# upsert current job details
curl $ZEUS_HOOK_BASE/builds/$TRAVIS_BUILD_NUMBER/jobs/$TRAVIS_JOB_NUMBER \
-X POST \
-H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
-d "{\"status\": \"$1\", \"result\": \"$2\", \"url\": \"https://travis-ci.org/${TRAVIS_REPO_SLUG}/jobs/${TRAVIS_JOB_ID}\", \"allow_failure\": ${TRAVIS_ALLOW_FAILURE}}"
From there you can submit artifacts using zeus-cli
and its standard mechanisms.