Caution

Buildbot no longer supports Python 2.7 on the Buildbot master.

3.10.8. ForceScheduler

The force scheduler has a symbiotic relationship with the web application, so it deserves some further description.

3.10.8.1. Parameters

The force scheduler comes with a set of parameter classes. This section contains information to help users or developers who are interested in adding new parameter types or hacking the existing types.

class buildbot.schedulers.forceshed.BaseParameter(name, label, regex, **kwargs)

This is the base implementation for most parameters, it will check validity, ensure the arg is present if the required attribute is set, and implement the default value. It will finally call updateFromKwargs to process the string(s) from the HTTP POST.

The BaseParameter constructor converts all keyword arguments into instance attributes, so it is generally not necessary for subclasses to implement a constructor.

For custom parameters that set properties, one simple customization point is getFromKwargs:

getFromKwargs(kwargs)
Parameters:

kwargs – a dictionary of the posted values

Given the passed-in POST parameters, return the value of the property that should be set.

For more control over parameter parsing, including modifying sourcestamps or changeids, override the updateFromKwargs function, which is the function that ForceScheduler invokes for processing:

updateFromKwargs(master, properties, changes, sourcestamps, collector, kwargs)
Parameters:
  • master – the BuildMaster instance

  • properties – a dictionary of properties

  • changes – a list of changeids that will be used to build the SourceStamp for the forced builds

  • sourcestamps – the SourceStamp dictionary that will be passed to the build; some parameters modify sourcestamps rather than properties

  • collector – a buildbot.schedulers.forcesched.ValidationErrorCollector object, which is used by nestedParameter to collect errors from its childs

  • kwargs – a dictionary of the posted values

This method updates properties, changes, and/or sourcestamps according to the request. The default implementation is good for many simple uses, but can be overridden for more complex purposes.

When overriding this function, take all parameters by name (not by position), and include an **unused catch-all to guard against future changes.

The remaining attributes and methods should be overridden by subclasses, although BaseParameter provides appropriate defaults.

name

The name of the parameter. This corresponds to the name of the property that your parameter will set. This name is also used internally as identifier for HTTP POST arguments.

label

The label of the parameter, as displayed to the user. This value can contain raw HTML.

fullName()

A fully-qualified name that uniquely identifies the parameter in the scheduler. This name is used internally as the identifier for HTTP POST arguments. It is a mix of name and the parent’s name (in the case of nested parameters). This field is not modifiable.

type

A string identifying the type that the parameter conforms to. It is used by the angular application to find which angular directive to use for showing the form widget. The available values are visible in www/base/src/app/common/directives/forcefields/forcefields.directive.js.

Examples of how to create a custom parameter widgets are available in the Buildbot source code in directories:

default

The default value to use if there is no user input. This is also used to fill in the form presented to the user.

required

If true, an error will be shown to user if there is no input in this field.

multiple

If true, this parameter represents a list of values (e.g. list of tests to run).

regex

A string that will be compiled as a regex and used to validate the string value of this parameter. If None, then no validation will take place.

parse_from_args(l)

Return the list of property values corresponding to the list of strings passed by the user. The default function will just call parse_from_arg on every argument.

parse_from_arg(s)

Return the property value corresponding to the string passed by the user. The default function will simply return the input argument.

3.10.8.2. Nested Parameters

The NestedParameter class is a container for parameters. The original motivating purpose for this feature is the multiple-codebase configuration, which needs to provide the user with a form to control the branch (et al) for each codebase independently. Each branch parameter is a string field with name ‘branch’ and these must be disambiguated.

In Buildbot nine, this concept has been extended to allow grouping different parameters into UI containers. Details of the available layouts is described in NestedParameter.

Each of the child parameters mixes in the parent’s name to create the fully qualified fullName. This allows, for example, each of the ‘branch’ fields to have a unique name in the POST request. The NestedParameter handles adding this extra bit to the name to each of the children. When the kwarg dictionary is posted back, this class also converts the flat POST dictionary into a richer structure that represents the nested structure.

For example, if the nested parameter has the name ‘foo’, and has children ‘bar1’ and ‘bar2’, then the POST will have entries like “foo.bar1” and “foo.bar2”. The nested parameter will translate this into a dictionary in the ‘kwargs’ structure, resulting in something like:

kwargs = {
    # ...
    'foo': {
        'bar1': '...',
        'bar2': '...'
    }
}

Arbitrary nesting is allowed and results in a deeper dictionary structure.

Nesting can also be used for presentation purposes. If the name of the NestedParameter is empty, the nest is “anonymous” and does not mangle the child names. However, in the HTML layout, the nest will be presented as a logical group.