[core-workflow] My initial thoughts on the steps/blockers of the transition

Brett Cannon brett at python.org
Mon Jan 4 19:42:27 EST 2016


So consider this the starting discussion of the PEP that will be the
hg.python.org -> GitHub transition PEP that I will be in charge of. Once we
have general agreement on the steps necessary I will start the actual PEP
and check it in, but I figure there's no point in have a skeleton PEP if we
can't agree on the skeleton. :) While I list steps influencing all the
repos, I want to focus on the ones stopping any repo from moving over for
now, expanding what we worry about to the cpython repo as we knock blockers
down until we move everything over and start adding GitHub perks.

The way I see it, we have 4 repos to move: devinabox, benchmarks, peps,
devguide, and cpython. I also think that's essentially the order we should
migrate them over. Some things will need to be universally handled before
we transition a single repo, while other things are only a blocker for some
of the repos.

Universal blockers
==============
There are four blockers that must be resolved before we even consider
moving a repo over. They can be solved in parallel, but they all need to
have a selected solution before we can move even the devinabox repo.

First, we need to decide how we are going to handle adding all the core
devs to GitHub. Are we simply going to add all of them to the python
organization, or do we want something like a specific python-dev gteamroup
that gets added to all of the relevant repos? Basically I'm not sure how
picky we want to be about the people who already have organization access
on GitHub about them implicitly getting access to the cpython repo at the
end of the day (and the same goes for any of the other repos in the python
organization). For tracking names, I figure we will create a file in the
devguide where people can check in their GitHub usernames and I can
manually add people as people add themselves to the file.

Second, CLA enforcement. As of right now people go to
https://www.python.org/psf/contrib/contrib-form/, fill in the form, and
then Ewa gets an email where she manually flips a flag in Roundup. If we
want to use a web hook to verify someone has signed a CLA then we need to
decide where the ground truth for CLAs are. Do we want to keep using
Roundup to manage CLA agreements and thus add a GitHub field in
bugs.python.org for people's profile and a web hook or bot that will signal
if someone has the flag flipped on bugs.python.org? Or is there some
prepackaged service that we can use that will keep track of this which
would cause us to not use Roundup (which might be easier, but depending on
the service require everyone to re-sign)? There's also the issue of
supporting people who want to submit code by uploading a patch to
bugs.python.org but not use GitHub. Either way I don't want to have to ask
everyone who submits a PR what their bugs.python.org username is and then
go check that manually.

Third, how do we want to do the repo conversions? We need to choose the
tool(s) and command(s) that we want to use. There was mention of wanting a
mapping from hg commit ID to git commit ID. If we have that we could have a
static bugs.python.org/commit/<ID> page that had the mapping embedded in
some JavaScript and if <ID> matched then we just forward them to the
corresponding GitHub commit page, otherwise just blindly forward to GitHub
and assume the ID is git-only, giving us a stable URL for commit web views.

Fourth, for the ancillary repos of devinabox, peps, benchmarks, and
devguide, do we care if we use the GitHub merge button for PRs or do we
want to enforce a linear history with all repos? We just need to decide if
care about linear histories and then we can move forward since any bot we
create won't block us from using GitHub.

Those four things are enough to move devinabox over. It probably is enough
for the benchmarks suite, but I have an email to speed@ asking if people
want to use this opportunity to re-evaluate the benchmark suite and make
any changes that will affect repo size (e.g., use pip to pull in the
libraries and frameworks used by a benchmark rather than vendoring their
code, making the repo much smaller).

Website-related stuff
================
This also almost gets us the peps repo, but we do need to figure out how to
change the website to build from the git checkout rather than an hg one.
Same goes for the devguide. It would be great if we can set up web hooks to
immediately trigger rebuilds of those portions of the sites instead of
having to wait until a cronjob triggers.

CPython requirements
=================
There are six things to work out before we move over cpython. First, do we
want to split out Python 2 branches into their own repo? There might be a
clone size benefit which obviously is nice for people on slow Internet
connections. It also clearly separates out Python 2 from 3 and lets those
who prefer to focus on one compared to the other do that more easily. It
does potentially make any single fix that spans 2 and 3 require a bit more
work since it won't be an intra-clone change. We could also contemplate
sub-repos for things like the Doc/ or Tools/ directories (although I doubt
it's worth it).

Second, do we want all fixes to go into master and then cherry-pick into
other branches, or do we want to follow our current practice of going into
the active feature branch and then merge into master? I personally prefer
the former and I think most everyone else does as well, but I thought it
should be at least thought about.

Third, how to handle Misc/NEWS? We can add a NEWS field to bugs.python.org
and then generate the NEWS file by what issues are tied to what version and
when they were closed. The other approach is to create a file per NEWS
entry in a version-specific directory (Larry created code for hg already
for this to give people an idea: http://bugs.python.org/issue18967). Then
when we cut a release we run a tool the slurps up all of the relevant files
-- which includes files in the directory for the next feature release which
represent fixes which were cherry picked -- and generates the NEWS file for
the final release. The per-file approach is bot-friendly and also
CLI-friendly, but potentially requires more tooling and I don't know if
people feel news entries should be tied to the issue or in the repo
(although that assumes people find tweaking Roundup easy :).

Fourth, we need to decide exactly what commands we expect core devs to run
initially for committing code. Since we agreed to a linear history we need
to document exactly what we expect people to do for a PR to get it into
their git repo. This will go into the devguide -- probably will want to
start a github branch at some point -- and will act as the commands the bot
will want to work off of.

Fifth, what to do about Misc/ACKS? Since we are using PRs, even if we
flatten them, I believe the PR creators will get credit in the commit as
the author while the core dev committing will be flagged as the person
doing the merge (someone correct me if I'm wrong because if I am this whole
point is silly). With the commits containing credit directly, we can either
automatically generate Misc/ACKS like the NEWS file or simply drop it for
future contributors and just leave the file for past contributors since git
will have kept track for us.

Six, we will need to update our Buildbot fleet.

This gets us to the bare minimum needed to function.

Parity with hg.python.org
----------------------------------
For parity, there are some Roundup integrations that will be necessary,
like auto-generating links, posting commits to #python-dev on IRC, etc. I'm
not sure if people want to block until that is all in place or not. I do
think we should make sure there is some web hook that can take an issue #
from the title of a PR and automatically posts to the corresponding issue
on bugs.python.org that the PR exists. If people disagree then feel free to
say so.

Adding perks
==========
Now we get to some added stuff that we never had on our own infrastructure.
:)

We should wire up CI for all PRs. I don't know if we want to go with
Travis, Codeship, or what CI provider, but we should definitely hook it up
and fully utilize the resource. This could even include running doctest
over the docs, making sure the reST markup is accurate, etc.

Do we need to set up a web hook to trigger website rebuilds? We should at
least have a mirror on Read the Docs that is triggered by web hook so that
we have a backup of the documentation (if possible; not sure how custom our
Sphinx setup is compared to what they require to work).

We should try to get test coverage wired up as well per CI. I don't know if
coveralls.io or some other provider is best, but we should see what is
available and find out if we can use them to either get basic coverage or
thorough coverage (read https://hg.python.org/devinabox/file/tip/README#l124 to
see what thorough coverage entails, but it does require a checkout of
coverage.py).

We should build a bot. It must use a Monty Python reference to trigger
(black-knight, none-shall-pass, man-from-scene-24, five-questions,
what-is-your-quest, what-is-your-favourite-colour, etc.; obviously I'm
leaning towards the Black Knight or Bridge of Death scenes from the Holy
Grail for inspiration since they deal with blocking you from doing
something). It should handle specifying the commit message, what branches
to commit to/cherry pick into, and a NEWS entry (if necessary). I don't
know if it needs to do anything else as a requirement. It should probably
implement a commit queue like Zuul or Homu (and both of those can be
considered as the basis of the bot). Also gating commits on passing a test
run probably would also be good.

I'm sure we will want to use some labels and milestones to track what PRs
are for what versions, if they are blocked on something, etc.

---

Long email! :) I think that is my current brain dumped in email form. As I
said at the beginning, I think we should focus on what is blocking the
easiest repos first and then just keep knocking down blockers as we try to
move over more repos.
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