/nixpkgs-review

Review pull-requests on https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs

Primary LanguagePythonMIT LicenseMIT

nixpkgs-review

Build Status

Review pull-requests on https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs. nixpkgs-review automatically builds packages changed in the pull requests.

NOTE: this project used to be called nix-review

Features

  • ofborg support: reuses evaluation output of CI to skip local evaluation, but also falls back if ofborg is not finished
  • provides a nix-shell with all packages that did not fail to build
  • remote builder support
  • allows to build a subset of packages (great for mass-rebuilds)
  • allow to build nixos tests
  • markdown reports
  • GitHub integration:
    • post PR comments with results
    • approve or merge PRs (the last one requires maintainer permission)
    • show PR comments/reviews
  • logs per built or failed package
  • symlinks built packages to result directory for inspection

Installation

nixpkgs-review is included in nixpkgs. Older versions of nixpkgs might still call it nix-review.

To use it without installing it, use:

$ nix run nixpkgs#nixpkgs-review

To install it:

$ nix-env -f '<nixpkgs>' -iA nixpkgs-review

To run it from the git repository:

$ nix-build
$ ./result/bin/nixpkgs-review

Note that this asserts formatting with the latest version of black, so you may need to specify a more up to date version of nixpkgs:

$ nix-build -I nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs-channels/archive/nixpkgs-unstable.tar.gz
$ ./result/bin/nixpkgs-review

Development Environment

For IDEs:

$ nix-build -A env -o .venv

or just use:

./bin/nixpkgs-review

Usage

First, change to your local nixpkgs repository directory, i.e.:

cd ~/git/nixpkgs

Note that your local checkout git will not be affected by nixpkgs-review, since it will use git-worktree to perform fast checkouts.

Then run nixpkgs-review by providing the pull request number…

$ nixpkgs-review pr 37242

…or the full pull request URL:

$ nixpkgs-review pr https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/37242

The output will then look as follows:

$ git fetch --force https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs pull/37242/head:refs/nixpkgs-review/0
$ git worktree add /home/joerg/git/nixpkgs/.review/pr-37242 1cb9f643480612696de93fb2f2a2f3340d0e3156
Preparing /home/joerg/git/nixpkgs/.review/pr-37242 (identifier pr-37242)
Checking out files: 100% (14825/14825), done.
HEAD is now at 1cb9f643480 redis: 4.0.7 -> 4.0.8
Building in /tmp/nox-review-4ml2epyy: redis
$ nix-build --no-out-link --keep-going --max-jobs 4 --option build-use-sandbox true <nixpkgs> -A redis
/nix/store/jbp7m1gshmk8an8sb14glwijgw1chvvq-redis-4.0.8
$ nix-shell -p redis
[nix-shell:~/git/nixpkgs]$ /nix/store/jbp7m1gshmk8an8sb14glwijgw1chvvq-redis-4.0.8/bin/redis-cli --version
redis-cli 4.0.8

To review a local commit without pull request, use the following command:

$ nixpkgs-review rev HEAD

Instead of HEAD a commit or branch can also be given.

To review uncommitted changes, use the following command:

$ nixpkgs-review wip

Staged changes can be reviewed like this:

$ nixpkgs-review wip --staged

If you'd like to post the nixpkgs-review results as a formatted PR comment, pass the --post-result flag:

$ nixpkgs-review pr --post-result 37242

Instead of posting a PR comment, nixpkgs-review can also print the report to the terminal using the --print-result flag. This flag will work for the rev and wip command..

$ nixpkgs-review pr --print-result 37242

Often, after reviewing a diff on a pull request, you may want to say "This diff looks good to me, approve/merge it provided that there are no package build failures". To do so, run the following subcommands from within the nix-shell provided by nixpkgs-review.

$ nixpkgs-review pr 37242
nix-shell> nixpkgs-review approve
# Or, if you have maintainer access and would like to merge (provided no build failures):
nix-shell> nixpkgs-review merge
# It is also possible to upload the result report from here
nix-shell> nixpkgs-review post-result
# Review-comments can also be shown
nix-shell> nixpkgs-review comments

nixpkgs-review will by default use nix-output-monitor if found in $PATH. If you have nom installed but don't want to use it, you can pass nix to --build-graph to use nix build instead of nom build.

Some pull requests may require configuration for nixpkgs to test out. You can use the --extra-nixpkgs-config flag to supply extra configuration for nixpkgs.

$ nixpkgs-review pr 37242 --extra-nixpkgs-config '{ cudaSupport = true; }'

Using nixpkgs-review in scripts or other programs

After building, nixpkgs-review will normally start a nix-shell with the packages built, to allow for interactive testing. To use nixpkgs-review non-interactively in scripts, use the --no-shell command, which can allow for batch processing of multiple reviews or use in scripts/bots.

Example testing multiple unrelated PRs and posting the build results as PR comments for later review:

for pr in 807{60..70}; do
    nixpkgs-review pr --no-shell --post-result $pr && echo "PR $pr succeeded" || echo "PR $pr failed"
done

nixpkgs-review also accepts a --run flag that allows to run a custom command inside the nix-shell instead of an interactive session:

$ nixpkgs-review pr --run 'jq < report.json' 113814
# ...
{
  "blacklisted": [],
  "broken": [],
  "built": [
    "cargo-deny"
  ],
  "failed": [],
  "non-existent": [],
  "pr": 113814,
  "system": "x86_64-linux",
  "tests": []
}

Review multiple pull requests at once

nixpkgs-review accept multiple pull request numbers at once:

$ nixpkgs-review pr 94524 94494 94522 94493 94520

This will first evaluate & build all pull requests in serial. Then a nix-shell will be opened for each of them after the previous shell has been closed.

Tip: Since it's hard to keep track of the numbers, for each opened shell the corresponding pull request URL is shown.

Remote builder

Nix-review will pass all arguments given in --build-arg to nix-build:

$ nixpkgs-review pr --build-args="--builders 'ssh://joerg@10.243.29.170'" 37244

As an alternative, one can also specify remote builder as usual in /etc/nix/machines or via the nix.buildMachines nixos options in configuration.nix. This allows to parallelize builds across multiple machines.

GitHub api token

Some commands (i.e., post-result or merge) require a GitHub API token, and even for read-only calls, GitHub returns 403 error messages if your IP hits the rate limit for unauthenticated calls.

To use a token, first create a personal access token. If you plan to post comments with the reports generated, you need to add the repo:public_repo scope.

Then use either the GITHUB_TOKEN environment variable or the --token parameter of the pr subcommand.

$ GITHUB_TOKEN=5ae04810f1e9f17c3297ee4c9e25f3ac1f437c26 nixpkgs-review pr  37244

Additionally, nixpkgs-review will also read the oauth_token stored by hub and gh.

Checkout strategy (recommend for r-ryantm + cachix)

By default, nixpkgs-review pr will merge the pull request into the pull request's target branch (most commonly master). However, at times mass-rebuilding commits have been applied in the target branch, but not yet built by hydra. Often those are not relevant for the current review, but will significantly increase the local build time. For this case, the --checkout option can be specified to override the default behavior (merge). By setting its value to commit, nixpkgs-review will checkout the user's pull request branch without merging it:

$ nixpkgs-review pr --checkout commit 44534

Only building a subset of packages

To build only certain packages, use the --package (or -p) flag.

$ nixpkgs-review pr -p openjpeg -p ImageMagick 49262

There is also the --package-regex option that takes a regular expression to match against the attribute name.

# build only linux kernels but not the packages
$ nixpkgs-review pr --package-regex 'linux_' 51292

To skip building certain packages, use the --skip-package (or -P) flag.

$ nixpkgs-review pr -P ImageMagick 49262

There is also the --skip-package-regex option that takes a regular expression to match against the attribute name. Unlike the --package-regex option, a full match is required, which means you probably want to work with .* or \w+.

# skip building linux kernels but not the packages
$ nixpkgs-review pr --skip-package-regex 'linux_.*' 51292

-p, -P, --package-regex and --skip-package-regex can be used together, in which case the matching packages will be merged.

Full documentation for regex matching syntax can be found here.

Running tests

NixOS tests can be run by using the --package feature and our nixosTests attribute set:

$ nixpkgs-review pr -p nixosTests.ferm 47077

Ignoring ofborg evaluations

By default, nixpkgs-review will use ofborg's evaluation result if available to figure out what packages need to be rebuilt. This can be turned off using --eval local, which is useful if ofborg's evaluation result is outdated. Even if using --eval ofborg, nixpkgs-review will fall back to local evaluation if ofborg's result is not (yet) available.

Review changes in personal forks

Both the rev and the wip subcommand support a --remote argument to overwrite the upstream repository URL (defaults to https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs). The following example will use mayflower's nixpkgs fork to fetch the branch where the changes will be merged into:

$ nixpkgs-review --remote https://github.com/mayflower/nixpkgs wip

Note that this has been not yet implemented for pull requests, i.e., pr subcommand.

Review changes for other operating systems/architectures

The --system flag allows setting a system different from the current one. Note that the result nix-shell may not be able to execute all hooks correctly since the architecture/operating system mismatches.

$ nixpkgs-review pr --system aarch64-linux 98734

Review changes inside sandbox [EXPERIMENTAL]

The --sandbox flag setups a sandbox using bubblewrap. This is the same tool used by Flatpak and OSTree, and offers an unprivileged sandbox based on user namespaces.

Keep in mind that --sandbox flag is not necessary tuned for privacy or security. Instead, it uses a pretty lax sandbox where it is possible to leak data sensitive by environment variables or stateful filesystems (like /run). The reason for this is because many packages would break otherwise, and this would make this flag useless for review purposes.

The objective of --sandbox is to protect your system against accidental modification and to offer a clean(ish) system state where packages can be tested. For example, it mounts a tmpfs in-place of your HOME directory, avoiding situations where a dirty configuration on your HOME directory can lead to a broken package during testing. It also protects your HOME and system against undesired files created during package testing.

This flag is still in an experimental stage. Please note that it isn't exhaustive tested against nixpkgs, so some packages may break under it. Before disapproving a PR because the program is broken under the sandbox, try without this flag first to make sure that the issue is not the sandbox. If the issue is caused because of the sandbox, please open an issue including the PR number in nixpkgs so we can try to fix this issue.

$ nix-shell -p bubblewrap # or install it using NixOS/Home-Manager/etc.
$ nixpkgs-review --sandbox pr 98734

Roadmap

  • build on multiple platforms
  • test backports
  • show pull request description + diff during review

Run tests

To run tests use:

$ pytest

We also use python3's type hints. To check them, use mypy:

$ mypy nixpkgs_review

Related projects:

  • nox-review:
    • works but is as slow as a snail: the checkout process of nox-review is slow since it requires multiple git fetches. Also it cannot make use of ofborg's evaluation
    • it only builds all packages without providing a nix-shell for review
  • niff:
    • only provides a list of packages that have changed, but does not build packages
    • also needs to evaluate changed attributes locally instead of using ofborg