Homu is a bot that integrates with GitHub and your favorite continuous integration service such as Travis CI, Appveyor or Buildbot.
Let's take Travis CI as an example. If you send a pull request to a repository,
Travis CI instantly shows you the test result, which is great. However, after
several other pull requests are merged into the master
branch, your pull
request can still break things after being merged into master
. The
traditional continuous integration solutions don't protect you from this.
In fact, that's why they provide the build status badges. If anything pushed to
master
is completely free from any breakage, those badges will not be
necessary, as they will always be green. The badges themselves prove that there
can still be some breakages, even when continuous integration services are used.
To solve this problem, the test procedure should be executed just before the
merge, not just after the pull request is received. You can manually click the
"restart build" button each time before you merge a pull request, but Homu can
automate this process. It listens to the pull request comments, waiting for an
approval comment from one of the configured reviewers. When the pull request is
approved, Homu tests it using your favorite continuous integration service, and
only when it passes all the tests, it is merged into master
.
Note that Homu is not a replacement of Travis CI, Buildbot or Appveyor. It works on top of them. Homu itself doesn't have the ability to test pull requests.
Homu is largely inspired by bors. The concept of "tests should be done just before the merge" came from bors. However, there are also some differences:
And also, Homu has more features, such as rollup
, try
, and the Travis CI &
Appveyor support.
$ sudo apt-get install python3-venv python3-wheel
$ python3 -m venv .venv
$ . .venv/bin/activate
$ pip install -U pip
$ git clone https://github.com/rust-lang/homu.git
$ pip install -e homu
In the following instructions, HOST
refers to the hostname (or IP address)
where you are running your custom homu instance. PORT
is the port the service
is listening to and is configured in web.port
in cfg.toml
. NAME
refers to
the name of the repository you are configuring homu for.
Copy cfg.sample.toml
to cfg.toml
. You'll need to edit this file to set up
your configuration. The following steps explain where you can find important
config values.
Create a GitHub account that will be used by Homu. You can also use an existing account. In the developer settings, go to "OAuth Apps" and create a new application:
cfg.toml
.http://HOST:PORT/callback
.http://HOST:PORT/
.Go back to the developer settings of the GitHub account you created/used in the
previous step. Go to "Personal access tokens". Click "Generate new token" and
choose the "repo" and "user" scopes. Put the token value in your cfg.toml
.
Add your new GitHub account as a Collaborator to the GitHub repo you are setting up homu for. This can be done in repo (NOT user) "Settings", then "Collaborators". Enable "Write" access.
4.1. Make sure you login as the new GitHub account and that you accept the collaborator invitation you just sent!
Add a Webhook to your repository. This is done under repo (NOT user) "Settings", then "Webhooks". Click "Add webhook", then set:
http://HOST:PORT/github
application/json
repo.NAME.github.secret
in cfg.toml
Issue comments
, Pull requests
, Pushes
, Statuses
, Check runs
Add a Webhook to your continuous integration service, if necessary. You don't need this if using Travis/Appveyor.
Buildbot
Insert the following code to the master.cfg
file:
from buildbot.status.status_push import HttpStatusPush
c['status'].append(HttpStatusPush(
serverUrl='http://HOST:PORT/buildbot',
extra_post_params={'secret': 'repo.NAME.buildbot.secret in cfg.toml'},
))
Go through the rest of your cfg.toml
and uncomment (and change, if needed)
parts of the config you'll need.
$ . .venv/bin/activate
$ homu