commit | c51685845a678f5209cfac8bd63a669e917c9ccb | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Quinten Yearsley <qyearsley@chromium.org> | Wed Nov 28 00:08:51 2018 |
committer | Quinten Yearsley <qyearsley@chromium.org> | Wed Nov 28 00:08:51 2018 |
tree | 02f5ec009c4d8709561b53f484b19dfc5c2ebbc3 | |
parent | dbc14037496f2365f12a19bb21b1406c9d78687f [diff] |
[tricium plugin] Handle concurrent _configureOAuthLibrary calls Copied from Nodir's change to buildbucket plugin: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/infra/gerrit-plugins/buildbucket/+/1347295 Change-Id: Ic92c7b8e4dda61e0aec747a87c42405a51011d38 Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/1347413 Reviewed-by: Nodir Turakulov <nodir@chromium.org>
Tricium is a code analysis service for Chromium. The purpose of this plugin is to integrate with the Gerrit UI, e.g. by displaying progress of analyzers.
To check out the Tricium plugin code:
git clone https://chromium.googlesource.com/infra/gerrit-plugins/tricium
The unit tests of the plugin are web-component-tester unit tests. Dependencies are specified in bower.json and can be installed by running bower install
in this directory. This requires bower to be installed.
To run the tests, run wct
from this directory. See wct --help
for more options.
With a local static web server, such as the one provided by Polymer CLI, you can also view and tweak UI interactively.
To install the Polymer tool-set globally, run npm install -g polymer-cli
.
After running polymer serve
, you can view an example of how the tricium-view element appears by navigating to http://localhost:8081/components/tricium/test/example.html.
You can create a local instance of Gerrit and use this plugin in that instance.
If needed, install bazel, and then build from the Gerrit repo root with bazel build plugins/tricium
.
The Gerrit repo includes a script for trying the PolyGerrit UI with a local server local plugins but with production data. See run-with-prod-data.sh.
To set up to run PolyGerrit with a local copy of the plugin, first get the Gerrit repo:
git clone --recursive https://gerrit.googlesource.com/gerrit
Then move or link the Tricium repo so it's inside the gerrit/plugins/
directory, e.g. mv tricium gerrit/plugins/
.
Known issue: with a locally run PolyGerrit, you can‘t log in, which means robot comment actions (e.g. the “not useful” button) aren’t visible by default.
It's also possible to test with a local instance of Gerrit.
To do this you must set up a Gerrit test site. To build the tricium plugin in Gerrit, it is assumed that the tricium directory is iniside the gerrit plugins directory.
Then, the local site could be started with Tricium by running run-with-testsite.sh.
This plugin is configured via the tricium.config
file present in the repo's refs/meta/config
ref. This file uses git config format. Example:
[host] tricium = tricium-prod.appspot.com