gecko-dev/taskcluster/docs/actions-schema.yml

205 строки
9.2 KiB
YAML

$schema: http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema#
id: https://hg.mozilla.org/mozilla-central/raw-file/tip/taskcluster/docs/actions-schema.yml
title: Schema for Exposing Actions
description: |
This document specifies the schema for the `public/actions.json` used by
_decision tasks_ to expose actions that can be triggered by end-users.
For the purpose of this document the _consumer_ is the user-interface that
displays task results to the end-user and allows end-users to trigger actions
defined by `public/actions.json`. A _consumer_ might be Treeherder.
The _end-user_ is a developer who is inspecting the results, and wish to
trigger actions.
type: object
properties:
version:
enum: [1]
type: integer
variables:
type: object
description: |
Mapping from variable name to constants that can be referenced using
`{$eval: '<variable>'}` within the task templates defined for each action.
This is useful for commonly used constants that are used in many task
templates. Whether it's to reduce the size of the `public/actions.json`
artifact by reuseing large constants, or simply to make it easier to
write task templates by exposing additional variables.
These will overwrite any builtin variables, such as `taskGroupId`,
`input`, `taskId`, `task`, and any further variables that future
backwards compatible iterations of this specifcation adds. Hence, you
should avoid declaring variables such as `input`, as it will shadow the
builtin `input` variable.
additionalProperties: true
actions:
type: array
description: |
List of actions that can be triggered.
items:
type: object
properties:
title:
type: string
maxLength: 255
description: |
Title text to be displayed on the button or link triggering the action.
description:
type: string
maxLength: 4096
description: |
Human readable description of the action in markdown.
Can be displayed in tooltip, popup and/or dialog when triggering
the action.
kind:
enum:
- task
description: |
Specifies the kind of action this is.
The `task` _action kind_ is triggered by creating a task, following
a task template.
Other kinds might be added in the future. Consumers should ignore
all entries featuring a `kind` property they don't recognize.
context:
type: array
default: []
items:
type: object
additionalProperties:
type: string
maxLength: 4096
title: tag-set
description: |
A set of key-value pairs specifying a _tag-set_.
description: |
The `context` property determines in what context the action is
relevant. Thus, what context the action should be presented to the
end-user.
The `context` property contains a set of tag-sets. A _tag-set_ is a
set of key-value pairs. A task is said satisfy a tag-set if
`task.tags` is a super-set of the given tag-set. An action is
relevant for a task if the task satisfies at-least one of
the tag-sets.
Hence, an action with `context: [{a: '1'}, {b: '2'}]` is relevant
for any task with `task.tags.a = '1'` or `task.tags.b = '2'`.
An action with `context: [{a: '1', b: '2'}]` is only relevant for
tasks with `task.tags.a = '1'` and `task.tags.b = '2'`.
This allows restrictions of what tasks an action is relevant for.
For example some tasks might not support running under a debugger.
The keen reader observes that actions with `context: [{}]` are
relevant for all tasks. Conversely, we have that tasks with
`context: []` are irrelevant for all tasks. We abuse this property
and define actions with `context: []` to be relevant for the
_task-group_ only.
That is an action with `context: []` should not be display in the
context-sensitive menu for a task, rather it should be display when
selecting the entire task-group. Presentation details are left for
consumer to decide.
Notice that the `context` property is optional, but defined to have
a default value `context: []`. Hence, if the `context` is not
specified consumer should take this to mean `context: []` implying
that the action is relevant to the task-group, rather than any
subset of tasks.
schema:
$ref: http://json-schema.org/schema
description: |
JSON schema for input parameters to the `task` template property.
Consumers shall offer a user-interface where end-users can enter
values that satisfy this schema. Furthermore, consumers **must**
validate enter values against the given schema before parameterizing
the `task` template property and triggering the action.
In practice it's encourage that consumers employ a facility that
can generate HTML forms from JSON schemas. However, if certain
schemas are particularly complicated or common, consumers may also
hand-write a user-interface for collecting the input. In this case
the consumer **must** do a deep comparison between the schema given
in the action, and the schema for which a custom user-interface have
been written, and fall-back to an auto-generated form if the schema
doesn't match.
It is assumed that the JSON schema `description` property will be
rendered as markdown when displayed as documentation for end-users.
Producers of `public/actions.json` is encouraged to provide a
detailed explanation of the input parameters using these
`description` properties. And consumers are *strongly* encouraged
to render `description` values as markdown.
The `schema` property is optional, and if not given the input for
`task` template parameterization shall be `null`.
task:
type: object
title: task template
description: |
Task template for triggering the action.
When an action have been selected in the appropriate context and
input satisfying the `schema` (if any) has been collected. The
action is triggered by parameterizing the task template given in
this property, and creating the resulting task.
The template is parameterized with the following variables:
* `taskGroupId`
* `taskId` (taskId, `null` if not triggered for a given task)
* `task` (task definition, `null` if not triggered for a given task)
* `input` (input matching `schema`, `null` if no schema is given)
* Property defined in the `variables` property.
The template is an object that is parameterized by:
1. Replacing substrings `'${variable}'` in strings and object keys
with the value of the given `variable`.
2. Replacing objects on the form `{$eval: 'variable'}` with the
value of of the given `variable`.
3. Replacing objects on the form {$fromNow: 'timespan'} with a
timestamp of `timespan` from now. Where `timespan` is on the
form: `([0-9]+ *d(ays?)?)? *([0-9]+ *h(ours?)?)? *([0-9]+ *m(in(utes?)?)?)?`
4. Replacing any object on the form `{$json: value}` with the
value of `JSON.stringify(result)` where `result` is the result
of recursive application of rules 1-4 on `value`.
This template language is still incomplete and additional features
will be added in the future. This statment will be changed when the
features of the template language is locked, until then consumption
of the `public/actions.json` artifact is experimental.
# TODO: Freeze the template language with a specification of json-e
This allows for dumping `input` and `taskId` into environment
variables for the task to be created. The following task template
injects `input` and `taskId` as environment variables:
```json
{
"workerType": "my-worker",
"payload": {
"created": {"$fromNow": ""},
"deadline": {"$fromNow": "1 hour 15 minutes"},
"expiration": {"$fromNow": "14 days"},
"image": "my-docker-image",
"env": {
"TASKID_TRIGGERED_FOR": "${taskId}",
"INPUT_JSON": {"$json": {"$eval": "input"}}
},
...
},
...
}
```
additionalProperties: false
required:
- title
- description
- kind
- task
additionalProperties: false
required:
- version
- actions
- variables